M
Memaw
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Our little ones always did that at our weekly Blue Army meetings. It was so sweet and they felt so important to the meeting. God Bless. MemawBeautiful!
Our little ones always did that at our weekly Blue Army meetings. It was so sweet and they felt so important to the meeting. God Bless. MemawBeautiful!
That really is wonderful.We pray the rosary daily as a family because my eldest son, then 8, asked us to pray it. I must admit, I would not pray it if I were not trying to set an example for my children and honor their wishes. It is not my favorite prayer, but it is a beautiful devotion and worthy of praise and respect. My 5 children, ages 3-12, each take turns praying the decades. The three-year-old rarely gets through more than 3 or 4 prayers before somebody else has to step in and finish the decade, but the others all do a remarkable job. Last night I attended a dinner at a friends house and we prayed the rosary together. There were 4 families and 22 children, all of whom participated in the entire rosary. Sure, some of the little ones were wandering a bit, but anybody older than 4 or so sat and prayed for the whole thing. The kids led the decades.
Wow that’s fantastic!We pray the rosary daily as a family because my eldest son, then 8, asked us to pray it. I must admit, I would not pray it if I were not trying to set an example for my children and honor their wishes. It is not my favorite prayer, but it is a beautiful devotion and worthy of praise and respect. My 5 children, ages 3-12, each take turns praying the decades. The three-year-old rarely gets through more than 3 or 4 prayers before somebody else has to step in and finish the decade, but the others all do a remarkable job. Last night I attended a dinner at a friends house and we prayed the rosary together. There were 4 families and 22 children, all of whom participated in the entire rosary. Sure, some of the little ones were wandering a bit, but anybody older than 4 or so sat and prayed for the whole thing. The kids led the decades.
Posts like this give me so much joy. God bless you and your family!This is my first post, so be gentle, but imposing prayer on children is something every parent should do. How else would that child know when/how to pray? Children have to be lead to Our Lord, and if we don’t equip them with tools like proper prayer they will be unable to defend themselves.
I used to be a Protestant many years ago, and was forced to say a blessing before dinner, would the OP find that offensive? I am teaching my 3 year old the rosary now, and she is required to say it with the rest of the family.
Well said.Children go to school unwillingly, do homework and take tests unwillingly. It’s a Catholic school so they are required to do Catholic things, like learn and pray the rosary. This is not bad, its good, even if they don’t want to pray the rosary. Children are just that, children. Where did the notion arise they have a choice when their parents lay out a path for them to follow?
This is kind of like saying there is a big difference between teaching my kids about math and enforcing that they actually solve equations.Again, there is a big difference between teaching what the rosary is and enforcing the saying of it.,
There are so many wonderful stories on this thread that have been a great inspiration and example to me.At a Catholic school, the children should learn the rosary. It is the most powerful prayer outside of liturgical prayer. And it is the most pleasing to Our Lady who asks us to pray it. It is not ‘repetitive’ prayer but a wonderful means for meditation and contemplation. It saves souls too.
I have no problem with Catholic schools doing Catholic things: school Masses, retreats, daily prayer, occasional confession opportunities, a general focus on good living, compassion and generosity. We are good at those things, even though few students or staff are actually “Catholic” in the way they practise their faith.
What I have a problem with is forcing children to say a repetitive prayer (counted off on the beads, of course - we wouldn’t want to count incorrectly) when they could be offered the opportunity to make a more personal, meaningful prayer.
For example, when I am required to say a prayer at a meeting, I always ask people to offer quiet prayers of a personal nature. This is in keeping with Matthew 6:6 (“go to your room” etc).
Another concern: if prayers are forced, they can’t be genuine. Therefore, they will not “get through” at all.
If Marian Devotion is not required of the faithful (beyond the main dogmatic statements which are more recognition than devotion), and if praying the Rosary is not required, I won’t be inclined to enforce this.
Surely a carefully considered prayer is of more personal and spiritual value than a dull, repetitive, forced prayer.
(NOTE: I have nothing against those with a devotion to Mary. I admire and respect that. It’s not for me, that’s all.)
If that was the only verse in the Bible, you would be right. Have you ever read the High Priestly Prayer of Jesus in the Gospel of John? Assuming that John wasn’t telepathic, Jesus prayed aloud. Do not take the path of Luther and write the word “only” in your Bible where it does not exist. Read beyond the one verse and add nothing. Jesus taught a way to pray, and even gave an example (not that the sinner prayed* aloud* and in the* Temple*).Oh, and I won’t be praying the Rosary out loud. No way. Prayer should be internal; a thought process. (Matt 6:6)
It is not immoral. No one is forced because no one is forced to go to Catholic school. If they are, it is the parent that is doing the forcing. Also, I would check into just how this force works. Detention for lack of sincerity? Do the watch the lips of the children? This sounds more like a disapproval of the school saying the rosary at all than any principle against forced prayers.So, you all agree that insincere prayers are valid, that children should be educated in repetitive prayers, and that such prayers are as valid as any others.
I think I understand.
You obviously missed the point. Being forced to pray is immoral.
Yes, but Protestant in what sense? I don’t believe many Protestants count praying the Hail Mary (or anything directed to a Saint) counts as prayer in the strict sense. Even as Catholics we should be careful that we don’t pray to anyone other than God.If that was the only verse in the Bible, you would be right. Have you ever read the High Priestly Prayer of Jesus in the Gospel of John? Assuming that John wasn’t telepathic, Jesus prayed aloud. Do not take the path of Luther and write the word “only” in your Bible where it does not exist. Read beyond the one verse and add nothing. Jesus taught a way to pray, and even gave an example (not that the sinner prayed* aloud* and in the* Temple*).
Yet you show by example the danger of individual interpretation of scripture based on proof-texting. I would say one should not expect a Catholic school to be protestant.
By protestant, I mean one should not expect a Catholic school to shun the rosary, embrace proof-texting or teach all prayer should be done silently, as per the posters reference to Matthew 6:6.Yes, but Protestant in what sense? I don’t believe many Protestants count praying the Hail Mary (or anything directed to a Saint) counts as prayer in the strict sense. Even as Catholics we should be careful that we don’t pray to anyone other than God.