Showing posts with label Rosary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rosary. Show all posts

Friday, October 7, 2011

The Rosary and Kids

Last year I posted a few times on integrating the rosary into family life. Since October is dedicated to the rosary, and today is the Feast of Our Lady of the Rosary, I thought it would be appropriate to pull them out of the archives!

Part 1 consist of making an edible rosary. I've seen people make these with mini-cupcakes too, so cute!


Part 2 is all about how to make praying the rosary a pleasant experience with hands on activities.



Part 3 shows how we have used art to help make the rosary come to life.



Part 4 features some our favorite rosary products.



For DOZENS of ideas on how to teach your kids about the rosary check out this link from The Catholic Toolbox. Also, we love Holy Heroes, check out their Rosary CD set!

Thursday, October 28, 2010

The Rosary and Kids - Part 4

October is almost over, which means it's time for the 4th and final "The Rosary and Kids" post.  This time I've come up with a list of some of our favorite rosary products that have helped make the rosary a part of our home. I am so thankful for the wonderful people who take their time to make holy products!


1. Baby Rosary (0-12 monts). These sturdy non-toxic, wooden rosaries are a favorite teething toy. We love giving them as gifts to our expecting friends and family. You can find them at most Catholic Book stores.











2. Holy Baby DVD (1-2 years). We don't watch much TV in our home, but we wouldn't have survived the Cotter family vacation to Lake Michigan without this DVD. Bean was 13 months at the time and we drove somewhere around 12 hours straight to get home. Watching Holy Baby kept her happy when the drive got long. The DVD recites the rosary in 7 languages while a montage of very simple objects are shown. Many of them are religious, like statues of saints and Noah's Ark toys.






3. A Child's Guide to the Rosary By Elizabeth Ficocelli (3-8 years). This is a delightful little book about a class of children who are learning about the rosary. They present each of the 20 mysteries in a way that is easy for kids to understand. Complete with kid friendly pictures and points of meditation, this book is a great tool for introducing the mysteries in a practical way.








4. Speak, Lord, I am Listening: A Rosary Book By: Christine Haapala (7-12 years). We recently received this as a gift from one of our mission partners and it is a wonderfully crafted book. Each mystery is presented with thought provoking watercolor images and relevant scripture verses to accompany each bead. It is a great way to help keep focused on the mystery you are meditating on.









5.  The New Rosary in Scripture: Biblical Insights for Praying the 20 Mysteries By: Edward Sri (13+, maybe? I'll let you know when we get there). This book walks you through a biblical explanation of each of the mysteries. It also includes frequently asked questions about Mary and the Rosary, as well as explanations on John Paul II's reflections on the meaning of the rosary.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

The Rosary and Kids - Part 3


A few years ago Magnificat began selling rosary greeting cards with 20 different images depicting each mystery of the rosary. While I wasn't too interested in using them as greeting cards I was interested in the fact that they were each a perfect 5 x 7, which means they could be framed.

At the time we were just beginning our first year as FOCUS missionaries, so the "decorating the new home" budget line was minimal. In our cozy cinderblock dorm suite, where I was a hall director, there was a large empty wall that I wanted to fill with some kind of religious art, but let's face it, religious art is not cheap. So when I saw these beauties I knew I had a solution to my problem. To frame the pictures I purchased clip frames for less than $2.00 each, including the shipping charges. If you buy them in bulk you end up buying 24, so the extra 4 are a bonus.

When we pray a family rosary we grab the picture(s) of the mystery we are meditating on from the wall for  a visual during the prayer. Pointing out the details of the images has been a great way to help explain the mysteries and to introduce our children to beautiful art. We also love them because they are a constant reminder in our home of the significant events in the lives of Jesus and Mary.

Cost rundown:
Rosary Greeting Cards: $20.00 (after shipping)
Frames: $37.50 (after shipping)
Total Project: $57.50

We hung them with a 1/2 inch spacing around each side of the frame.
Pal picking out a mystery... or 3.

Also, I keep forgetting... for more awesome ideas check out the Catholic Icing link up party. Bloggers have posted their ideas for the rosary here in one place.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

The Rosary and Kids - Part 2

This summer I attended a round table discussion at a Catholic conference on the topic of integrating the Faith into your home. Realizing that there were many older, wiser mom's in the room I posed the question "How do you get your kids to sit still during the rosary?", to which they all quickly retorted "Oh honey, you don't!". Shocking news to me. I always thought prayer time should look like this:


That's the Martin family, the parents are Blessed and the little one kneeling on her mom's lap, Therese, is a saint. It's a beautiful depiction of a holy family, but you know what Bl. Zelie, Therese's mom, had to say about her little Therese? "As for the little ferret, I do not know what she will turn out to be; she is so little, so thoughtless, she has an intelligence superior to Celine's, but she is less gentle and has an almost invincible stubbornness." Guess that means there's hope for all children. 

The wise mom's went on to tell me about some various tactile ways that the keep their kids engaged in the family rosary. Below is a combination of their ideas and a few of my own which have transformed family rosary from "I don't want to" to, "do we get to". They also each provide a bonus education moment.


Beads and pipe cleaners: We give the kids a pipe cleaner and 10 beads, after each Hail Mary they add one bead to the pipe cleaner until we have completed a decade. I have found pipe cleaner are better than sting because the fuzz hold the beads in place. My two year old particularly loves this, even though he ends up with varying bead amounts after we finish a decade. This is great for fine motor skills.


Chalkboard beads: For this manipulative we draw 10 circles, or beads, on a chalkboard, after each Hail Mary the kids take a wet cotton ball and trace the bead to erase it until all of the beads are gone. This helps with learning how make a circular motion. You could also do this on a dry erase board.


Number paste: This one takes a minute of prep. I draw a grid on a half sheet of paper with 10 places then write numbers 1-10 on the other half and cut the numbers out. After each Hail Mary the kids paste a number on, in order from 1-10 with a glue stick. For kids who are starting to learn number order you could write the numbers on the grid and have the kids match them. This provides practice with spacing, number order and pasting.


Shape sorter: Grab your shape sorter and give your kid 10 shapes. After each Hail Mary they can drop in one shape until they are all back in the sorter. Sorters are great for cause and effect and fine motor skills.


Dry erase numbers: We have a set of dry erase flash cards from Kumon that I will give to my 4 year old and after each Hail Mary she writes a number until she reaches ten. Sometimes we will give her 11-20 or 21-30. Prayer,  handwriting and numbers, not bad.


Magnetic letters: Our chalk board is magnetic, so I will write on the board a ten letter word that has to do with our mystery and have my kids match a letter after each Hail Mary. Visitation, Assumption, Holy Spirit, Coronation and Mother Mary are some words we have used. Letter recognition is your bonus here.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

The Rosary and Kids - Part 1

The month of October is dedicated to the Holy Rosary, to celebrate this month I am going to do a 4 part series on the rosary and kids, with a new post each Thursday. Today is the perfect day to start such a series on the Feast of Our Lady of the Rosary! While we aren't perfect at it we try to pray a decade of the rosary as a family at night before bed. This can be a challenge with little ones because, well, learning to sit still for even 5 minutes is not a lot of fun. We have come up with some tactics to make the rosary a meaningful prayer experience for all of us which I will be sharing over the next few weeks.

My first way of making the rosary a positive is experience is to make the devotion enjoyable. My prayer is that my kids have fond memories of their experiences with faith, not ones that leave them thinking the Church, God and his family are an ungraspable, distant thing that imposes upon their freedom. I want them to learn that faith is what ultimately brings joy to our lives and joy is more valuable than happiness because joy does not depend upon your circumstances, but upon your disposition.

So as a fun way to talk about the rosary and its prayers we put together an edible rosary using cut outs of Multi-Grain Cheerio Treats. Healthy right? My kids have been having way too many cakes lately, so I thought maybe I could justify this one on our last day of 5 feast days in 8 days. Also we had leftover mini-marshmallows from our Bible Timeline craft where we build the walls of Jericho using frosting and mini-marshmallows, plus I over bought on multi-grain cheerios when they were on sale and they are about to expire... ta da, a dessert is born! As we pressed out the beads we talked about why there are different sizes to the beads and how a big Our Father bead and 10 small Hail Mary beads make up a decade. This also proved to be a fun lesson in math as we counted out our beads.

Next week I'll share some tactile ways that we keep the kids engaged while we pray the rosary so they stayed tuned into our prayer time and don't try to wander off looking for toys. Directions to make your own rosary are below, enjoy!

Melt 1/4 cup of butter and 10 oz of mini-marshmallows in the microwave for 2-3 minutes, stir until blended
Stir in 8 cups of cheerios until coated
Spread out on waxed paper, let cool,  cut with cookie cutters and form your rosary