This kind of fell by the wayside, didn't it? I continue with the daily mass readings, and hope to pick up this blog again. Maybe for Advent.
We did "bury" our Alleluias--in the back of the pie safe--and they graced the dining room throughout the Easter season. A nice custom, I will do it again.
It is about 12 weeks til the first Sunday of Advent. I will try to continue then.
Friday, September 07, 2007
Friday, February 23, 2007
Burying the Alleluia
Maria von Trapp, that diva of Catholic homemaking, wrote about the Austrian custom of "burying the Alleluia". Children would prepare a nice homemade sign with the word "Alleluia" and wrap it in a cloth and "bury" it at the foot of the statue of the Blessed Mother in church, or at home. You could also literally bury such a sign. It would be dug up, or retrieved from the base of the statue, at the first mass of Easter. In those days it would have been on Easter morning.
I picked up a nice idea from Elizabeth Foss. She has her kids decorate "Alleluia cards" which she then tucks away and puts in their Easter baskets. I like this idea. My older boy did a google image search and found two Alleluia images to make cards. We will do this tomorrow in time for the first Sunday of Lent.
I picked up a nice idea from Elizabeth Foss. She has her kids decorate "Alleluia cards" which she then tucks away and puts in their Easter baskets. I like this idea. My older boy did a google image search and found two Alleluia images to make cards. We will do this tomorrow in time for the first Sunday of Lent.
Cracking open St.Mark
Mark is the shortest Gospel but it is packed with incident. My NAB introduction says it focuses on "Christology". Apparently Mark was writing, around A.D. 70, for Gentiles.
The introduction says there are four principal divisions of this Gospel. They lend themselves naturally to a ten-day, or so, schedule of readings:
1. The preparation for the public ministry of Jesus (1:1-13)
2. The mystery of Jesus (1:14 to 8-26)
3. The mystery begins to be revealed (8:27 to 9:32)
4. The full revelation of the mystery (9:33 to 16:8)
There are three endings, which I hope to get to by Holy Week!
Tonight I will read the first chapter and see how far I get. Comments welcome.
The introduction says there are four principal divisions of this Gospel. They lend themselves naturally to a ten-day, or so, schedule of readings:
1. The preparation for the public ministry of Jesus (1:1-13)
2. The mystery of Jesus (1:14 to 8-26)
3. The mystery begins to be revealed (8:27 to 9:32)
4. The full revelation of the mystery (9:33 to 16:8)
There are three endings, which I hope to get to by Holy Week!
Tonight I will read the first chapter and see how far I get. Comments welcome.
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