Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Tae Kwon Do Blue Belt!!!!

So proud of Legoboy!

 

While he didn't ENTIRELY pass his belt test, they gave him the belt with a white tape on the end; he re-did the last few requirements the following week and had the tape removed; he handled it rather maturely, while obviously visible disappointed in himself that he didn't get a "full" blue belt at the test day itself. He knew he'd not practiced well enough - and the requirements to perfection get stiffer as belt rank increases. It was a very good lesson!

 

The difference between full belt and tape? He can't learn the new stuff for the NEXT belt until he gets the tape off. He's there now and so relieved. The instructor even went out of his way to pick him up and take him to class (and return him) on a day that Legoboy was available to attend but I was not available to drive).

 

The belt test itself:

 









Beforehand - still a purple belt

 









got the new belt - but covered it up ;)










turning to bow to the audience of parents

 









a close-up cuz he just so handsome!!

 

 









all that color!

 









the gentleman who tested him

 









the instructor - the "master"
(interesting placement of weapons in the back there....)

 









the master who likes to have fun ;)
(not knowing the weapons already did it, hahaha!)

 

 

 

 

 

Leading a portion of a class afterward; and helping with a transfer student who is also a blue belt (not all schools have precisely the same requirements for each colored belt - black belts are all the same though; so Legoboy was asked to transition the boy into the requirements at this school).

 









helping the new blue belt (transferring in)

 









leading the kicking portion of basics

 









note that the other blue belt is quite a bit older ;)

 



 



 



 

 

Monday, May 20, 2013

A bit of post-atrium fun

What the children do after our Monday atrium - these photos are all of Legoboy from the last day of class. Bittersweet! I would have cried when saying goodbye to the children, but I was distracted by some physical pain. At least I was able to end the year on a note of fulfillment.

 

Please note - the photos may be redundant, but he is NOT intentionally making a silly face or hiding his face - he actually WANTED his photo taken - and I had to take the opportunity while I could!!!

 



 



 



 



 



 



 

A bit of Post-Atrium Fun

What the children do after our Monday atrium – these photos are all of Legoboy from the last day of class. Bittersweet! I would have cried when saying goodbye to the children, but I was distracted by some physical pain. At least I was able to end the year on a note of fulfillment.

Please note – the photos may be redundant, but he is NOT intentionally making a silly face or hiding his face – he actually WANTED his photo taken – and I had to take the opportunity while I could!!!











Friday, May 17, 2013

Catholic Bible Studies

 

Legoboy has been fascinated with the Bible his entire life. Yay!

 

At age 8, he began an in-depth study of the Book of Revelation. And he's getting it! He has many questions and I started again on a search for an appropriate resource to use with one little boy at home.... Which only led to frustration.

We're Catholic! Why should we be frustrated looking for a Bible study at an adolescent level? Protestants have this covered!

 

[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="262"] working in the atrium - is he working? or is this a joyful moment? ;)[/caption]

 

First, how did we - as a family - get to this point? 

  • We have only ever read from the full Bible. No little-kid version, though I had a few on-hand from pre-motherhood days when I thought they were a good idea - cartoony images; snippets of stories with little to no cohesion between them. I had CGS level 1 formation when Legoboy was not quite 1, and I'd already been reading from the full Bible aloud when he was in the womb. He knew the Word of God.

  • He has been in the Catechesis of the Good Shepherd atrium at home, at parishes and in schools since he was 1; the Bible holds a place of reverence - equal to that of the Liturgy. Also see Seeking the Plan of God.

  • We attend Easter Vigil, Midnight Mass and other long celebrations - since infancy. I missed Easter Vigil the evening my son was born - since then, both he and I have held dear this greatest of liturgical celebrations when Salvation History is proclaimed in beautiful chant and prayer and song.

  • Before age 6, based on Montessori principles and observation of all children around me, we laid a strong foundation of reality. Throughout this time, we read from the Bible, lived out the liturgy, celebrated the liturgical year at home - and emphasized the TRUTH in it all. Thus when he did begin to read truly fictional (fantasy) stories at 4 3/4 (much sooner than he really should have), he GOT it. He knew what was truth and what was a really cool imagining.

  • As a boy, he loves battles! As a Catholic, CGS, Montessori, truly thinking child, he has always loved symbolism, figuring out who Aslan represents before he turned 5.

  • One summer, we did an introductory study of the book of Psalms (using a resource from a Mennonite company (706 is their Book of Psalms), because it was solid in its theology, corresponded with Catholic teaching and all other Psalms studies available from a Catholic stance were either low-quality, cheesy (his word!), far too academic for a then 6-year-old boy, or far too expensive for his mother). That study prompted a deeper study of the entire book of Psalms; from there he has delved into various books and for 2 years now has been latched onto Revelations. We also have their study on the Book of Proverbs (807), but we've not yet done it because there has yet to be a natural lull in our rabbit-trail study of the Bible ;)


 

And how did we - as a church - get to this point? Where Bible study resources are of questionable quality, boring, over-priced, inappropriate matches for the intended audience, or are of questionable theology? Where most Catholics don't even know what the Church teaches about Creation

  • Historically, Catholics were taught from the Bible, but because Bibles were few and far between, being hand-copied over the process of MANY long months, the people may not have realized that what they were learning at Church was truly from the Bible.

  • The Protestant Reformation, around the time of the printing press, when Bibles were more readily available to the populace, twisted the truth and made people believe that Catholics had never really learned from the Bible.

  • Individual interpretations sprang up (which is allowable by the Catholic Church, within the framework of the few interpretations we know to be 100% solid. All of which led to further break-down.

  • Centuries pass. Mis-information is spread. Long story here.

  • Then we reach my generation and the one before - we had the worst Catechism in the history of the Church. Some days I am astounded there are devout Catholics remaining at all!

  • Finally, we have people putting together authentic Catholic studies, but for particular audiences - adults, faith formation groups (who can ostensibly afford $200-$300 for one study), some (very few) for children. And those ones for children - are cheap, leave out far too much, and do not trust the spiritual depth of the child's baptismal pre-age-of-reason soul. Seriously, folks who make these Bible studies! If Protestant children can handle the Bible, so can OURS! Especially can ours!


 

As Legoboy and I started a year-long reading of the entire Bible this year, we'd read a passage and wonder "what does the Church teach about this passage, if anything?" I have a degree in Catholic Theology; I know that most of the Bible is open to interpretation, but I do know the Church has provided a good amount of guidance in this area and there are a few passages with a very specific interpretation, known as Dogma, that to be a Catholic one must profess as faith.

And yet, I am struggling to find appropriate and affordable resources, without spending hours of my time researching for one passage.

My son is a homeschooled boy with no siblings - he just wants to LOVE and LEARN and SOAK UP the Bible.

What does this have to be SO HARD in the days of Google!
And yet, there are indeed a plethora of new and perhaps good resources. Let's explore what I have found of late; I've put off the final decision, but now I have sort of invited another boy and his family to join us, so I guess it's time to make a decision whether they join us or not. Summer is just about there after all.

 

Here are the resources we have found specifically for the Book of Revelation with their prices where appropriate - I have only listed the ones I would consider as they are a few more that are not even a consideration:

  • New Testament Study Bibles: For his birthday, a dear family friend purchases two New Testament resources for Legoboy. Not specifically Revelation, but still useful. Very useful.

  • T3 Revelation: The Lion and the Lamb - 64.95 (DVDs) or 49.95 (CDs) - each set includes one student workbook and one leader guide - for 4 30-minute lessons it seems pricey, but solid. How deep does it go in less than 2 hours?

  • The End - A Study on the Book of Revelation - Dr. Scott Hahn - 66.95 (14.95 without the CDs, just the study guide) - seems good, but perhaps too adult/scholarly?

  • Ignatius Catholic Study Bible - Letters to St. John & Revelation to St. John - available individually for 11.95 or as part of the complete New Testament study: Ignatius Catholic Study Bible (part of the photo in the first link of this list - price ranges on format 24.95-44.95) -- this one is almost ideal - the full book does not contain the described study questions that are in the individual books (UPDATED!) This link will take you to a .zip file of the study questions for each of the individuals - it is a free file I got from the Ignatius website itself.

  • Coming Soon - Unlocking the Book of Revelation - 15.95 - could this be THE one!? It is verse-by-verse (perfect for our CGS style meditations on the Scriptures), connects with the Mass, study questions for each chapter, but  the description doesn't seem to emphasize the connections with the Old Testament; although it does seem to emphasize not only Revelation in the present moment of our lives, but also looking forward to the Parousia. The one review it has right now says it DOES indeed cover typology, emphasizing the necessity of knowing the Old Testament to understand the New.... So just maybe....

  • Come and See - Ezekiel, Hebrews, Revelation - Catholic Bible Study for Adults - 19.95 - This series also has children's work with which I have experience. I find the children's work to be superfluous and relatively silly. Having worked with very young children in the Catechesis of the Good Shepherd atrium, just shows me how deep children's souls are! My 4 year old had NO interest in these; and at age 9 says "no" to even sampling them. Anyway, it has me wondering about the adult version - if it's deep enough, then perhaps it would be appropriate for my 9 year old? It certainly intends to connect the Old and New Testaments, which is a bonus with our CGS work on typology.

  • Unveiling the Apocalypse - the End Times According to the Bible - from Catholic Courses - 50-70 depending on place of purchase -- this one seems to directly address some of the most pertinent practical (apologetic) questions we have.

  • Free Online Resource - if not very pretty, it seems to have good information.

  • Adventures in Revelation 10 Week Bible Study - 179.95 - seems to be specifically for adults and is likely more scholarly than what we need. I am open to reviews, but the price is SO steep.

  • The Book of Revelation - Catholic Scripture Studies International - 129.95


 

Any others you know of??

 

By the by, the Mennonite studies on Psalms and Proverbs? $3.30 each. Mm-hm. Accessible, rich, and affordable.

Compared to With Psalms: The School of Prayer at 24.95 just for the study guide (89.95 or 179.95 for CDs or DVDs). Perhaps more intense, but the 3.30 workbook provided us with a year's worth of follow-up work that was quite intense by itself!

 

 

Monday, May 13, 2013

Genesis Chapter 25 - Sons of Abraham!

This post is also being shared on Seeking the Plan of God - a blog I set up as a journal of our atrium experiences. It seems pertinent over here too ;)

 

This is not specifically atrium - I am adding it here because my son has been in atrium with me for 8 years. This past year being is first in level 3 (a year early) - and he reads the Bible a bit different from your average child. I'm not bragging there ;) He reads the Bible like a child has been in level 1 atrium almost continuously for 8 years (at least once a week; sometimes 4-6 times); in level 2 almost continuously for 7 years (at least once a week; sometimes 3-5); and level 3 for a year. Not to mention all the formation courses he has attended! and even assisted!

 

We have started a sequence of reading through the Bible in a year. At the time of writing this, we are still in Genesis.

Chapter 25 to be specific.

How many times I've read this passage and only THIS time did I really read it. And he picked up on it too.

We all know that Abraham had two sons: as Abram, he bore a son by his wife's maid (Ishmael); then the covenant was completed, his name changed to Abraham and Sarah bore him a son in her old age: Isaac.

 

DID YOU KNOW?

After the death of Sarah, Isaac took solace in his wife Rebekkah (Genesis 24:67b).

After the death of Sarah, Abraham took solace in a new wife: Keturah.

 









This one seems accurate - 9 brothers;but what about their ages?

 

DID YOU KNOW? 

Ishmael had 12 sons to rule over 12 tribes.

Isaac grandfathered 11 boys; one boy had two sons to replace him; making what we know as the 12 tribes of Israel.

Side note: Joseph had two sons from whom 2 tribes received their names; Joseph did not have a tribe named after him. Benjamin being the younger brother, this means that only 9 brothers (at most because perhaps some were toddlers!) participated in any way in the selling of Joseph to the Egyptians.

(I wish those people who write children's Bibles would at least get the stories ACCURATE.)

Keturah bore 6 sons to Abraham; their ultimate descendants as listed come to 13, so it doesn't fit above; all 6 original sons were given grants and sent away from Isaac (probably because of what happened between Isaac and Ishmael).

 

DID YOU KNOW? 

Abraham, therefore, bore 8 sons. Not 1, not 2. EIGHT.

8. That's an interesting number. 8th day of creation (Easter); 8 people on the Ark.....

Isaac and Ishmael were together at their father's burial. Ishmael was a legitimate son, if not the "first-born" according to the birthright, because his mother was given in place of Sarah - not as a concubine, but as a replacement for Sarah's own womb. When Sarah was then able to bear a child, Ishmael maintained his legitimacy as a child of the Abraham, but lost his birthright as first-born. The other boys were considered to be conceived by "concubinage" despite Sarah being deceased at the time.

 

Wow.

Just one chapter. And that's not the whole thing!

 

That same chapter contains the birth of the twins: Esau and Jacob. Interesting that we usually consider Rebekkah to be something of a brat in her preference for the younger son. But indeed -while pregnant with the twins, she felt them wrestling and went to the Lord - the Lord told her that the older would serve the younger; indeed that he would "surpass" his older brother. Hence, she was simply favoring the one the Lord told her would rule.

Hm.

 

And there's still so much more said in just a few words - the age of the parents involved; how many years would that have been praying for children? the selling of the birthright....

 

Your turn!

 

;)

 

 

 

Genesis 25 - Sons of Abraham

This post is also being shared on Seeking the Plan of God - a blog I set up as a journal of our atrium experiences. It seems pertinent over here too ;)

This is not specifically atrium – I am adding it here because my son has been in atrium with me for 8 years. This past year being is first in level 3 (a year early) – and he reads the Bible a bit different from your average child. I’m not bragging there ;) He reads the Bible like a child has been in level 1 atrium almost continuously for 8 years (at least once a week; sometimes 4-6 times); in level 2 almost continuously for 7 years (at least once a week; sometimes 3-5); and level 3 for a year. Not to mention all the formation courses he has attended! and even assisted!

We have started a sequence of reading through the Bible in a year. At the time of writing this, we are still in Genesis.
Chapter 25 to be specific.
How many times I’ve read this passage and only THIS time did I really read it. And he picked up on it too.
We all know that Abraham had two sons: as Abram, he bore a son by his wife’s maid (Ishmael); then the covenant was completed, his name changed to Abraham and Sarah bore him a son in her old age: Isaac.

DID YOU KNOW?
After the death of Sarah, Isaac took solace in his wife Rebekkah (Genesis 24:67b).
After the death of Sarah, Abraham took solace in a new wife: Keturah.

This one seems accurate – 9 brothers;but what about their ages?

DID YOU KNOW? 
Ishmael had 12 sons to rule over 12 tribes.
Isaac grandfathered 11 boys; one boy had two sons to replace him; making what we know as the 12 tribes of Israel.
Side note: Joseph had two sons from whom 2 tribes received their names; Joseph did not have a tribe named after him. Benjamin being the younger brother, this means that only 9 brothers (at most because perhaps some were toddlers!) participated in any way in the selling of Joseph to the Egyptians.
(I wish those people who write children’s Bibles would at least get the stories ACCURATE.)
Keturah bore 6 sons to Abraham; their ultimate descendants as listed come to 13, so it doesn’t fit above; all 6 original sons were given grants and sent away from Isaac (probably because of what happened between Isaac and Ishmael).

DID YOU KNOW? 
Abraham, therefore, bore 8 sons. Not 1, not 2. EIGHT.
8. That’s an interesting number. 8th day of creation (Easter); 8 people on the Ark…..
Isaac and Ishmael were together at their father’s burial. Ishmael was a legitimate son, if not the “first-born” according to the birthright, because his mother was given in place of Sarah – not as a concubine, but as a replacement for Sarah’s own womb. When Sarah was then able to bear a child, Ishmael maintained his legitimacy as a child of the Abraham, but lost his birthright as first-born. The other boys were considered to be conceived by “concubinage” despite Sarah being deceased at the time.

Wow.
Just one chapter. And that’s not the whole thing!

That same chapter contains the birth of the twins: Esau and Jacob. Interesting that we usually consider Rebekkah to be something of a brat in her preference for the younger son. But indeed -while pregnant with the twins, she felt them wrestling and went to the Lord – the Lord told her that the older would serve the younger; indeed that he would “surpass” his older brother. Hence, she was simply favoring the one the Lord told her would rule.
Hm.

And there’s still so much more said in just a few words – the age of the parents involved; how many years would that have been praying for children? the selling of the birthright….

Your turn!