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St
John's Day
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In England, people used to celebrate St. John's Eve by setting great bonfires after sunset. This was known as 'setting the watch' and men, women and children would jump through these bonfires for luck. The streets were lined with lanterns, and people carried cresset lamps set on poles as they went from one bonfire to the next. These wandering, garlanded bands were called a 'marching watch'. Often they were attended by morris dancers, and traditional players dressed as a unicorn, a dragon, and six hobby-horse riders.
In northern countries such as Scandinavia, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania the summer solstice is still celebrated on this day. Traditionally, the evening festivities last the entire night, because the Sun does not set at this time in far northern latitudes. During this celebration men wear crowns of oak leaves and women put on wreaths of wild flowers. A bonfire is built, around which the night's activities take place.
In Sweden, flowers are an important aspect of the Midsummer festival. Girls and women weave wreaths of flowers to wear in their hair for the day. Wreaths or bouquets are traditionally made with seven or nine different types of wildflowers. Homes are similarly decorated: a flower wreath may be hung from the ceiling to bring blessing to the house and a pair of young birch branches put at the front door.
Family
and friends get together and feast on pickled herring, boiled
potatoes, sour cream, crisp bread, beer and schnapps, followed by
strawberries or fresh fruit for dessert. After the meal, people dance
around a Maypole made of birch branches and covered with flowers. They
sing traditional songs, play games and continue celebrating into the
next day (the sun doesn't set in Scandinavia at this time of year!).
Huge crosses called Midsommarstoeng are also constructed,
like the Maypole, from birch branches and covered with leaves and
flowers. A flower wreath may be hung on both sides of the cross, from
the horizontal beam.
Celebration of this holiday traditionally began the night before, since in ancient times days were reckoned from evening to evening, rather than from midnight to midnight as we do now (hence the prominence of "eve's", as in Christmas Eve, New Year's Eve, Halloween, etc). St. John's Eve, June 23, was sometimes known as Bonfire Night in Ireland. Up to the mid-20th century, Irish Catholics lit large communal bonfires at sunset on this day, or small family fires outside their houses.
The communal bonfires were traditionally piled very high with wood, sticks, dry brambles, etc. Each household would contribute fuel for the fire. At dusk the whole town would gather around the pile, and an elderly man in the community would light the bonfire while saying the following prayer:
"In honour of God and of St. John, to the fruitfulness and profit of our planting and our work, in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, Amen."The elders then led everyone in praying a decade or more of the Rosary, to obtain God's blessing on their crops and a bountiful harvest. Sometimes a parish priest would attend and lead the prayers. Everyone would walk clockwise around the bonfire while praying the Rosary. The bonfires were also used as places to reverently dispose of old and broken sacramentals, such as rosaries, statues and scapulars (burning is the proper way to dispose of some blessed items).
After the prayers, the merriment would begin: dancing, singing, shouting, blowing horns, storytelling, instrumental solos, etc. The bonfire was tended until long after midnight; as it burned down, some men would begin jumping over the low fire, and boys might grab burning sticks and throw them into the air to watch the sparks fly.
Sometimes young men would walk through the fields holding torches lighted from the fire; this was believed to bring God's blessing on the fields and protect the crops from harm. After the fire burned out, households would carry the ashes home to sprinkle on the four corners of the fields to bless their crops, and maybe lay an ember or two from the bonfire on their hearth.
The small family fires were more subdued and prayerful, with prayers for God's blessing and protection on flocks, fields and members of the household. While the large communal bonfires seem to have ceased by the mid-twentieth century, these small fires may still occur in remote parts of Ireland.
Traditionally, people gathered in beautiful spots such as on hilltops or by rivers to feast and honour men named John. A large bonfire and wheel hub on a post were set afire. It was thought that the wider the area that was illuminated by the fire, the better the harvest would be. Young people gathered grasses with which they predicted their futures. Girls also wore wreaths and later set them afloat on rivers and lakes to find out if they would marry or not in the following year. Unmarried young men and women sang, danced and jumped over the remains of the bonfire until daybreak. St. John's Day dew was thought to have many magical healing properties. The dew was also used by village sorceresses for malevolent purposes—for preventing cows from giving milk.
So the Christian Feast of St John has roots in a pagan past, became a major holiday during the catholic ascendancy, and has now perhaps begun to revert to the spirit of its origins. The essential, seasonal nature of the festivity is deeply ingrained in our culture, a fact that was not lost upon the early leaders of the church, as they managed the transition from the ancient pagan ways to the newer Christian dispensation.
Christian Feasts replaced their pagan competitors, smoothing the pathway to the new faith. Lady Day marks the Vernal Equinox, St John's Day marks the Summer Solstice, Michaelmas the Autumnal Equinox and Christmas the Winter Solstice. This is the cardinal cross that lies at the heart of tropical astrology—and at the centre of the Christian system. The astrological symbolism is deep, and underpins our archetypal responses to all four of the quarter day celebrations.
For more detail on the pagan origins of Saint John the Baptists's Day, check out Hislop's explanations on line at The Two Babylons. Although Hislop is of the school of Christian thought that holds that the pagan origins of Christian festivals is evidence of the deceptive work of the devil, his detailed scholarship is well worth reading.
Article Source - http://www.astrologycom.com