Do You Know The Meaning Of 'Auld Lang Syne?'

Auld Lang Syne - The Queen, Tony and Cherie (Pic:Mirrorpix)

Queen and the Blairs in 2000

AS the clock strikes midnight tonight, many of us will be holding hands and belting out Auld Lang Syne – well, the first few lines anyway.

A poll reveals very few of us actually know the words to one of the most popular songs on the planet.

And despite having 12 months to become word perfect in reciting the ditty, which is synonymous with New Years Eve, 75% of us will just be miming or mumbling along.

Even worse, 60% of us have no idea what the title means while 5% will leave the room altogether once the singing starts.

The survey, to celebrate the release of the film New Year’s Eve, starring Halle Berry, also found that 85% of us are unsure of the song’s overall meaning, while 10% of those under 25 think it was written by Elvis Presley or Sir Paul McCartney.

So with mere hours to go before we welcome in 2012 in the traditional way, it is time to put the record straight.

Auld Lang Syne is attributed to Robert Burns, but it is believed the Scots poet adapted an old ballad and set the words to a traditional folk tune.

Its title translates as “old long since” and the words – printed in their entirety on the left – pay homage to people and memories of times gone by.

Burns expert Chris Rollie said he is not surprised by the poll’s findings that few people know all the lyrics.

He said: “Plenty of songs are sung without people knowing the words and bear in mind this is usually sung at the end of a long day and night. But I think people understand its sentiment.

“Burns was sentimental. He had a frequent saying which was, ‘I drink to the hope that the friends of youth may be companions in old age’.

“The words reflect this. And the elements of Auld Lang Syne are really simple – friendship, memories and drink to celebrate it. That’s it.”

Although known as a Hogmanay song, it is also used to symbolise endings or new beginnings.

Auld Lang Syne is belted out at the end of Scout Jamborees, the TUC Congress, and even when a British colony achieves independence.

This emotive song, performed holding hands with loved ones and total strangers alike, also has the power to bring together the most unlikely people.

Who can forget the unhappy expression on the Queen’s face as she linked hands with Prime Minister Tony Blair to welcome in the new millennium?

Maybe Her Majesty was just shocked that he had forgotten the words...

The song has featured in more than 170 Hollywood films, including It’s a Wonderful Life and When Harry Met Sally, and versions are sung as far away as Japan, Hungary and Finland.

The song has also been covered by Jimi Hendrix, who played a live version in New York on December 31, 1969, and Elvis Presley, on New Year’s Eve, 1976, in Pittsburgh.

Last year, Maria Carey released it as a single. Billy Joel also sang it for his live CD, 2000 Years: The Millennium Concert.

Auld Lang Syne lyrics

Should auld acquaintance be forgot

And never brought to mind

Should auld acquaintance be forgot

And auld lang syne.

chorus:

For auld lang syne, my dear,

For auld lang syne,

We’ll tak’ a cup o’ kindness yet

For auld lang syne.

And surely you’ll be your pint stowp

And surely I’ll be mine,

And we’ll drink a richt guid willy waught

For auld lang syne.

[chorus]

We twa hae run aboot the braes

And pu’d the gowans fine,

But we’ve wandered monie a wearie fit’

Since auld lang syne.

[chorus]

We twa hae paidled in the burn

Frae morning sun till dine

But seas a’tween us braid hae roared

Since auld lang syne

[chorus]

And here’s a hand my trusty fere

And gie’s a hand o’ thine

And we’ll tak’ a cup o’ kindness yet

For auld lang syne.

[chorus]

Happy New Year!

Surrender Everyday in 2012 | Ron Edmondson

Those looking for success in 2012 may first need to redefine what it means to be successful, suggests a Tennessee pastor.

Success from the standpoint of human success is entirely different from what God has planned for our lives, says church strategy consultant Ron Edmondson, who is a co-founding pastor at Grace Community Church in Clarksville.

Edmondson told The Christian Post that success is guaranteed for a person if one shifts from desiring their own will to God’s will in their life.

“You have to define success before you can measure whether you have achieved it or not,” Edmondson said. “For me, success is only measured in the context of God’s will.”

In his recent blog post, “How to Guarantee Success in the New Year,” he said that the success he was writing about was in the context of God’s desire for our lives.

Edmondson used the example from the Bible of Abram being called by God to follow His plans for Abram’s life. In his post, Edmondson put in bold text the “I’s," “you’s,” and "your's."

“The Lord said to Abram:
Go out from your land,
your relatives,
and your father’s house
to the land that I will show you.
I will make you into a great nation,
I will bless you,
I will make your name great, and you will be a blessing.
I will bless those who bless you,
I will curse those who treat you with contempt,
and all the peoples on earth will be blessed through you.” – Genesis 12:1-3

“The secret, for lack of a better word, for Abraham’s success, was moving from his will to God’s will. When the ‘you’ comes after the ‘I’ rather than before, we’ll guarantee our success,” wrote Edmondson.

“If you and I want the new year to be a success, let’s:

Drop our agenda … join His agenda
Get off our path … get on His path
Release our ambitions … embrace His ambitions
Ignore my will … live His will.”

Edmondson said that he would like to do something for God in the coming year that may not make sense to anyone else.

“I want to do something in my life, or be a part of something, that God is calling us to do that looks absolutely stupid in the eyes of man,” he said. “Leaving the business world and walking into ministry with not any income is that way. I’ve had those experiences that people around me said, ‘That doesn’t make any sense.’

“However, sometimes we move into this protection mode. So, the person I think about whenever I think about these sort of things is Abraham,” he explained.

Whether they are called “resolutions” or “goals,” Edmondson said it’s just a matter of semantics and it’s natural for people to want to do things better next year.

“It’s a daily thing for me. Sometimes, it’s getting up [in the morning] and saying, ‘God, today I want to follow you. I’m yours. I’m ready when you are,’” he said. “It’s a process of surrendering daily.

“In my heart I say, ‘God I’m going to follow your will before you even tell me what your will is.’ I think that God sometime hesitates with giving our assignment because we haven’t surrendered to His will yet.”

Edmondson plans to release a book next year that he began writing last month about the growing trend among youth who are dependent on the affirmations coming from other people. This dependency on approval has created a society of young people that are afraid to move forward with their lives, he said.

 

 

Why You Should Embrace Discomfort | Michael Hyatt

Think you have big goals? Think again. Several years ago, I read an article in Wired magazine about a long-distance runner named Dean Karnazes.

A Man Running in the Desert - Photo courtesy of ©iStockphoto.com/skodonnell, Image #7572215

 

Get this:

  • He ran fifty marathons in fifty states on fifty consecutive days.
  • He once ran 350 miles in three days—without stopping and with no sleep.

 

  • He’s run the Badwater Ultramarathon seven times. It starts in Death Valley, 250 feet below sea level and concludes, 135 miles later, halfway up Mt. Whitney, at 8,360 feet. He won the race in 2004 on his fifth attempt.
  • He runs 100 to 170 miles a week.
  • He couldn’t find time to run 4–6 hours a day, so he began sleeping less. He currently only sleeps four hours a night.
  • His resting heart rate is 39 beats per minute!

I was so inspired by the article, I bought his book, Ultramarathon Man: Confessions of an All Night Runner and devoured it. I then made a commitment to run my first ever half marathon. I have run one per year ever since.

In another interview in Outside magazine, Dean makes an important point that many of us have forgotten:

Western culture has things a little backwards right now. We think that if we had every comfort available to us, we’d be happy. We equate comfort with happiness. And now we’re so comfortable we’re miserable. There’s no struggle in our lives. No sense of adventure. We get in a car, we get in an elevator, it all comes easy. What I’ve found is that I’m never more alive than when I’m pushing and I’m in pain, and I’m struggling for high achievement, and in that struggle I think there’s a magic.

This rings true for me. I think there are three reasons why you and I should embrace discomfort, whether we deliberately choose it, or it simply happens to us.

  1. Comfort is overrated. It doesn’t lead to happiness. It makes us lazy—and forgetful. It often leads to self-absorption, boredom, and discontent.
  2. Discomfort can be a catalyst for growth. It makes us yearn for something more. It forces us to change, stretch, and adapt.
  3. Discomfort is often a sign we’re making progress. You’ve heard the expression, “no pain, no gain.” It’s true! When you push yourself to grow, you will experience discomfort.

A few weeks ago, I started participating in a Pilates class with Gail. It sounded easy enough. Boy, was I wrong. It has proven to be incredibly challenging. I hurt when I am doing it, and I am sore afterwards.

But that’s the very reason I love it. I feel like I am making progress and becoming stronger with each class.

The bottom line is this: you can either be comfortable and stagnate or stretch yourself—become uncomfortable—and grow. You may think that comfort leads to happiness. It doesn’t. Happiness comes from growth and feeling like you are making progress

 

 

 

Christmas and Church History

I found this interesting article on the history of Christmas in the church.  It’s concise, which is good!  ~ naj

 

 

Christmas Past and Present in the Church

The Advent-Christmas season is almost upon us, that joyful time of year when we celebrate the birth of our Lord Jesus Christ.

Have you ever wondered how Christmas came to be part of the annual Christian calendar? Here’s the fascinating story, which we begin with a surprising observation. Neither Jesus nor the apostles commanded or even suggested that the church should have a Christmas festival — and no evidence of such a celebration is in the New Testament.

In the church of the second century, we see evidence of an annual celebration of Jesus’ resurrection in the spring (our Easter), but no celebration of his birth. (It’s possible that the roots of the resurrection celebration go back to the apostolic church.)

The church also added Pentecost and Epiphany to its yearly worship calendar in the second century. Epiphany, on Jan. 6, celebrated not the birth of Christ, but the manifestation of his divine sonship, his kingship and his divine power as displayed in his baptism, the visit of the Magi, and his miracle at the wedding feast in Cana. Pentecost commemorated the coming of the Holy Spirit.

Epiphany was the church’s earliest annual celebration in connection with the Incarnation of Jesus. However, it was not until the fourth century that we have clear evidence of the birth of Jesus being celebrated on Dec. 25.

Why Dec. 25?

One theory for the origin of Christmas is that it was intended to compete with or supplant the pagan celebration of the sun-god on that date. According to this hypothesis, accepted by most scholars today, the birth of Jesus was given near the date of the winter solstice. On this day, as the sun began its return to the northern skies, the pagan devotees of Mithra celebrated the birthday of the invincible sun. The cult was particularly strong at Rome when Christmas celebration arose.

The idea is that the church tried to counteract this pagan worship with its own celebration of Jesus’ birth. That makes good sense, since the church was, in effect, providing its members with a Christian worship and fellowship opportunity while the pagans were cavorting and doing homage to their gods. It was also an opportunity for the church to preach the true gospel. If this reasoning is correct, what Christians did, then, was to redeem in Christ an understanding that he (not a pagan sun god) was the true Son and Sun of Righteousness (Malachi 4:2) — the true light that lights our path with his grace (John 8:12).

Another idea as to why Christmas celebration began and expanded throughout the church has to do with its need to combat a then rampant heresy about Christ’s Person. The council of Nicea in 325 had condemned Arianism, which claimed that Jesus Christ was only an exalted creature and not true God of true God.

It was not long afterward that the Christmas festival first appeared in Rome, and then spread to the churches in other parts of the Roman Empire. In this view, the controversies of the fourth century about the incarnation and person of Christ impelled the church to create a festival that would celebrate the mystery of God becoming man, as a kind of teaching tool for the church.

Birthday of Jesus?

Why wasn’t Jesus’ birthday celebrated earlier than the fourth century? One reason might be that neither the day nor month of Jesus’ birth is given in the Gospels or any other early Christian writings—and cannot be determined with any certainty. Despite this, it seems to have been the opinion of some church leaders in the first four centuries that Christ was actually born on Dec. 25.

Chrysostom

 

Theologian John Chrysostom (347-407) appealed, in support of this view, to the date of the registration under Quirinus (Cyrenius). He apparently believed that the census and tax records of Jesus’ family were preserved in the Roman archives. Justin Martyr (100-165), in his noted Apology, stated that Jesus was born at Bethlehem, saying such can be ascertained "from the registers of the taxing" (Apology I, 34).

Tertullian

 

Tertulian (160-250), spoke of "the census of Augustus — that most faithful witness of the Lord’s nativity, kept in the archives of Rome" (Against Marcion, Book 4, 7). The early church father, Hippolytus (180-236), came up with a Dec. 25 date, which he attempted to calculate from information in the Gospel of Luke regarding the ministry of the priest Zechariah, John the Baptist’s father (Luke 1:5, 8-10).

Whatever the facts might be about the date of Jesus’ birth, it is clear that the church sensed the need to have a festival that commemorated the birth of our Savior. In the words of the church historian Philip Schaff, it was inevitable that the church would have "sooner or later called into existence a festival which forms the groundwork of all other annual festivals in honor of Christ" (History of the Christian Church, volume 3, "Nicene and Post-Nicene Christianity," page 395). Schaff points to Chrysostom’s observation that without the birth of Christ there would be no salvation history in Christ — no baptism, passion, resurrection, ascension or outpouring of the Holy Spirit. Hence, there would be no celebration of Epiphany, of Easter or of Pentecost."

However meaningful Christian worship was during the Christmas season, we must also acknowledge that Christmas was often celebrated with the same sensual excesses as some pagan feasts had been among the general populace. Truly, at times in the history of the church, it was needful to put Christ back into Christmas.

Puritans in Britain and America

"Puritans" was the name given in the 16th century to a group of Protestants that arose from within the Church of England. As part of their broad-based reform agenda, they demanded that the church should be purified of any liturgy, ceremony or practices that were not found in the Bible.

Cromwell

 

Since the Christmas celebration was not mentioned in Scripture, the Puritans concluded that it must be stopped. When the group came to political power in England under Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658), they immediately proceeded to outlaw Christmas. Cromwell and the Puritans even banned special church services, not just on Christmas but also on Easter and Pentecost. Christmas Day was a regular work day and shops remained open. Parliament was to sit as it usually did. Criers were sometimes sent through the streets, shouting, "No Christmas today, no Christmas today."

The year 1642 saw the first ordinance issued forbidding church services and civic festivities on Christmas day. These were issued regularly in the ensuing years. On June 8, 1645, the Puritan-dominated Parliament abolished the observance of Christmas, Easter, Whitsuntide and the Saints’ days. In 1660, things changed. The Monarchy was re-established, and the Puritan clergy were expelled from the Church of England. Many Puritans migrated to New England in America, beginning in the second decade of the 17th century.

In Puritan New England, Christmas was a regular workday, and any violation of this was punishable by fine or dismissal. In 1659, the Massachusetts Puritans declared the observation of Christmas to be a criminal offense. Offenders had to pay five shillings as a fine. In Massachusetts, Dec. 25 did not become a legal holiday until 1856. It is hard to realize now that worship on Christmas was outlawed in New England until the second half of the 19th century.

Twelve Days of Christmas and Advent

"The Twelve Days of Christmas" is more than a secular, traditional Christmas song. At one time it was common for Christmas worship and celebration to last 12 days, from Dec. 25 until Jan. 5, the beginning of Epiphany. This tradition has virtually disappeared.

Today, the season of Advent begins the yearly worship or liturgical calendar. Advent is celebrated on the four Sundays preceding Christmas. It is devoted to the commemoration of the coming of our Lord in the flesh as well as to his return at the final judgment. That’s why they are called Advent Sundays, since advent means the coming or arrival, especially of something extremely important. (What event could be more important than the coming of the Son of God in human flesh — and then his coming again as King of kings and Lord of lords!)

Lawrence Stookey, in his book Calendar: Christ’s Time for the Church, explains it this way: "The primary focus of Advent is on what is popularly called ‘the second coming.’ Thus advent concerns the future of the Risen One, who will judge wickedness and prevail over every evil. Advent is the celebration of the promise that Christ will bring an end to all that is contrary to the ways of God; the resurrection of Jesus is the first sign of this destruction of the powers of death…. The beginning of the liturgical year takes our thinking to the very end of things" (pages 121-122).

Meaning of Christmas

For the church, the entire Christian year centers on the person and work of Jesus Christ. Christians do not "celebrate" or "keep" days as though holy in themselves, but rather worship Christ and recall the great events of our salvation, using those special times as opportunities for worship.

The purpose of the annual worship year is to keep our minds focused on the story of salvation and to worship Jesus Christ in a way that ministers to his glory. Specifically, Christmas, Advent and Epiphany were meant as vehicles to celebrate Jesus Christ.

The yearly Christian festivals remind us of the leading events of the gospel history, and beckon us to participate in worship of Christ. In the words of Philip Schaff: "The church year is, so to speak, a chronological confession of faith; a moving panorama of the great events of salvation; a dramatic exhibition of the gospel for the Christian people" (History of the Christian Church, volume III, pages 387).

May you have a blessed and joyous Christmas!

Paul Kroll, 2005

http://www.gci.org/history/christmas

Road Trip - Lost In Kingdom Lights (katie's blog)

Road Trip

Driving through a quaint, old town, snow has powdered the world this morning and it makes everything beautiful.  The ponderosa forest zooms past while pink and green clouds dance overhead.  The snow-lined road underneath  jolts me about with its familiar drone while the music playing from my sister's iPod couldn't fit more perfectly.  The morning sun sets other clouds on fire and gives the moss on scattered branches a celestial glow.  Patches of sunlight dot the deep, shady woods as we pass by Lost Creek.  It starts snowing pine needles as we sit in the shade with an abandoned picnic table.  Wired fences, rusty mailboxes, and an old red beetle sitting in a bare dirt yard come and go as we wind down this mountain.  The snow has long since disappeared now, but the leftover autumn leaves beneath an orchard are just as lovely.  Christmas is quickly on its way, and as I sit here watching the world go by I suppose life is moving on just as fast.  Perhaps it's all a glorious daydream, but at least I can see it.  And it's beautiful.  God has blessed me more than I know, and that which I do know I can't ever be thankful enough for.  And now as we are especially remembering His birth... oh I can hardly believe what I've been given in a baby, the Son of God wrapped in swaddling clothes.  Soon we'll get our Christmas tree, decorate it with the ornaments all special and familiar, have a cup of eggnog and look at the beautiful thing.  Meanwhile, I'm still in the back window seat of our van, listening to Christmas music with the old hum of tires on pavement singing along.  In a short time though we'll drive down a recognisable road, pass some familiar buildings, and finally pull into our own driveway. Glory to the Newborn King.  Welcome home.