Saturday, August 01, 2009

Treasuring God in Our Traditions: A Recommendation

I'm starting to feel a little like Granger from Fahrenheit 451 piling up books in our house while everyone else lines their walls with 60 inch plasmas. We don't own a TV and its quite peaceful not having one. Wyatt has been reading voraciously and I have been picking up speed as of late.

Wyatt found me a nice hard backed copy of Treasuring God in Our Traditions by Noel Piper at Half Price Books. If you haven't been to a Half Price Books, you should go now if there is one in your area. We are lucky to have 7 stores nearby. Its become a line item in our monthly budget ringing in on average around $100.

I love a deal as you may know, so I usually browse the Clearance section and Wyatt heads straight to the Religion section. Some great finds so far: Synopsis of the Four Gospels, Church Dogmatics by Barth, Michaelangelo the Painter and other large print art books for $1, 3 Presbyterian Hymnals for $1, and several classic kids books $1 and last but not least...Your Best Life Now (Joel Olsteen). I am working on acquiring all the Canonical books for our home school. I'll post a list on that in the near future.

Now onto Treasuring God in Our Traditions (Read it free here). The best thing about this book is Noel's examples from her own life and practical ideas for developing your own traditions. She walks through the everyday traditions and also the especially traditions like Easter, Christmas, and Birthdays.

One anecdote that stuck out to me was John Piper singing to one of his sons the same short hymn every night since his son was just a baby. His son later remembered the red light from their German apartment he used to see while John sang and walked the halls with him when he was under 2. Its a good reminder that the everyday traditions we do with our children are being absorbed even now and are important to establish early on.

I am excited to take from her example's of creating traditions for Advent and Lent during the Christmas and Easter seasons. I did not grow up with these, but appreciate their meaning now and importance of developing these in my own families life. She also laces the book with family recipes, which I plan to try! Look for blogs on our family traditions in the near future.

Thought for the day: You don't have to burn books to destroy a culture. Just get people to stop reading them. Ray Bradbury

 

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