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Asheville's Christmas Community: Faith, Giving, and Holiday Cheer
Published 4 months ago
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Good morning, this is your Asheville Local Frequency for Thursday, December 25.
Merry Christmas, Asheville! While many of us unwrap gifts and savor family traditions today, our communitys resilient spirit shines through in heartfelt ways that make this holiday truly special. Last night, the Cathedral of All Souls brought festive joy to parishioners with two packed Christmas Eve Eucharists at St. Georges Episcopal Church, their temporary home since Hurricane Helene flooded every corner of their historic Biltmore Village site. Dean Sarah Hurlbert shared how turnout soared this year as folks returned from displacements, rebuilding lives and now eyeing flood-resilient designs from architects, with renderings set for February and a capital campaign to raise one and a half million for loans and recovery. Its a powerful reminder that faith and community are mucking out the mess and rising stronger, ready to serve neighbors in future storms.
Speaking of giving back, the Asheville Buncombe Community Christian Ministry wrapped up their Christmas Angel Tree Program amid record need, serving over two thousand three hundred kids from nine hundred fifty families hit hard post-Helene. Volunteers like Beth Farmer packed personalized wish lists, providing wrap, tape, and decor so parents could hand over the magic themselves, sparing tough choices between heat and holiday cheer. If youre moved to help year-round, their crisis ministry is still calling for hands-on support.
On the roads, a truck fire yesterday afternoon near Smokey Park Highway Exit on I-40 westbound scorched grass and closed lanes until nearly four, but NCDOT cleared it swiftly, keeping holiday travel flowing. Stay safe out there, drivers.
For todays festivities, head to the Omni Grove Park Inn later if youre not a guest, as their dazzling National Gingerbread House Competition display reopens post-Christmas, showcasing sweet architectural wonders that dazzle all ages. Families, tune into Asheville FM from one to three PM for Professor Teds prog-rock Christmas special on Closer to the Edge, blending festive tunes with epic jams. Craving dinner out? The Watch at The Restoration Hotel offers cozy Christmas spreads from noon to eight, perfect for toasting the season.
Looking ahead, tomorrows Friday night brings Ween-Bath, an Asheville all-star tribute to Ween and Black Sabbath at Third Room, doors at eight for fifteen bucks a ticket, promising weird celestial chaos. And Deck the Trees glows through early January in Black Mountain and Swannanoa, with over fifty music-and-song themed displays benefiting the Fuel Fund, plus free entry to Asheville Yards skating and more family fun.
This has been Asheville Local Frequency. Well see you tomorrow with more local updates.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Merry Christmas, Asheville! While many of us unwrap gifts and savor family traditions today, our communitys resilient spirit shines through in heartfelt ways that make this holiday truly special. Last night, the Cathedral of All Souls brought festive joy to parishioners with two packed Christmas Eve Eucharists at St. Georges Episcopal Church, their temporary home since Hurricane Helene flooded every corner of their historic Biltmore Village site. Dean Sarah Hurlbert shared how turnout soared this year as folks returned from displacements, rebuilding lives and now eyeing flood-resilient designs from architects, with renderings set for February and a capital campaign to raise one and a half million for loans and recovery. Its a powerful reminder that faith and community are mucking out the mess and rising stronger, ready to serve neighbors in future storms.
Speaking of giving back, the Asheville Buncombe Community Christian Ministry wrapped up their Christmas Angel Tree Program amid record need, serving over two thousand three hundred kids from nine hundred fifty families hit hard post-Helene. Volunteers like Beth Farmer packed personalized wish lists, providing wrap, tape, and decor so parents could hand over the magic themselves, sparing tough choices between heat and holiday cheer. If youre moved to help year-round, their crisis ministry is still calling for hands-on support.
On the roads, a truck fire yesterday afternoon near Smokey Park Highway Exit on I-40 westbound scorched grass and closed lanes until nearly four, but NCDOT cleared it swiftly, keeping holiday travel flowing. Stay safe out there, drivers.
For todays festivities, head to the Omni Grove Park Inn later if youre not a guest, as their dazzling National Gingerbread House Competition display reopens post-Christmas, showcasing sweet architectural wonders that dazzle all ages. Families, tune into Asheville FM from one to three PM for Professor Teds prog-rock Christmas special on Closer to the Edge, blending festive tunes with epic jams. Craving dinner out? The Watch at The Restoration Hotel offers cozy Christmas spreads from noon to eight, perfect for toasting the season.
Looking ahead, tomorrows Friday night brings Ween-Bath, an Asheville all-star tribute to Ween and Black Sabbath at Third Room, doors at eight for fifteen bucks a ticket, promising weird celestial chaos. And Deck the Trees glows through early January in Black Mountain and Swannanoa, with over fifty music-and-song themed displays benefiting the Fuel Fund, plus free entry to Asheville Yards skating and more family fun.
This has been Asheville Local Frequency. Well see you tomorrow with more local updates.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI