This is in reference to teh Ghost tipping soem Christmas Cheer from his tourch. Scooge quessitons if the "flavour" would work on any other dinner on Christmas Day. The Ghost relies was if it were given kindly yes but to the por most of all. Scooge questioned why the poor most of all. The Ghost response was sharper saying "Because they it is need there most of all". here the message is that for anyone to have some comfort at Christmas if its offered and accept is good but the poor need it most as they have nothing otherwise.
The second spirit showed Scrooge the harsh reality of the poor and highlighted the importance of helping those in need. The spirit emphasized that it is crucial to show compassion and care for others, especially those who are less fortunate.
So Scrooge sees how his poor employee and his family still keep Christmas despite having very little
The everyone can keep Christmas in their hearts no matter how rich or poor they are and it is that spirit and not money that is important
He learns what is happeneing around him that he choses to ignore . He sees the deprivation and the suffering but also the fact that people like the Cratchits who were quite poor still took time to keep Christmas in their hearts - He also learns that Tiny Tim many not, without help see another Christmas and that man has two failings. These are Ignorance and Want and Scrooge is warned that Ignornace is the most dangerous of the two
The Ghost of Christmas Past shows Scrooge what and how his past has effected him and tries to tell him that it is the past and now he must look to the future, he cannot change the past The Ghost of Christmas Present shows Scrooge what is happening around him at Christmas and that it doesn't matter how rich or poor everyone can keep the season in their hearts but he leave Scrooge with two warnings . Firstly Tiny Tim will not see another of his Christmas brothers and second that ignorance and want are all around Scrooge
The large man wants Scrooge to mend his ways and change his selfish behavior so that he can avoid the same fate as Marley - being bound in chains and condemned to wander the afterlife as a tormented spirit. He warns Scrooge that he still has a chance to change, but time is running out.
Scrooge calls Tiny Tim, Bob Cratchit's son, a poor boy in "A Christmas Carol" by Charles Dickens.
No Jesus was talking of poor in spirit, and nothing to do with finance. As those who are "Poor in Spirit" have the most to gain.
The three ghosts in "A Christmas Carol" are the Ghost of Christmas Past, the Ghost of Christmas Present, and the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come. They each play a role in helping Scrooge confront his past, understand the joy of the present, and see the potential consequences of his actions in the future in order to inspire him to change for the better.
There were four spirits that visited Scrooge that night: the Spirit of his dead partner Marley; the Spirit of Christmas Past, who "took" Scrooge back in time to Christmases--both good and bad--when Scrooge was younger; the Spirit of Christmas Present, who "took" him to his nephew Fred's home and the Crachit's home, to show him how joyously they were enjoying the season, in spite of being poor; and the Spirit of Christmas Yet to Come, who "took" him into the future to scenes relating to Scrooge's own death. Scrooge convinced the last Spirit to leave by promising it he would change.The two spirits under the robe of the Ghost of Christmas Present were Ignorance and Want.
Bob Cratchit
Workhouses. or prisons
In "A Christmas Carol," Scrooge says the tear he sheds is "not ungenerous, for it was not welcome." He admits that he hoped to lessen the spirit's effect on him by pretending not to see its sadness, but in reality, he was deeply affected by the vision shown to him.