G
Gamera
Guest
Home altars sound interesting but I don’t think I’ve ever seen one. Where do you get one? What goes on it? What’s it for?
It was traditional for Catholic homes to have some area or table or shelf dedicated to religious devotion prior to the 1960s. Today the tradition is growing again.Home altars sound interesting but I don’t think I’ve ever seen one. Where do you get one? What goes on it? What’s it for?
OPINION (only), reflecting my pagan training. Any table or flat surface can be used as an altar. What makes it an altar is your use of it for spiritual practices. Say after you bless it with holy water. Put on the altar whatever is meaningful to YOU.Home altars sound interesting but I don’t think I’ve ever seen one. Where do you get one? What goes on it? What’s it for?
So, if a cat knocks a ladder into my path which causes me to drop an umbrella onto the table, I’m not supposed to throw money over my shoulder and put a statue of St. Benedict under the kitchen sink?Another opinion. Reverance, yes. Superstition, no. If your baby barfs on the altar cloth, or my cat deposits a hairball on the altar cloth, just clean it up. I work on the assumption that Mary is level headed and reasonable, does understand, and even has a sense of humor.
Nahhhh…one Hail Mary should the jobSo, if a cat knocks a ladder into my path which causes me to drop an umbrella onto the table, I’m not supposed to throw money over my shoulder and put a statue of St. Benedict under the kitchen sink?![]()
Have a look at what I have at home.Home altars sound interesting but I don’t think I’ve ever seen one. Where do you get one? What goes on it? What’s it for?
Your shrines never cease to amaze me.
I posted my website in post #8.i believe thistle posted a lovely picture of his home altar. i think he has one. correct me if iam wrong thistle?
oh goody!! i’ll go back and lookI posted my website in post #8.
I actually have more than those I show but because I’m technically clueless I haven’t yet figured out how to put more photos there.
Dear Gamera, To answer some of your questions, an icon corner, like the Church, is meant to convey the Heavenly Kingdom that we commune with in prayer.Home altars sound interesting but I don’t think I’ve ever seen one. Where do you get one? What goes on it? What’s it for?
I was thinking the same thing. Going with a mostly Celtic theme. Changing the clothes during the season. An striping the whole thing bare just about for lent.OPINION (only), reflecting my pagan training. Any table or flat surface can be used as an altar. What makes it an altar is your use of it for spiritual practices. Say after you bless it with holy water. Put on the altar whatever is meaningful to YOU.
Like icons? Put one or two on it. Dislike icons? Leave them off. Candles, crosses, crucifixes, altar cloths, whatever, up to you. Pictures and statues. Whatever helps.
Another opinion. Reverance, yes. Superstition, no. If your baby barfs on the altar cloth, or my cat deposits a hairball on the altar cloth, just clean it up. I work on the assumption that Mary is level headed and reasonable, does understand, and even has a sense of humor.