Showing posts with label December. Show all posts
Showing posts with label December. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 22, 2017

Free Catholic Feast Day Planning Page


Ah, December and all its wonderful Catholic feast days! You sit down to make some plans for your favorite days, but then you realize just HOW many feast days there are in December and how maybe keeping everything organized can be a bear.
  
Simple Catholic Feast Day Planning Sheet

To help stay focused on what to celebrate, we always choose a handful of feast days of our favorite saints. Saint Lucia always ranks high, as does Our Lady of Guadalupe ... and Saint Juan Diego and, oh, there's Saint Thomas Beckett ...

Oh, right. Yes, choosing just a few can be difficult. 

https://app.box.com/s/e2u78ud2mh4pa39ps9q9no2io7m3f7jw
Download!

Once we do, though, we make sure to highlight, underline, and bold that day on our calendar and also consider why we're celebrating. What about this saint or feast day speaks to us specifically? 

Because we're Catholic, we do love our food and drink! Find inspiration from the saint's own life or homeland.

To get to that point, we often read about a saint's life or watch a movie about the saint's life. (Formed.org in particular has a good selection of saint movies for families.) If we give ourselves more room in the planning, we can pick up books about the saint as well.

Download the free Catholic feast day planning page and start preppin' for all the upcoming feast days.




Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Advent 2014: Coloring Pages and Activities

https://www.etsy.com/shop/paperdali


Looking for some new coloring pages to help you celebrate Advent? Me, too! My children were ready for new pages to color and use, so I revamped the activity book by drawing 19 new coloring pages, swapping out some activities for others, and including a handful of classic drawings.

Here's a peek at what's inside the Advent 2014: 24 Coloring Pages and Activities PDF:


https://www.etsy.com/shop/paperdali

https://www.etsy.com/shop/paperdali

https://www.etsy.com/shop/paperdali


The Advent 2014 Coloring Pages and Activity Book includes:
  •  First Sunday of Advent
  •  Second Sunday of Advent
  •  Third Sunday of Advent
  •  Fourth Sunday of Advent
  •  Advent Playset Countdown
  •  St. Nicholas
  •  Favorite Carols
  •  Good Deeds Manger
  •  Immaculate Conception
  •  Juan Diego
  •  Juan Diego's Tilma
  •  Advent Wreath
  •  Our Lady of Guadalupe
  •  Who Are You Helping This Season?
  •  St. Lucia
  •  Notecards From Secret Santa
  •  Shepherd Coloring Page
  •  Sheep Coloring Page
  •  Melchior the Wise Man Coloring Page
  •  Balthazar the Wise Man Coloring Page
  •  Gaspar the Wise Man Coloring Page
  •  Angel Coloring Page
  •  St. Joseph Coloring Page
  •  Mary Coloring Page
 To find out more or to purchase the Advent 2014: Coloring Pages and Activities PDF, check out The Paper Dali Shop on Etsy.





Monday, October 27, 2014

Brand-New Jesse Tree Ornaments for Advent 2014 [Printables]

"Advent has a twofold character: as a season to prepare for Christmas when Christ’s first coming to us is remembered; as a season when that remembrance directs the mind and heart to await Christ’s Second Coming at the end of time. Advent is thus a period for devout and joyful expectation.” (“The Liturgical Year,” Congregation for Divine Worship

On the first day of December, my children and I start to practice the tradition of the Jesse Tree.

We download Jesse Tree ornament coloring pages, read the Scripture verse for the day, then color the day’s ornament... all the way to December 24.

Each Jesse Tree ornament and its accompanying verse is meant to help us grow closer to Christ and our understanding of significant Biblical events leading to Jesus’s birth.

After using the same illustrations for the past few years, though, I decided to draw new Jesse Tree ornaments for Advent 2014.

Each ornament is the size of a CD and has a reference to a related Bible verse beside it.

(I didn’t write down the Scripture reading itself, for I didn’t want to lose the appeal of reading from a worn, beloved Bible.)


The new Jesse Tree printable ornaments PDF is available right now for the same price of a latte.

Here’s a peek at two pages from my new printable Jesse Tree ornaments PDF.





Quick Tips for Using Your Jesse Tree Ornaments
  • Print out your Jesse Tree drawings ahead of time.
  • Inexpensive display areas for your ornaments can include a branch from your backyard, a construction-paper Christmas tree taped to the wall, a paper tree outline on your refrigerator door, an unadorned Christmas tree, and a Christmas wreath.
  • Spend a little cash if you can and get a set of magnetic tape to use the Jesse Tree ornaments on your fridge door or dry-erase board.
  • Our family’s go-to cheap “lamination” is packing tape.
  • Don’t stress out over missing a day. Either make up for it the next day or skip it.
  • Remember that the Jesse Tree ornament coloring time is to be prayerful but fun.
Have any more ideas to add? Feel free to add them in the comments below.

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Advent: 10 Easy-Peasy Ideas for Celebrating the Season

A classic Paper Dali post

"When the Church celebrates the liturgy of Advent each year, she makes present this ancient expectancy of the Messiah, for by sharing in the long preparation for the Savior’s first coming, the faithful renew their ardent desire for his second coming. By celebrating [John the Baptist’s] birth and martyrdom, the Church unites herself to his desire: “He must increase, but I must decrease.”
(Catechism, no. 524)

The Advent season begins! Are you feeling overwhelmed? Or filled with quiet, gentle peace? I recently gave a talk to parents of the Faith Formation program at church about Advent.

Why We Celebrate Advent: The Short Answer
The Catholic Church in her wisdom has the liturgical calendar, so that our minds and hearts can devote special times to the life of Christ. Like the secular calendar, which reminds us to give thanks or to move our clocks or check out a ground hog's shadow (does anyone really do that?), the liturgical calendar helps us to:
  • set aside times and days in our routines to think and pray about certain aspects of our faith
  • re-commit ourselves to our dedication to follow Jesus Christ
  • unite both the spirit and physical in prayer (All the outward signs that we make during these special times ... the lighting of candles, the opening of Advent calendar boxes, etc. ... help our bodies to also be aware of the changes in the season.)
  • prepare the way for the Lord (Not only do we remember the birth of Christ, but we also await his Second Coming.)

10 Tips for a Simple Yet Holy Advent
1.    Incorporate color

The colors of Advent are: purple (penance and contrition) and rose (repentant, expectant, and joyful).  Decorate your home in these colors: tablecloth, napkins, blankets, candles, etc. If you have any purple clothes, wear them at Mass. Be sure to point out to the children that you are wearing the same colors that we use at Mass. Don’t forget that on the third Sunday of Advent, the color is rose! This is a small, powerful way to unite one’s domestic life with the life of the Church.

Our children must understand that their faith is not separate from other aspects of their lives. Our going to Mass, our prayers, our beliefs are not something that just happen on Sundays. Our faith is the oil in the lamp of our lives. It cannot be separate, and if it is, then we are living a fractured faith. If the children have a house with small touches of purple, with an Advent wreath, with the sense of expectancy, when they then attend Mass, the Church will seem an extension of their lives. It won't seem odd or something shoved to the side, but something central to who they are.

2.    Use an Advent wreath

It doesn't have to be fancy. Heck, it doesn't even have to be lit or real, but there are the basic components that help us to live the season:
  • Evergreen: It lasts forever. It’s even a term in marketing for things that last forever and don’t lose their freshness or form.
  • Circle: unending, unbroken because God always was and always will be, forever and ever, amen!
  • Colors: (See above.) Some people are adding a white candle in the middle to light for Christmas.
You can read more about the history of the Advent wreath, if you'd like. 

3.    Practice small acts of kindness

Let this season focus on love and doing small gestures of kindness towards one another. You can do the Gifts for Jesus/Advent manger activity or you can use the Secret Santa idea, but make it Secret Nick's, in which stockings are left in one place, and throughout Advent, members of the family do little things or make gifts for the stockings.

4.    Create a nativity scene … slowly

Instead of just rushing to put up the manger and Nativity pieces, add the feeling of a journey to this tradition.

Piece by piece: Some people put up the scene, then they leave the manger empty until Christmas day. Other folks add a piece each day to the manger: maybe the shepherds on one Sunday, the animals on another Sunday, the star on the next Sunday, and then the family on the last Sunday of Advent.

The journey: Another idea is to have the manger set up, but then put Mary and Joseph in another part of the room. A friend of mine puts them on the mantle above the fireplace, another on the kitchen counter, and then, each evening, after the night prayer, a child gets to move Mary and Joseph closer to the manger. They will get there on Christmas day!

5.    Use an Advent calendar

Every December, there are free liturgical calendars at the back of the church. Snag one! Let that be your Advent calendar. Or make one of your own. Just make sure the emphasis is on Christ and the spirit of holiness, not receiving gifts or Santa or anything that would shift our focus from the eternal to the temporary. You can also use one online, such as this one from EWTN.

6.    Add songs to your night prayers

Add all the songs of expectation. Try to fast from Christmas songs. I know it’s difficult! You can look in the church missal for songs that we sing during Advent. Even choose just one, but add it to your nightly prayers. Or maybe sing it before meals.

7.    Participate in the feast days of this holy season.
Learn about the following saints and create activities for each feast day: (I've coloring pages/paper dolls to help!)

    8.    Make gifts for the forgotten and lonely

    Donate food or clothing to our charity office. Ask your friends and family members to put together a gift basket for a local homeless shelter or a pregnancy shelter. One year, my friends and I put together a newborn basket for a pregnancy center; we added baby clothes, diapers, wipes, blankets, etc. The children really got a sense of an upcoming child, which helped them tie in the idea that we’re also celebrating the birth of Christ. Plus, it was a good opportunity to discuss how Jesus had so very little, and we can focus on what to give others rather than what to receive.

    If you are struggling to make ends meet, consider what you have and share it. Maybe you have some clothes that a child outgrew or you have extra fabric scraps---then you can donate extra yarn or blanket to the Binky Patrol and other charity crafting places.

    9.    Watch quieter, more contemplative movies together

    Don’t gorge yourself just on the Christmas movies. I know, I love Christmas movies, too—even some movies that are dark and not like Christmas at all except for snow and glitter. (You really, really don't want to know.) Those may have a place, too, but also be sure to add movies that bring peace and joy, rather than chaos to the house. Ideas include: The Little Drummer Boy, The Star of Christmas (Veggie Tales), the first part of Jesus of Nazareth. Go to your local Catholic store and just ask for recommendations, too.

    10.    Do something outside of the ordinary

    Think about this one for a while.

    Like everything else, Advent can become something that we take for granted. We get used to doing the same things over and over again. Think about what you can do this year to make it different than the previous year. Look at the Church bulletin or diocesan newspaper, and see if there are events and activities in which you can participate this year. Maybe flip through Catholic sites and get ideas for new activities that y'all have never done before.  For years, I read about the Jesse tree, but it felt too complicated to me. So, I simplified it, drew up easy-to-color Jesse Tree templates, and ... TA-DA! A new custom was born.

    Happy Advent, friends!
    Creative Commons License ... and please do NOT offer my works as downloads from your site.