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Advent and Christmas with Tomie de Paola and Others






An Integrated Literature Unit for
Advent and Christmas
 

 



 




The following is an example of how to make living the liturgical
year all you do for “school” for a season. This is an advent and Christmas unit. It was designed with the real limitations and demands of a
large family in mind.
It is not necessary to do everything. It is necessary to prayerfully discern what would best
benefit your family. 



  






My favorite children's
authors is Tomie de Paola (click

here
or on the book cover for his new autobiography!). A Catholic of Irish-Italian descent, he is not afraid to
wear his faith on his sleeve. He liberally sprinkles

inferences
to Mass, the saints, and
even confession throughout basically secular books that can easily
be found on public library shelves. In addition to many folktales from varied cultures, he has
also written several well-researched, beautifully illustrated
stories of saints. And
he has enough advent and Christmas books to carry a family from the
first Sunday in advent through Epiphany. 








In


Merr
y
Christmas, Strega Nona
, many children will recognize dear
old "Grandma Witch" who begins preparing for her traditional
Christmas Eve feast on the first Sunday of Advent. She staunchly refuses to use the magic she employs during
the rest of the year, insisting that Christmas has a magic of its
own. Big Anthony, her
bumbling helper, has a Christmas surprise planned for the old lady
and the entire town turns out to help him make the holiday a
special one for her. 


 

Next
in line is

Country Angel Christmas
. I introduced this one on the Feast of Saint Nicholas,
December 6. There is definitely a sense of advent as a time of
preparation as all the angels in heaven are preparing for the
celestial Christmas celebration. The littlest angels are told to be scarce while the barn
angels ready the animals for the procession, the kitchen angels
bake, and the music angels rehearse carols. It is Saint Nicholas, in heaven where he belongs, who finds
the littlest angels the all-important job of providing light for
the celebration. This
book works beautifully at the beginning of the season because, like
Merry Christmas, Strega Nona, there is great emphasis on the
preparation. 

 






December
12 is the feast of the

Lady of Guadalupe
and de Paola has an exquisite picture book by
that name. The author is both a gifted artist and a superb
storyteller. This is
the story of the Aztec peasant Juan Diego, who sees our Lady as a
pregnant Mexican woman and hears her tell him to build shrine in
her honor. He must
convince a skeptical bishop. Mary graciously provides a miraculous sign, captured
beautifully in de Paola's pictures. 



 

Hispanic
parishes always have a large picture of Our Lady of Guadelupe and
carry it in procession on her feast day. True to his love of detail, de Paola depicts such a
procession in

The Legend of the Poinsettia
. Lucida is little girl who is helping her mother weave a
blanket for the Christmas crèche at church. When her mother suddenly falls seriously ill, the child
tries to finish the blanket herself. She tangles it miserably and is bereft at the thought of
having nothing to bring to the manger. An old woman mysteriously appears outside the church and
suggests she carry a bundle of weeds inside. The picture of Lucida kneeling by the crèche, surrounded by
glorious poinsettias, is guaranteed to inspire you to run out and
buy many, many of these flowers to adorn your mangers at home. Both this book and The
Lady of Guadelupe
are available in Spanish. 









Closer
to Christmas,

The Clown of God
is a lovely way to remind children that
the greatest gift, indeed Christ's own gift, is the gift of self. A traveling juggler has spent his whole life making people
laugh. Near the end of
his days, he searches for the perfect present for Mary and the
Infant. He learns and
teaches a valuable lesson in giving. 



 


 

Following the clown theme,

Jingle, the Christmas Clown
, is an award winner not to be
missed. Jingle is the
youngest clown
in the circus and the
circus is traveling to the big city for its annual Christmas
performance. Every
year, the circus stops in a little village for Christmas Eve. This year, they arrive to find the village destitute. All of the young people have left; even the church is
closed. The circus
presses on, except for Jingle, the youngest clown, and the baby
animals, who are too tired to travel. The little animals and Ji
ngle put on a very
special show for the old villagers. An angel appears amidst golden stars at the show's finale. The recipe for golden star cookies at the end of the book is
a natural invitation to an afternoon of cookie baking and
decorating.
  





On January first,


Mary, The Mother of Jesus

 is a logical choice. This book is lovely and quite different from the author’s
typical children’s storybook or his saints’ stories. Mary’s life is depicted in fifteen beautifully illustrated
segments. In his
forward, Tomie de Paola writes, “When I was an art student in 1956,
I saw the Giotto frescoes of the life of Mary in the Arena Chapel
in Padua, Italy. I
knew that some day, I would attempt my own visual version of Mary’s
life. I have drawn on
scripture, legend and tradition for the praise of Mary, the mother
of Jesus.” 





Stretching beyond Christmas day and on to Epiphany,


The Story of the Three Wise Kings
, recounts the legend of
the Wisemen. They
travel to Bethlehem to pay homage to Jesus. Along the way, they encounter Herod and before their return,
they are warned by an angel to travel a different route. 







Finally,


The Legend of Old Befana
must be told. Old Befana is a cranky old Italian woman who is too set in
her ways to get up immediately to follow the Wisemen who are
following the star to visit the Baby King. Because she sets out too late, she never catches up with the
wise men's traveling party and so she searches still, leaving
goodies outside the doors of children on the Feast of the Three
Kings. "For, after
all," says Old Befana, "I never know which child might be the Baby
King of Bethlehem."
Sounds like the
beginning of a new
tradition in our house. 

The First Week of Advent


Begin to create an“Advent to Ascension” lapbook or notebook. Read through the Gospel of Luke, using the Navarre Bible or the Ignatius Catholic Study Bible.  As you go, illustrate and narrate the mysteries of the rosary and organize them into a lapbook.  Be sure to include the luminous mysteries. Other useful books include The Miracles of Jesus by Tomie de Paola, The Miracles of Jesus retold by Selina Hastings and The Parables of Jesus by Tomie de Paola.  Also, Mary the Mother of Jesus by Tomie de Paola is helpful for both text and illustrations. Eventually, we’ll walk through the Bible, using lapbooks or notebooks as an organizer for study.


Scripture Memory Verse: Joseph, son of David, do not be afraid to take Mary as your wife, for the child conceived in her is from the Holy Spirit.  She will bear a son, and you are to name him Jesus, for he will save his people form their sins. (Matthew 1:20)

Narration:

Listen to or read Merry Christmas Strega Nona (de Paola) and narrate and illustrate.


And

Listen to or read The Country Angel Christmas (de Paola) and narrate and illustrate.

Reading Practice:

Early readers can read Merry Christmas Strega Nona and The Country Angel Christmas after hearing it read aloud.   If this is too challenging, have the child read from a clean, corrected, typewritten copy of his own narration of the story.

For more advanced readers:
The Littlest Angel (Tazewell)

For Older Children:

Wonderworker: The True Story of How Saint Nicholas Became Santa Claus

Just David (Porter)

Just20david

To Read Aloud together:
26 Fairmount Avenue This is Tomie de Paola’s autobiography.

0698118642

Copywork and Studied Dictation:

For beginners:

Don’t think about what others have done.  Just be yourselves and you will make a fine Christmas.

For Level  2:

His halo was permanently tarnished where he held on to it with one hot, little, chubby hand when he ran, and he was always running. Furthermore, even when he stood very still, it never behaved as a halo should.  It was always slipping down over his right eye...

For Level 3:

The friends, the relatives, the adoring public, the mint of money--they are all David's now.  But once each year, man grown though he is, he picks up his violin and journeys to a little village far up among the hills.  There in a quiet kitchen he plays to an old man and an old woman; and always to himself he says that he is practicing against the time when, his violin at his chin and the bow drawn across the strings, he shall go to meet his father in the far-away land, and tell him of the beautiful world he has left.

Safe surfing while mom makes lists and checks them twice:  Go to Tomie de Paola’s website www.tomie.com and spend some time there every week.  Kids can narrate about what they learned there.

And there is SO MUCH to learn and do at the Saint Nicholas Center.

This year, we are blessed to have many more St. Nicholas ideas at A Living Education.

Rabbit Trails for the whole family:

· Together, make a list of all the Advent activities your family does.  Compare the list with another family.  Are there any new traditions you would like to adopt?

· Write a family advent prayer.  Pray that this will be a special time to prepare for Jesus’ birthday

· Discuss the real hierarchy of angels.

· Help the child make puppets to dramatize Merry Christmas, Strega Nona.  Perform the show for family and friends on Christmas Day.

· Make apple star prints.  Cut an apple in half width-wise (surprise! there is a star inside) and use tempera to print the stars on paper.  Or print them on canvas bags or aprons with fabric paint and give as a Christmas gift.

Appleprint0001

· Make glitter glue stars to hang on the Christmas tree.  Draw stars in glue on wax paper.  Sprinkle with glitter.  When the glue dries, peel away the wax paper.  Use gold thread to hang.

·The country angels harnessed a star to shed light on the Christmas celebration.  During advent, we await Christ, who is the Light of the world.  Make an advent meditation candle to remind you throughout the season that it is Christ’s light that is a “light unto my path and a lamp unto my feet” (Psalm 119: 105).  Decorate a large pillar candle with colored beeswax cut into figures which represent biblical events from the time of Adam and Eve until Jesus’ birth.  (supplies are available from Hearthsong 1-800-325-2502)

· Bake something that requires “peeling sifting, pouring and stirring” like the kitchen angels did.

Read The Baker's Dozen and make cookies using the cookie cutters available from St. Nicholas Center.

·  Make a traditional Italian Christmas Eve dinner.  Throughout Italy, traditional dinners include twelve courses, in honor of the twelve apostles.  (See recipe box for ideas, including Big Anthony’s cod.)  This is a seafood dinner.  You can do this now or wait until it’s really Christmas Eve.

More rabbit trails for older children:

· Research Saint Nicholas.  Read how his legend evolved in Hark! A Christmas Sampler.The Real Story of the St. Nicholas Legend. Narrate a story a day from The Real St. Nicholas: Tales of Generosity from Around the World. Alternatively, read

Realstory

· Find Turkey on the map.  What kind of country is it now?  Write or dictate a report on your findings. The Holy Father will be in Turkey this week, the week before St. Nicholas Day.  Have an older child follow the trip carefully and collect web reports and newspaper clippings.

·  Find Italy on the map.  Research Christmas traditions in Italy. Write or dictate a report on your findings.

·  Tomie de Paola has written several saint stories.  He doesn’t have one entitled The Story of Saint Nicholas.  Write and illustrate one.

Poet Study:

Read "Twas The Night Before Christmas" by Clement C. Moore, Matt Tavares (Illustrator). Read every day, slowly, memorizing the poem together.  This is the only poetry for the entire month.  Break copywork into small chunks.  Let children illustrate segments as they memorize.

Picture Study:

Discuss Tomie de Paola as an author and illustrator.  Read The Art Lesson by Tomie de Paola.  Choose a picture of Saint Nicholas from Country Angel Christmas to study. Discuss your Saint Nicholas choice, without looking at the print, round robin style, beginning with the youngest child. Copy the picture or give a detailed oral narration of it. Compare an icon of Saint Nicholas to dePaola’s drawing in Country Angel Christmas.  Draw your own picture of Saint Nicholas in any style you wish.

Artlesson

Science and Nature Study

· Don’t forget to get outside for a hike and don’t let it get swept away by the pressure of the season.  A brisk walk is a great stress-buster for mom and kids.  Look for natural materials to use as Christmas decorations.

· Decorate pinecones with glitter or sequins or wire them into a wreath.  Tie cinnamon sticks with red ribbon.  String popcorn and cranberries for outdoor trees to feed the birds.

Music:

Enjoy A Classical Kids Christmas

Classical

Tea Time Read Aloud

Saint’s biography:  St. Nicholas the Wonder Worker (Neuberger) or The Real St. Nicholas: Tales of Generosity from Around the World.

Jotham’s Journey (Ytreeide)  This is includes a daily reading for every day of Advent and Christmas Day.  It is an adventure story that can get intense at times.  Preview each selection and paraphrase if you think it necessary.  Not a bedtime story. This is out of print. Worth finding.

Advent and Christmas with Tomie de Paola and Others: Week 2

Scripture Memory Verse: And Mary said, “My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior, For he has regarded the low estate of his handmaiden.  For behold, henceforth all generations will call me blessed; for he who is mighty has done great things for me, and holy is his name.”
Luke 1: 46-49  Shorten as necessary.

Narration:
Child will listen to or read The Legend of the Poinsettia and The Lady of Guadalupe and The Night of Las Posadas and narrate. 

Stories to Read:
The Lady of Guadalupe
The Night of Las Posadas
The Legend of the Poinsettia
The Christmas Miracle of Jonathon Toomey
The Christmas Tree (Salamon)


Read Aloud: A Christmas Carol. (Dickens). 

Copywork
For beginners: May God be as good to you as he was to Juan Diego.

For middles: Juan Diego looked down.  His rough cactus-fiber tilma had been changed into a painting of the Lady just as he had last seen her at the foot of  Tepeyac.

For the big kids:
And Mary said, “My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior, For he has regarded the low estate of his handmaiden. For behold, henceforth all generations will call me blessed; for he who is mighty has done great things for me, and holy is his name.”

Rabbit Trails for the whole family:
Read about Mexico.  Find it on the map and tell about the country today.  How is Christmas celebrated there?
Make Holiday Flan:
4 eggs
2 and one half cups milk
one half cup honey
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 to 2 tablespoons warmed honey or syrup
Method:
In a medium bowl, beat the eggs until foamy.  In a small saucepan, heat the milk and honey together just to simmering, then add the vanilla.
In a slow, thin stream, beat the milk mixture into the eggs.  Our the mixture into a buttered 9” layer cake pan or flan pan.  Place in a large, shallow pan or baking dish filled with hot water to a depth of one-half inch.  Bake at 325 degrees for thirty-five to forty minutes, or until the center is fairly firm.  Glaze with the honey.
Makes six servings
(from Joy to the World by Phyllis Vos Wezeman and Jude Dennis Fournier)

The creche is an important part of The Legend of the Poinsettia.  Where did the tradition of the manger scene begin?  Read about it in Francis, The Poor Man of Assisi by Tomie dePaola.

Make tissue paper flowers in red, white, and pink, traditional poinsettia colors.

Copy de Paola’s picture of Our Lady of Guadeloupe onto cardstock using magic markers.  Send it as a Christmas card.

Using felt, make a large banner of Our Lady like the one in the book.

Have a procession like the one in the book.  Gather up some friends to parade with you and have hot chocolate and cookies afterwards.

Make  Mexican Hot Chocolate for tea time.

Copy the recipe above and embellish the recipe card for your lapbook.

Make a manger scene using old-fashioned clothespins, doll head beads and felt (all supplies are readily available in craft stores).

Make clothespin poinsettia ornaments.
Depaola_week20003

Detailed directions with pictures to follow, but you need old fashioned clothespins and doll heads, artificial poinsettias (3 or 4 will probably do), hot glue and glue gun, a little paint or markers in pink and blue, something to use as doll hair, gold cord to use to hang the ornaments, and flesh colored pipe cleaners.
Depaola_week20005

Make rose pound cake.
Make a Juan Diego for your lapbook. Copy the illustration of Jaun Diego twice.  Cut the tilma only out of one of the copies.  Copy the image of Our Lady.
Depaola_week20001

Cut and glue the image of Our Lady of Guadalupe to the full copy of Juan Diego. Tape the bottom of the tilma-only copy to the Juan Diego. Stick rose stickers to the inside so that when it falls open, you see roses. 
Depaola_week20006

If there is a baby in the house, make a ceremony of letting each child trace a cross on her forehead and say, “May God be as good to you as he was to Juan Diego.”

Depaola_week200011

Make a grotto for Our Lady of Guadalupe
Set up a family shrine.
Depaola_week20002

Make ornaments like the ones  pictured on the 4Real Message Boards.

Watch Juan Diego:  Messenger of Guadalupe

More rabbit trails for older children:
Research Christmas traditions in Mexico. Make a flip book of them for your lapbook.

The story of Our Lady of Guadeloupe is presented as a legend in the book, using another source, read about the Church’s official teaching on Juan Diego. Read about the canonization of Juan Diego.

Our Lady of Guadeloupe is just one of many of Mary’s titles.  Make a list of all of them and decorate the list with embellishments.

Carve a nativity set.

Draw Our Lady of Guadalupe

Poet Study:
Read Twas The Night Before Christmas by Clement C. Moore, Matt Tavares (Illustrator).  Read every day, slowly, memorizing the poem together.  This is the only poetry for the entire month.  Break copywork into small chunks.  Let children illustrate segments as they memorize.

Science and Nature Study
Don’t forget to get outside for a hike and don’t let it get swept away by the pressure of the season.  A brisk walk is a great stress-buster for mom and kids.

Go to a Christmas tree farm and compare the different varieties of trees.  Make sketches and label them in nature notebooks.

Read about Christmas plants in Hark! A Christmas Sampler (beginning on page 60). Visit a nursery to see Christmas plants up close.  Bring home a poinsettia.

Narrate what you learned about Christmas plants and make a poinsettia covered brad-book for your lapbook.  Copy  a poinsettia picture from de Paola’s book, laminate it, trace it onto several pages of lined paper.  Write narrations on the lined paper and “bind” them behind the laminated illustration with a brad.
Depaola_week200012

Music:
Enjoy A Classical Kids Christmas
Listen to Castilian Roses

Tea Time Read Aloud
Saint’s biography: The Story of Our Lady of Guadalupe, Empress of the Americas 

Jotham’s Journey (Ytreeide)  This is includes a daily reading for every day of Advent and Christmas Day.  It is an adventure story that can get intense at times.  Preview each selection and paraphrase if you think it necessary.  Not a bedtime story.

Detailed directions for the Poinsettia Flower Fairy Ornaments:

Poinsettia Flower Fairies

My friend Missy made these with my big kids years ago.  It was fun to make them again with the little guys. I noticed that a certain really big kid wandered in long enough to "help" make three of them.  The boy still can't resist a little paint and the smell of a glue gun!

Ornaments0001

You need a clothespin doll kit, flesh colored pipe cleaners, silk poinsettias, a glue gun, yellow felt, fake hair,  pink paint and paint the color of eyes.

For each flower fairy, snip apart the poinsettias so that you have two larger red petals and two smaller ones.  You'll need two green leaves about the size of the larger red petals. Reserve the middle of the flower, too. Cut a rectangle of yellow felt to use as a tunic. You'll want a very small hole in the middle of it.

Ornaments0003

Glue the hair to the top of the doll head.

Ornaments0004

Glue the larger red petals to the clothes pin to make a skirt.  The petals will curve as you glue them around the clothes pin.  One goes in the front and one goes in the back.

Ornaments0005

Layer the smaller red petals over the larger ones.

Ornaments0006

Thread a flesh colored pipecleaner through the hole in the clothes pin, looping it to make arms.

Ornaments0007

Slip the tunic over the top of the clothespin and tie it with gold cord.

Ornaments0009

Pop the head on top of the clothespin.

Ornaments0010

Glue the green leaves to the back to make fairy wings.

Ornaments00011

Glue a little bit of the center of the poinsettia flowers to the top of the head.  Paint a face or use magic markers.Tie with gold cord to hang. (I prefer to tie the waistcord in back but the crafter who made this one argued differed with me.)

The week before and Christmas Week

“Advent to Ascension” lapbook. Read through the Gospel of Luke, using the Navarre Bible or the Ignatius Catholic Study Bible. As you go, illustrate and narrate the mysteries of the rosary and organize them into a lapbook. Be sure to include the luminous mysteries. Two other useful books included The Miracles of Jesus retold by Selina Hastings and The Parables of Jesus by Tomie de Paola. Also, Mary the Mother of Jesus by Tomie de Paola is helpful for both text and illustrations. Eventually, we’ll walk through the Bible, using lapbooks as an organizer for study.

Scripture memory and copywork choose all or part of Luke 2:7-14

Narration:

Child will listen to or read the following books according to interest and ability and then narrate aloud or write narrations:

Jingle the Christmas Clown 

Clown of God

The Friendly Beasts

Who’s Coming to Our House? (This is a great one to have a new reader read to the toddlers.)

The Miracle of St. Nicholas

The Miracle on34th Street (de Paola illustrator)

Papa’s Angels

For lapbooks, take a color copy of the book covers and reduce them. Keyboard the narration and paste it behind the copy, flipbook style.

Read Alouds:

Christmas Remembered (This is a new Tomie de Paola book this year. We’re pretty excited about our autographed version. Thanks for thinking of us Leah; wish we could have been there!)

St. John Bosco (Vision Books) or watch this wonderful DVD

More copywork for lapbooks:

Make a color copy of each of the animals in The Friendly Beasts and fold over and cut. Copy the verse from the book beneath each animal and paste into lapbook.

On the web:

This Devotions to Infant Jesus website has an overview and links to various pages. On this page there are some images of saints traditionally depicted holding the infant Jesus (Mary , Joseph, Christopher, Anthony, Cajetan)

Consecration of your child to the Infant Jesus would be a special touch to add this Advent.

Rabbit Trails for the whole family:

  • Read the “Gift of the Littlest Shepherd” in Hark! A Christmas Sampler.  Compare the gift of the shepherd with the gift of the juggler.
  • Read The Little Drummer Boy. What gift have you got to give?
  • Make a gift coupon for each person in your family.  Decorate them in Tomie de Paola’s style.
  • Make a gingerbread stable for Jingle’s animals.  Use animal crackers in your scene.
  • Saint John Bosco could juggle.  Find out how this skill was helpful in his ministry.
  • Learn to juggle.
  • Make star cookies using the recipe in Jingle The Christmas Clown. This year, we are making gingerbread star cookies for Gaudete Sunday and decorating them with pink and purple sparkle sugar.
  • On December 28, the Feast of the Holy Innocents, read “The Dough and the Child” in Hark! A Christmas Sampler.  Make yeast bread.
  • After reading The Miracle of St. Nicholas, discuss how the farmer’s wife kept hope alive and made beeswax candles year after year. Make some of your own. Here are some to roll.  Here is some great information for more beeswax candlesmaking. You can order bulk beeswax from Mountain Rose Herbs.
  • A nice addition to the unit study for this week would be to look at some of the devotions to the Holy Child and learn about them:
    Jesu Bambino (Rome)
    Infant of Prague (Czech Republic)
    Santo Nino de Atocha (Spain, Mexico)
    Santo Bambino di Ara Coeli or Lama dei Peligni (Italy)
    Santo Nino of Cebu (Philippines)
    Divino Nino de Bogata (Columbia)

Pray the Infant of Prague Novena as a family.

 

Poet Study:

Read Twas The Night Before Christmas by Clement C. Moore, Matt Tavares (Illustrator). Read every day, slowly, memorizing the poem together. This is the only poetry for the entire month. Break copywork into small chunks. Let children illustrate segments as they memorize.

Picture Study:

Sift through the Christmas cards your family receives. For the ones depicting classic art, learn the titles and artists. Spend an afternoon trying to copy one or two of them.

Science and Nature Study:

  • Jingle took good care of the animals.  Animal were also important to Saint Francis.  Read “The Legend of the Birds” in Hark! A Christmas Sampler .  Make a present for the birds using pinecones, peanut butter, and birdseed.  Hang it with a Christmas ribbon on a tree in your yard.
  • We
    tend to romanticize the stable.  Take a trip to a working barn during
    Christmas week.  Be prepared for unpleasant sights and smells.  Imagine
    a tiny infant there.
  • Write a Christmas story with animals in it.

Music:

Enjoy Christmas Carols 24/7!

Tea Time Read Aloud

Jotham’s Journey (Ytreeide) This is includes a daily reading for every day of Advent and Christmas Day. It is an adventure story that can get intense at times. Preview each selection and paraphrase if you think it necessary. Not a bedtime story.

Candlemas0001 Week Four Mary, The Mother of Jesus  

1.   Read the book as a family and study the pictures.  Compare the events depicted in the book with the mysteries of the rosary.

2.   Illustrate the mysteries of the rosary, reflecting the style in dePaola’s book.  Use the illustration for meditation when you pray the family rosary this year.

3.   Also read The Donkey’s Dream by Barbara Helen Berger.

4.   Read and memorize “The Donkey’s Song” in Hark! A Christmas Sampler.

5.   Using a new calendar, write in all the Marian feast days and decorate those squares.

6.   On January first, we honor Mary in her role as the Mother of God.  Choose a mother (or grandmother or godmother) you know who reminds you of the Blessed Mother.  Write about it.  Illustrate your essay with a border of forget-me-nots like those in The Donkey’s Dream.  Present your essay as a gift to the mother you chose.

7.   Read “The Legend of the Rosemary” in Hark! A Christmas Sampler.

8.   Make rosemary botanical candles.  Wrap and knot a length of wick around a pencil.  Suspend it across the top of a clean quart sized milk carton (cut the top off the carton to make it square).  Melt beeswax in an clean aluminum can set in a pot of simmering water.  Pour into the carton, filling the carton about one quarter of the way full. Let harden slightly and sprinkle with dried rosemary.  Add more hot wax, to the halfway mark and repeat with the rosemary until you have filled the candle.  Let harden completely (overnight).  Peel away the milk carton.

9.   Make Rosemary Chicken for dinner.

2 pounds boneless, skinless chicken breasts

2 cans cream of mushroom soup

one half cup white wine

one teaspoon dried rosemary

Flour the chicken breasts and brown quickly in a skillet with olive oil (no need to cook through).    Put chicken in a crock pot and cover with the rest of the ingredients.  Cook on low eight to ten hours.  Serve over egg noodles.

10.  Obtain a copy of an art book which shows the frescoes that inspired de Paola.  Compare them with de Paola’s drawings.  Write a critical essay contrasting the two.

 

Week Five The Legend of Old Befana 

1.   Read “The Littlest Camel” in Hark! A Christmas Sampler

2.   Read “Baboushka” in Hark! A Christmas Sampler

3.   On January sixth, leave a little gift at a neighbor’s door with a note signed “Old Befana.”  Keep the secret forever.

4.   Make cardboard crowns.  Decorate throughout January with one plastic jewel for every Bible verse memorized.

5.   Make stars from translucent paper to hang in the window to remind you to always follow the star.  (Hearthsong has kits for this 1-800-325-2502)

6.   Make King cake with little treasures baked into it.  Serve with wassail punch.

7.   What is the scientific explanation of the star in the east?

8.   Compare Baboushka with Old Befana.  Write a short, well-organized paragraph contrasting the two.

9.   Cut up this year’s Christmas cards to make flannelboard pieces. Can you tell the whole nativity story with them.  What else can you do with them?  Be creative.

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Quick Prayer to St. Anne

  • Good St. Anne, you were especially favored by God to be the mother of the most holy Virgin Mary, the Mother of our Savior. By your power with your most pure daughter and with her divine Son, kindly obtain for us the grace and the favor we now seek. Please se- cure for us also forgiveness of our past sins, the strength to perform faithfully our daily duties and the help we need to persevere in the love of Jesus and Mary. Amen.

Only for Today

  • Decalogue for Daily Living
    1. Only for today, I will seek to live the livelong day positively without wishing to solve the problems of my life all at once. 2. Only for today, I will take the greatest care of my appearance: I will dress modestly; I will not raise my voice; I will be courteous in my behavior; I will not criticize anyone; I will not claim to improve or to discipline anyone except myself. 3. Only for today, I will be happy in the certainty that I was created to be happy, not only in the other world but also in this one. 4. Only for today, I will adapt to circumstances, without requiring all circumstances to be adapted to my own wishes. 5. Only for today, I will devote ten minutes of my time to some good reading, remembering that just as food is necessary to the life of the body, so good reading is necessary to the life of the soul. 6. Only for today, I will do one good deed and not tell anyone about it. 7. Only for today, I will do at least one thing I do not like doing; and it my feelings are hurt, I will make sure no one notices. 8. Only for today, I will make a plan for myself: I may not follow it to the letter, but I will make it. And I will be on guard against two evils: hastiness and indecision. 9. Only for today, I will firmly believe, despite appearances, that the good Providence of God cares for me as no one else who exists in this world. 10. Only for today, I will have no fears. In particular, I will not be afraid to enjoy what is beautiful and to believe in goodness. Indeed, for twelve hours I can certainly do what might cause me consternation were I to believe I had to do it all my life. Bl. Pope John XXIII

Petition to St. Anne

  • O glorious St. Anne, you are filled with compassion for those who invoke you and with love for those who suffer! Heavily burdened with the weight of my troubles, I cast myself at your feet and humbly beg of you to take this present intention which I recommend to your special care. (mention your petition) Please recommend it to your daughter, the Blessed Virgin Mary, and place it before the throne of Jesus, so that He may bring it to a happy issue. Continue to intercede for me until my request is granted. But above all, obtain for me the grace one day to see my God face to face, and with you and Mary and all the saints to praise and bless Him for all eternity. Amen.

Totus Tuus

  • Immaculate Conception, Mary, my Mother. Live in me. Act in me. Speak in and through me. Think your thoughts in my mind. Love, through my heart. Give me your dispositions and feelings. Teach, lead and guide me to Jesus. Correct, enlighten and expand my thoughts and behavior. Possess my soul. Take over my entire personality and life. Replace it with yourself. Incline me to constant adoration and thanksgiving. Pray in me and through me. Let me live in you and keep me in this union always. – Pope John Paul II

Prayer to Our lady of La Leche for Another Child

  • Lovely Lady of La Leche, most loving mother of the Child Jesus, and my Mother, listen to my humble prayer. Your motherly heart knows my every wish, my every need. To you only, His spotless Virgin Mother, has your Divine Son given to understand the sentiments which fill my soul. Yours was the sacred privilege of being the Mother of the Saviour. Intercede with Him now, my loving Mother, that, in accordance with His will, I may become the mother of other children of our heavenly Father. This I ask, O Lady of La Leche, in the Name of your Divine Son, My Lord and Redeemer. Amen.

Efficacious Novena to the Sacred Heart

  • Efficacious Novena To The Sacred Heart Of Jesus O my Jesus, You have said, ‘Truly I say to you, ask and it will be given you, seek and you will find, knock and it will be opened to you.’ Behold, I knock, I seek and ask for the grace of... Our Father... Hail Mary... Glory be to the Father... Sacred Heart of Jesus, I place all my trust in you. II. O my Jesus, You have said, ‘Truly I say to you, if you ask anything of the Father in my name, He will give it to you.’ Behold, in Your name, I ask the Father for the grace of... Our Father... Hail Mary... Glory be to the Father... Sacred Heart of Jesus, I place all my trust in you. III. O my Jesus, You have said, ‘Truly I say to you, heaven and earth will pass away but my words will not pass away.’ Encouraged by Your infallible words, I now ask for the grace of... Our Father... Hail Mary... Glory be to the Father... Sacred Heart of Jesus, I place all my trust in you. O Sacred Heart of Jesus, for whom it is impossible not to have compassion on the afflicted, have pity on us poor sinners and grant us the grace which we ask of You, through the Sorrowful and Immaculate heart of Mary, Your tender mother and ours. Hail, holy Queen, Mother of Mercy!Our life, our sweetness, and our hope! To thee do we cry, poor banished children of Eve, to thee do we send up our sighs, mourning and weeping in this valley, of tears.Turn, then, most gracious advocate,thine eyes of mercy toward us; and after this our exile show unto us the blessed fruit of thy womb Jesus; O clement, O loving, O sweet virgin Mary. Pray for us, O holy Mother of God That we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ. St. Joseph, foster father of Jesus, pray for us

St. Therese Rose Novena

  • O Little Therese of the Child Jesus, please pick for me a rose from the heavenly gardens and send it to me as a message of love. O Little Flower of Jesus, ask God today to grant the favors I now place with confidence in your hands .... (Mention specific requests). St. Therese, help me to always believe as you did, in God's great love for me, so that I might imitate your "Little Way" each day. Amen.

Unfailing Petition to St. Joseph

  • Holy St. Joseph, Spouse of Mary, be mindful of me, pray for me, watch over me. Guardian of the paradise of the new Adam, provide for my temporal wants. Faithful guardian of the most precious of all treasures, I beseech thee to bring this matter to a happy end, if it be for the glory of God, and the good of my soul. Amen

Prayer for the Intercession of John Paul the Great

  • O Blessed Trinity We thank You for having graced the Church with Pope John Paul II and for allowing the tenderness of your Fatherly care, the glory of the cross of Christ, and the splendor of the Holy Spirit, to shine through him. Trusting fully in Your infinite mercy and in the maternal intercession of Mary, he has given us a living image of Jesus the Good Shepherd, and has shown us that holinessis the necessary measure of ordinary Christian life and is the way of achieving eternal communion with you. Grant us, by his intercession, and according to Your will, the graces we implore, hoping that he will soon be numbered among your saints. Amen.

A Considered Childhood

  • As much as I am able, every day, I will ensure that my child will: * Live the Liturgy * Experience loveliness * Breathe deeply: Fresh air and exercise * Serve others * Listen to, contemplate, and exchange ideas. * Develop expressive skills. * Practice logical reasoning. Math. * Receive focused attention and affection

Today in the Church

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