Do I need a spiritual director? Where can I find one?

The diocese’s School of Spiritual Direction restarted in 2023 after a seven-year hiatus. The goal is to help students grow in their faith so they can help others do the same.

The first and second cohort of the three-year bilingual program currently has 24 students. The third cohort will start this fall. Arkansas Catholic asked these second-year students to share how they have grown spiritually through the training. 

Deacon Charlie Kuehl

Immaculate Conception, Fort Smith

What is spiritual direction, and what role does your spiritual director play in your spiritual growth? Spiritual direction is taking the time to speak to God in the presence of a trusted ally, so that the conversation evolves, leading to a deeper relationship with God.

How did you know you needed a spiritual director? I didn’t know that I needed a spiritual director. It was a required part of my deacon spiritual formation. 

How have you benefited from spiritual direction? Spiritual direction has uniquely deepened my prayer life. Sometimes, when prayer life seems to be like a mouse running on a wheel, a spiritual director can help you get off that wheel. A good spiritual director has the ability to help me see God working in my life in a way that I did not see. 

How did you find your spiritual director? In some areas, spiritual directors are hard to find, and seeking the right spiritual director takes time and prayer. There is a list available through the diocese, but I have asked priests and other deacons for recommendations. It takes a few sessions to feel comfortable with directors. So be patient and give it/them a chance.

How has spiritual direction helped you to discern God’s voice? Spiritual direction makes me take the time to stop my life and my brain so that I listen to God more completely. Spiritual direction helps with hearing God’s voice calling me from my wilderness.

Deacon Charles Kuehl of Fort Smith talks with Molly Walchuk of Conway before their spiritual direction class May 16 at St. John Center in Little Rock. (Malea Hargett)

Deacon Larry Fox

St. John, Russellville

What is spiritual direction, and what role does your spiritual director play in your spiritual growth? It is a way for me to grow closer to Christ with the help of someone to guide and help me along this path. My director has accompanied my journey, not really with directions, as much as helping me see Christ with gentle help and suggestions.

How did you know you needed a spiritual director? I knew I needed direction when I started discernment for the diaconate.

How have you benefited from spiritual direction? I have learned more about my own spirituality and grown much closer to Christ. He has helped listen to Jesus instead of my own will.

How did you find your spiritual director? I had others talk about Father Jerome Kodell and had known him for years. We already had a good relationship, and it was a natural choice. And he accepted graciously.

How has spiritual direction helped you to discern God’s voice? Direction has helped me develop ways to set aside my will and listen quietly to God’s voice. One thing I have learned is that if I find peace in discernment, it is from God.

Taffy Council

Our Lady of Fatima, Benton

What is spiritual direction, and what role does your spiritual director play in your spiritual growth? Spiritual direction provides companionship to persons pursuing a closer relationship with God. A spiritual director listens and encourages. Scripture and journaling are key elements.

How did you know you needed a spiritual director? I was finishing an eight-day Ignatian retreat that had been a real turning point for me spiritually. It was a natural move to ask for direction to continue. That was over 13 years ago.

How have you benefited from spiritual direction? Spiritual direction allows me to stretch in my prayer experience. If I doubt something or question its source, I can take it to direction. That, plus prayer during the session, most always brings clarity. I appreciate the accountability that, in part, keeps me committed to my prayer practice as well. 

How did you find your spiritual director? I asked the director from the retreat I’d been on.

How has spiritual direction helped you to discern God’s voice? In direction, I’m encouraged to speak to Jesus about this or that. That seems so simple, but it’s really not. Letting go and letting God is freedom. I’ve discovered God’s voice is alive and active in my spirit. He calls me to simply come and see and be. My spiritual director walks beside me and nudges me back on the road if I wander.

Nancy Unverferth

St. Joseph, Conway

What is spiritual direction, and what role does your spiritual director play in your spiritual growth? Spiritual direction is a beautiful process where two people walk together in life’s journey with God. It is this relationship of three that makes spiritual direction so valuable and inherently fruitful. The one seeking the Lord (or a deeper relationship with the Lord) invites a trained/certified spiritual director to accompany him/her in their quest for a richer, fuller spiritual life with God — and God, as the Third Person, is always present and attentive. 

He desires relationship with both the one seeking and the one directing. His love is for all! My spiritual director prays with me and for me. In our one-hour sessions, we begin by asking the Holy Spirit to be present and to guide us. My director then listens to me as I share my life’s ups and downs since our last meeting and the blessings and trials of my daily prayer in that same time frame. 

How did you know you needed a spiritual director? I found myself yearning for more than casual — even good — conversations about the Lord. My heart wanted to talk to someone who had walked (or was walking) the same path toward holiness and could help me understand what I was experiencing, what the Lord may be asking of me. That is when I knew a spiritual director was what I needed.

Molly Walchuk

St. Joseph, Conway

What is spiritual direction, and what role does your spiritual director play in your spiritual growth? Spiritual direction is a ministry of companionship as I search for God’s action and direction on my life’s path. My spiritual director gives me her deep listening and her prayers to help guide me to what the Lord is truly calling me to do and be.

How did you know you needed a spiritual director? Being kind of a literary nerd, I usually turned to books —  many of them the spiritual classics of Catholic saints, which were very helpful; however, I longed for a real person to connect with and particularly a woman and mother. The Lord answered my plea when one day (maybe 13 years ago), at Debbie Eckert’s hair salon, she told me that she knew someone who was in the practicum phase of spiritual direction school who needed a directee. 

How have you benefited from spiritual direction? My spiritual journey is so much richer for the time I’ve spent in direction. My prayer life is deeper and more vibrant. I am more confident and trusting in my experience of the Lord’s love, care and guidance in all areas of my life. 

How has spiritual direction helped you to discern God’s voice? By listening with a prayerful heart, asking gentle questions and encouraging me to always look deeper and not to hesitate to seek the “more” that the Lord is anxious to give.

For more information, call the Office of Spiritual Direction at (501) 664-0340. 




Benton parish celebrates 25 years of perpetual adoration

Our Lady of Fatima Church in Benton marked 25 years of perpetual adoration, a feat few parishes can claim. 

More than 250 Catholics — including clergy who have served the parish since 2000 — filled the pews Feb. 26 as Bishop Anthony B. Taylor celebrated Mass.

Taffy Council, perpetual adoration coordinator,  said the celebration wasn’t just for adorers but for the entire parish. 

“Our whole parish has been blessed immensely for 25 years in a really special way. Anybody who’s been here long enough to understand perpetual adoration would feel that way,” she said. 

Council helped create our Lady of Fatima’s perpetual adoration ministry with other parishioners March 5, 2000.

“I acquired the habit of stopping in our little adoration chapel on my way to work. I would sit on the floor at the tabernacle and have a little prayer time. At that time, we were having 24 hours of adoration every first Friday of the month, so I had become accustomed to making a holy hour,” she said. 

Council said one day during adoration, she felt God calling her to work alongside other parishioners to create the perpetual adoration ministry. She called the late Father Michael Bass, who had just been assigned to Our Lady of Fatima from St. Paul the Apostle in Pocahontas — a parish with perpetual adoration. He gave Council the green light to give it a try. 

Taffy Council admires the Blessed Sacrament in the adoration chapel at Our Lady of Fatima in Benton before joining the celebration Feb. 26. (Katie Zakrzewski)

She worked with other parishioners to build a team of division leaders and “24-hour captains” so that the Blessed Sacrament was never left alone. 

“That team concept has been a huge factor in our successful continuation,” Council said, describing the sign-up forms and website that the perpetual adoration team has used to streamline the teamwork. 

“We have a wonderful system of substitution that we utilize. We’ve always been very dependent on our substitutes because we’re a small parish … our website that we use is tailored to our needs.”

Parishioner Edelia Olvera, who is involved with perpetual adoration, told Arkansas Catholic that she became involved to help the Hispanic community become more familiar with perpetual adoration. 

“I have realized throughout the years that coming to the Blessed Sacrament is like coming to a school of sanctity — it has enriched my family life and has been a constant in my marriage and in keeping my children close to me,” she said through an interpreter, Wendy Brown, parish secretary. “… This has kept me close to the culture I grew up with, to a space where I feel like I could continue with what I learned when I was younger … This is something that connects me back to my roots.” 

Olvera said adoration has grown in popularity among the Hispanic community, especially in recent months. 

“People are coming to pray because most of the Hispanic community that comes to adoration cannot vote. So the only thing they had left was prayer,” she said. “So they were coming here. I saw more people coming in to pray for God’s will — whatever God’s will is, please let it happen.”

Olvera said if you’re not sure how to navigate adoration, coming in and spending time with Jesus is the first step.

“I have invited people into the adoration chapel to just sit. I mainly tell people to sit in front of the Blessed Sacrament and close their eyes. Of course, at first, it might just look like a piece of bread. But if they close their eyes, they will feel the Real Presence. … If we all knew the greatness that we have in there, in the Blessed Sacrament,” she said, “The chapel would be so crowded we would need someone to help us take turns.”

Council and Olvera said that parishioners strategized and overcame challenges presented to perpetual adoration during the pandemic. Council is thankful that their priests and deacons throughout the years have been so supportive of perpetual adoration. 

“Our pastors encourage people to be prayerful, making references to perpetual adoration in their homilies and really drawing people into it,” she said.

The front pew at Our Lady of Fatima was reserved for all of the clergy who had served at Our Lady of Fatima for the past 25 years and who played a role in perpetual adoration. In attendance and helping celebrate the Mass alongside Bishop Taylor were Father Bill Elser of Hot Springs Village; Father John Marconi and Father Phillip Reaves, both of Little Rock; Father Luke Womack, the current pastor; and Deacons Dan Cartaya, Ronald Steven Lee and Marcelino Luna.  

Father Phillip Reaves (from left), Father Bill Elser and Father John Marconi help celebrate Mass Feb. 26 during Our Lady of Fatima’s 25th perpetual adoration celebration. The three priests, among others, all played a role in creating and sustaining the parish’s perpetual adoration program and were invited back to celebrate. (Katie Zakrzewski)

“One of the things that I’ve promoted throughout my priesthood over the course of 44 years is Eucharistic adoration,” Bishop Taylor told those present during his homily. “And of course, today, you’re thanking the Lord for the many blessings you have received over the course of 25 years of eucharistic adoration in your parish. Over the years, my daily holy hour, which I spend whenever possible before the Blessed Sacrament, has brought many blessings to me personally. 

Bishop Anthony B. Taylor gives his homily at the 25th perpetual adoration celebration at Our Lady of Fatima Church in Benton Feb. 26. (Katie Zakrzewski)

“And like with you here at Our Lady of Fatima, I can attest that eucharistic adoration has also brought many blessings to the parishioners of the parishes. I have heard that adorers feel closer to Jesus and are more fully aware of his Real Presence among us in the Eucharist. Moreover, adoration is not only for the especially pious. Indeed, it is we who have problems who most need the strength and comfort we find in spending time with Jesus.”

Parishioner Diane Brenkus, who visits the adoration chapel and and helped plan the parish’s celebration, called the 25th anniversary “a miracle in itself.”

Diane Brenkus keeps the food trays coming for a crowd of over 250 people at the reception following Mass Feb. 28. (Katie Zakrzewski)

“I want to honor the Lord. I want to give all the awe and praise and blessing to have him with us 24/7,” she said. “It’s just a miracle in itself with our small parish, and I think it’s an honor that we are able to go be with him. … There are 168 hours in a week. All 168 hours, there are people in there praying for themselves, for other adorers and our parish. And I really believe that those prayers have benefitted the entire parish.”

Council agreed.

“What a gift it is,” she said of perpetual adoration. “Not only for yourself and for your family, but for the Church and for this country and the world.”

CORRECTIONThe original publication of this article stated that this event was held Feb. 28. It was actually held Feb. 26. This online version has been corrected.




How to create a more prayerful life this Advent season

Every year, Advent quickly approaches, and by the time it’s over, many Catholics are left saying, “I wish I’d done more to have a prayerful Advent.”

“This time of the year is so busy that even with the best of intentions, it is easy to let Advent, this most beautiful season, slip by,” Father Jerome Kodell, OSB, a Benedictine monk at Subiaco Abbey, said.

Arkansas Catholic talked to clergy and lay leaders from around the state, who provided advice and opportunities for our readers to keep Christ in Christmas this Advent season. 

Prayer (in many forms)

Father Daniel Velasco, pastor of Our Lady of the Holy Souls Church in Little Rock and director of the diocesan spiritual direction formation program, invited Catholics to “get their feet wet” with a new style of prayer that they might not have tried before. 

“Embrace a different method of prayer during this time, like the St. Ignatius Daily Examen prayer or maybe a devotion like Divine Mercy,” Father Velasco said. “Just to get the feet wet of the faithful in expanding their willingness to have a relationship with God.”

The Ignatian Daily Examen consists of five steps to help Catholics become more aware of God’s presence in their lives. 

  • Become aware of God’s presence.
  • Review the day with gratitude.
  • Pay attention to your emotions.
  • Choose one feature of the day and pray from it.
  • Look toward tomorrow.

“As a spiritual director, I recommend Ignatian prayer to become more aware of God’s presence in our daily life, even though we are surrounded by many different messages,” Father Velasco said. “If we take the time to ponder, pray and be silent, we can realize that there is so much more depth in God’s presence.” 

Father Velasco also recommended Catholics “approach the sacrament of reconciliation” during the Advent season. 

“There are different reconciliation services around the diocese … that would be one way to receive God’s grace and continue our journey.”

Mailelani Lessenberry, a freshman at the University of Dallas, is a young Catholic influencer who has built a following across multiple platforms. Lessenberry, a member of St. Bernard Church in Bella Vista, echoed Father Velasco’s sentiments and said prayer comes in many forms — Catholics should find a form that works for them this Advent. 

“During Advent, it’s a great idea to meditate on the birth, life and passion of Christ as we await his coming on Christmas,” she said. “By praying the rosary, we also honor our Blessed Mother, who carried our Savior in her womb before bringing him into the world.”

Another form of prayer Lessenberry recommended is adoration.

“What better way to prepare for Jesus’ coming than to spend time with him? Most parishes have open adoration hours throughout the week, making it easy for parishioners to stop by and spend time with Christ. Even if you spend just one hour with him this Advent, it’s better than no time spent with him at all.”

Get the family involved

“For those who have children, plan an activity that involves the children, whether it be an Advent calendar or a fun fact every day in Advent,” Father Velasco said. “This gets the kids engaged and also makes it fun to look forward to the Christmas celebration.” 

Father Kodell said families might find ways to bring Advent saints and holy figures to life for their children as “companions on the journey during this holy season.”

Sister Regina Schroeder, OSB, procurator at St. Scholastica Monastery in Fort Smith, encouraged families to make an effort to pray together, even if only briefly.

“The effort to spend time as a family or as husband and wife, even if it is only 10 or 15 minutes with a short prayer, helps me and could help families or couples to give purpose to life,” she said. 

Pastor Father Daniel Velasco blesses the Advent wreath at Our Lady of the Holy Souls Church in Little Rock Nov. 30 at the beginning of the Advent season. (Malea Hargett)

Remembering less fortunate

Sister Kimberly R. Prohaska, OSB, prioress of St. Scholastica Monastery in Fort Smith, reminded Catholics that while Advent is a season of joy, not everyone may be feeling joyous. 

“It’s important to remember those who struggle during this time of year. Sometimes, people have painful situations that they’re carrying. Are we aware of that? Are we alert to one another enough to be present to one another?

“There may be people who are suffering and doing without — just to try to pay attention. People are very generous at heart, and sometimes, if we get too distracted by all that the world says that we have to have, we may miss opportunities to have a sacred moment with someone.”

The Diocese of Little Rock’s website has Advent resources at dolr.org/advent. One of those resources is the 2024 Share Your Light Advent Calendar, which consists of 24 ways — for each day in Advent — to help make someone’s day brighter. 

Some of the activities are: 

  • Invite friends, neighbors or co-workers, who are living alone, to share your family’s Advent traditions with them.
  • Donate to St. Nicholas Partners to support a Catholic Charities of Arkansas ministry.
  • Help moms in need by giving baby items to a pregnancy resource center or volunteering to babysit or lending a listening ear to a mom in your life.
  • Contact your local jail or a nearby prison to see if you can mail Christmas cookies or cards to inmates incarcerated during the holidays. 

That 2024 calendar can be found at dolr.org/share-light-advent-calendar

Advent wreaths, old-school prayers and holy figures

Many Catholics using Jesse trees, Advent calendars or nativity scenes to center the Advent season on Christ. For Father Kodell, even the Advent wreath itself is an important symbol to keep in mind.

“I think the most helpful practices are those that remind us and draw us back,” he said. “The Advent wreath is a prime example. Every time we see it, we are drawn back into the Advent spirit.”

Father Kodell said the presence of older Christian prayers can give Advent worship a new flair. 

“We could make more use during these days of one of the oldest Christian prayers, which appears in Aramaic in the Bible: Maranatha, Come, Lord Jesus,” he said. “It is rich in tradition and puts us in touch with Christians who have celebrated Advent all during the centuries, and because it is in a foreign language, it only means one thing and produces no other associations. It might be used as a word to repeat in prayer, as many Christians do, or it might be posted in large print on the refrigerator or another place of focus in the house during Advent.”

Father Kodell said focusing on one of many holy figures throughout the Advent season can bring a new level of intimacy to celebrations.

“There are holy figures associated with the season — of course, Mary (with her feasts of the Immaculate Conception and Guadalupe) and John the Baptist, but also St. Nicholas and St. Lucy,” Father Kodell said. “The early martyr St. Lucy, whose name means ‘light,’ is not as well known as St. Nicholas, but she lights up the winter darkness on Dec. 13 every year. More recently, a saint of our hemisphere has become part of the Advent preparation — St. Juan Diego. His feast is usually celebrated on Dec.  9, the day he had the vision of the Virgin, but it is superseded this year (because of the feast of Immaculate Conception).”

Finding God in the silence 

Taffy Council, a student in the first cohort of the School of Spiritual Direction, oversees eucharistic adoration at Our Lady of Fatima in Benton. During the noise of the holiday season, Council reminds us that “God speaks to us in the great silence of the heart.”

“Ask God each day to give you the grace to spend some time in silence with him, and only him,” she said. “Ask him to create that space and time just for you. Take a deep breath. Tell him what’s on your heart. Take another deep breath and simply listen. Perhaps only hearing the lovely silence. He’s there. He always meets us where we are. I have a dear friend who will call and say, ‘I only have a few minutes on my hands, but I wanted to say hello to my friend.’ May we, too, say that to our loving God.”

Msgr. Lawrence Frederick, known as Father Fred, is the rector of Catholic High School, chaplain of Mount St. Mary Academy and the Carmel of St. Teresa of Jesus, all in Little Rock. He also warned Catholics to beware of distractions and avoid them with a consistent prayer routine. 

“Schedule a time of prayer and stick with it,” he said. “Set the phone aside for a period of time to read Scripture each day. Limit time spent on the internet for personal contact with others — all the usual things that distract us from hearing God speak to us.”

Kristine Grelle, a certified spiritual director with Infinitely Rooted and a member of St. Vincent de Paul Church in Rogers, invites Catholics to explore personal prayer in a quiet place as a way of improving themselves spiritually for the new year.

“A growing relationship with Jesus takes dedicated time in silence, listening to the Word and becoming aware of what the Lord is saying to me,” she said. “Each day, I can meditate on the Scriptures that the Church has chosen, pondering the words or phrases that resonate from within. I can also imagine myself in the scene of the Scripture passage to experience them in a new way.” 

The first candle is lit on the Advent wreath in Morris Chapel at the St.
John Center in Little Rock in this photo taken Nov. 27. (Katie Zakrzewski)

Preparing as soon as possible

Sister Mary Petra Masek, OCD, of the Carmel of St. Teresa of Jesus in Little Rock, said getting holiday preparations done as soon as possible frees up time to focus on Christ. 

“Practically, we can look at activities for the celebrations to come and prepare earlier in a less hectic fashion or take a second look at the meaning of them for us at this time,” she said. “They do help to express our faith, but maybe an ‘update’ can be considered to help us keep a gentle and serene spirit as Christmas comes near. Any of these practices could be done alone or with family, with a faith group, with a parish presentation, with an Advent wreath.” 

Sister Schroeder agreed.

“Shopping for gifts seems to be a priority for many people,” she said. “To avoid this distraction of getting gifts, I buy early, long before Advent, so that the gift of self is the focus. … In these last days of Advent, we get rushed and focused more intently on the gifts that we give others. What can I give? Do we ever think of giving in a new light? A different way? Do our actions and efforts to find the right gift remind others of Jesus and his loving ways? Do we reach out and serve as Jesus did? Can we be the light for others as Jesus is for us? How will I do this?”

Jeff Hines, director of the Office of Faith Formation, said the material preparations for Christmas make it easy to get overwhelmed. 

“When you are thinking about family and friends, making plans for gifts and visits, think, too, about Jesus, the person,” Hines said. “To get the most out of Advent, read the Sunday Mass readings ahead of time. Contemplate them. From this, you will learn that the Old Testament prophets told the Jews to expect the Messiah to come. Jesus is the long-awaited Messiah.  You will learn that we are waiting for Jesus’ second coming and to live life knowing that Jesus is near to you now.”

Meditation and reflection

Silence can pave the way for introspection and asking questions to evaluate one’s faith. 

Sister Masek said that while we are still in the Year of Prayer, Advent is a season of waiting, expectation and “accompanying Mary as she prayerfully waits for the birth of Jesus” every year.

“With Scripture, we can draw near to the Immaculate Heart of Mary and ponder with her the rich and glorious mysteries presented to us through the daily liturgies, especially in the readings of the prophets,” Sister Masek said. 

“My thoughtful daily meditation as a Carmelite over the years has been, ‘Only Word, uttered in silence by the Father from all eternity, and received lovingly in Mary’s womb, make those you have called to serve you in Carmel witnesses as she was in body and soul to the Word of God.’ Part of this is a reflected thought in a Carmelite intercession. If someone wants to use it, ‘Carmel’ can be substituted for their situation/place. The more quiet and contemplative atmosphere of winter will draw us more easily into this reflective and restorative practice.”

“Looking at my behaviors and practices helps me in my awareness and the opportunity to bring life to others and myself,” Sister Shroeder said. “Personally, I spend each morning in the quiet, beginning with reading the Scripture and reflecting on the Word for that day. For the theme of that week, I ask myself, ‘How does this reading address that theme?’ An example might be hope, and I ask, ‘How does this reading bring hope?’ or ‘What do I need to do today to bring hope in my life or bring hope to others?’ This means I make time for longer reflection and wake up earlier each day.”

Sister Regina said Advent gives us an opportunity to slow down and reflect as we seek a closer relationship with Jesus and one another. 

“This means we have to be mindful of how we feel and how we understand my faults and failings,” she said. “If we take the time to focus on a little prayer, ‘Come, Lord Jesus,’ said throughout the day, we will surely be ready for Christmas. We are allowed to focus on Jesus coming into our lives, dwelling among us, living peacefully and reconciling with God and one another. This is the real meaning of Christmas. Christ dwells within us.”

Classics for the season

Lessenberry, who plays music in her spare time, recommended Catholics swap out secular tunes and carols for Christian Christmas music.

“St. Augustine once said, ‘He who sings prays twice.’ By listening to and singing along with Christian holiday music, we can lift our praise to the Lord and get ourselves in the holiday spirit at the same time,” Lessenberry said.

Father Kodell recommended taking the time to read up on the Advent hymns inspired by the prophet Isaiah.

“For personal reading, there is nothing better than to follow the selections from Isaiah in the liturgy and to hear their echoes in the Advent hymns that Isaiah has inspired.”

Beyond Advent

Grelle said it’s just as important to think about what Advent implies in the broader sense of the liturgical calendar. 

“The beginning of the Advent season marks the beginning of a new year in the Church calendar.  At the start of a new year, we often talk about it as a time to reset, prioritize and make commitments for areas in our lives that we sense the need to change for our own well-being and growth,” Grelle said. “The liturgical new year provides a unique opportunity to focus on our spiritual life as we prepare for the birth of Jesus, the greatest gift, and turn our eyes to deepen our relationship with him.”

Advent resources

The following is a list of other recommended resources to help you have a more prayerful Advent.

Prayers

The Ignatian Daily Examen

The Magnificat

Publications

Advent meditations by Father Mark Toups include “Rejoice! An Advent Pilgrimage into the Heart of Scripture,” “Rejoice! Advent Meditatins with Mary” and “Rejoice and Be Glad, A Journey Through Christmas with the Holy Family.”

Websites

The Word Among Us, wau.org

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, usccb.org

Questions to meditate on

Sister Regina Schroeder, OSB, procurator at St. Scholastica Monastery, created a list of questions for families and discussion groups to reflect on together to better prepare for the Advent season.

1. How did God enter into my life today, or did I recognize today God helping me? Talk about what happened.

2. Who are we waiting for at this time of year? If it is Santa or the birthday of Jesus, how am I

preparing for this? Talk about how to connect the two.

3. What does it mean to wait? How many times have you done this today? What are some ways we practice waiting in our lives? This takes patience. As you wait for the birth of Jesus, how would you hope Jesus’ coming will enrich your life or make your life better? Give some practical ways.

4. Do I have weaknesses and failings I want to change or do better with? What am I working on? How can others help me?

5. What do I hope for? Name one thing or activity that I hoped for and received, and what did I do with it? What will I do with what I hope for as I prepare for Jesus’ birthday?

6. How can I bring peace to my family? My work? My classmates or co-workers?