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TulaneLSU's Top 10 first Sunday of Advent decorating observations

Posted on 11/29/20 at 8:10 pm
Posted by TulaneLSU
Member since Aug 2003
Member since Dec 2007
13298 posts
Posted on 11/29/20 at 8:10 pm
Friends,

I am exhausted. For the last three months I have been champing at the bit to start decorating. Mother's good sensibilities and manners and adherence to the liturgical calendar have bridled that passion. But as the clock struck midnight today, I began a furious assault on an undecorated home. Although I am not finished, I have worked nearly 17 hours straight, with an hour reprieve to worship online this morning. But as anyone who has ever decorated for Christmas knows, 17 hours is just the tip of the iceberg.

Let us begin this list with a marvelous rendition of O Come, O Come, Emmanuel by the King's College Choir. I so miss the days I spent at King's College, brief though they were. That resplendent chapel and choir are perhaps the pinnacle of Christendom in the United Kingdom. How I yearn for a choir like that in New Orleans. If only our band would put down their brass to sing in harmony like these beautiful choirs.

So that I can go to bed, I will be brief tonight with TulaneLSU's Top 10 first Sunday of Advent decorating observations:

10. Walmart's fiber optic Christmas trees are stunning!


Last year you may remember the Walmart post-Christmas sale where I purchased six more artificial Christmas trees. Two of those were fiber optic trees that were only $5. In the dark, these things are magical. I wish I had bought more, one for every table in the house.

9. Unfurling an artificial Christmas tree takes time

It is lazy to let its limbs flop and start decorating. A proper unfurling and fluffing of the branches will take no less than 30 minutes per tree. Do not prematurely start with the decorations. Unfurl and fluff!

8. Hot chocolate and Calliope Chocolate Chip Cookies are fuel for decorating

7. As you decorate the tree, you should share a story about each of the decorations, if possible. As Mother and I decorated our main tree in the sitting room, we had so much joy sharing in the stories behind each and every ornament. After it took us an hour to get four ornaments up, we realized we needed to limit stories to under five minutes each, lest we not even finish decorating that one tree!

6. It is time for Tigerdroppings to put up the lights. I appreciate TD's insistence on waiting, even when everyone called for the lights. I checked in throughout the day hoping to find the lights going up. Tonight is the night, though. Please light them.

5. Can one have too much Christmas stuff? I do not know. I thought after last year's shopping extravaganza, I had bought too much. However, today, as I decorated I knew that we could have used more garland, more trees, and more Radkos.

4. This Christmas will be the greatest Christmas since Jesus was born.

3. Spend extra time with your manger scenes. I collect manger displays, and now have 124 of them. I love them and they are everywhere in our house! Jesus, Mary, and Joseph, and sometimes wise men and farm animals really do set the house right. I love you, Holy Family! I wish I could have been there that evening to watch you enter the world to comfort us all! Each time I took out a new scene, I prayed for help and in thanksgiving. What a spiritual time.

This post was edited on 11/29/20 at 8:13 pm
Posted by TulaneLSU
Member since Aug 2003
Member since Dec 2007
13298 posts
Posted on 11/29/20 at 8:11 pm to
2. Christmas carols and hymns are necessary when decorating. I suggest any and all of TulaneLSU’s Top 10 Holy Advent and Christmas Songs:
10. Come, Thou Long Expected Jesus
The first of Charles Wesley’s hymns to make the Top 10 list, when set to Hyfrydol as included in the above link, it puts a charge in my heart and a lift in my step. Published first in 1744, it can be used as both an Advent and an apocalyptic hymn, as we await the coming of our triumphant Lord.

9. O Come All Ye Faithful
The authorship of this triumphant hymn, initially named Adeste Fideles is uncertain, but the oldest extant manuscript comes from English hymnist, John Francis Wade in 1751. Some have even claimed St. Bonaventure wrote this piece half a millennium earlier. During services, when it begins, I am naturally drawn toward the altar. Even if I am the only one standing up front, I am not ashamed to stand before the congregation and sing praise to my Lord.

8. O Little Town of Bethlehem
Bostonian Episcopal priest, Phillips Brooks, wrote this touching hymn in 1868, three years after he visited the town of Bethlehem. I like to hold hands with whomever is next to me when signing it.

7. Away In A Manger
Attributed to Martin Luther, its origin is much more likely American by an anonymous writer. The first appearance of its words show up in the anti-Mason publication Christian Cynosure in 1882. The Irish-Protestant immigrant to America, William J. Kirkpatrick, set the song to the ever familiar tune you know in 1895. What a sweet song for children to sing.

6. In the Bleak Midwinter
Catherine Rossetti, in 1872, published in Scribner’s this poem. It didn’t enter the hymnary until 1906 when it was set to music by Gustav Holst. While there are several tunes to which this song is arranged, I much prefer the deliberate, building tune of Cranham by Holst. The #1 Christmas item at Hallmark, as found in TulaneLSU's Top 10 Hallmark Decorations, reminded me of this hymn.

5. O Come, O Come Emmanuel
Nothing gets Advent going like this solemn and mighty hymn. For some reason, I attributed it to Martin Luther, but the actual translator was John Mason Neale, in 1861. The origins go back to the 15th century in Cologne, but the history is quite nebulous. It feels almost like a Gregorian chant to me at times. If your church’s first Sunday in Advent service doesn’t open with this hymn, consider a transfer. Nothing sets the appropriate, anticipatory, yet somber mood of the season of Advent, as we, captive Israel, mourning in lonely exile, waiting ransom, wait for the day of ransoming, when we shall be set free.

4. Hark! The Herald Angel Sings
The British have given us the bulk of our great Christmas hymans, and Hark! is no exception. Written by Charles Wesley of Methodist fame in 1739, the music with which you most likely associate it is actually a secular tune from Mendlelsson’s Festgesang.

3. Joy to the World!
English composer par excellence Isaac Watts wrote this glorious and triumphant hymn in 1719, the same year the first African slaves arrived in New Orleans at Algiers Point. It is based on Psalms 96 and 98, as well as Genesis 3:17-18. The loudest I ever sing a hymn is when this one or Thine Be the Glory is piped out the organ. He does indeed rule the world with truth and grace.

2. Silent Night
Last year this humble, slow moving hymn celebrated its 200th birthday. Whenever I get groups together to go Christmas caroling, we sing this wonderful song at least three times, often with our sheet music illuminated by small lit candles. Father Joseph Mohr initially wrote the lyrics two years before he asked his congregant, Franz Xaver Gruber, to compose the music in Salzburg, Austria. John Freeman Young, an Episcopalian priest in NYC, translated it in the mid-1800s, and it quickly became a hit in American churches.

1. Oh, Holy Night
This stirring song brings tears to my eyes and my body prostrate in prayer when it is sung well. French composer Adolphe Adam in 1847. Cantique de Noel is based on a poem named Midnight, Christmas, by French poet Placide Cappeau.

1. My garlands are Martha Stewart-level.

I spent well over $500 on garland material in last year's post Christmas sales. I know it does not seem like a lot, but much of that was from Hobby Lobby at 90-95% off. MSRP value of my garlands is probably closer to $8000. I have never been a very big garland decorator until this year. It was last year that I began watching videos on how properly to decorate with garland. With over 50 hours of education in my toolbox, I hit the garlands hard this year and now the home is bursting with holly berries, golden glitter, white pine cones, and fir. On one of the garlands, I even included a Black Santa I got at the Hobby Lobby 90% discount sale!



Faith, Hope, and Love,
TulaneLSU
This post was edited on 11/29/20 at 8:11 pm
Posted by AUriptide
Member since Aug 2009
7339 posts
Posted on 11/29/20 at 8:13 pm to
Friend,

I need more Stacey Dash.
Posted by LoneStar23
USA
Member since Aug 2019
5162 posts
Posted on 11/29/20 at 8:13 pm to
Merry Christmas season brother Tulanelsu
Posted by Rebel
Graceland
Member since Jan 2005
131369 posts
Posted on 11/29/20 at 8:16 pm to
quote:

Calliope Chocolate Chip Cookies


what is the correct pronunciation of "Calliope"?

kuh lie uh pee - like the instrument

or

Kally ope - like the projects
Posted by IonaTiger
The Commonwealth Of Virginia
Member since Mar 2006
33053 posts
Posted on 11/29/20 at 8:16 pm to
Good list. I still prefer to sing your #9 (my #1) as Adeste Fideles. It takes me back to my days of serving Midnight Mass in the early 1960s.
Posted by 777Tiger
Member since Mar 2011
73856 posts
Posted on 11/29/20 at 8:17 pm to
quote:

Friends,



quote:

I am exhausted.


As are we. From your Top 10 lists.
Posted by BorrisMart
La
Member since Jul 2020
8812 posts
Posted on 11/29/20 at 8:18 pm to
Dearest Friend,

Thank the good Lord for your safe return. Things on the OT have been fairly unstable in the absence of your Top 10's. I feared that if you were gone any longer that Chicken might pull the plug.

Sincerely,

BM
Posted by tgrbaitn08
Member since Dec 2007
146214 posts
Posted on 11/29/20 at 8:20 pm to
If there was anyone that’s needs to die it’s the OP
Posted by 777Tiger
Member since Mar 2011
73856 posts
Posted on 11/29/20 at 8:21 pm to
quote:

If there was anyone that’s needs to die it’s the OP



Harrummphhh!!
Posted by Jake88
Member since Apr 2005
68191 posts
Posted on 11/29/20 at 8:21 pm to
Please... Oh, Holy Night
Posted by BorrisMart
La
Member since Jul 2020
8812 posts
Posted on 11/29/20 at 8:29 pm to
MAKE YOUR OWN THREAD!!!! You don't just belittle a man like TulaneLSU, he's old school.
Posted by LSUJML
BR
Member since May 2008
45437 posts
Posted on 11/29/20 at 8:29 pm to
quote:

Spend extra time with your manger scenes. I collect manger displays, and now have 124 of them.


Friend,

How do you store these?
It must take hours to wrap each figure for safe keeping.

Your pal,

LSUJML
Posted by Hamma1122
Member since Sep 2016
19820 posts
Posted on 11/29/20 at 8:30 pm to
Goat poster
Posted by tgrbaitn08
Member since Dec 2007
146214 posts
Posted on 11/29/20 at 8:32 pm to
quote:


MAKE YOUR OWN THREAD!!!! You don't just belittle a man like TulaneLSU, he's old school.



You better check you math kid.

I’ve been around longer than that retard
Posted by BorrisMart
La
Member since Jul 2020
8812 posts
Posted on 11/29/20 at 8:34 pm to
Kid baw I thought we was friends. But seriously, TulaneLSU is a forum treasure and is to be regarded as such.

Edit (thanks DallasTiger where are my manners): NATIONAL treasure.
This post was edited on 11/29/20 at 8:44 pm
Posted by LSUneaux
NOLA
Member since Mar 2014
4490 posts
Posted on 11/29/20 at 8:35 pm to
This thread is sponsored by:

Posted by BorrisMart
La
Member since Jul 2020
8812 posts
Posted on 11/29/20 at 8:38 pm to
If Marlboro made a "10 pack" then I might believe it.
Posted by DallasTiger
THE Capital City
Member since Jan 2004
4224 posts
Posted on 11/29/20 at 8:39 pm to
quote:

TulaneLSU is a NATIONAL treasure and is to be regarded as such.
Posted by tgrbaitn08
Member since Dec 2007
146214 posts
Posted on 11/29/20 at 8:41 pm to
quote:

TulaneLSU is a forum treasure


No he isn’t. He an alter and Yall all are fools for falling for it

But do what you want
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