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Cultivate the Wonder of Advent in Your Home

The word “Advent” is derived from the Latin word adventus, meaning “coming”.

This year, the season of Advent lasts for four Sundays leading up to Christmas - it officially begins Dec. 1 and culminates on Dec. 24. At that time, the new Christian year begins with the twelve-day celebration of Christmas, which lasts from Christmas Eve until Epiphany on January 6.

We have a perfect opportunity to use this Advent season to cultivate traditions and rhythms in our home.

In a world where Christmas begins after Halloween, and the season is marked by shopping, rushing, and a general feeling of stress, we can heed a greater call to SLOW DOWN, savor, and anticipate the birth of Christ.

Use this Advent season to celebrate truth, beauty, and goodness.

Cultivate the Wonder of Advent in Your Home #homeschool

The spirit of Advent is countercultural to our world today.

(Want to learn more about Advent before you embark upon it with your children. I highly recommend reading this short article - What is Advent?)

The “Three Cs” of Advent Traditions

Rather than give you a HUGE list of wonderful Advent ideas, I am just going to give you a few.

Less is more.

These are traditions we have used in our home - traditions that have grounded and shaped our holiday season. Now that my children are both teens I feel like we got this part of parenting “right”… and hopefully, my children will pass some of these traditions along to their own families one day.

Calendars, Carols, and Candles

These three simple things will help your family have a peaceful Advent. It is my prayer that you can use some of these suggestions in your home this Advent season.

Calendars for Advent

An Advent calendar is a simple way to mark the days for the coming of Christ’s birth.

When my children were young I had an Advent calendar that hung in the hall outside their bedrooms.

It had little numbered pockets for each day of Advent - inside each pocket, I placed two Hershey Kisses. They could choose when they wanted to eat their kiss… one child ate it FIRST thing out of bed - the other child saved it for after rest time in the afternoon.

One year my son had a LEGO Advent calendar.

I’ve seen so many Advent calendars - just pick one and make it part of your family’s Advent tradition each year.

Carols for Advent

Learning carols to celebrate the coming of the Christ child is another way to make memories and deepen the meaning of the Advent season.

I’ve written two volumes of carols. These teach about the history of the carol and include activities for ALL ages to enjoy.

As a child, I remember my mother sitting at the piano playing Christmas carols. Each time I hear Away in a Manger I have a vivid memory of my mom’s hands on the piano. I know all of the verses by heart.

What a gift that was (and continues to be) to me… and it’s so simple to give that same kind of gift to our children.

Pick a few carols. Learn them. Sing them. Make them part of your Advent traditions.

Learn About Christmas Carols with SQUILT - perfect for all ages #homeschool #musiced

Candles for Advent

Use an Advent wreath in your home to learn about the season and create an atmosphere of peace and anticipation.

Do you know the history of the Advent wreath?

The Advent wreath first appeared in Germany in 1839. A Lutheran minister working at a mission for children created a wreath out of the wheel of a cart. He placed twenty small red candles and four large white candles inside the ring. The red candles were lit on weekdays and the four white candles were lit on Sundays.

Eventually, the Advent wreath was created out of evergreens, symbolizing everlasting life in the midst of winter and death as the evergreen is continuously green. The circle reminds us of God’s unending love and the eternal life He makes possible.

Advent candles shine brightly in the midst of darkness, symbolizing and reminding us that Jesus came as Light into our dark world. The candles are often set in a circular Advent wreath. In Scandinavia, Lutheran churches light a candle each day of December; by Christmas, they have twenty-four candles burning.

The most common Advent candle tradition, however, involves four candles around the wreath. A new candle is lit on each of the four Sundays before Christmas. Each candle represents something different, although traditions vary. Often, the first, second, and fourth candles are purple; the third candle is rose-colored. Sometimes all the candles are red; in other traditions, all four candles are blue or white. Occasionally, a fifth white candle is placed in the middle of the wreath and is lit on Christmas Day to celebrate Jesus’ birth.

*learn more at Crosswalk

Cultivate the Wonder of Advent in Your Home #homeschool #advent

It’s so simple to create an Advent wreath.

Keep the wreath on your dinner table. Light a candle each Sunday in Advent and read a devotion to go along with the significance of that particular candle. When Christmas morning arrives, light the white candle in the middle and celebrate the birth of the Christ child.

Use your Advent wreath to create a tradition and liturgy for the holiday season.

These are just a few suggestions for your Advent celebrations. Whatever you do - stay consistent, make it something you can sustain for the entire four weeks of Advent, and let your children take ownership.

We have such a gift waiting for us on December 25 - enjoy the anticipation!!

Do you have Advent traditions in your home?

Tell me about them in the comments below.



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5 Christmas Activities for Children (of all ages)

The beauty of homeschooling is the ability to SLOW DOWN, ditch the schedule and the expectations of traditional school, and just ENJOY our children.

At Christmas time I’m immensely thankful for the gift of homeschooling. We are able to relax our schooling or (GASP!) suspend formal schooling entirely. We can design “Christmas School” if we so choose.

Use the gift of homeschooling to your advantage!

Use it to make memories, teach your children the TRUE meaning of Christmas, and soak up those moments with family and friends. I hope you can allow these suggestions spur you on to a more simple and peaceful Christmas season.

5 Simple Christmas Activities - for Children of All Ages

Simple Christmas Activities

Read

There are so many beautiful books to be read with children during the Christmas season. I always put out our Christmas book basket, which contains a collection of all of their favorite picture books and short chapter books.

Our favorite books to read aloud together over the month are shown below. Curl up with hot chocolate and fuzzy blankets. Don’t stick to a schedule. Allow everyone to stay in the pajamas. Turn on the Christmas lights and just enjoy your precious children.

A Christmas Carol (Puffin Classics)The Best Christmas Pageant EverThe Family Under the BridgeThe Lion in the BoxThe Christmas DollLetters from Father Christmas by J. R. R. Tolkien (1-Oct-2009) PaperbackThe Twenty-four Days Before Christmas: An Austin Family StoryA Merry Christmas: And Other Christmas Stories (Penguin Christmas Classics)The True GiftNancy and Plum

 

Serve

Pick a service project or two for the month. Whether it is volunteering at a food bank, adopting an angel off an angel tree, or baking Christmas goodies for your local police and firemen - choose something and DO IT.

Set up a Christmas crafting time or music recital at a nursing home.

Volunteer at an Operation Christmas Child Processing Center.

I love these Random Acts of Kindness Tags for kids. This is something all ages can enjoy together.

Make service a theme for the holidays. Your children will learn more through serving than they ever could in a day sitting in a traditional school classroom.

Volunteer at an Operation Christmas Child Processing Center

Create

Our children’s souls need time to be quiet, time to contemplate, time to create.

Allow time in their lives for them to dream up projects, to spend a lot of time with those projects - to finish the projects!

Ask your children what they would like to do. Let them plan the creative activities for the month.

A few ideas:

Play!

Play is how children learn. Christmas is the perfect time to play - A LOT.

Even your big kids need time to play.

Again - a few ideas:

  • schedule a Holiday Game Day- play games ALL DAY LONG!

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  • Play The Santa Claus game (FUN!)

  • declare one day a Christmas Fort Day - build the biggest Christmas Fort you can - then read some of those Christmas books in your comfy fort!

  • If you have a warm day, declare one day Christmas Playground Day - visit all of the playgrounds in a 10 mile radius of your house!

Remember, the important thing is just to DO THIS. So often we have good intentions that never come to fruition (ahem. I speak from experience.)

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Field Trip

Be intentional about planning a fun field trip (or three) during the Christmas season.

Seek out a local production of The Nutcracker - learn about it and then attend the performance.

Read A Christmas Carol, then go see a production.

Is there a botanical garden with a beautiful holiday display? Ice skating at the mall? A huge light display?

Just make a point to get out and GO and DO. It doesn’t have to be much, just make a memory!



I pray you have a beautiful, peaceful, memorable holiday season!

Do you have a favorite Christmas activity? Share it in the comments below.


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