Category Archives: catholicism

Debating Life Issues: A Resource for Every Catholic

Cut to the chase and get the facts now! This is a great resource to get up to date facts on the Pro-Life issue which is part of why we call our selves, C-A-T-H-O-L-I-C!!! I haven’t finished reading them all but I wanted to pass them along for everyone to see. Enjoy!

(click on the box below)

What you will find in this link of Pro-Life Talking Points:

  • Pro-Life Violence: Setting the Record Straight
  • Why Women Abort
  • The Abuse of Population Control
  • Negative Effects of the Pill
  • Does Welfare Reduce Abortion?
  • Condoms
  • Fetal Development
  • Men & Abortions
  • Maternal Deaths
  • Obama vs. Life I: Before the Elections

“The Pro-Life Talking Points series is meant to provide pro-life activists with clear and concise information with which to argue against common misinformation they will encounter while debating life issues. ” – Human Life International website

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Organizing the Liturgical Year

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By Guest Blogging Mama: Liz

Liz is a homeschooling mommy to four lovely children ages one to eight and a happily married wife. She and her husband have a little baby boy expected to arrive in August of this year. Liz and her family “find daily inspiration in the Holy Family and look to Jesus, Mary and Joseph for guidance.”

One thing I never have done, is organize all the wonderful things you can do throughout the liturgical year. The main problem is that by the time I realize a feast day is coming up, I don’t have enough time to look for celebratory ideas, gather craft supplies, and have everything ready for the kids to do. After realizing that celebrating the liturgical year is very important to me and my family, I’ve decided to do something that will hopefully simplify my life in this aspect as well as make it easy for me to do activities.

My first step in creating a system was to GOOGLE!! If you look up “organizing the liturgical year,” I guarantee that you won’t get a lot of good sites. But I did stumble upon some excellent ideas from other Catholic bloggers, like myself!

My first visit was to By Sun and Candlelight. She has a great file folder system set up for all her homeschool, household, and liturgical needs. I like that she uses a crate because of the openness of it…easy to put stuff in and take stuff out. I tend to ignore our filing cabinet and only keep things in there that I don’t really use frequently (think copies of birth certificates and old tax returns).

Another great post to check out for organizational ideas is Catholic Mom’s Journey. She was also inspired by the file folder system (above) and tweaked it so that it worked for her. I like that she divides her system into 12 folders, one for each month of the year. She further divides each monthly folder into 5 separate folders, one for each week of the month.

Finally I visited Wildflowers and Marbles where Jen not only has FABULOUS pictures of her school room, but she also briefly mentions her liturgical organization. She divides each month into two. Each monthly folder holds two separate folders: one for liturgical plans and the other for seasonal plans.

After trying to decide what was going to work for me, I decided that Jen has the most simple and user friendly system. So in order to get my own act together, I went out and got supplies to start organizing my own liturgical year. Here is what I did.

1. Purchase a file box for the files (I need something with a lid in order to keep little hands out!).
2. Label 12 hanging files, one for each month.
3. Label 2 folders for each month. One for seasonal plans and the other for liturgical plans.
4. Label 3 additional hanging files for the liturgical seasons of Advent/Christmas, Lent, and Easter.

To clarify what I would put in the folders:

  • The seasonal folders would include things not associated with the liturgical calendar. Holidays such as 4th of July, MLK Day, Father’s Day, etc.
  • The folder holding liturgical plans might include holy cards for that month’s feast days, instructions to crafts, prayers, coloring pages, book lists, etc.
  • Liturgical season folders would also hold things that just mesh from one month to another, like Advent activities.

I hope this sheds some light on organizing your own faith filled year!! It took me about 20 minutes to put this simple system together once I had all my supplies ready. It was mostly using my label machine that took me longest.

For more neat ideas by this Blogging Mama, please visit her Homeschooling journey: Holy Family Classical Academy.

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Looking for a Few Good Blogging Catholic Mamas


We thank the Lord that we are rapidly getting this blog going (with the help of my “tech guy” AKA my DH). In the meantime, we are in need of, and are looking for, a few good blogging Catholic mamas who would be interested in posting great ideas on any of the Menu topics above. If you have already posted something on your own blog or wish to write about something new and innovative you have tried and tested at home with your children, please contact us at raisinglittlesaints@gmail.com. Your blog will also be listed on our homepage as well as part of your article submission! (You help us, we help you!)

We welcome all Catholic Mamas (seasoned and new) that homeschool. Happy blogging!


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Rappresentanti in Terra: Encyclical on Christian Education: Pope Pius XI

Encyclical on Christian Education
His Holiness Pope Pius XI
Promulgated on December 31, 1929

To the Patriarchs, Primates, Archbishops, Bishops and other Ordinaries in Peace and Communion with the Apostolic See and to all the Faithful of the Catholic World.

Venerable Brethren and Beloved Children, Health and Apostolic Benediction.

REPRESENTATIVE ON EARTH of that divine Master who while embracing in the immensity of His love all mankind, even unworthy sinners, showed nevertheless a special tenderness and affection for children, and expressed Himself in those singularly touching words: “Suffer the little children to come unto Me,”[1] We also on every occasion have endeavored to show the predilection wholly paternal which We bear towards them, particularly by our assiduous care and timely instructions with reference to the Christian education of youth.

2. And so, in the spirit of the Divine Master, We have directed a helpful word, now of admonition, now of exhortation, now of direction, to youths and to their educators, to fathers and mothers, on various points of Christian education, with that solicitude which becomes the common Father of all the Faithful, with an insistence in season and out of season, demanded by our pastoral office and inculcated by the Apostle: “Be instant in season, out of season; reprove, entreat, rebuke in all patience and doctrine.”[2] Such insistence is called for in these our times, when, alas, there is so great and deplorable an absence of clear and sound principles, even regarding problems the most fundamental.

3. Now this same general condition of the times, this ceaseless agitation in various ways of the problem of educational rights and systems in different countries, the desire expressed to Us with filial confidence by not a few of yourselves, Venerable Brethren, and by members of your flocks, as well as Our deep affection towards youth above referred to, move Us to turn more directly to this subject, if not to treat it in all its well-nigh inexhaustible range of theory and practice, at least to summarize its main principles, throw full light on its important conclusions, and point out its practical applications.

4. Let this be the record of Our Sacerdotal Jubilee which, with altogether special affection, We wish to dedicate to our beloved youth, and to commend to all those whose office and duty is the work of education.

5. Indeed never has there been so much discussion about education as nowadays; never have exponents of new pedagogical theories been so numerous, or so many methods and means devised, proposed and debated, not merely to facilitate education, but to create a new system infallibly efficacious, and capable of preparing the present generations for that earthly happiness which they so ardently desire.

The rest of this lengthy and informative encyclical can be read at:
http://www.papalencyclicals.net/Pius11/P11RAPPR.HTM

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