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Bananagrams and Pieper

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Our 11-year-old son’s favorite Christmas gift was, quite frankly, a surprise to all of us: Bananagrams. The simple Scrabble-like game requires participants to build as many words as possible in a race against time. The winner screams “Bananagrams!” when all his or her letters have successfully been used.
 
By Christmas afternoon, our son was already convening us all in the dining room for long, raucous rounds. The whole family quickly fell in love with the game. And when Grammie came for a recent visit from Chicago, she jumped into the fray.
 
Candidly, we wish we had more time for leading all-family games, sing-alongs, hikes, day-trips, and other Bananagram-like experiences of fun, family togetherness. Today, every family knows how easy it is to fracture into each person doing his own thing, screen in hand. When we do this, day after day, we lose opportunities to celebrate the other-centered communion which is at the heart of every family’s Trinity House or domestic church.
 
In the 4th week of each month, we turn our focus with you to Level 4 of your Trinity House, Family Culture. And as a little exercise, let’s look at the power of Bananagrams in light of key principles from Joseph Pieper’s classic work, Leisure, the Basis of Culture. As he wrote:

  • Leisure: “Leisure cannot be achieved at all when it is sought as a means to an end… Celebration of God in worship cannot be done unless it is done for its own sake. That most sublime form of affirmation of the world as a whole is the fountainhead of leisure.”
  • Celebration: “The soul of leisure, it can be said, lies in ‘celebration’.”
  • Boredom: “The vacancy left by absence of worship is filled by mere killing of time and by boredom, which is directly related to inability to enjoy leisure; for one can only be bored if the spiritual power to be leisurely has been lost.”

To help translate these principles to your own family’s unique culture, we invite you to reflect on these questions together as parents:

  • What types of “leisure” activities can your family enjoy—like a family meal, or a Bananagrams tournament—“for its own sake” and not as part of some larger goal or project?
  • How can your family “celebrate” more, as you enjoy the gift of the communion that you have together and with God?
  • If members of your family have complained about being “bored,” is this an indicator that your family culture needs to be strengthened?  

Your family culture is utterly unique, a precious gift that the Lord has given you to steward, grow, and celebrate. Don’t lose another minute in boredom or in merely being entertained. If you’re looking for one single way to strengthen your family culture starting today, just focus on your family meals, which we like to compare to your “mini-Sabbath.” 

Every family works so hard today. Taking time out to celebrate the communion that God has given us is not “another task” or “more work”: it’s the heart of our family’s gratitude to God. As we journey into 2023, may our kitchen tables be places of true leisure, laughter, celebration, and wonder as our children beat us yet again at Bananagrams!

At 16K views, this Institute of Catholic Culture lecture, entitled “Leisure: The Basis of Culture” by the Diocese of Arlington’s Fr. Paul Scalia is a great entry-point or refresher for Pieper’s vision for contemplation, worship, leisure, and renewal.   

Family, Leisure, and the Restoration of Culture” (Conversatio) by R.J. Snell includes this observation: “Make the Sabbath sing. Make it taste good. Make it be like the way God is, generous and delightful. God, in our Catholic understanding, is a community of love and joy—that’s what the Trinity is in the end—but we can’t recognize God if we don’t have a taste for joy and love and generosity and hospitality.” Amen! 

If you’re ready to take a deeper dive, then here is Josef Pieper’s Leisure: The Basis of Culture (Amazon, $17.95).

> Mark your calendars for our next Heaven in Your Home Gathering at St. John the Apostle in Leesburg on Feb. 4th. Virtus-trained volunteers will watch the kids while parents sneak away to hear Deacon Rich Napoli, a faculty member of CUA’s Busch School of Business, give a conversation starter on “Family Finances for the Busy Family: Strategies and Opportunities.” For more info, check out the flyer here

“Trinity House Café became one of the most special places in my life when I met my now-husband there at a Bible study.”

– Olivia Thetford

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