Archive for December, 2011

Best ‘Salve Regina’ Ever!

Posted by:Kate Duffy Sim on Dec - 27 - 2011 - Filed under: Catholic Links -

Salve Regina from Sister Act

I start every morning with this. So uplifting!

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The Child Mary

Posted by:Kate Duffy Sim on Dec - 14 - 2011 - Filed under: Catholic Links -

“And he set her down upon the third step of the altar, and the Lord sent grace upon her; and she danced with her feet, and all the house of Israel loved her.” The Gospel of James describes the child Mary in the temple.

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Advent: Ambushed by Grace

Posted by:Kate Duffy Sim on Dec - 11 - 2011 - Filed under: A Space for Grace -

Grace appears where you least expect it. I certainly wasn’t looking for it when I made the rounds at the St. Augustine Home rummage sale early this December. But there among the rubber gloves, sheet sets, and mismatched luggage, I was ambushed by grace.

It appeared in the form of a crèche, or nativity scene, displayed on emerald felt. It wasn’t the only manger scene for sale that day, but what made me stop  — and wipe away an errant wistful tear – was that this set was identical to the one my family put up every Christmas when I was a child.

Made in Italy half a century ago from a material that seems to be a mixture of papier mache and clay, the figures are painted in bright colors and in admirable detail. Kneeling, Mary holds slender hands to her breast, her sky blue robe folding over a pink gown. Joseph, gray-haired and dressed in brown and purple, is barefoot, supporting himself on one knee with the help of a staff.  Both seem pensive, although Mary smiles in quiet joy. There are three shepherds with adoring expressions; the three kings are richly gowned and two have dark complexions.  An angel suspended from a nail blesses the rickety wooden barn that contains the scene. There are four sheep, a wobbly camel, a cow with horns of twisted wire, a donkey, a dog, and a goat.

The jewel of the collection is, of course, the Christ Child, lying on a white drape in his manger of hay, his dreamy pointed face surrounded by sandy curls and a gold halo. His posture is ironically reminiscent of His impending crucifixion: arms outstretched, one knee raised higher than the other, a loin cloth gathered at one side. But the loin cloth is baby blue, and his knees are painted with rosy high lights. The entire figure is no more than three inches long, two inches wide, and no heavier than a walnut.

Every Christmas I can remember, until I married and left home, it was my “job” to arrange the crèche. My mother and I would create a different barn every year, usually from a shoe box and salt dough, or pop cicle sticks, but I alone got to decide how the figures would be positioned. Who was on the right, Mary or Joseph? Who would be closest to the Baby Jesus? The shepherds? The Kings? The animals? Usually I opted for the animals.

But it didn’t matter where I initially placed them, because they moved all during Advent. My mother wisely knew that these figures were not items for display, but living characters in a child’s mind. Again and again I acted out the story from the Gospel of Luke, moving the shepherds and wise men closer and closer to the miraculous discovery. Sometimes I would place myself in the story and bring “treasures,” usually sequins and shiny buttons from my mother’s sewing box, to place at the feet of the Infant Christ.

Time and six moves took their toll on my family’s nativity set. Spindly legs snapped off the sheep and the dog, and I had to prop them against the human figures. A decapitated shepherd was made whole again by a necklace of glue. Joseph’s original wire staff disappeared and was replaced with straightened hair pins or paper clips. By the end of my mother’s life, the set was down to only a few figures: the Holy Family, a shepherd, an angel, and a chalky white replacement sheep (made in Japan) purchased at Woolworths for twenty-five cents in the 1960’s. But my mother still set them out with her other Christmas decorations, and it gave me a thrill to see them every year in her apartment.

My mother died in November 2009, and in all the chaos that came with quickly emptying her apartment before the next month’s rent was due, the nativity set vanished. I don’t know if it was accidentally placed in the Goodwill pile, or thrown out with the empty boxes. I just know it didn’t come home with me, and I was doubly heartbroken, missing more than my mother that Christmas.

But grace blindsided me at a rummage sale this month, leading me to a duplicate of our original set, 19 pieces, all complete and undamaged. After I dried my eyes I took out my check book.

The “new/old” set now graces an antique chest next to our Christmas tree.  The pieces are, of course, smaller than I remember. When I was a child the Baby Jesus figure filled my hand. Now it covers only half of my palm. But this year as I carefully, lovingly put the figures into place, I asked myself the same old questions. Who goes on the right, Mary or Joseph? Who will be closest to the Baby Jesus? The shepherds? The Kings? The animals? I opted for the animals. I was nine years old again, filled with the wonder of Christmas and the peace that comes from grace.

Wishing you a space for grace in your life today,

Kate

 

 

 

 

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“The Holy Spirit did not describe Mary in the Gospels…

Posted by:Kate Duffy Sim on Dec - 10 - 2011 - Filed under: Catholic Links -

…but left it to you to picture her in your heart.”  St. Thomas of Villanova

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About Me

My name is Kate Duffy Sim. I’m a retired educator, wife and mother, and life-long resident of Indianapolis, Indiana, where I’m a parishioner at St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic Church. I’m also a devoted follower of Our Lady. She is known by many names: Blessed Mother, Madonna, and the Virgin Mary are only a few. But to me she is first and foremost my Mother. Her love, compassion, and guidance bless my life daily, and all that I have comes through Her grace.

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