Thursday, June 4, 2020



https://catholicmom.com/2014/04/15/why-do-we-homeschool/

“Why do we homeschool?” Often when we begin homeschooling there is something that prompted us to begin. It may have been a child struggling with school, a negative socializing experience, or any number of issues. Once the mom begins, she may feel conflicted that her children will miss out on some great academic experience. She may moan, “I wish I had a real science lab” or “I could never have an interesting literature discussion like I did in my British Literature class.” So why are we doing “that”? Why are we homeschooling? Because we want to educate the whole child; we want to educate the child for eternity.
On occasion my twin nephews, who are six years old, will burst into song, “Father, I adore you.” And I lay my life before you. How I love you.” In a public school setting, I guarantee the teacher would not appreciate or encourage such a song. But in the home, this is a beautiful testament of my nephews’ childlike faith.
Too often we focus on the academics and overlook the whole child, building the character of the child, considering all aspects of the person. In his Apostolic Letter Tertio Millennio Adveniente, Blessed John Paul II described Christ as one who “labored with human hands, thought with a human mind, acted with a human will, and loved with a human heart” (par. #4). We need to ask ourselves when we educate ourselves and our children, “Do we labor with Christ’s hands, think with Christ’s mind, act with Christ’s will, and love with Christ’s heart.” We sometimes become so consumed with educating our children’s mind, we overlook shaping their wills, teaching self-control of their drives and passions, training their hands, and nourishing their hearts and souls.
Because the child is a whole, integrated person, we cannot always compartmentalize when we will be educating their minds, their hearts, or their hands. While showing my daughters how to crochet, we might have a discussion on a topic that would form their character or is related to their academics. In practicing her violin or playing the piano, my daughter develops any number of virtues, such as perseverance, attention to detail, and listening to the soul.  When I ask a young child, “Please bring me a diaper or wash cloth” or another simple task; I am testing his will and encouraging his obedience. In the home, education is life.
What are we educating? The whole child.
How do we educate the whole child? Father Kentenich, the founder of Schoenstatt, an apostolic lay movement said, “We must educate our children in such a way that he or she can later give themselves to God, freely and of their own accord, when and where God wishes. When God asks us to return our children to him, we cannot keep them for ourselves. We must return our children from where they came, our Heavenly Father, whether in a consecrated life or a married or single state of life” (The Nazareth Family, unfinished manuscript, Fr. Jonathan Niehaus, 9).
It is not yet six in the morning and very peaceful and quiet as I am typing this up—a hushed quiet—, so it is easy for me to say that our homes should be a foretaste of heaven. We want to build our little Nazareth families, oases of love. When the baby is crying, the children are fighting, the phone is ringing and the water from the rice is boiling over, that is when life really begins to happen! Then can I also say, “Our homes should be a foretaste of heaven!”?
It is easy to smile, when the baby is coohing, but when the baby is fussing, the challenge arises that I then too should smile. At that moment, my human weakness reveals itself, I don’t want to smile. In my weakness, I can become discouraged or even despair, unless I look to a greater power outside of myself (or should I say deep within my soul). In my weakness, I can recognize that I cannot do this by myself; that I can turn to the Blessed Mother and ask her intercession. I can ask my Heavenly Father to send me the graces I need to accomplish that tasks he has set before me—to love my husband, children and family.
Once again! School is more than academics. It is habits and virtues. SAT and ACT tests do not measure creativity, ingenuity, industriousness, and many other virtues. Think of Thomas Alva Edison.
Every child is gifted, precious in the sight of God, created in the image and likeness of God.
Anybody can accomplish school academics for a year. We want to instill a lifelong love of learning, a striving to be a saint.
Homeschooling should be a restoring of childhood to its proper place. Even if you did not experience an ideal family situation when growing up, because of death, divorce, or brokenness, our Heavenly Father through the gifts of the Holy Spirit gives you the grace to transform your family into a family filled with the love of Christ.
Mitchell Kalpakgian in the dedication of his book, The Mysteries of Life in Children’s Literature, describes what we are striving for. 
“To all my beloved Armenian family members who provided me an authentic childhood of play, innocence, and wonder, who instilled in me a love of life, a love of family, and a love of God; who made me feel special, loved, and the apple of their eye; who showed me by their example that loving children is the great business of life; whose generosity, hospitality, and kindness formed my heart; and who taught me how to savor the simple pleasure of life: delicious, home-cooked food, conversation at the dinner table, visits to friends and relatives, the bonds of true friendships, the love of learning, the mirth of games and sports, and the wonder of hearing stories of the miracles of Divine Providence in each person’s life” (vii).
What is your goal in homeschooling? If you define a successful homeschool year as doing every problem on every page and finishing all the textbooks and workbooks by a certain date, you may accomplish your goal, but did you achieve success? With this goal, you may end up a burnt out, frazzled, crispy-around-the-edges mom.
If you define your goal as the extreme opposite—Oh, just hanging out and doing whatever you feel like whenever—, then you don’t have a plan. What are “you” trying to accomplish? We need to have a goal. I need to know, “Why am I doing this? What do I hope to achieve?”
When you go to bed at night, what do you wish you had done that day? Then do it the next day.
What do you wish you had done growing up?
What positive memories from childhood do you have? What positive memories do you wish to give your children?
What do your kids wish to do?
What is the one thing you want to accomplish this year with each child? It can be a habit or a virtue, not just a subject or a skill.
What are social, emotional, psychological, and academic reasons that you are doing this?
As parents, what do we do to encourage or even make possible the healthy interests or childhood pastimes of our children? When homeschooling is all said and done, what do we as parents wish to accomplish? What is our end goal? If our end goal determines how we live out our lives on a day to day basis, then what is our end goal? How do we define it?
Is our style of life living from one TV program to the next? One sporting season to the next? Who won the Superbowl 10 years ago? 5 years ago? the World Series? Grammy Awards? Academy Awards? Who was the most popular singer, movie star, or sports personality 10 years ago? We can become sucked into a culture of superficiality unless we offer healthy substitutes.
By turning off the TV, computer or video games, and other distractions, you can experience life in a whole new way: plant a garden, learn a musical instrument, read that book aloud to the whole family.
Do we encourage the good, the true, and the beautiful? Phil. 4:8 “Your thoughts should be wholly directed to all that is true, all that deserves respect, all that is honest, pure, admirable, decent, virtuous, or worthy of praise.”
Let us strive to make our homes havens of peace, joy, laughter, and love. Pope John Paul II said, the home “is truly ‘the sanctuary of life’” (Evangelium Vitae). Ultimately, homeschooling is an avenue to live that sanctuary of life. It is turning our homes into oases of love, miniature churches, in the midst of the world.
Homeschooling is not about academics or SAT scores or basketball scholarships. It’s about love. Love your children with the love of Christ. I may not always want to love, especially when someone is being unlovable, but I can ask Christ to love through me. Since we are fallen creatures, teaching our children to love is a lifelong process. In Familiaris Consortio, we read, “Love is therefore the fundamental and innate vocation of every human being” (Par. 11).
As Fr. Kentenich, the founder of the apostolic movement of Schoenstatt said, “The ultimate meaning of our life is to learn to love, to learn to love correctly, to learn to love selflessly, to learn to love constantly, to learn to love faithfully” (On Monday Evenings, Vol. 20, 123).
So, why do you do that?
Homeschooling is all about love.
Copyright 2014 Elizabeth Yank

Spiritual Warfare 101: Are You Ready for the Fight?



Spiritual Warfare 101: Are You Ready for the Fight?: Are you ready for the fight? If you were to enter the boxing ring today, would you be primed? Or are your muscles a little flabby, your lungs easily winded and your feet dragging instead of dancing? Besides you don’t want to break your nose. Competitive boxers prepare through discipline and hard work. They recognize …

Wednesday, May 27, 2020

Who is That Lady With the Rosary?



http://www.catholic365.com/article/11468/who-is-that-lady-with-the-rosary.html


Every morning as I walk through my mother's quiet community in Florida, I bring out my weapon of choice, the rosary. In the famous St. John Bosco vision of two columns, the Pope steers the ship toward the column with the Eucharist, "Salvation of the Faithful" and the column with the Blessed Virgin, "Help of Christians." A violent storm rages, tossing the ship, while the enemies of the Church assault it on all sides. The Pope is struck twice, dying, and the new Pope, overcoming innumerable obstacles, safely guides the ship to the two pillars and securely fastens chains with anchors to the two columns, safely mooring it. Immediately, all the enemies of the Church scatter, ships collide with one another and eventually sink. We don't know when this dream will come to fruition, but we do know that God has given us two gifts to sustain us when we are assaulted on all sides, two pillars of strength and power, the Eucharist and Mary, Help of Christians.
            Right now, not just in the United States but throughout the world, only some faithful are able to receive Holy Communion. In a very few parishes they are still able to receive the sacrament of Confession. A few have Eucharistic Adoration. However, there is one devotion that never has to go away and that is devotion to the Blessed Mother. The Church recognizes her power. On May 1 Bishops throughout the United States reconsecrated the country to Mary. Within the home, we too can also dedicate our homes to her Immaculate Heart.
            We can also recognize her power by imploring her to help us during this time of crisis, under her titles as Advocate, Co-redemtrix and the Mediatrix of all Graces, to stand before the throne of God and intercede for us, her children. What was our Blessed Mother's request at Fatima: to pray the rosary daily, establish devotion to her Immaculate Heart, to offer sacrifices for sinners and say many times, especially when we make a sacrifice, 'O Jesus, this is for love of Thee, for the conversion of sinners, and in reparation for the sins committed against the Immaculate Heart of Mary.'
            Many years ago when we were first married we dedicated our home to the Blessed Mother under the title Queen and Victress of Schoenstatt. While we faithfully say our prayers in our homeshrine, saying the rosary has always been a challenge with children. Nonetheless, let us keep in mind the words of Theodore Roosevelt:
            Nothing in this world is worth having or worth doing unless it means effort, pain, difficulty. No kind of life is worth leading if it is always an easy life. I  know that your life is hard; I know that your work is hard; and hardest of all for those of you who have the highest trained consciences, and who therefore feel always how much you ought to do. I know your work is hard, and that is why I congratulate you with all my heart. I have never in my life envied a human being who led an easy life; I have envied a great many people who led difficult lives and led them well.
            Recently when I turned on my computer, the title of an article popped up. "How to start running, even if you are bad at it." We could change the words to "How to start praying, even if you are bad at it." G. K. Chesterton encourages us, “If a thing is worth doing, it is worth doing badly.” Let me explain. My brother likes to enter road cycling races. Those who don't train drop out very quickly. In other words, if you want to succeed, you need to start somewhere and it isn't going to be at the top. You will need to train. You will need to build up your endurance, stamina, strength. You will start by doing it badly.
            There are various websites, such as U. S. Grace Force, that are encouraging people to commit to saying the rosary daily. There are also groups, like America Needs Fatima, that have for many years supported rosary rallies. Still other groups have encouraged rosary processions. The Layman's Rosary of Reparation and St. Charles Borromeo Society also recognize the need and the power of the rosary. These are perilous times. If we don't start saying the rosary now, when? Just like working out for a bike race, this is a battle which will require stamina, endurance and strength.
            Our country is in need of a miracle of grace, for the spiritual and moral renewal of its people. Through perseverance and thousands upon thousands of rosaries families prayed every day, Fr. Petrus Pavlicek led the charge to drive out the Soviet Union from the Soviet occupied zone of Austria without a single loss of life. It took 8 long years, but in the end the Blessed Mother was victorious!
            We need to remember the words of Fr. Pavlicek: “Peace is a gift of God, not the work of politicians,” He added, "the gifts of God are obtained through prayers that storm heaven as soldiers storm a fort—with confidence and determination."
            We need to unleash the incredible power of the rosary. Father Gabriele Amorth, the Vatican exorcist, said,  "One day a colleague of mine heard the devil say during an exorcism, 'Every Hail Mary is like a blow on my head. If Christians knew how powerful the Rosary was, it would be my end.'"
            In the musical Les Misérables is a line from "Do You Hear the People Sing." "Will you join in our crusade? Who will be strong and stand with me?" Will you join in the crusade to crush Satan through the Immaculate Heart of Mary to restore holiness to our country?

Monday, May 4, 2020

Responding to the Heavenly Father's Love

Responding to the Heavenly Father's Love: “Do you love me?” are the touching words Tevye sings to Golde, his faithful wife of 25 years, in the acclaimed musical Fiddler on the Roof. The musical’s universal appeal unfolds the deeper meaning of love through sacrifice, begging the question, “What is true love?” Following the custom of the time, Tevye and Golde’s parents …

https://catholicexchange.com/responding-to-the-heavenly-fathers-love

Pope St. Pius V's Saintly Secret Weapon

Pope St. Pius V's Saintly Secret Weapon: One of my favorite lines from the Disney animated classic, An American Tail, is when Gussie yells, “Release the secret weapon! (To imitate her; her “r”s sound like “w”s). This sets in motion a chain of events that unleashes the secret weapon’s incredible power, ultimately routing their inimitable foes. The mice, like David in the …