Category Archives: general

Lent at Home

A Continuing Series on Celebrating the Church Year.

Lent is a season of repentance in preparation for Easter, which begins Ash Wednesday (February 22nd in 2012) and continues to Holy Week. It has been marked traditionally by fasting, prayer and acts of charity. In Lent, we reflect on such questions as: what routine sins are estranging me from God and other people? In what ways has my heart grown cold to the gospel? What idols of my heart are distorting my love for God?

Because the Lenten season is more somber in tone, it can be hard to know how to observe it at home with children. This post is a collection of ideas, certainly not a prescriptive list we are doing in full this year (or any year!) I’d love to hear what you’ve done in the past or plan to do in the future.

PREPARING FOR LENT
Shrove Tuesday, or Mardi Gras, is the day preceding Ash Wednesday. Traditionally, people used up butter, eggs, sugar and other things they might be giving up for Lent by making pancakes. I am planning to make these gingerbread pancakes to eat as we talk about our plans for Lent over dinner.

For me, Ash Wednesday services set the tone for Lent, the liturgy is powerful. They tend to have short homilies that are child-friendly at the Episcopal and Anglican parishes we’ve visited, and we’ve always felt very welcome even with wiggly toddlers or noisy babies. Sometimes less-liturgical churches will have Ash Wednesday services without the imposition of ashes, if you like the idea but not the ashes.

DURING LENT ITSELF
Make a commitment to confess your sins together as a family. With smaller children, this would be done orally, but you could write them out if you have teens and feel that would work better.

Memorize one of the Psalms of repentance that are traditional to the season of Lent: 6, 32, 38, 51, 102, 130 or 143.

Use prayers of confession like the familiar general confession from the episcopal church or this one from St. Ambrose at home.

After confession, you can foreshadow Easter by using hopeful affirmations of assurance of pardon and union with Christ, like this one from the Syrian Orthodox tradition: “How fair and lovely is the hope which the Lord gave to the dead when he lay down like them beside them. Rise up and come forth and sing praise to Him who has raised you from destruction.”

Fast from something: dessert, TV or another distraction. Perhaps introduce a few meatless days into your meal rotation. Don’t forget that Sundays are for feasting and remembering a resurrected Christ, even during lent. Break your fast and enjoy whatever you’ve given up.

Use meditative, breath prayers like: Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner.

Read scripture! You can use the lectionary to guide scripture reading as a family. Decide how much time you can spend daily and plan accordingly (e.g. one psalm, the OT and the gospel.) If that’s too much, just read through one of the gospels together. If you aim to finish before holy week, you’d end up needing to read less than a chapter a day.

Pray throughout the day. You could make a commitment to the daily Morning, Evening and Night prayers (with the daily lectionary readings) from the Book of Common Prayer or use a resource like Phyllis Tickle’s The Divine Hours.

Learn the verses of a hymn of confession you sing in church. “Nothing But the Blood” is particularly good for pre-readers.

Here’s a playlist on Spotify of appropriate songs for lent.

Contemplate acts of service you can do as a family or individually. Consider giving to a ministry that serves the poor by freeing up money you might have spent on something else.

Make pretzels, a traditional lenten bread and reminder to pray.

Remind yourselves of how lent is a time of growth by planting seeds for your spring garden. Starting seedlings depends on your climate, germination times, etc. But it could line up well to plant the week after Easter if you don’t live in the frigid north.

Simplify your schedule or your possessions. Clear out things you don’t need, and give them to a local thrift store.

Do a devotional together. Noel Piper’s Lenten Lights is a weekly devotional that includes a candle component, we’ve not used it but it may be a good fit if you have smaller children and don’t want to make a daily commitment. If you have teens, Henri Nouwen’s Show Me the Way is a classic. Bread and Wine is a collection of readings from great writers for Lent and Easter. City Church, Philadelphia (PCA) has a good guide with scripture readings and prayer for each day during lent.

I made a few printables, for those of you who like to rotate seasonal decor with the church calendar. (If you click on them, they will open large enough to print at 8×10.)

A Dangerous Unselfishness

Last year I posted part of one of Martin Luther King Jr.’s speeches to commemorate this day when we remember him, and the great injustice he fought. Here’s part of his last speech in Memphis that is not often highlighted, long before “I’ve seen the promised land,” on the Parable of the Good Samaritan.

Let us develop a kind of dangerous unselfishness. One day a man came to Jesus; and he wanted to raise some questions about some vital matters in life. At points, he wanted to trick Jesus, and show him that he knew a little more than Jesus knew, and through this, throw him off base. Now that question could have easily ended up in a philosophical and theological debate. But Jesus immediately pulled that question from mid-air, and placed it on a dangerous curve between Jerusalem and Jericho. And he talked about a certain man, who fell among thieves.

You remember that a Levite and a priest passed by on the other side. They didn’t stop to help him. And finally a man of another race came by. He got down from his beast, decided not to be compassionate by proxy. But with him, administered first aid, and helped the man in need. Jesus ended up saying, this was the good man, because he had the capacity to project the “I” into the “thou,” and to be concerned about his brother. Continue reading

Calling All Green Thumbs

I think we’re going to have a plot in a new community garden this year. I’m pretty stoked about it. We’ve done some container gardening before, but this would be raised bed, probably square foot style and organic. We will certainly grow tomatoes, peppers, basil and cilantro, but I am not sure what varieties, and what else. I’d love to try green beans.

So, green thumbs, any suggestions for varieties or things to try? Our girls don’t really remember our gardens of the past, so I am hoping for a memorable summer of working and reaping the harvest. I am also excited about the potential for building community with friends old and new as we garden together. The location is a few miles away (boo) but in a neighborhood that’s on our list for a potential place to settle in if we are able to stay here long term.

a possibly impossible 2011 manifesto

inspired by lovely mollie, who always dreams big.

this year i will endeavor to…
laugh every day
make music
keep reading
have people to dinner more often
apply to grad school
write (on this blog and otherwise)
eat less carbs
exercise regularly
call and write and be present for friends
spend more time with my girls one-on-one
love michael better
make a cozier, tidier home

You Learn Something New…

Today I was at the Jewish Community Center and a flipped-open copy of Southern Jewish Life alerted me to the fact that you can get prescription drugs relatively cheaply from Israel. Magen David Meds can be your Israeli pharmacy, and with $10 shipping to the U.S. it may be worth checking out.

Unexpected Grace

After two months of daily blogging, I took a few days respite. As I ran errands today, I was thinking about what I ought to blog about. Walking through Wal-Mart gave me several things to consider blogging about such as how annoying it was that the organic fruit snacks are up high and the “bad” ones shaped like princesses are at child’s eye view.

An hour and cart full of groceries later, the girls hit their breaking point and melted down over who was going to get the orange juice out of the case and put it in the cart. (At least they fight about helping, right?) My nearest fellow customer glared at them, and then at me. I tried unsuccessfully to mediate and then, a man walked toward me.

He was an older gentleman, and he reminded me of my great uncle Joe and his posse of Italian old men. Dressed in one of those old man tracksuits, with glasses and shaggy hair, he approached me with a smile. He clasped both his hands around mine, and I felt something pass between us. When I opened my hand I found two small lollipops. I thanked him profusely, then handed the candy to the children, who in their preoccupation with juice had missed the exchange completely. “Where’s this candy from?” they asked. “That nice gentleman there.” They bounded over to say thank you, and he returned once again. I watched as he reached his hand into his unzipped pocket and pulled out a big handful of butterscotch candies, giving them to me. We shared a smile, and he walked away.

It’s funny, two minutes earlier I had been thinking about 1 John 4, where it says that love is from God, and everyone that loves is born of God, and knows God, and more than that, God abides in us and His love is perfected in us. When I least expected it, I found love in the dairy aisle at Super Wal-Mart. I hope to be that gracious, to reach out to the harried and discouraged, and to remind them that they are not alone. At minimum, I hope to be a little old lady with a big purse full of lollipops.

Sleepy

I’ve been feeling like a zombie for a few days now. Just SO tired. (I often feel tired, but this is crazy-tired.) Caffeine doesn’t cut it. Neither does sleeping more. Ideas?

Tweets of the Week

+ Tonight will probably be the only time I ever say the words of institution out loud in church. about 5 hours ago from web
+ Tonight’s reception reminded me of my longstanding desire to be a part of a culture with group dancing (e.g. Greek, Lebanese.) 11:51 PM Jan 23rd from Tweetie
+ Fresh air with k+l since school let out. Bikes, bubbles, chalk, friendly dogs. I even adjusted a bike. 5:06 PM Jan 21st from Tweetie
+ I have inherited a mangia mentality from my Italian gma: I show love through food & receive love when people enjoy it. 9:30 PM Jan 20th from Tweetie

Some Thoughts from Rev. King

On this day that we stop and remember a complex and human man, and the great injustice he fought, here are some words Martin Luther King, Jr. spoke in his commencement address at Oberlin College, in June of 1965.

“All mankind is tied together; all life is interrelated, and we are all caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly. For some strange reason I can never be what I ought to be until you are what you ought to be. And you can never be what you ought to be until I am what I ought to be – this is the interrelated structure of reality. John Donne caught it years ago and placed it in graphic terms: No man is an Island, entire of itself; every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main… And then he goes on toward the end to say: any man’s death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind; and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee. And by believing this, by living out this fact, we will be able to remain awake through a great revolution. Continue reading

Today is the Day

The internets say its National Delurking Day. I’d love to know who is out there reading these days.

On deck for future posts:
A review of the Book Thief
Hippie Cookies and Other Adventures in Child Nutrition

Life is a Miracle

“To know that I am ‘a white male American human,’ that a red bird with black wings is ‘a scarlet tanager,’ that this is ‘a riparian plant community’–all that is helpful to a necessary kind of thought. But when I try to make my language more particular, I see that the life of this place is always emerging beyond expectation or prediction or typicality, that it is unique, given to the world minute by minute, only once, never to be repeated. And then is when I see that this life is a miracle, absolutely worth having, absolutely worth saving….Perhaps we should wish that after the processes of reduction, scientists would return, not to the processes of synthesis and integration, but to the world of our creatureliness and affection, our joy and grief, that precedes and (so far) survives all of our processes.”

| Wendell Berry |

On Comments and Conversation

Back when I was posting less, I set up the blog to publish as notes via rss on my facebook page. And so, I get comments both places. For the most part, this is fine, but every so often a post sparks the sort of comments which are more conversational, and readers interact with one another. The division of such comments between the places seems wrong.

I am not a very active facebook user, I typically check in once a day for a few minutes. I am much more likely to catch something via my feed reader than the notes section of facebook, but I realize others have different habits. Being able to “like” something on facebook with just a click, without needing to say more, is something I value, though.

Perhaps there isn’t a great solution. I am thankful that anyone reads anything I write and grateful for the chance to hear your feedback, kind readers. Conversations are important to me, and I will take what I can get, scattered as they may be.