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In scots, an ingle is a fire and a neuk is a corner, fire possibly coming from the Gaelic-aingeal. Not sure if that marries with your ingle nook
Like Mothhawk, I'm trying to understand the derivation of Christ-ingle - and if its supposed to mean Christ's Light then all I can relate it to is your "Ingle" or fire.
I have to admit that I used to think the churchgoers were saying Chris Tingle........
When I were "the lad" working at the local blacksmith's I was told that the "ingle" was the fire & the "nook" was a seat built into the side/s of the fireplace.
As seen to the left in pic below
thus the "inglenook" in the pic below is actually only an ingle,having no nook.
Now if only there was a way I could earn a living out of all the accumulated useless infornation I have accumulated *sigh*
He who smiles in the face of adversity,has already decided who to blame
Artificial intelligence is no match for natural stupidity
We walk to the local church on Christmas Eve. The christingle service is a lovely Christmassy bit of church......the local vicar is a real character. A lovely man.
Sadly......sort of.....we do not go to church at any other time. I like the community and the stories though.
The church in our village still calls it a 'candlelit service', which describes perfectly what it is. 'Christingle' sounds somehow more commercial and stagy- I would expect Andy Williams or Val Doonican sitting on the altar rail surrounded by seasonally dressed small children, and singing lullabys - too saccharine to be real.
Saturnalia used in another thread today - Saturnalia was an ancient Roman festival in honor of the deity Saturn originally held December 17 and later expanded with festivities through December 23.
^^^That's a good word, far more representative of what the Christmas holiday means to so many nowadays. 'Yule' is a word that satisfies the pagan in me, I love the Victorian cards that show Father Christmas dressed in green, rather than C**a-C**a red. bring back the Green Man, I say!
staying on the theological track, howzabouts "eschatological" ? Topical with the winter solstice approaching with dire warnings and escatology being a branch of theology concerned with the final events in the history of the world or of humankind
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