We are the hands of Christ.
Registrations Fees for Religious Ed:
$25 for one child or $40 for a family (2 or more children).
How to Keep Your Kids Catholic by Ken Hensley
In a heartfelt and truly practical presentation, former Baptist minister Ken Hensley reveals effective strategies to help keep our kids within the fold of the Catholic Church. Drawing on personal experience and centuries of Catholic spiritual wisdom, he shares timeless, real-world advice we can readily use. His insights set us on the road to effective and successful parenting.
https://watch.formed.org/how-to-keep-your-kids-catholic-by-ken-hensley
Extraordinary Stories for Children
Children as young as five and adults of all ages will enjoy the colorful, engaging film. The film features eleven different stories that introduce children to this humble priest's spirituality and ministry. Each segment features a child who tells a fascinating and true story about Blessed Solanus.
https://watch.formed.org/extraordinary-stories-for-children
.
While in one of his adventures in the Sea of Galilee, Lukas met Jesus and was so impressed and gratified that now together with his old friend Noah, a turtle survivor of Noah’s Ark, gather and tell the greatest stories of all times of Jesus and all the Saints that Lukas met through the ages… Discover how these stories full of music and fun changed the lives of the youngest of the reef: Ana, Paul, Agnes and Peter.
https://watch.formed.org/lukas-storyteller
Confirmation Parent Meeting August 28, 6pm
Classes…
JH & HS - 6-7:30 pm, Wednesdays
Elem. - 10:30-11:45 am, Sunday
Weekly Mass Resources For Kids
(When Attending Mass Isn’t Possible)
https://www.catholicicing.com/weekly-mass-resources-for-kids/
Resources Include: Specific Sunday Mass Resources, How to Set Up Mass At Home, Spiritual Communion Printables, Weekly Mass Resources for Kids at Home, Children's Bulletins and MORE...
I asked the Catholic Icing community what ya’ll do when attending Mass isn’t possible, and this is what you said! (Not saying everyone needs to do all these things, again, your obligation is lifted, but these were suggestions from the community.)
As we send our young children back to school, remind them of the protection of their guardian angels. God assigns an angel to every person to keep all people—especially children—out of harm’s way. Some Christian writers have asserted that it is one’s guardian angel who presents a person’s soul to God upon their death. Share the Prayer to My Guardian Angel with your children and their families. Encourage them to make this prayer part of their morning or bedtime prayer ritual.
We’re all familiar with the question that children ask when we are taking them somewhere they are excited about: “Are we there yet?!” Unfortunately, when it comes to taking our children to church on Sunday, the question often turns into, “Why do we have to go?”
It can be challenging for parents who want their children to develop an appreciation for the centrality of Sunday Eucharist, when they receive “push-back” instead of enthusiasm. Try as we might, the kids compare the experience of going to Mass with other experiences in their lives and conclude that “it’s boring.” Our goal is not to convince them that the Mass is fun and exciting but rather, to help them develop a deeper understanding of what it means to worship and why it is so critical to our spiritual health.
The first thing that I tell parents who encounter the question, “Why do we have to go to Mass?” is to respond (and I’m being only half-facetious) by saying, “Because Mommy and Daddy are broken. And so are you, sweetie. Get in the car.” The point is that we don’t go to Mass because it’s fun or exciting but because we are in need of being “fixed.” Ultimately, we believe that we need help from beyond ourselves when it comes to avoiding sin. We need a Savior. We go to Mass to be saved, because we are incapable of saving ourselves.
In an article for Together Magazine (a Loyola Press resource for God’s Gift: Eucharist), my friend Tom McGrath shares “8 Reasons to Bring Your Child to Mass Regularly.” What I like about this article is that Tom does encourage parents to enter the debate of “why should we go to Mass” at the superficial level of fun and excitement but delves deeper into the existential realities that are associated with worship. Tom asserts that, “Children learn to value what their parents and extended family value, and they learn not so much by what we say as what we do.” Here are his first four reasons why it’s important to take our children to Mass. (I’ve added my own thoughts below each.)
Taking our children to Mass will:
Sometimes life seems hard to bear,
full of sorrow, trouble and woe.
It's then I have to remember,
that it's in the valleys I grow.
If I always stayed on the mountain top,
and never experienced pain,
I would never appreciate God's love,
would be living in vain.
I have so much to learn,
and my growth is very slow,
sometimes I need the mountain tops,
but it's in the valleys I grow.
I do not always understand
why things happen as they do,
but I am very sure of one thing.
My Lord will see me through.
My little valleys are nothing
when I picture Christ on the cross,
He went through the valley of death;
His victory was Satan's loss.
Forgive me, Lord, for complaining
when I'm feeling so very low,
Just give me a gentle reminder
that it's in the valleys I grow.
Continue to strengthen me, Lord,
and use my life each day,
to share your love with others,
and help them find their way.
Thank you for the valley, Lord,
for this one thing I know.
The mountain tops are glorious,
but it's in the valleys I grow.