Holding My December Jesus

This is a weird time of year as a Catholic! It seems that it was only a handful of weeks ago that we were preparing to receive Jesus as a baby. When I see Jesus as a baby I can’t help but think of my own precious babies. There are times when I get lost looking intently on their faces and into their eyes, all the while falling more deeply in love! The mere thought of pain or suffering coming to that sweet child seems to trigger an automatic door that slams shut at the very mention of such a thing. It’s a place no one should ever need to imagine. Mary, as a mother, was she spared the understanding of what her baby would one day do?

It was not so long ago we were thinking about Jesus, not on the cross, not the one who bears the sins of the world and certainly not as the one who was bloodied and sacrificed on the cross. No! It was not so long ago we were thinking of Jesus as a sweet, squishy newborn infant. It was not so long ago that he was the one who would take His place in an empty stable bed that we had been anxiously awaiting all of Advent to fill. The Christ child, the King of the world, born as the long awaited One, the One all of humanity needed and was looking for, the One who would save us all- and still, the one who was completely reliant on his mother and father. It’s Jesus as a child, a baby, the one who needed to be cared for- to be held in Mary’s arms and loved that I want to hold onto. But in this time of year the weeks move quickly and before too long the dust of ashes will grace our faces and we will again prepare for Jesus to suffer and save us all. In this time of the year I wish to slow down time and hold onto my December Jesus as if I could protect Him from the agony that should befall Him.

Now, if you’d allow me, I have a story to share and I promise this will come together in the end.

As a Catholic mother, I experienced a moment of sheer reward- a moment where I realized that all that we teach isn’t being lost on deaf ears! We had a cross on our mantle. It was a pretty cross and generally I am not one for pretty crosses. Crosses aren’t meant to be pretty- they’re meant to bring us to know Jesus and in my experience, that’s when it gets messy. But alas, I had a weak moment in Home Goods and found myself with a pretty wooden cross. Okay, so back to that moment of reward- I was in the kitchen hastily preparing for Christmas when the older boys came in and saw that I was trying to repair the cross. (Why was I having to repair a cross? I don’t know what happens in your house, but in our house we sometimes have brooms that ‘mysteriously’ fly through the air and make things fall off the mantle- like my pretty cross. Obviously there are usually no witnesses to these types of events and they generally ‘just happen’). Anyways, in Giorgio’s sweet voice he said ‘Jesus arm broken. Jesus missing’. In that moment, I gave up my frustration of having to glue my pretty cross back together and was instead rewarded with the observation of my three year old. He noticed that this cross, unlike the other crosses in our home, was missing the body of Jesus. As Mariano looked at the cross he said, ‘that is where Jesus lives!’ Perhaps it was because I was in the throws of Christmas crafting with red berries and pine branches, that I thought to myself ‘but not in December. In December Jesus lives in a manager and in the arms of Mary’. In December, the contrast of Jesus hanging on a cross, covered in blood and suffering for us simply seems too harsh in light of that same Jesus coming as an infant baby King! But in February that is the Jesus we prepare for; that is the Jesus we look upon and reflect on.

Last week Mariano was closely examining the San Damiano cross that hangs in my kitchen, when he noticed the blood dripping from the nails in Jesus’ feet. Mariano questioned the nails and why they were there, and who put them there; he was concerned how they must have hurt Jesus and wanted to know how nails could hold him to the cross; was it the nails that made him die; why did Jesus die? From my child who perpetually asks why, his simple observation of the blood dripping from Jesus’ feet quickly reached the ceiling of my limited knowledge of theology. We covered things like a Triune God, the medical implications of dying by way of crucifixion, and what happens to the body and soul at death. I very nearly phoned a friend with a theology & catechesis degree to help me manage these questions from my FOUR year old. As I was talking about Jesus dying on the cross I had a moment that I really needed! I needed to be reminded of the inconvenient truth, the harsh reality of the cross and why Jesus died. It always comes back to the cross. It’s at the cross that we meet Jesus and it’s at the cross where we can truly understand his love for us; where we can truly understand that Love requires Sacrifice. Maybe it’s that pain that makes me retreat from the thought of my Jesus, the baby Jesus asleep in Mary’s arms, enduring such agony and wishing that no mother should have to consider that end. Maybe it was when I explained that Jesus died for our sins so that we could live with him forever in Heaven; maybe it was having to say to my four year old that ‘we all make choices that break the heart of Jesus’ that allowed me to realize that I need this Lent. Looking at sin and the things in my life that break the heart of Jesus are how we know who he really is. I love my December Jesus but I must let go of the imagine of the Christ child, at least for now so that I can again fall in love with the heart of Jesus and the heart of The Father.

So here we are only days before the commencement of Lent, preparing to embrace the suffering of Jesus as a way to remember His Love for us. As I head into these 40 days it is an opportunity to fall more deeply and madly in love with the One who first loved me, who first loved my husband and children and family; the One who first loved us all despite what we do that breaks His heart. I ask that you pray for me as I embark on these days of waiting and I will pray for you. Let us not forget, just as we longed for the Christ child to take his place in a shoddy manager bed, He must also take his place on the cross and there is another truly beautiful image of Jesus waiting for us all on the other side of these 40 days.

Peace, Lauren

Not so plain Chocolate Chip Cookies

Have you ever been lured to a blog by some scrumptious looking thing, hoping to secure the recipe and tempt the chances of creating it yourself only to find the most complicated and time consuming recipe? Well, not here in this recipe! Don’t let the simplicity of this recipe fool you! These cookies have an amazing buttery taste and a texture that entices you to have ‘just one more’!

There are a few star players in this recipe- the butter of course (don’t ever use anything other than butter- promise me that much) and the chocolate chips! They for sure take center stage here but without the strong background performance of the brown sugar and the magic of the quick oats, this recipe would simply fall flat and be just another ordinary chocolate chip cookie.

So friends, without any further delay, here it is… Enjoy and let me know what you think!

Not So Plain Chocolate Chip Cookies

  • 1 1/2 cups (3 full sticks) of softened butter
  • 2 cups brown sugar (pack it down)
  • 1/2 cup granulated sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 Tbsp vanilla extract (use the good stuff, please)
  • 3 1/2 cups all purpose flour
  • 1/2 cups quick oats (not old fashioned oats)
  • 1 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1 1/2 tsp baking soda
  • 2 cups semi sweet chocolate morsels
  • 2 cups semi sweet chocolate chunks
  1. Cream the softened butter and both sugars together until light and fluffy
  2. While still beating the sugars and butter, add eggs one at a time and then the vanilla extract. Do not use imitation vanilla, buy the good stuff!
  3. Add flour, quick oats*, salt and baking soda; slowly mix together until well mixed.
  4. Once the dough has come together, start to add the chocolate morsels and chunks; mix until you see even distribution of chocolate throughout the dough
  5. Cover the dough tightly with plastic wrap and chill in the fridge for several hours
  6. Preheat the oven to 350 (oven rack positioned in the middle)
  7. Scoop the dough and form bigger than you are comfortable with balls. (balls of dough people- this is a family blog)
  8. Place the cookie balls on a cookie sheet. (I bake on stone but if you are using a metal cookie sheet line your cookie sheet with a piece of parchment paper.)
  9. Bake for 11- 13 minutes. (Take them out before you think they are done. Be sure to not over bake these sweet like things)
  10. Let them rest for about 10- 15 minutes on your cookie sheet before transferring them to a cooling rack where they will continue cooling before packing them away.

* These cookies are not meant to be oatmeal chocolate chip cookies. Keeping that in mind do not use old fashioned oats as they will steal the show. The quick oats are almost not noticeable but provide just enough interest in the background to give the cookies a bit of texture)

This little cutie stole a cookie from my displays as I was photographing!

My very first blog post!

After months of dawdling, I’m finally here… and now you’re here and we’re doing it! This won’t be perfect but I’m starting, so bear with me and we’ll have some fun together! There have been so many encouraging friends and family over the years that have said, ‘Lauren, you really should write a blog’. I immediately shrugged off that idea because I am not a blogger, I’m not much of a writer, and I repeatedly still question if there is anything interesting enough about my life to keep readers engaged! (And after that paragraph, I’m sure you’re questioning why you should spend your time here. So let me remind you… there’s been spices (lots of spices), and water (lots more water), locked doors, haircuts, and the zoo (you don’t know about the zoo yet but it’s a good one- that poor girl at the pretzel hut– she got more than she bargained for that day). I thought and prayed about a name, and had way too much fun playing around with creating a logo and now I am finally at the point of writing- the most daunting part!

So, let’s get to it! Here is what I plan to share:

  • I plan to share the stories of our imperfect Catholic life! I’m not a Catholic writer, a theologian or an expert in the faith- but we try! We do love Jesus and we attempt to show our kids the love of Jesus in the beauty of our Church! So, come hear our stories! And post your ideas too. I would love for this to be a place where friends can share ideas to help all of us bring the domestic church to life in our homes! (And let’s face it, right now, in the midst of this crazy pandemic, our kids haven’t seen the inside of a church in months and they need the best this domestic church can offer).
  • I plan to share my recipes! I don’t claim to be a professional by any means but many of you know that I have a pipe dream to open a bakery one day! I do love baking and I am often asked to share my recipes, so I hope you enjoy! As a nurse, there are some days that the weight of responsibility and sorrow that I experience can be unbearable. And while there is Jesus to hold that hurt and pain, sometimes cookies are nice too! ‘Sometimes you just have to make a cookie’. It’s a creative outlet for me (and others get to enjoy some sweetness too).
  • I sometimes joke that I would open my store and it would be called ‘Milk and Cookies’. On one side I would have my thriving bakery and on the other side of the store would be my lactation business. I have a passion for breastfeeding and one of my greatest joys is helping mommas with the tribulations that sometimes come (who are we kidding, that often come) so that they can get to the part that is truly sweet! I have experienced incredible joy from my time nursing my little boys but goodness it came with new and HARD hard challenges every. single. time! I experienced heartache, and disappointments and physical consequences as a result but I hold firm that I would do it all over again to see those precious babes look up at me and smile! I had to learn more that I ever knew there was to learn about breasts (get comfortable with that word) in a very short amount of time and I hope one day to learn even more about breasts and become an IBCLC!

I am so glad that you are here and that you have kept reading! The version of the blog that you see now, I can imagine will change over time as I learn how to actually become a blogger! I look forward to sharing my stories, sharing my heart, and sharing my family! Please come and share your stories too and let us together enjoy ‘the sweet life’!

We had fun in the cotton!