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Quote of the day

“God did conceale the time when Christ was borne, upon the same reason that He tooke away the body of Moses, that they might not put an holinesse upon...”

Dawson, William Francis. Christmas: Its Origin and Associations. London: Elliot Stock, 1902.

Devotional

Jesus was estimated lower than his servant (1886)

The Jews sent priests and Levites from Jerusalem to ask [John the Baptist], “Who are you?”—John 1:19 (ESV).The great mas...

Events

1542

Death in Suzdal, Russia, of Solomonia Yuryevna Saburova, forced into a nunnery because of her failure to bear a son and heir for Grand Prince Vasili III of Muscovy. A woman of exemplary character, she will be recognized as a saint.

Authority for the date: Wikipedia.

1555

Martyrdom of John Philpot, archdeacon of Winchester. As he was going to the stake in Smithfield, the sheriff’s men offered to carry him over a muddy spot, but Philpot declined, saying “I am content to go to my journey’s end on foot.” He knelt and kissed the stake, recited three psalms and then submitted to the flame. Years earlier he had been one of the religious leaders who condemned Joan of Kent to a similar fate.

Authority for the date: Standard encyclopedias.

1666

Covenanter minister Hugh McCall is brought into court, found guilty, and condemned to hang for his resistance to the authority claimed by the king over the Scottish church. The verdict will be carried out four days later and on the way to the scaffold, McCall will assure his father that his death will do more good for the cause of God’s people than twenty more years in the pulpit.

Authority for the date: http://www.clanmccall.org/stories.htm

1808

Baptism of Jane Eliza Leeson in St. Mary’s Church, Nottingham. She will become a prolific hymnwriter, especially of children’s hymns such as “Savior, Teach Me Day by Day,” and translator of hymns from Latin to English.

Authority for the date: The Canterbury Dictionary of Hymnology

1821

Young George Müller is jailed at Wolfenbüttel Castle (in Germany) on theft charges and will remain imprisoned until 22 January the following year. After his conversion, he will become a faithful steward of contributions to Christian charities.

Authority for the date: Muller, George. A Narrative of Some of the Lord’s Dealings with George Muller. 

1919

Death of Wu Hongyu in Shanghai. He had been one of the first three priests ordained in the American Episcopal Church of China. He had used a medical ministry to gain access to souls.

Authority for the date: Biographical Dictionary of Chinese Christianity.

1925

Death in England of Edith Warner, from pleursy and complications, after thirty-three years of service in the Niger.

Authority for the date: Basden, G. T. Edith Warner of the Niger. London: Seeley, Service & Co., 1927.

1974

Death in India of Evelyn “Granny” Brand, who had been an extraordinary missionary in the hill country. She had wanted to complete the work begun by her husband and herself years earlier, but mission authorities would not let her. So upon her “retirement” she moved to the hills and worked there with great success for twenty-four years more until her death.

Authority for the date: Wilson, Dorothy Clarke. Granny Brand, her story. Chappaqua, New York: Christian Herald Books, 1976.

1975

The Evangelical Lutheran Church in South Africa is founded. During the session unknown perpetrators hurl tear gas cannisters into the assembly through a window, injuring seventeen delegates.

Authority for the date: http://www.elcsa.org.za/history-.html

1975

Elder Seraphim (Romantsov) takes ill during a vigil, and is forced to go to bed, where he will die on the last day of the year. He had lived a life of ascetism, humility, and prayer, giving wise spiritual council to all who requested it. Under the Soviets, he had been sent with convicts to canal construction and afterward had been forced to hide for twelve years.

Authority for the date: http://orthodoxwiki.org/Seraphim_(Romantsov).

1979

The Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith withdraws Hans Küng’s missio canonica, which had permitted him to teach in the name of the church. Küng had amassed evidence against the papal claim to speak infallibility (when pronouncing officially on matters of morals and doctrine) and had made statements repugnant to Catholic theology, as that in certain circumstances a lay person could consecrate the bread and wine of the Eucharist. 

Authority for the date: Bald, Margaret. Literature Suppressed on Religious Grounds. Facts on File, 2006. p155.

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