![]() ![]() I’m planning a candlelit breakfast-for-dinner with the traditional crepes. What are your plans for today? Besides this coloring page, in my home, we’ll be praying this Candlemas Family Liturgy for evening prayer. Download the Candlemas proverb coloring page here. Happy Candlemas! Today, we’re sharing a charming new coloring page from Michelle Abernathy Art (and consequently updating this site for the first time since May!). The book is divided into four sections: 1) “Breathless” (Christ leaving. As you would expect from the title, Alary chooses the theme of breathing in order to illuminate a biblical theology of the Holy Spirit as wind and breath. ![]() Just like her other books, Breathe is an example of poetic theologizing for children - weaving together the Scriptures and church year traditions as she explores the liturgical themes. So, I was delighted to receive a copy of her new book Breathe: A Child’s Guide to Ascension, Pentecost, and the Growing Time from Paraclete Press. I’ve written here on the Homely Hours about how much I have appreciated Laura Alary’s “Child Guides” to both Lent and Advent. Happy Rogation Sunday and Mother’s Day! While each of those occasions deserve their own posts, instead I’m squeezing in a review about a book for Ascension and Pentecost (because this is the first opportunity I’ve been able to post it and so that you can have enough time to buy it for yourself, if you are so inclined). We found these two links to be particularly helpful: If I want to know more, what are some other helpful resources? You can scroll down on the Fisheaters Ember Days article to find a helpful chart showing which Ember Day corresponds to which month of the year. Luke 4:16-31Īre there any interesting customs surrounding the Ember Days?įolklore says that the weather of the Ember Days predicts the weather of the year. The collect for the Ember Days is as follows:Īlmighty God, who hast committed to the hands of men the ministry of reconciliation We humbly beseech thee, by the inspiration of thy Holy Spirit, to put it into the hearts of many to offer themselves for this ministry that thereby mankind may be drawn to thy blessed kingdom through Jesus Christ our Lord. ![]() How does the Book of Common Prayer treat the Ember Days? They are days to be attentive to the givenness of God’s created order in the passage of the seasons. For this reason, they have also traditionally been the times that women pray for children and childbirth. These are days for prayer and fasting, specifically prayer for clergy and ordinations, as well as taking care of the needy. However, Leo the Great (440-461) called the fasts an apostolic institution. The earliest mention of the Ember Days is found in the writings of Philastrius, the bishop of Brescia, who died in 387 AD. Folk etymology claims that the source of “ember” comes from “may ye rem ember, ” that is, remember the cycle of death and life. ![]() The word “Ember Days” is from the Anglo-Saxon ymbren, a circuit or revolution (from ymb, around, and ryne, a course, running). In Latin, these days are called Quatour Tempora (Four Times). An old English rhyme states: “Fasting days and Emberings be / Lent, Whitsun, Holyrood, and Lucie.” Lucy in spring, after Ash Wednesday in summer, after Pentecost Sunday and in fall, after Holy Cross Day. As you may suspect, this happens four times a year: in winter, after the feast of St. The Ember Days are set aside by the Church as a way to mark the passage of seasons through prayer and fasting. ![]()
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