Sunday, December 24, 2006

December 24, 2006


Merry Christmas From Bud's World


The Candy Cane Legend


"Look at the Candy cane…What do you see? Stripes that are red…Like blood shed for me

White for my Savior…Who’s sinless and pure! ‘J’’ is for Jesus… ‘My lord,’ that’s for sure!


Turn it around…and a staff you will see… Jesus my shepherd…Was born for me!"



Many years ago, a candy maker wanted to make a candy cane at Christmas time that would serve as witness to his Christian faith. He wanted to incorporate several symbols for the birth, ministry and death of Jesus. He began with a stick of pure white hard candy; white to symbolize the Virgin Birth and the sinless nature of Jesus; hard to symbolize the solid rock, the foundation of the church; firmness to represent the promise of God.



The candy maker made the candy in the form of a "J" to represent the name of Jesus, who came to earth as our Savior. He thought it could also represent the staff of the Good Shepherd, with which He reached down into the ditches of the world to lift out the fallen lambs that, like all sheep, have gone astray.



Thinking that the candy was somewhat plain, the candy maker stained it with red stripes. He used three small stripes to show the stripes of the scourging Jesus received and by which we are all healed. The large red stripe was for the Promise of eternal life. Unfortunately, the candy became known as a candy cane – a meaningless decoration seen at Christmas time. But the true meaning is still there for those who have eyes to see and ears to hear.


Christmas Trivia:


What popular children's cracker was introduced in 1902 as a Christmas ornament?


The National Biscuit Company introduced the Barnum’s Animal Cracker and box. The box, as it does today,


had a string designed so that the box could be hung as a Christmas ornament.


In 1939 Robert May created what Christmas figure as a Christmas


promotion for Montgomery Ward department store in Chicago?


Rudolph the Red Noised Reindeer.


In the 1920’s what world wide beverage company adopted the


Santa Claus figures for a winter advertising promotion?


The Coca-Cola Company used Santa Claus to promote the idea that a soft drink


was a winter beverage as well as a summer beverage.


Who was the first United States ambassador to Mexico?


Joel Poinsett the developer of the popular Christmas Poinsettia flowers.


What popular Christmas candy had its debut and was given


out by a choirmaster in 1670 to quiet the noisy children?


The candy cane.


Which American President banned the Christmas Tree


from being displayed in the White House?



The environmentalist President Teddy Roosevelt.


In what year did Coca-Cola hire Haddon Sundblom to illustrate Santa Claus dressed in the red

Santa Claus suit and Santa Claus hat trimmed in white fur that helped standardize the image of the gift-bringer in the eyes of America?

Haddon Sunblom was hired to illustrate Santa Claus in 1931 and drew Santa Claus illustrations


Visit us at: www.frombudsworld.blogspot.com







Merry Christmas

From Bud’s


History of the Carols


December 24, 2006


Silent Night, Holy Night’

(1818) pg. 239

Words by: Joseph Mohr (1792 - 1848) Music by: Franz Gruber (1787 - 1863)


On the afternoon of Christmas Eve in 1818, in a tiny village high in the Austrian Alps, Joseph Mohr, the local Catholic priest, sat writing some appropriate verses for the season. The church pipe organ had given out and the men summoned to repair it were unable to fix it in time for that evening’s service. The church organist, Franz Gruber, agreed to write out a simple tune for his pastor’s text, writing the music for a tenor, a bass, a chorus and a guitar. That very evening, the first performance of ‘Silent Night’ (‘Stille Nacht’) took place, unnoticed except for a few parishioners of St. Nicholas Church in Oberndorf, Austria on that Christmas day in 1818.


It may have been the organ repairmen, who finally brought the news of the lovely new carol to other villages in the Alps, though never mentioning either Gruber’s or Mohr’s name. For many years, neither man was aware of their Christmas song’s increasing popularity nor did the world know its creators. Even the English words we sing today were long unaccredited to the Reverend John Freeman Young, who made his translation and then modestly watched, without claiming his share of fame, as "Silent Night" became one of the most familiar Christmas carols in the world.


Christmas Day in History…


1939

– Montgomery Ward stores introduced ‘Rudolph’ the 9th reindeer

1923

– 1st electrically lit Christmas tree was displayed in the White House

1884

– Layne Hall of Silver Creek, NY was born (He would become

"The oldest legally licensed driver in U.S. history

" at 105 years of age)

1818

- 1st U.S. performance of Handel’s ‘Messiah’ premiered in Boston, Mass.

1818

– The 1st time ‘Silent Night’ was sung (Austria)

1776

– George Washington crossed the Delaware River

1492 -

Columbus' ship Santa Maria docked at Dominican Republic
1223 - St. Francis of Assisi assembled 1st Nativity scene (Greccio, Italy)

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ef. BuffaloHistory Cyberhymnal TimelinesOfHistory SilverCreek.com DmarieCapsule RDM

Visit us at www.frombudsworld.blogspot.com

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

From the Choir Loft

"A 1940's Christmas Homecoming"
The Christmas musical from behind the scenes...
It was Sunday night, December 17, 2006. What a great night! We had a packed house...it seemed as though each person we had invited to the performance showed up...it was the best weather we had ever experienced for a Christmas musical...the audience was responsive...the actors were very believable...and the choir was powerful! Everything I wanted for Christmas I received in one night.
The town historian loaned us a black & white video showing our area in the 1940's & 1950's. While we projected that historic video, we played recordings of Christmas tunes played by the Glenn Miller Band.
Many people loaned us uniforms, helmets, posters, pictures, etc. The USO Ambassador from Ft. Drum had sent us USO banners to use and they looked great. I'm sure the audience felt as though they were participating in a WWII USO show.
JoAnn and Pastor Molly did last minute decorating on our "living room" scene and "barracks" scene, while poor Terry was lugging wet pallets up the stairs for our scenery. The army barracks came to life when JoAnn got our local Paper Factory store to enlarge an army barracks picture to 4 feet x 14 feet and applied it to a vinyl canvas.
The biggest victory of the evening came while I was conducting. I fell off the stool and off the podium and ended up vertical. The choir never missed a beat. What a group! For my next act I'm going to fake a serious injury just to see if they'll stop when they see me lying on the floor.
I can't thank Diane enough for all her help!

Saturday, December 16, 2006

December 17, 2006






Christmas Tunes






"The Chipmunk Song"



This is a song, which is dusted off every year for the Christmas season. Ross Bagdasarian was a novelty writer in a non-novelty world. Making a living as a quirky songwriter, Ross had one major triumph…he had written the wacky hit, ‘Come Onna my House’ for Rosemary Clooney in 1951. He was later pushed to the other side of the recording booth to the position of recording engineer. Bagdasarian loved the dials, the buttons, the little gauges and lights. He truly got a kick out of playing with the technology of recording. By deliberately recording on the slowest speed possible on his reel-to-reel tape machine, he found he could sing normally, and sound like a freak on helium if he sped-up the recording to normal speed on playback. Using this novelty voice as the background singers for the chorus, he recorded ‘Witchdoctor’ and hit the top of the charts in 1958. With the same recording technique, he created the Chipmunks and their hapless manager, Dave. The character ‘Alvin’ was based on his son who drove him crazy with very complicated questions. The Chipmunk Song, released for the Christmas season of 1958, sold 5 million copies that year and the Chipmunk Song received two Grammy Awards in 1958: "Best Comedy Performance" and "Best Recording for Children."




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From the Choir Loft






Tonight is the culmination of 6 months of planning and rehearsing. Tonight, our combined choirs and drama members will present the exciting Christmas drama: ‘A 1940’s Christmas Homecoming.’ Over 200 people have helped us in one way or another. The choir members, the drama members, the church secretaries, those who have helped us with the church decoration, construction, logistics, promotion, coaching, accompanists, our families, etc. It would be impossible to thank everyone! Please support our many efforts by attending and invite others to come!



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History of Christmas Toys



1952




Banking on the idea that children like to play with their food, Hasbro introduced "Mr. Potato Head."




George Lerner of New York City invented and patented Mr. Potato Head based on an earlier toy called "make a face" that used a real potato. A year after his appearance, Mr. Potato Head was introduced to the future "Mrs. Potato Head" and a short time later, were married. "Mr. Potato Head" was the first children’s toy to be advertised on TV.




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Today in history



(December 17)




1992 – ‘A Christmas Carol’ opened on Broadway (would continue for 22 performances)




1975 – Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme was sentenced to life in prison for attempt on President Ford




1965 – The Houston Astrodome was opened (1st event was Judy Garland & Supremes in concert)




1962 – The Beatles appeared on TV for the 1st time in London, England







Church office: (716) 672-2048, Bud: (716) 934-7734, email:





























From Bud’s



History of the Carols




December 17, 2006




"Hark! The Herald Angels Sing"




(1856) pg. 240



Words by Charles Wesley (1707 - 1788)




Music by Felix Mendelssohn (1809 - 1847)







The "poet laureate of Methodism," Charles Wesley, the younger brother of John Wesley, who founded Methodism in England, wrote the text for ‘Hark! The Herald Angels Sing’ and published it in his ‘Hymns and Sacred Poems’ of 1739, a volume so popular that it went through five editions. It is said that Wesley wrote this about one year after his conversion. Charles Wesley is credited with authoring 6,500 hymns. These lyrics were originally sung to a different tune than it is today. Many hymns in the eighteenth century consisted merely of printed words without music. It was left to those leading the congregational singing to choose an appropriate tune based on the meter of the verse.




A century later in 1840, Felix Mendelssohn, whose reputation as a musical genius bore no challenge, was asked to compose a "Festgesang," or ceremonial cantata, in honor of Johannes Guttenberg and the 400th anniversary of the invention of the printing press.




Englishman musician Dr. William H. Cummings adapted Mendelssohn’s music to fit the lyrics of ‘Hark! The Herald Angels Sing.’







Meanwhile…1856…150 years ago…in the United States










U. S. President: Franklin Pierce…Vice-President: William King



Woodrow Wilson was born




YMCA opened a branch in New York City




The average American family had 5.4 kids




The main cause of death was: smallpox, typhoid, malaria & "accidents"




Congressman Brooks hit Senator Sumner with his cane on the Senate floor over slavery




Pascal Pratt and Bronson Rumsey founded The M&T Bank in Buffalo, NY




Buffalo, NY had a horse-drawn streetcar named the "omnibus line"




The S. Howes Corporation of Silver Creek, NY was founded







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Wednesday, December 13, 2006

From the Choir Loft

Sunday night (12/17/06) is the culmination of over 6 months of planning and rehearsing! Our combined choirs and drama group will present the wonderful Christmas musical: 'A 1940's Christmas Homecoming' at Sheridan United Methodist Church (2679 Route 20 in Sheridan, NY). Over 200 people have helped us prepare for this exciting night as we present this Christmas musical arranged in the 'big band' style. We will be opening the church doors at 6:00 pm where the audience will listen to Christmas music played in the big band style while we project old video of our area in the 1940's and 1950's. We thank our local historical society for supplying the video.
The choir/drama members are asked to report to the church at 6:00 pm and you're asked to report to the St. John Bosco church parking lot, where you will be shuttled to our church. Don't forget your dark sunglasses for the "cool" arrangement of 'We Three Kings.'
Merry Christmas...Bud

Saturday, December 9, 2006

12/10/06

Christmas Tunes


"Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer"


Ad-man Robert L. May created ‘Rudolph’ in 1939, when he wrote a whimsical little story and circulated it at Christmas time in pamphlet form among the Montgomery Ward mail-order department. Ten years later, composer Johnny Marks composed a musical setting, and ‘Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer burst onto the holiday scene in Gene Autry’s hugely successful recording. The whole story of ‘Rudolf’ appeared, out of nowhere, in 1939. The Santas at Montgomery Ward stores gave away 2.4 million copies of the booklet entitled ‘Rudolf the Red-Nose Reindeer.’ A person in the advertising department named Robert May wrote the story, and Denver Gillen illustrated the booklet. Robert May was rather sickly, shy and introverted as a child and he loosely based the Rudolph character on his childhood feelings of alienation from children his own age. The original name of the red-nosed reindeer was to be Rollo, but executives did not like that name, or the other suggested name of Reginald. The name Rudolf came from the author's young daughter!


[As a side note to this story: Robert May’s wife passed away from a long and terminal illness about the same time he created Rudolph. Since he had created Rudolph as a Montgomery Ward employee, the company held the copyright to all royalties received from the story. Deeply in debt from all the medical bills resulting from his wife’s illness, May persuaded Montgomery Ward’s corporate president, Sewell Avery, to turn the copyright over to him in January 1947. With the rights in hand, May’s financial security was assured.]



From the Choir Loft


Our choirs will be presenting the musical drama:


"A 1940’s Christmas Homecoming Sunday (12/10) at 7:00 inside the beautiful First United Church in Silver Creek, NY. (The big white church in the center of Silver Creek) We would like to encourage you to come out and bring a few visitors. This musical is a powerful Christ-centered message presented in the "big band" style of the 1940’s. We guarantee you will be impressed and encouraged…Or your money back! (By the way, we’re only asking for a "free-will" offering!)


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History of Christmas Toys


In 1949, Ole Christiansen, a Danish toy maker, began to manufacture toy blocks with a new twist. Christiansen created a plastic brick that can be locked together in different configurations…The Lego, which comes from the Danish ‘leg godt,’ meaning "play well" was born. The world's children spend 5 billion hours a year playing with LEGO bricks.


The Lego Blocks fit together in 102,981,500 different ways! (For those of us from N.T., that’s almost 103 million!)


______________________________

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Today in history

(December 10)


1995 – Worst snowstorm in Buffalo history with 37.9" of snow falling in a 24 hour period


1963 – 6 year old Donny Osmond made his singing debut on the Andy Williams TV show


1915 – The ten millionth Model-T Ford was assembled in Detroit, Michigan by Ford Motor


1672 – NY Governor Lovelace announced mail service to begin between NYC & Boston


1520 – Martin Luther publicly burned papal edict


Church office: (716) 672-2048, Bud: (716) 934-7734, email:


tubamanbud@yahoo.com, www.frombudsworld.blogspot.com









Bud’s


History of the Carols


December 10, 2006


"O Little Town of Bethlehem"




(1868) pg. 230


Words: Phillips Brooks (1835 – 1893) Music: Lewis H. Redner (1830 – 1908)



Three years after his return from a trip to the Holy Land in 1865, Philadelphia preacher Phillips Brooks found himself still deeply moved by Bethlehem’s "simplicity and wondrous beauty." Brooks wrote about his horseback journey from Jerusalem to Bethlehem, where he assisted with the midnight service on Christmas Eve, 1865. "I remember standing in the old church in Bethlehem, close to the spot where Jesus was born, when the whole church was ringing hour after hour with splendid hymns of praise to God. How again and again it seemed as if I could hear voices I knew well, telling each other of the Wonderful Night of the Savior’s birth."


He penned some lines that he thought captured the serene atmosphere of the place where Jesus was born, and asked the organist of his church, Lewis Redner, if he could compose a melody.


Redner was a wealthy real estate broker as well as the church organist at Holy Trinity Church. Redner struggled with his task day after day, until, waking from a nap on the afternoon of Christmas Eve, he seemed to hear "an angel strain" and was finally inspired to jot down a tune that matched Brooks’ verses perfectly.


That was in 1868, but ‘O Little Town of Bethlehem’ did not gain its universal popularity until 1882, when it was published in the new hymnal of the Episcopal Church.



Meanwhile…1868…138 years ago…in the United States…



U. S. President: Andrew Johnson…Vice-President: None




U.S. House of Representatives voted to impeach President Andrew Johnson


Cornell University (Ithaca, NY) was opened


Brigham Young married his 27th wife


William Hinds received a patent for the "Candlestick"


Frederick Olmsted was hired to design the City of Buffalo’s public parks



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ef. ThenSingsMySoul Cyberhymnal TimelinesOfHistory SilverCreek.com DmarieCapsule RDM

Tuesday, December 5, 2006

December 3, 2006

Christmas Tunes

‘Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!’


One oppressively hot day in July 1945, Jule Styne and Sammy Cahn were in Los Angeles to talk with their publisher, Edwin H. Morris. Their business finished, Cahn suggested that they go to the beach to cool off. But Styne, always businesslike, thought they ought to work a little first. He suggested that they cool off by writing a winter song. Cahn finally agreed and dashed off the beginnings of a lyric; Styne responded with the beginnings of a tune. Before long, ‘Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow’ was finished. Vaughn Monroe’s recording shot to the top of the pop charts during Christmas of 1945.


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The Christmas season From the choir loft

As Christian musicians, our sole focus must be to worship God in our music. God created us for fellowship and with fellowship comes communication. We communicate our thoughts and feelings through our songs. In the Bible, from the time of Moses up until the present time, God has blessed us with powerful sacred music to worship Him. All our musical efforts during this blessed Christmas season are to lift our music in worship to Him. We only hope to honor Him for who He is!


"He is the reason for the Season!"


You know the Christmas musical is less than a week away. (First United Church in Silver Creek, NY on Sunday 12/10, and Sheridan United Methodist Church on Sunday 12/17.) Both dress rehearsals are on Sunday 12/3...we need everyone! The choir will rehearse on Tuesday 12/5 and Tuesday 12/12! Please make every effort to attend all rehearsals and concerts! We need everyone!


Don't forget that we are "Christmas Caroling" on Tuesday, 12/19. If you are singing inside St. Columban's On The Lake, please report to St. Columban's at 6:15 PM. If you are going out to sing to the "shut-ins," please report to Sheridan United Methodist Church at 6:00 PM. We will have music books. We are inviting everyone to sing with us! Not talent necessary. Just a willingness to bless others during this wonderful time of the year.


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History of Christmas Toys

Crayola Crayons


In the early 1900s, Binney & Smith, a chemical company, began to produce slate pencils and a type of dustless chalk. Company executives, and cousins, Edwin Binney and C. Harold Smith realized that a new wax crayon they had developed to mark crates and boxes in their factory would provide a neater and more affordable alternative to costly imported crayons for American schools. Edwin Binney’s wife, Alice, picked Crayola as the brand name. In 1903, an assortment of affordable, multi-colored crayons was offered to the American public for the first time. The first Crayola crayons came in a box of eight and retailed for a nickel. The eight original colors were black, blue, brown, green, orange, red, violet, and yellow. In the company's 102-year history, over one hundred billion Crayola crayons have been produced. Binney & Smith produce nearly three billion crayons each year—that's about seven million every day. That much paraffin wax and colored pigment is enough to make a crayon thirty-seven feet wide and four hundred and twenty feet long, higher than the Statue of Liberty! Crayola crayons are sold in more than eighty countries and packaged in twelve languages. The average American child uses 730 crayons by his/her tenth birthday. Children ages two through eight spend an average of twenty-eight minutes a day coloring. That equals

6.3 billion hours spent coloring annually! The scent of Crayola crayons is among the twenty most recognizable scents to American adults.


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Today in history



(December 3)


1979 – The last Pacer automobile was manufactured

1950 – Paul Harvey began his national radio broadcast career


1947 – "A Streetcar Named Desire" opened on Broadway


1931 – Alka Seltzer was sold for the first time


Church office: (716) 672-2048, Bud: (716) 934-7734, email:


tubamanbud@yahoo.com

Visit "Bud's Blog" at www.frombudsworld.blogspot.com








From Bud’s


History of the Carols


December 3, 2006


"Angels We Have Heard on High"


(1937) pg. 238

Words: Traditional French Carol (1862)


Music: Arranged by Edward Shippen Barnes (1881 - 1958)



According to the story of the first Christmas, it was the shepherds tending their flocks near Bethlehem to whom the angels first gave the news of the baby Jesus’ birth. And so, in medieval times shepherds who found themselves minding their little herds in the wintry mountains of southern France on Christmas Eve remembered the story of that first birth and the angels who sang of it.


They called one to the other, each from his own peak, singing the good news as the angels had sung so long ago, until finally the mountaintops themselves rang with a glorious patchwork of echoing voices.


In this favorite carol, the music probably comes from a 17th or 18th century French carol, as does the text. But the back-and-forth "Gloria" refrain is probably based on a much older phrase of music, perhaps a bit of plainsong chant from the Church’s earlier days. The back and forth "gloria’s" in the chorus mimic the echo sound of the shepherds’ voices as they sang from the mountaintops. The combination of tune and text was not published, so far as we know, until it appeared in a carol collection in 1855.



Meanwhile…1937…69 years ago…in the United States…



U. S. President: Franklin D. Roosevelt…Vice-President: John Garner

Average prices


: Bread: 9 cents/loaf, Milk: 12 cents/qt.,

Car: $675, Gas: 20 cents/gal., Stamp: 3 cents


Best Actor


: Spencer Tracy…Favorite songs: ‘The Dipsy Doodle’ by Tommy Dorsey’… ‘The Moon Got in my Eyes’ by Bing Crosby…’Boo Hoo’ by Guy Lombardo

The Hindenburg burst into flames while landing in Lakehurst, NJ


Walt Disney’s ‘Snow White & the 7 Dwarfs’ movie was released


Amelia Earhart disappeared on her ‘around the world’ flight attempt


Rev. James W. Reis was pastor of Sheridan Methodist Church



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ef. The Sheridan Settler Cyberhymnal RDM TanBible DmarieCapsule

Friday, December 1, 2006

From the Choir Loft

How can you tell when your lead singer is at the door?
He can't find the key and doesn't know when to come in!

We've only got a short time left before our Christmas concerts (9 days until we sing in Silver Creek, NY and 16 days left until our Sheridan, NY performance!) Make sure you have your choir books "marked," your concert "attire" ready, and your favorite dark sunglasses ready to go for the remaining rehearsals and concerts.
Remaining Schedule:
Sunday, December 3
2:00 - Dress Rehearsal at Sheridan United Methodist
4:00 - Dress Rehearsal at First United Church
Tuesday (12/5) 7:00 PM rehearsal @ Sheridan United Methodist
Sunday (12/10) Concert @ 1st United Church
(6:00 report/7:00 start)
Tuesday (12/12) 7:00 PM rehearsal @ Sheridan United Methodist
Sunday (12/17) Concert @ Sheridan United Methodist
(6:00 report/7:00 start)
Please remember there will be a reception for all following each concert!
EVERYONE IS INVITED!
(Even for choir members who make mistakes...
well, less than 3!!!!!!)

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

November 26, 2006



Holy Humor...




What kind of man was Boaz before he married Ruth?
Ruthless.
What do they call pastors in Germany?
German Shepherds.
Who was the greatest financier in the Bible?
Noah. He was floating his stock while everyone else was in liquidation.
Who was the greatest female financier in the Bible?
Pharaoh's daughter. She went down to the bank of the Nile and drew out a little prophet.



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From the Choir Loft





Thanksgiving is now over. When I was growing up, my mother always said I couldn’t play the Christmas "records" (remember those?) until Thanksgiving Day. The reason for that rule was she caught me playing "Joy To The World" in August. That means I can now perform Christmas music with a clear conscience. Beginning next week, I will be including the history of some of the "best"



Christmas Tunes (I decide which ones are "best!"). I will also include the history of some of the old Christmas Toys. If you have a favorite Christmas Carol or favorite Christmas toy, let me know and I will do some research on its background.



The Community Chorus has two dress rehearsals on Sunday, December 3, 2006:



2:00 PM @ Sheridan United Methodist Church (Sheridan, NY)



4:00 PM @ First United Church (Silver Creek, NY)



For many reasons, we need you to make both dress rehearsals.



The two performances of the Christmas cantata are:



Sunday, December 10, 2006 at First United Church in Silver Creek (7:00 start/6:00 report)



Sunday, December 17, 2006 at Sheridan United Methodist Church (7:00 start/6:00 report)



Also, Tuesday, December 19th, we will be Christmas Caroling @ St. Columban's and to the many "shut-ins" in our area. Please meet @ *St. Columban's (Route 5 in Silver Creek, NY) @ 6:15 PM, or meet at the church @ 6:00 PM if you are traveling to the shut-ins. We want a big group, including the kids! "Come one...come all!"



[If you know of anyone who would appreciate being visited by Christmas Carolers, please contact me or the church office for a visit from some of the very best Christmas Carolers in Chautauqua County!]



*Because of bridge construction, you must enter St. Columban's on Route 5 from the west side (from the Dunkirk side) of the facility! I know this from personal experience!







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You might be a United Methodist if...



... you know that a circuit rider is not an electrical device



... you've ever owned a pair of 'cross and flame' boxer shorts



... your church is named for a geographical location rather than for a saint



... at least one person in every church meeting says, "But we've never done it that way before!"



... the only church camp song you know by heart is "Kum ba yah"



... you realize that the ‘Book of Discipline’ is not a guide to getting your child to behave



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Today in history



(November 26)



1978 – 10 died in a fire inside a Holiday Inn in Rochester, NY



1968 – The 34th Heisman Trophy was awarded to the USC running back O.J. Simpson



1962 – The 1st recording session under the name ‘Beatles’



1956 – ‘The Price is Right’ debuted on NBC-TV



1940 – The Nazis forced 500,000 Jews in Warsaw, Poland to live in a "walled ghetto"







1865 – ‘Alice in Wonderland’ by Lewis Carroll was 1st published



1861 – The state of West Virginia split from Virginia over the issue of slavery



1832 – The 1st streetcar in America began operating in NYC with a fare of 12 cents



1789 – The 1stNational Thanksgiving’ was celebrated in America



1716 – The 1st lion ever exhibited in America in the Boston Zoo





Church office: (716) 672-2048, Bud: (716) 934-7734, email:



tubamanbud@yahoo.com
















From Bud’s



History of the Hymns



November 26, 2006



"Rock of Ages, Cleft for Me"



(1776) pg. 361



Words



by Augustus M. Toplady (1740 - 1778) Music by Thomas Hastings (1784 - 1872)



Many years after ‘Rock of Ages’ was written, one of the "Jubilee Singers" of Fisk University was on board a ship that caught on fire. He had the presence of mind to place life preservers on himself and his wife. But in the agony of despair, when all on board were trying to save themselves, someone took from his wife her life preserver, so that she found herself helpless in the water. But she clung to her husband, placing her hands firmly on his shoulders as he swam on. After a little while her strength was exhausted and trying to keep his wife’s spirits up, he pleaded with her to sing ‘Rock of Ages.’ Immediately they both began to faintly sing; and their strains fell upon the ears of many in the water around them. One after another, other swimmers joined in. Strength seemed to come to each of the singers; and they were able to hold out a little longer, still faintly singing. A boat was seen approaching, and they did get strength enough to keep themselves afloat until the crew lifted them on board. And thus Toplady’s hymn helped to save more than one from death by the sea, as it has often helped save souls from sin.





Meanwhile…1776…230 years ago…



What happened to the signers of the Declaration of Independence?



Five of the signers of the Declaration of Independence were captured by the British and brutally tortured as traitors. Nine fought in the War for Independence and died from wounds or from hardships they suffered. Two lost their sons in the Continental Army, another two had sons captured and at least a dozen of the fifty-six had their homes pillaged and burned. What kind of men were they? Twenty-five were lawyers or jurists. Eleven were merchants. Nine were farmers or large plantation owners. One was a teacher, one a musician, and one a printer. These were men of means and education, yet they signed the Declaration of Independence, knowing full well that the penalty could be death if they were captured. In the face of the advancing British Army, the Continental Congress fled from Philadelphia to Baltimore on December 12, 1776. It was an especially anxious time for John Hancock, the President of the Congress, as his wife had just given birth to a baby girl. Due to the complications stemming from the trip to Baltimore, the child lived only a few months.



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ef. HistoryOfAmerica HymnHistories TimelinesOfHistory TanBible PoliticsAndVirtue

Monday, November 20, 2006

11/20/06


"Bump in the night"

A man is walking home alone late one foggy night... when behind him he hears:
BUMP... BUMP... BUMP...
Walking faster, he looks back and through the fog he makes out the image of an upright casket banging its way down the middle of the street toward him. Terrified, the man begins to run toward his home, the casket bouncing quickly behind him.
FASTER... FASTER... BUMP... BUMP... BUMP...
He runs up to his door, fumbles with his keys, opens the door, rushes in,


slams and locks the door behind him.
However, the casket crashes through his door, with the lid of the casket clapping
clappity-BUMP... clappity-BUMP... clappity-BUMP... on his heels, the terrified man runs.
Rushing upstairs to the bathroom, the man locks himself in. His heart is pounding;


his head is reeling; his breath is coming in sobbing gasps.
With a loud CRASH the casket breaks down the door. Bumping and clapping toward him.
The man screams and reaches for something, anything, but all he can find is a bottle of cough syrup!
Desperate, he throws the cough syrup at the casket... and,
(...hope you're ready for this!!!)
The coffin stops!


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From the Choir Loft

Choir rehearsals for the upcoming Christmas musical are in full swing and we’re still looking for more participants!


If you can help by singing with us, or by videotaping the performance, or by greeting or ushering during the cantata, or by acting in the drama portion of the cantata, or by finding us some theater spotlights, or by helping build a few sets, or by providing a few set decorations, or by dancing during the "big band" music…we need you! Why not call Bud or call the church office to offer some help?


Christmas caroling will be Tuesday, December 19 at 6:00 PM. Everyone is invited! Especially kids!

Do you know anyone who would appreciate Christmas Carolers singing outside their door? Call me and we will sing for them. Do you have any Christmas Caroling books we could borrow?

Yes folks...there is a BLOG from Bud. We'll be including the Bud's World and History of the Hymns articles plus choir announcements and information. The Blog address is:


http://frombudsworld.blogspot.com/


Happy Thanksgiving!


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Wit or Wisdom?


"To me, old age is fifteen years older than I am."


- Bernard M. Baruch


"Millions of people long for immortality who do not know what to do


with themselves on a rainy Sunday afternoon."


- Susan Ertz


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Today in history

(November 19)


1965 – Kellogg’s introduced America to the "Pop Tart"


1959 – The Ford Motor Co. discontinued the unpopular "Edsel"


1928 – The 1st issue of Time Magazine was published (Japanese Emperor Hirohito on cover)


1895 – The pencil was patented as "The Paper Pencil"


1863 – President Abraham Lincoln delivered his famous "Gettysburg Address"


1644 – The 1st Protestant Ministry Society was formed in New England



Church office: 672-2048, Bud: 934-7734, email:


tubamanbud@yahoo.com







From Bud ’s


History of the Hymns


November 19, 2006


"Praise God, from Whom All Blessings Flow"


(1978) pg. 95

Words


by Thomas Ken (1637 - 1711) Music by Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872 - 1958)

Nearly every English-speaking Protestant congregation unites at least once each Sunday in this noble overture of praise. These lyrics, sung as the "Doxology" in many churches, are actually the last verse of a longer hymn, "Awake, My Soul, and with the Sun." It has been said that the "Doxology" has done more to teach the doctrine of the Trinity than all the theology books ever written.



The author of this text was a bold, outspoken 17th century Anglican bishop named Thomas Ken. Ken’s illustrious career in the ministry was stormy and colorful. He served for a time as the English chaplain at the royal court in The Hague, Holland. He was so outspoken; however, in denouncing the corrupt lives of those in authority at the Dutch capital that he was compelled to leave after a short stay. Upon his return to England, he was appointed by King Charles II to be one of his chaplains. Ken continued to reveal the same spirit of boldness in rebuking the moral sins of his dissolute English monarch. Despite this, King Charles always admired his courageous chaplain, calling him "the good little man."

History & Traditions of Thanksgiving…


Thanksgiving is a national holiday in the United States commemorating the harvest reaped by the Plymouth Colony in 1621, after a winter of great starvation and hardship. In that year Gov. William Bradford proclaimed a day of thanksgiving, and all the colonists and the neighboring Native Americans shared the feast. Although similar observances were held locally, they were sporadic and had no set date. After the American Revolution the first national Thanksgiving Day, proclaimed by George Washington, was Nov. 26, 1789. Abraham Lincoln revived the custom in 1863, appointing as the date the last Thursday of November. In 1939, 1940, and 1941 Franklin D. Roosevelt proclaimed Thanksgiving to be the third Thursday in November. When a conflict arose between President Roosevelt’s proclamation and some state governors, Congress passed a joint resolution in 1941 decreeing that Thanksgiving should fall on the fourth Thursday of November. The day is observed by church services and family reunions. The customary turkey dinner is a reminder of the four wild turkeys served at the Pilgrims’ first thanksgiving feast.


The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2001-05 Columbia University Press