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  • #120350

    @The Observer wrote:

    @*Sian* wrote:

    @The Observer wrote:

    @*Sian* wrote:

    Ours finish the second week in July and are back on the first week of september… we have this week whit week … I don’t even know what it is for :lol: :lol:

    rePentecost at your leisure! It’s one of them Christian thingies innit :lol:

    Dont’ forget to roll your cheeses :roll:

    “Oh My Dear what a fool I’ve been”

    Even more confused now :lol:

    It’s an English thing. You being British obviously don’t get it! :lol: :wink:

    Me being Scottish must mean that’s why I don’t get it either…….. :lol:

    #120351

    Aha – now if you’d said Pentecost I would’ve understood better……..

    Found this:

    Whitsun (Pentecost)

    Pentecost is also known as Whitsunday and is a major festival in the Christian church. It is celebrated on the Sunday which falls on the 50th day after the Easter festival.
    The name Pentecost comes fom a Greek word which means ‘fiftieth’.

    Pentecost celebrates the coming of the Holy Spirit in the form of flames to the followers of Jesus, as recorded in the New Testament. Jesus had told them to wait until the Spirit came to them. Ten days after Ascension, 50 days after the resurrection, the Spirit came.

    The festival is often called Pentecost because when the disciples received the Holy Spirit and began to go out and preach about Jesus it was the Jewish festival of Pentecost.

    Pentecost is recognised as the birth of the Church. The Apostle Peter preached a sermon which resulted in 3,000 people becoming believers. Whit Sunday is a favourite day for baptism. It is thought that because people are often baptised dressed in white, Whit Sunday was probably originally known as ‘White Sunday’.

    Whisuntide is the week following with Whitsunday, which is always the seventh sunday after Easter Sunday.

    Customs and Traditions

    Whit Walks
    Christians in some towns and cities have traditionally taken part in Whit Walks. Whitsun was the time for walks and possessions. The traditional “Procession of Witness” has long been celebrated throughout the North West.

    Bread and Cheese Throwing
    In Gloucestershire, Whit Sunday is called ‘Bread and Cheese Day’ because of a very strange custom.

    In St Braivels, Gloucestershire, following evensong on Whit Monday, basketfuls of bread and cheese are thrown from a wall near the old castle, to be scrambled for in a lane below. The locals of St Braivels have been hurling bread and cheese since the 13th century, when the custom began probably as a payment for the villagers’ right to cut timber from a nearby wood.

    Cheese Rolling
    The first Sunday or Monday in May is a unique opportunity to witness the ancient custom of cheese rolling.

    Gloucester cheese Rolling. Randwick, Gloucestershire, England:
    After rolling three double Gloucester cheeses around the church, one is cut up and shared amongst bystanders and the other two are rolled down a steep hill.

    Stilton Cheese Rolling. Stilton, Cambridgeshire:
    Teams of four, in bizarre costumes, roll stilton cheese along a 50-yard course. They must not kick or throw the cheeses. The prize is a whole Stilton Cheese, which weighs about 16 pounds, and bottles of port—the traditional accompaniment.

    Edam Cheese Rolling. Ide Hill, Kent:
    Women chase a thrown edam cheese down the sloping village green during the annual Whit Monday Fair

    Cheese rolling also takes place in other areas around England.

    Whitsun Ales (village festivals)

    #120352

    I did say Pentecost, just added a ‘re’ in front for Sian, in case she wanted to repent (geddit!) :twisted:

    See what you are missing by sticking to being Scottish and all that Rabbie Burns and haggis shyte :lol:

    #120353

    @The Observer wrote:

    See what you are missing by sticking to being Scottish and all that Rabbie Burns and haggis shyte :lol:

    Believe me – I can have more fun at an all-night Burns’ Supper, than anyone can rolling cheese down a hill!! :lol: :lol:

    #120354

    I can’t remember what i look like when i smile :(

    #120355

    Tommy in MSN!! :roll: :lol:

    #120356

    haggis’ nice acutally so r faggots lol :lol: n whats wrong with scottish shyte??? :|

    everythin n im acutally sober :lol:

    #120357

    something someone said to me today at work….omg cant belive it

    #120358

    @*Sian* wrote:

    My kids being at my mothers!

    so why u ere sian!!!!!!!! :wink:

    #120359

    lol pat its the only thing she knows cause she always on here :lol: :P

Viewing 10 posts - 5,841 through 5,850 (of 10,662 total)

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