Image: Adoration of the Magi - Giotto di Bondone, Metropolitan Museum of Art
Catholic church flower lore, film reviews and more . . .
British Catholic author Evelyn Waugh wrote a beautiful poem about the Three Kings. Waugh was a convert. The poem (framed as a prayer) draws a parallel between converts and the Magi, who arrive in Bethlehem after the birth of Jesus. The poem can be found here.
In a letter to Edward Sackville-West, Waugh wrote, “Conversion is like stepping across the chimney piece out of a Looking-Glass world, where everything is an absurd caricature, into the real world God made; and then begins the delicious process of exploring it limitlessly.”
The depth of Waugh's humility and gratitude for his conversion is found in the poem's lines, "May we, too, before and at the end find kneeling-space in the straw."
We live in a time of vulgarity, irreverence -- and worse -- even in high places in church and state. We must not join in this. We need to frequently turn our minds to Our Lord, Our Lady, the angels and saints, and everything we know to be good, beautiful, and true.
We need to sanctify our homes in every way possible. We need statues, art, candles, music, books, and flowers that call our minds to higher things and refine us.
We need etiquette in our homes as well as in public places. We need to observe the proper order of things.
I hope that readers of this site will adapt information found here about church flowers to their "oratories" at home. I hope too that many will honor Our Lady with a Mary garden, whether it be outdoors or on a windowsill or table top. And I hope that our Queen will inspire us to remember that we are only as good as we are in private when we think no one is looking and forget that all of Heaven can see us.