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Saint Costumes
Our Coats of Many Colors, a cottage industry run by a mom in Kansas with a team of six seamstresses, has been making beautiful and imaginative dress-up costumes for six years. They have recently added a line of religious costumes for children - priest outfits from three different orders: Jesuit, Benedictine and Franciscan. The costumes are sturdy (my children have been using these for YEARS and they've held up beautifully and wash quite easily), nicely detailed, and feature velcro to make dressing up easy for little ones. Great for All Saints' Day dress-up.
The Jesuit costume (pictured at right), comes in five sizes (XS, S, M, L, XL).
It includes a full-length black cassock and cincture (like a belt) and features a roman collar. A row of buttons hides the easy-open velcro front of the cassock. The cincture also has a velcro-closure. Some great Jesuits include:
- St. Ignatius Loyola, founder
- St. Francis Xavier
- St. Isaac Jogues
- St. Jean de Brebeuf
- St. Edmund Campion
- Pierre de Smet
- Jaques Marquette
- St. Robert Bellarmine
- St. Peter Claver
- St. Aloysius Gonzaga
- Fr. Eusebio Kino
- St. Paul Miki
- St. Stanislaus Kostka
- St. Claude de la Colombierre
- St. Robert Southwell
- Gerard Manley Hopkins
It includes a full-length black cassock, hooded scapular and cincture (belt). All pieces have a velcro-closure. Some great Benedictines include:
- St. Benedict, founder
- St. Gregory the Great
- St. Augustine of Canterbury
- St. Boniface
- St. Thomas Becket
- St. Bede
- St. Hermannus Contractus
It includes a full-length brown hooded cassock and rope belt. Some great Franciscans include:
- St. Francis, founder
- St. Anthony of Padua
- St. Bonaventure
- St. Francis Solanus
- St. Joseph of Cupertino
- Blessed Junipero Serra
- St. Padre Pio
- St. Maximilian Kolbe
This review was updated in 2008 to reflect additional costume offerings.
Saint Francis
Saint Francis of Assisi
This book is available in numerous editions - including one from Ignatius Press which also includes Chesterton's book on St. Thomas Aquinas.
Saint Joseph First Communion Catechism
This beautifully illustrated (in full-color) gem is designed to prepare a child for First Communion and would be appropriate for Kindergarten through second grade. The text follows the Baltimore Catechism, but also includes basic prayers, parts of the Mass and Holy Days of Obligation. In a few places, the explanations given to expand upon the Baltimore Catechism are not as well-written as I'd like them to be, but for the most part they are quite good. For some reason, the text has taken some of the Catechism questions out of order, so that the child learns about sin and its consequences before studying about Our Lord coming to earth to save us. I prefer the original order (which can be done by following the questions in numerical order) so that young children learn about God's love for us before going too deep into the evils of sin and the devil. Many homeschoolers use this as a supplement to other texts (such as the Faith and Life series - partly because the wording of the questions in this text is more succint than the wording in the Faith and Life series) for the purpose of memorizing the Catechism questions and enjoying the pictures.
Saint Paul the Apostle
The short chapters are nice for beginning readers and for busy moms trying to read the story aloud a little at a time.
Saint Search Game from Illuminated Ink
Saint Symbol Stickers from Illuminated Ink
Saint Thomas Aquinas
The book begins with an introduction to Saint Thomas Aquinas that tells of his unique titles in the Church and his gifts of wisdom and learning. We learn of his childhood and his studies, his captivity and his nickname, the Dumb Ox, and of his beautiful hymns for the feast of Corpus Christi and Benediction. We read about the many miracles and holy favors enjoyed by the Saint and learn from examples of his spiritual gifts of charity, humility, and intelligence. Finally, we hear about his holy death, canonization, and the institution of his feast day. Our young students will be encouraged to pray to this great Doctor of the Church and be inspired to work hard at their studies in imitation of him.
Saint Thomas Aquinas and the Preaching Beggar - additional
Once Saint Thomas Aquinas was in a class that Saint Albert the Great taught. One day St. Albert asked why this was silly: "I am a human being and I have a high pitched voice; therefore all human beings have high-pitched voices."
St. Thomas said that Father Albert should be pointing to an "essential" and not an "accidental". An essential is what all of what you are talking about have. An "accidental" is what only some of what you are talking about have. For example, how big a room is, what shape it is, what color it is and what it is used for are all accidentals. The essential thing about a room is that it is a space between four walls and has a ceiling and a floor.
I thought that this was very brilliant.
Reviewer age 9