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Showing posts with label St. Nicholas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label St. Nicholas. Show all posts

Monday, December 6, 2010

Feast Day: St. Nicholas and a big step on our Advent journey to Christmas

We love St. Nicholas' Feast Day!  This is a big step on our Advent journey toward Christmas.  This is the day that the good Saint fills children's shoes and hearts with the love and spirit of giving of the Christmas Season!

Now, this is how we do things around here [and please understand that this is what works for us and altho I enjoy your suggestions, please don't "dis" my way of doing things]:

On St. Nick's Eve (that would be last night) the family each put out a shoe (the bigger the better the younger you are) and a note to St. Nick.  The note details what the wishes are for Christmas ... and the older ones do a bit of an examination of conscience since only the good Saint will see the letter.  This is a good chance for all of us to think about how we can empty ourselves of the bad and re-fill with the good before the coming of the Christ Child. 
The next morning (that would be today) the letters are gone and the shoes are filled with some gold-covered chocolate coins (in rememberance of St. Nick's helping of the dowerless girls), a candy cane (to represent the Bishop Nicholas' crook), and a book -- either a push-the-limits reading book, an activity book, or a religious book.  This year the good Saint included:
St. Nicholas is WELL-LOVED around here.  He is also our Santa ... yes, we do still believe in Santa around here and would hope that all well-meaning adults and precocious children who think they know "the truth" would be sure and not tell our kids otherwise. 

See, we believe in the magic of the season ... that St. Nicholas is a model of goodness and charity and self-giving ... that St. Nicholas is the one who fulfilled the needs of the dowerless girls, the almost-lost-at-sea sailors, the nearly killed boys in the barrel ... and that he continues to bring goodness and charity at this time of year.  So yes, the family writes letters asking for Wiis or dolls or cameras or whatever ... and yes, on Christmas morning there will be surprises that engender comments like "no way, Mom and Dad got us that!"   This is all part of the Christmas Magic that I've always believed in ... and will continue to encourage in my own children. 

Now, obviously, as the kids get older, they "know" ... but they get into the spirit of the season and don't ruin it for their younger siblings.  And it truly is amazing to see the surprises that often end up under the tree ... or come during the season .... things that "no way we could afford" but would REALLY like ...

So, believe in the magic and celebrate St. Nicholas and his spirit with us from now thru the Christmas season!

BTW, we'll be making St. Nicholas Soup for dinner (thanks to Twelve Months of Monastery Soups), homemade crusty bread, and finishing off with St. Nicholas Purse Cookies and tea.  What more could you want on a blustery, early Winter evening? 


Friday, December 4, 2009

Advent: Plans for Week 2


Advent Week Two -- plans for Week 2 in the heart of our home .... [note:  for book resources, please see the post "Plans for Week 1"]


Advent 2009 Theme:
Christmas Traditions from Around the World -- thru legends, facts, foods and crafts!





Chapter Book Read-aloud:
 The Christmas Donkey: a story of France (finish from Friday);
A Grandma for Christmas: a story of Norway both by Alta Halverson Seymour
The Cricket on the Hearth by Charles Dickens


Saint of the Day:

This week: Netherlands, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, France

Make dough for St. Nick cookies (Speculaas) on Saturday ...

Sunday: 2nd Sunday of Advent -- St. Nicholas -- treats in shoes and St. Nick cookies with icecream.

Monday: St. Ambrose feast -- make beeswax candles and honey cookies.  DB: Chapter 8; W: 17 "St. Nicholas"; CSRW: The Netherlands pg 46-53; continue reading The Christmas Donkey; prepare animals for the Nativity.  Jesse tree: coat of many colors.  Evening:  stories and hot chocolate.

Tuesday:  Feast of the Immaculate Conception -- attend Mass; make Marian ornaments.  DB: chap 9-10; W: 9 "Nativity Plays"; CSRW: Iceland pg 18-23; continue reading the Christmas Donkey (finish up today); make animals for the Nativity.  Jesse Tree:  cup of plenty.  Evening: game and popcorn.

Wednesday:  St. Juan Diego feast -- make santos after co-op.  Co-op Christmas feast.  Jesse Tree: whip for persecution of Jews in Egypt.  Evening: cider and stories.

Thursday:  Our Lady of Loreto -- make graham cracker "house of Loreto".  DB: chap 11-12; W: 10-11 "Christmas Crib" and "Symbolic Lights and Fires"; CSRW: Norway pg 54-59.  Read A Grandma for Christmas (we'll read in one-sitting).  Jesse Tree:  bundle of wheat for Ruth.  Evening: performance of one of the stories this week and tea.

Friday:  Damasus -- making Christmas cards.  DB: chap 13-14; W: 12-13 "The Christmas Tree" and "Christmas Plants and Flowers"; CWRW: Sweden pg 88-93; L: pg 28-29.  Start The Cricket on the Hearth -- a lead-in to our study of Christmas in the British Isles next week.  Jesse Tree:  lamp.  Evening:  snacks and family movie night.

Saturday:  Our Lady of Guadalupe -- Mexican food for dinner.  Make LuciaPepparkakor dough. Jesse Tree:  sling (David and Goliath).

Sunday:  3rd Sunday of Advent and Feast of St. Lucy -- make LuciaPepparkakor. Jesse Tree: crown for King David.


 O Father, stir up our hearts that we may prepare for Your only begotten Son, that through His coming, we may be made worthy to serve You with pure souls.  We ask this through Christ, Our Lord.  Amen.