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MaryM Forum Manager


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| Posted: July 09 2005 at 11:29am | IP Logged
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Since Marybeth mentioned St. James - I thought it would be a good time to also run a thread of ideas for St. Benedict's Feast Day on July 11. Considering that our new Holy Father has chosen this name it's especially fitting to have special activities/celebration this year.
Catholic Culture's page as always, is a great start.
St. Benedict
Other ideas?
__________________ Mary M. in Denver
(mother to 4 - sons aged 21 , 18 , & 10 and daughter 14 )
Our Domestic Church
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Marybeth Forum All-Star

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| Posted: July 09 2005 at 1:08pm | IP Logged
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I watch my sister's four children on July 11th so we are going to make a cave in their backyard. We are going to take in it some religious books, read about St. Benedict and say the rosary. I am sure my 14 year old nephew will be thrilled.
We will then each choose a symbol of St. Benedict and make a craft using whatever art supplies they have on hand. I want them to hang these in their rooms so in remembering St. Benedict they remember to pray daily for our new Holy Father.
I wonder if I can find a bell shaped cookie cutter so we could make cookies too?? hmmm...will need to dig in my sister's cabinets....
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MaryM Forum Manager


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| Posted: July 09 2005 at 1:52pm | IP Logged
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Bell cookie cutters should be available at craft stores year around. (And since it's about time for stores to start selling for Christmas anyway might be readily available)
Ran across these:
Images of St. Benedict
Fun Facts from Saints and Angels website.
__________________ Mary M. in Denver
(mother to 4 - sons aged 21 , 18 , & 10 and daughter 14 )
Our Domestic Church
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MaryM Forum Manager


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| Posted: July 09 2005 at 2:00pm | IP Logged
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Marybeth wrote:
| ... we are going to make a cave in their backyard. |
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Great idea!
Or find a local cave for some spelunking.
Benedict is considered the patron of speliologists (cave explorers). Maybe a mini study study of caves in general - formation of caves, stalagtites/stalagmites, cave-dwelling animals.
__________________ Mary M. in Denver
(mother to 4 - sons aged 21 , 18 , & 10 and daughter 14 )
Our Domestic Church
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JennGM Forum Moderator


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| Posted: July 09 2005 at 2:01pm | IP Logged
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The story of the St. Benedict medal is just fascinating. Telling that story of the blessing over the poisoned cup and it shattering is a great one to tell children. That easily brings in discussion of the powerful evil of the devil but the stronger power of prayer. This discussion is great in reinforcing the need for blessing our food before partaking -- thanking God, but also asking him to bless us and the food.
Also St. benedict has a connection with bees (see Blessing of the Bees on the Feast of St. Benedict), which can lead to all sorts of rabbit trails on bees, beehives, honey, wax, candlemaking, pysanky eggs, beeswax crayons, etc. There have been a few discussions already on the boards on
1) Candlemaking,
2) Bees
3) Easter Vigil Notebooks and
4) Easter Eggs Traditions.
Either here or on the CCM list there has been discussion of using cookie molds like the ones from House on the Hill and making beeswax shapes. They sell beeswax, have some molds with the bees depicted. Some other ideas on candlemaking are connected to the feast of St. Ambrose.
The study of Roman history correlates with Benedict, as his vocation rose from living and seeing the overindulgence and sins of the Roman Empire.
How about the connection of our new pope Benedict with the Benedictines? After he was elected he immediately went to Subiaco, the original monastery that Benedict had founded. Studying the history of Subiaco is also fascinating. This is the Official site. this is the English version of the site. Just take a peek at the library!!!! What a dream place!!!
The Rule of St. Benedict is an easy read and food for much discussion. A family is a miniature monastery in a sense. The famous line "Ora et Labora" (Pray and Work), the two tenets of the Benedictine Rule are still around to this day. There's a great interview about applying St. Benedict's rule to the family here. He wrote two books Listen My Son: St. Benedict for Fathers and St. Benedict and St. Therese. These I have not read, but want to!
Another author, a Protestant, wrote a book Christian Family Toolbox: 52 Benedictine Activities for the Home and The Family Cloister based on applying St. Benedict to the home.
And lastly, two reprinted books by Ignatius: Louis De Wohl's Citadel of God (excellent!) and Mary Fabean Windeatt St. Benedict, Hero of the Hills.
__________________ Jennifer G. Miller
Wife to & ds1 ('03) & ds2 12/07
Family in Feast and Feria
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Marybeth Forum All-Star

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| Posted: July 09 2005 at 2:38pm | IP Logged
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Jenn,
I don't know the story of the poisoned cup? Could you do a quick explanation or just tell me where to look it up? Thanks. I think my future cave dwellers would love it!
Hey, I may have to make a special trip to Hobby Lobby and look at their Christmas aisle.
Marybeth
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MaryM Forum Manager


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| Posted: July 09 2005 at 3:50pm | IP Logged
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Marybeth wrote:
I don't know the story of the poisoned cup? Could you do a quick explanation or just tell me where to look it up? |
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Maybe Jenn has a more detailed story or site - but this is a short version of the stories I've heard.
After Benedict had been living as a hermit for several years a religious community came to him after the death of their abbot and asked Benedict to take over. Some of the monks didn't like this plan and the rigor of his rule and attempted to kill him with poisoned bread and wine. When St. Benedict made the sign of the Cross over the cup of wine and the bread, the cup holding the wine shattered (some versions I've seen say it spilled) and some versions indicate a raven carried off the bread.
Here is an explanation of the St. Benedict Medal and the meaning of the symbols on it which includes the poisoned cup and the raven.
__________________ Mary M. in Denver
(mother to 4 - sons aged 21 , 18 , & 10 and daughter 14 )
Our Domestic Church
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JennGM Forum Moderator


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| Posted: July 09 2005 at 3:59pm | IP Logged
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Hey, for the adults, have a little sip of Benedictine or B&B for the feast!
__________________ Jennifer G. Miller
Wife to & ds1 ('03) & ds2 12/07
Family in Feast and Feria
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Marybeth Forum All-Star

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| Posted: July 09 2005 at 7:23pm | IP Logged
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I think maybe we will go to the Catholic store in our neighborhood and buy some St. Benedict medals.
Thanks for the links!
Marybeth
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Marybeth Forum All-Star

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| Posted: July 09 2005 at 7:25pm | IP Logged
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I forgot to thank Mary for explaining the St. Benedict and the poison story for me. Thank you very much!!
Marybeth
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JennGM Forum Moderator


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| Posted: July 09 2005 at 10:40pm | IP Logged
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MaryM wrote:
Marybeth wrote:
I don't know the story of the poisoned cup? Could you do a quick explanation or just tell me where to look it up? |
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Maybe Jenn has a more detalied story or site - but this is a short version of the stories I've heard. |
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Your version is better than mine, Mary! Thanks for taking the time to type it up!
__________________ Jennifer G. Miller
Wife to & ds1 ('03) & ds2 12/07
Family in Feast and Feria
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alicegunther Forum All-Star


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| Posted: July 09 2005 at 10:56pm | IP Logged
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You would also enjoy reading The Holy Twins by Tomie dePaola, a picture book on the life of St. Benedict and his twin sister, St. Scholastica. I have told my children repeatedly that if I were ever blessed with twins, a boy and a girl, they would have the middle names Benedict and Scholastica!
__________________ Love, Alice
mother of seven!
     
Cottage Blessings
Brew yourself a cup of tea, and come for a visit!
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JennGM Forum Moderator


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alicegunther wrote:
| You would also enjoy reading The Holy Twins by Tomie dePaola, a picture book on the life of St. Benedict and his twin sister, St. Scholastica. |
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Thanks for the reminder, Alice! This book slipped my mind and I had bought a copy at a used book sale this year.
__________________ Jennifer G. Miller
Wife to & ds1 ('03) & ds2 12/07
Family in Feast and Feria
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JennGM Forum Moderator


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| Posted: July 11 2005 at 8:43am | IP Logged
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Oh, another famous monastery founded by St. Benedict is Monte Cassino. A whole unit study could be done on the monasteries Benedict founded, or even this one alone. There was even a Battle of Monte Cassino in WWII where it was bombed to ruins, hundreds of innocent lives lost.
From Catholic Encyclopedia. Also the Benedictine's website gives some information and links about this monastery.
__________________ Jennifer G. Miller
Wife to & ds1 ('03) & ds2 12/07
Family in Feast and Feria
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stefoodie Forum Moderator


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When I was looking for food to prepare to celebrate the Pope's election, I found several references to "Pope food" being served in Marktl (?) Am Inn in Germany (the Pope's birthplace) -- including "Pabstbier" Pope's beer, and "Vatican Bread". I even found references to Ratzinger slices, Benedict cake, and Pope honey. Over the top but funny.
__________________ stef
mom to five
... and these Thy gifts ...
The Homeschooler's Book Blog
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JennGM Forum Moderator


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| Posted: July 11 2005 at 10:28am | IP Logged
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My Nameday, Come for Dessert suggests a Honey Chiffon Cake or Glace Benedictine (Strawberry ice cream laced with Benedictine liqueur). See EWTN for text.
This quote from the book I thought had a lot of food for thought: "St. Benedict warns that personal prayers should be short in order to bring the mind to God and not leave it exposed to the danger of idle thoughts."
Got this from the VIS today:
POPE RECALLS ST. BENEDICT, A FOUNDER OF CIVILIZATION
VATICAN CITY, JUL 10, 2005 (VIS) - The Pope's reflections prior to praying the noon Angelus today concentrated on the figure of St. Benedict, abbot, founder of the Benedictine Order and patron saint of Europe, whose feast day falls tomorrow.
The Pope reminded the 40,000 pilgrims gathered in St. Peter's Square of some of the episodes in the life of this saint (480-547) from Nursia, Italy, who abandoned Rome and retired to the mountains of Subiaco. There he created "a fraternal community founded on the primacy of the love of Christ, a community in which prayer and work alternated harmoniously in praise to God."
The Pope explained how the author of the famous Benedictine Rule, "amid the ashes of the Roman empire and seeking before all else the Kingdom of God, laid, perhaps unknowingly, the seed of a new civilization which would later develop, integrating Christian values with, on the one hand, classical heritage and, on the other, Germanic and Slav cultures."
Benedict XVI also recalled that the saint whose name he had taken "did not found a monastic institution with the aim of evangelizing barbarian peoples, as other great missionary monks of the time did, rather he indicated to his followers that the search for God is the fundamental, indeed the only, goal of existence."
"Nevertheless, he also knew that when believers enter into a profound relationship with God, they cannot be content with living a mediocre life marked by minimalist ethics and superficial religiosity.... St Benedict said: 'Place nothing before the love of Christ.' This is sanctity, which is valid for all Christians and has become a true pastoral priority in our own times, when we feel such a need to anchor life and history to solid spiritual references."
__________________ Jennifer G. Miller
Wife to & ds1 ('03) & ds2 12/07
Family in Feast and Feria
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JennGM Forum Moderator


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stefoodie wrote:
| When I was looking for food to prepare to celebrate the Pope's election, I found several references to "Pope food" being served in Marktl (?) Am Inn in Germany (the Pope's birthplace) -- including "Pabstbier" Pope's beer, and "Vatican Bread". I even found references to Ratzinger slices, Benedict cake, and Pope honey. Over the top but funny. |
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Did these have recipes? Or just names applied to existing recipes?
Oh, too many things going through my head today! Benedict was born in Nursia, Italy, which is the Umbria region of Italy, same region as St. Francis. There are some great Italian dishes that could be served up today, also, in honor of this saint.
See Patron Saints Index for further information and great links on Benedict.
Also, St. Gregory the Great wrote a story of Benedict, called Life of St. Benedict. I love when saints' lives overlap. I started brainstorming about Gregory's feast day, since it's a big family patron saint (my maiden name is Gregory).
__________________ Jennifer G. Miller
Wife to & ds1 ('03) & ds2 12/07
Family in Feast and Feria
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Kelly Forum All-Star

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Re: Monte Cassino, I think that is where the Italians/Germans stored many of their priceless art treasures during the war. Along with the loss of human life was the loss of this stash of priceless art.
You can read more about this in the book, "The Rape of Europa".
Kelly in FL
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aussieannie Forum Moderator


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Just wanted to bump this great thread, in Aus it is the morning of his feast and I am looking for some good ideas...
__________________ Under Her Starry Mantle
Spiritual Motherhood for Priests
Blessed with 3 girls & 3 boys!
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aussieannie Forum Moderator


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Our local bakery sells 'beestings' it is a beautiful cake that has a custard/cream filling and a honey topping encrusted in almond slivers - I think this is my easiest feasting option I have a lovely big plastic St Benedict Medal that could sit on top.
__________________ Under Her Starry Mantle
Spiritual Motherhood for Priests
Blessed with 3 girls & 3 boys!
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