Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's ridiculous that people are criticizing you for this. Many of the traditions are lovely, so why not.
Make or buy and advent wreath. (Three violet, one rose candle)
Or do a Christmas Pyramid: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christmas_pyramid
Make or buy and advent calendar
Celebrate your child's name day:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Name_day
If she doesn't actually have a saint's name, pick the closest equivalent. She gets a small gift like they do in France.
Sing Christmas carols. Go to sing-alongs.
Follow Christmas Eve feast traditions, e.g., the Italian Feast of the Seven Fishes
As I said, I wasn't trying to criticize, I didn't realize OP was trying to create traditions within her family. And even if she wanted to include others she should go ahead but not be surprised if others don't jump aboard.
Sounds more like you were trying to discourage her -- and still are trying to discourage the idea of celebrating advent outside of organized religion.
No. I'm sure we all know plenty of folks who celebrate without being devout.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's ridiculous that people are criticizing you for this. Many of the traditions are lovely, so why not.
Make or buy and advent wreath. (Three violet, one rose candle)
Or do a Christmas Pyramid: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christmas_pyramid
Make or buy and advent calendar
Celebrate your child's name day:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Name_day
If she doesn't actually have a saint's name, pick the closest equivalent. She gets a small gift like they do in France.
Sing Christmas carols. Go to sing-alongs.
Follow Christmas Eve feast traditions, e.g., the Italian Feast of the Seven Fishes
As I said, I wasn't trying to criticize, I didn't realize OP was trying to create traditions within her family. And even if she wanted to include others she should go ahead but not be surprised if others don't jump aboard.
Sounds more like you were trying to discourage her -- and still are trying to discourage the idea of celebrating advent outside of organized religion.
Anonymous wrote:I consider myself a cultural Catholic too. I'm doing advent wreath, self-improvement for lent, and of course Christmas, Easter, Halloween, St. Valentine's Day, etc traditions. I also do saint's days with the kids, mostly because they are twins and it gives them a special day to themselves in addition to their joint birthday.
With all these traditions and celebrations I focus mostly on the seasonal changes of the year and the many stories humans have told about the cycles of nature throughout history, including Catholic ones among others. After all most of these traditions came out of pagan nature-based religions before being appropriated by the Catholic church, so I feel no guilt whatsoever about evolving them once again away from a Christian context.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's ridiculous that people are criticizing you for this. Many of the traditions are lovely, so why not.
Make or buy and advent wreath. (Three violet, one rose candle)
Or do a Christmas Pyramid: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christmas_pyramid
Make or buy and advent calendar
Celebrate your child's name day:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Name_day
If she doesn't actually have a saint's name, pick the closest equivalent. She gets a small gift like they do in France.
Sing Christmas carols. Go to sing-alongs.
Follow Christmas Eve feast traditions, e.g., the Italian Feast of the Seven Fishes
As I said, I wasn't trying to criticize, I didn't realize OP was trying to create traditions within her family. And even if she wanted to include others she should go ahead but not be surprised if others don't jump aboard.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's ridiculous that people are criticizing you for this. Many of the traditions are lovely, so why not.
Make or buy and advent wreath. (Three violet, one rose candle)
Or do a Christmas Pyramid: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christmas_pyramid
Make or buy and advent calendar
Celebrate your child's name day:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Name_day
If she doesn't actually have a saint's name, pick the closest equivalent. She gets a small gift like they do in France.
Sing Christmas carols. Go to sing-alongs.
Follow Christmas Eve feast traditions, e.g., the Italian Feast of the Seven Fishes
Anonymous wrote:I think it's fine OP. And note to PPs, she didn't say she was trying to get a whole community to do this--just something with her daughter.
The biggest mistake maybe was sticking this under the Religion forum. Religious people would probably not get this. I think the historical and traditional part of many religions is interesting and beautiful, and if you want to just explore some of that, it is a very cool idea.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's ridiculous that people are criticizing you for this. Many of the traditions are lovely, so why not.
Make or buy and advent wreath. (Three violet, one rose candle)
Or do a Christmas Pyramid: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christmas_pyramid
Make or buy and advent calendar
Celebrate your child's name day:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Name_day
If she doesn't actually have a saint's name, pick the closest equivalent. She gets a small gift like they do in France.
Sing Christmas carols. Go to sing-alongs.
Follow Christmas Eve feast traditions, e.g., the Italian Feast of the Seven Fishes
Anonymous wrote:Cafeteria line Catholics (as they used to be called around here) are the only sane ones!
My advice:find a group of similarly minded friends and avoid people whose parents still attend daily mass and who'll try to drag you back into the fold.
Don't expect too much change in the hierarchy, BTW; as long as the Pope has cowardly secret meetings with crazy girls who go to jail for not issuing marriage licenses, the church leadership will not be marked by forward thinking.
The rest of us will have to take a wait-and-see attitude while the world spins merrily on.
The difference is that while there is as a PP noted "a well-established community of cultural Jews" the Catholic church has a love-or-leave-'em attitude towards its flock, which is why attendance peaks at around 20% in Europe. If you want to observe Cultural Catholics, just look to the EU: people have moved on with their lives and still enjoy Christmas and Easter, weddings and baptisms and funerals, but get to live a mostly secular life. Guessing by declining church attendance here, we'll all be that way soon, except for those who already are.
If you want some immediate spiritual gratification, stroll the gardens of the Francisan Monastery in N.E. or the campus of CUA and then drop into the Basilica.
Good luck!