Seasons Greetings from ChicagoWeddingDJs. No matter how you celebrate the season… if it’s called Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, Solstice, Festivus, or the Yuletide. We wish you all the best from ChicagoWeddingDJs.
Seasons Greetings from ChicagoWeddingDJs
Christmas
- Christmas is December 25th
- It’s an annual festival
- It commemorates the birth of Jesus Christ
Hanukkah
- In 2020 begins Thursday, December 10 at sunset and ends Friday, December 18
- Hanukkah is a Jewish holiday
- It commemorates the rededication of the Holy Temple in Jerusalem
Kwanzaa
- Begins Monday, December 26 ends Sunday, January 1
- Created in 1966
- African-American Holiday
- Means: “The First Fruits of Harvest”
- A celebration of family, community, and culture
- Not created as an alternate to people’s own religious holiday
Solstice
- Is December 21st
- Longest night of the year
- Shortest day of the year
Festivus
- Is December 23rd
- It’s a parody
- Also a secular holiday
- And alternate to the pressures and commercialism of the Christmas season
- A time to air grievances
Yuletide
- Modern times is a synonym for Christmas
- Older than Christmas
- Refers to a midwinter pagan festival
Commonly spoken or written as a greeting, Season’s greetings, is used before or during the Christmas and holiday time.
Spread holiday cheer while in your home city of Chicago. Or wherever you are.
Send this holiday love with a little reminder that soon we will all celebrate together again.
White the origins of the phrase Seasons Greetings are not known not might have something to do with the saying “Happy Christmas”.
It had become more popular to say Merry Christmas, rather than Happy Christmas. This making it more non-denominational.
Happy Holidays has received am unpopular vote for it’s reference to the war on Christmas. None the less it’s very inclusive and still widely used.
Some people might also say Holiday Wishes. That term being also of the inclusive nature of the former.
It all still means that we wish each other joy, so whatever phrase you use you’re making a gesture of happiness for the festive season.