... the Zoomlians bring to you: our favorites from the past year! Happy New Year's Eve!
Favorite Posts:
Triumphs: Eagle Court, Leena's Confirmation, Abydos, and the Pinewood Derby
Adventures: Beach, House, Flamingos, and Everything Else
Hilarity: Choclo's Blue Horse, Oob's Journalism, Mantax and Pridak , and Bad Ideas
Home School:Music, Masters of Disasters, Chemistry, and Awesome Modern History
Fun: Birthdays, 7 Quick Takes, Marching Through Time, and Steampunk
Saturday, December 31, 2016
Friday, December 30, 2016
On the Sixth Day of Christmas....
...the Zoomlians bring to you: Radio Garden!
This is a website which streams live radio broadcasts from around the world!
Doesn't sound too exciting? Try it! Spin the globe and click on whatever little green dot catches your eye. It's addictive!
You should be able to get to their website by clicking on the picture, but if I haven't gotten the tech right, you can use this link: Radio Garden.
This is a website which streams live radio broadcasts from around the world!
Doesn't sound too exciting? Try it! Spin the globe and click on whatever little green dot catches your eye. It's addictive!
You should be able to get to their website by clicking on the picture, but if I haven't gotten the tech right, you can use this link: Radio Garden.
Thursday, December 29, 2016
Wednesday, December 28, 2016
On the Fourth Day of Christmas...
...the Zoomlians bring to you: Leena's Christmas Special!
With the added bonus of the BCC Christmas Special, with all the art done by Klenda!
With the added bonus of the BCC Christmas Special, with all the art done by Klenda!
Tuesday, December 27, 2016
On the Third Day of Christmas...
...the Zoomlians bring to you: a beautiful Christmas carol!
HT: Imogen Elvis (and family!) She has a whole playlist of really lovely Christmas music!
HT: Imogen Elvis (and family!) She has a whole playlist of really lovely Christmas music!
Monday, December 26, 2016
On the Second Day of Christmas...
...the Zoomlians bring to you: a Christmas poem!
HT: Poetry Foundation
Two things about this poem: firstly, the writer was a priest in England during Elizabethan times who was later martyred for his faith, and secondly, it was set to music and sung by Sting. I'm not sure what's with that since I also heard his version of The Angel Gabriel to Mary Came for the first time ever this Advent.
The Burning Babe
Surpris’d I was with sudden heat which made my heart to glow;
And lifting up a fearful eye to view what fire was near,
A pretty Babe all burning bright did in the air appear;
Who, scorched with excessive heat, such floods of tears did shed
As though his floods should quench his flames which with his tears were fed.
“Alas!” quoth he, “but newly born, in fiery heats I fry,
Yet none approach to warm their hearts or feel my fire but I!
My faultless breast the furnace is, the fuel wounding thorns,
Love is the fire, and sighs the smoke, the ashes shame and scorns;
The fuel Justice layeth on, and Mercy blows the coals,
The metal in this furnace wrought are men’s defiled souls,
For which, as now on fire I am to work them to their good,
So will I melt into a bath to wash them in my blood.”
With this he vanish’d out of sight and swiftly shrunk away,
And straight I called unto mind that it was Christmas day.HT: Poetry Foundation
Two things about this poem: firstly, the writer was a priest in England during Elizabethan times who was later martyred for his faith, and secondly, it was set to music and sung by Sting. I'm not sure what's with that since I also heard his version of The Angel Gabriel to Mary Came for the first time ever this Advent.
Sunday, December 25, 2016
On the First Day of Christmas...
...the Zoomlians give to you: Best wishes for a Merry Christmas!
We got to decorate our parish this Christmas!
We got to decorate our parish this Christmas!
Saturday, December 24, 2016
Merry Christmas Eve!
Sunday, December 18, 2016
Poem of the Week: Advent Hands
Advent Hands
By Catherine Alder
I see the hands of Joseph.
Back and forth along bare wood they move.
There is worry in those working hands,
sorting out confusing thoughts with every stroke.
“How can this be, my beautiful Mary now with child?”
Rough with deep splinters, these hands,
small, painful splinters like tiny crosses
embedded deeply in this choice to stay with her.
He could have closed his hands to her,
said, “No” and let her go to stoning.
But, dear Joseph opened both his heart and hands
to this mother and her child.
Preparing in these days before
with working hands
and wood pressed tight between them.
It is these rough hands that will open
and be the first to hold the Child.
I see the hands of John,
worn from desert raging storms
and plucking locusts from sand ripped rocks
beneath the remnant of a Bethlehem star.
A howling wind like some lost wolf
cries out beneath the moon,
or was that John?
This loneliness,
enough to make a grown man mad.
He’s waiting for this, God’s whisper.
“Go now. He is coming.
You have prepared your hands enough.
Go. He needs your servant hands,
your cupping hands to lift the water,
and place his feet upon the path to service and to death.
Go now, John, and open your hands to him.
It is time.”
I see a fist held tight and fingers blanched to white.
Prying is no easy task.
These fingers find a way of pulling back to old positions,
protecting all that was and is.
Blanched to white. No openness. All fright.
But then the Spirit comes.
A holy Christmas dance begins
and blows between the twisted paths.
This fist opens
slowly,
gently,
beautifully,
the twisted fingers letting go.
Their rock-solid place in line has eased.
And one by one the fingers lift
True color is returned
And through the deepest of mysteries,
The holiest of holies,
O longing of longings
Beyond all human imagining
this fist,
as if awakened from Lazarus’ cold stone dream
reaches out to hold the tiny newborn hand of God.
HT: Journey With Jesus
By Catherine Alder
I see the hands of Joseph.
Back and forth along bare wood they move.
There is worry in those working hands,
sorting out confusing thoughts with every stroke.
“How can this be, my beautiful Mary now with child?”
Rough with deep splinters, these hands,
small, painful splinters like tiny crosses
embedded deeply in this choice to stay with her.
He could have closed his hands to her,
said, “No” and let her go to stoning.
But, dear Joseph opened both his heart and hands
to this mother and her child.
Preparing in these days before
with working hands
and wood pressed tight between them.
It is these rough hands that will open
and be the first to hold the Child.
I see the hands of John,
worn from desert raging storms
and plucking locusts from sand ripped rocks
beneath the remnant of a Bethlehem star.
A howling wind like some lost wolf
cries out beneath the moon,
or was that John?
This loneliness,
enough to make a grown man mad.
He’s waiting for this, God’s whisper.
“Go now. He is coming.
You have prepared your hands enough.
Go. He needs your servant hands,
your cupping hands to lift the water,
and place his feet upon the path to service and to death.
Go now, John, and open your hands to him.
It is time.”
I see a fist held tight and fingers blanched to white.
Prying is no easy task.
These fingers find a way of pulling back to old positions,
protecting all that was and is.
Blanched to white. No openness. All fright.
But then the Spirit comes.
A holy Christmas dance begins
and blows between the twisted paths.
This fist opens
slowly,
gently,
beautifully,
the twisted fingers letting go.
Their rock-solid place in line has eased.
And one by one the fingers lift
True color is returned
And through the deepest of mysteries,
The holiest of holies,
O longing of longings
Beyond all human imagining
this fist,
as if awakened from Lazarus’ cold stone dream
reaches out to hold the tiny newborn hand of God.
HT: Journey With Jesus
Sunday, December 11, 2016
Poem of the Week: Gaudete!
The Incarnate Word is with us,
is still speaking, is present
always, yet leaves no sign
but everything that is.
By Wendell Berry
HT: Minnesota Mom
Wednesday, December 7, 2016
Tuesday, December 6, 2016
Happy Feast of St. Nicholas!
We had a big party with lots of friends, games and a gingerbread contest!
The first game was coloring a picture of St. Nicholas.
St. Nicholas was a bishop, so we cut two little slits and slid in a candy cane for his crosier.
Then we had Stocking Toss, where the kids tossed little bags of gold on the stockings. That commemorates St. Nicholas tossing bags of gold secretly into a house to help a family who would have had to sell their children.
And, back by popular demand, we had Punch Arius!.
The idea is to punch Arius while shouting parts of the Nicene Creed that proclaim Jesus' divinity.
This is based on the story that St. Nicholas struck Arius during the Council of Nicaea when Arius was trying to convince the world's bishops that Jesus was not really God.
I told the kids that they weren't allowed to punch heretics unless they became bishops and were at an Ecumenical Council. You never know what can plant the seed of a vocation!
The prizes for all the games were gold (chocolate) coins.
Gingerbread results tomorrow!
The first game was coloring a picture of St. Nicholas.
St. Nicholas was a bishop, so we cut two little slits and slid in a candy cane for his crosier.
Then we had Stocking Toss, where the kids tossed little bags of gold on the stockings. That commemorates St. Nicholas tossing bags of gold secretly into a house to help a family who would have had to sell their children.
And, back by popular demand, we had Punch Arius!.
The idea is to punch Arius while shouting parts of the Nicene Creed that proclaim Jesus' divinity.
This is based on the story that St. Nicholas struck Arius during the Council of Nicaea when Arius was trying to convince the world's bishops that Jesus was not really God.
I told the kids that they weren't allowed to punch heretics unless they became bishops and were at an Ecumenical Council. You never know what can plant the seed of a vocation!
The prizes for all the games were gold (chocolate) coins.
Gingerbread results tomorrow!
Monday, December 5, 2016
Sunday, December 4, 2016
Advent Poem of the Week: Into the Darkest Hour
Into The Darkest Hour
by Madeleine L’Engle
It was a time like this,
War & tumult of war,
a horror in the air.
Hungry yawned the abyss-
and yet there came the star
and the child most wonderfully there.
It was time like this
of fear & lust for power,
license & greed and blight-
and yet the Prince of bliss
came into the darkest hour
in quiet & silent light.
And in a time like this
how celebrate his birth
when all things fall apart?
Ah! Wonderful it is
with no room on the earth
the stable is our heart.
HT: Coffeehouse Junkie
Image HT: Embedded Faith
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