T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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664.1 | Giving thanks | NETMAN::BASTION | Fix the mistake, not the blame | Tue Jan 29 1991 09:23 | 9 |
| Wendy,
Leave it up to the kids! My interpretation of grace is that it is to
give thanks. If you have more than one child, they could take turns
each evening giving thanks for whatever they're thankful for.
Judi
|
664.2 | Short and simple | SCAACT::COX | Kristen Cox - Dallas ACT Data Center Mgr | Tue Jan 29 1991 10:21 | 8 |
|
My step-son has liked the same one (when it's his turn to say grace) for
about 3 years:
God is great,
God is good.
Let us thank Him
For our food. Amen.
|
664.3 | god does not equal male to me | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Tue Jan 29 1991 10:35 | 15 |
| re-.1
That is basically the same grace that I had learned and besides the
bad dinner memories that it holds for me, one thing that I would be
trying to avoid is portraying God as a male figure. (note: this is my
own personal belief system).
I want to portray God as a creative, guiding, and caring power, not
as a man or father figure. This is a very important aspect of my life,
for although I consider myself very spiritual, I am not in the least
bit religious (neither I or my husband choose to attend organized
church services).
Wendy
|
664.4 | some from my youth
| CSSE32::RANDALL | Pray for peace | Tue Jan 29 1991 11:14 | 21 |
| Presented tongue in cheek:
My brother's favorite is:
Good food
Good meat
Good God
Let's eat!
On a more serious note: The table prayers our interdenominational youth
group used to use were simple:
Lord God, we give thanks for this meal we are about to eat.
or
God bless this food and all who share it. Thank you. Amen.
Don't know if either of those suit your needs.
--bonnie
|
664.5 | | MOIRA::FAIMAN | light upon the figured leaf | Tue Jan 29 1991 11:15 | 10 |
| In our family we use
Earth who gives to us this food
Sun who makes it ripe and good
Dear sun, dear earth, by you we live
Our loving thanks to you we give
and then, all holding hands
Blessings on the meal
|
664.6 | Another singing grace! | SHRMAX::ROGUSKA | | Tue Jan 29 1991 11:31 | 16 |
| Another song......
The Lord is good to me!
And so I thank the Lord,
For giving me the things I need,
The sun and the rain and the appleseed.
The Lord is good to me!
My niece and nephew, now twelve and seventeen (!), have been singing this
since three and seven!
Boy time flies!
Kathy
|
664.7 | Catholic and a nondenominational grace | ICS::NELSONK | | Tue Jan 29 1991 12:08 | 25 |
| My Protestant husband likes the Catholic "Grace before Meals" that
I learned when I was a kid:
Bless us, O Lord, and these thy gifts
which we are about to receive
from thy bounty. Through Christ our Lord, Amen.
Although, .0 had mentioned something about keeping it nondenominational
and non-gender-specific. Here's an adaptation from soemthing I read
in "Dear Abby," of all places:
We give thanks for food
and remember the hungry.
We give thanks for friendship
and remember the lonely.
We give thanks for all our gifts
and ask that others may be so blessed
so that we may be one in spirit, in fellowship and love. Amen.
We said this at Thanksgiving dinner at our house. I feel it's
pretty flexible, as you can insert whatever blessings/petitions you
have on your mind, also you can insert your name for your deity as
you see fit.
|
664.8 | Girl Scout Graces | COGITO::FRYE | | Tue Jan 29 1991 12:36 | 19 |
| At the Girl Scout camp I went to for years, we sang grace before every
meal. Johnny Appleseed mentioned a few back was one of the favorites.
Another -
For health and strength and daily bread
We praise thy name, oh Lord.
(this was usually done as a two part round)
One we said as children was
Thank you for the world so sweet,
Thank you for the food we eat.
Thank you for the birds that sing,
Thank you, God, for everything.
Norma
|
664.9 | easy to make non-denominational | SMURF::HAECK | Debby Haeck | Tue Jan 29 1991 12:44 | 4 |
| This is the one we use:
Bless O Lord this food to our use, and us to Thy loving service. Make
us ever mindful of the needs of others, for Jesus' sake. Amen.
|
664.10 | | BCSE::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Tue Jan 29 1991 15:23 | 5 |
|
For what we are about to receive, may the Lord make us
truly thankful. Amen.
I don't know if it's demoninational or not.
|
664.11 | Camp Prayer | MR4DEC::POLAKOFF | | Wed Jan 30 1991 09:37 | 6 |
|
Rub a dub dub
Thanks for the grub
Yea' God
|
664.12 | personally, I vote for .5 | JAWS::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Wed Jan 30 1991 09:58 | 28 |
| In my not-brief-enough stay (2 years) at a secondary boarding school,
we were strongly encouraged ;-) to use a version of .9's - it never
made a whole lot of sense to me, though:
Bless, oh Lord, this food [How do you bless "to" something?]
to our use
And us to thy service [seems irrelevant to the meal]
In Christ's name* [hey wait a minute, _I'm_ the one
saying the prayer]
Amen [*a lot of us muttered, "For
Chrissake, Amen!"]
The year I was in nursery school, I was called upon at Thanksgiving to
say grace for the whole family; so I said it as I'd heard it every day
before Snack (none of us can say it any other way, or with a straight
face, ever since):
God is Great
Good is Good
Let us thank him
For our food
Amen; drink your juice.
Leslie
|
664.13 | Jewish example | WORDY::STEINHART | Pixillated | Wed Jan 30 1991 10:16 | 16 |
| This is the Jewish prayer:
Blessed art thou, Lord, our God, King of the Universe, who bringest
forth bread from the earth.
It can be adapted in several ways:
* Non-gender specific. "Ruler of the Universe"
* Informal case. "Blessed are you. . . who brings"
* Different foods. "creates fruit" etc.
For full meals, not snacks, i.e. those where bread is served, the first
blessing is used to cover all food. And a much longer blessing is
recited after the meal.
Laura
|
664.14 | Grace | CSC32::DUBOIS | The early bird gets worms | Wed Jan 30 1991 13:44 | 8 |
| At my son's daycare (Children's World), they say:
Thank you for the food before us.
Thank you for the friends beside us.
Thank you for the love between us.
Amen.
Carol
|
664.15 | A slight misunderstanding on my part (for 20 years) | SCAACT::RESENDE | Digital, thriving on chaos? | Wed Jan 30 1991 21:52 | 17 |
| We kids said the "God is great" blessing when we were growing up. But
my dad used the following:
"Lord, bless us and make us ever thankful for these and all thy mercies."
The entire time I was growing up, I always thought he was saying:
"Lord, bless us and make us ever thankful for these and all thy
NURSES."
I could never understand why he was so thankful for nurses when none of
us were sick very much. I was an adult before I realized what he had
really been saying.
(^;
Steve
|
664.16 | the one and only... | ULTRA::DONAHUE | | Thu Jan 31 1991 12:13 | 8 |
| The only grace I remember growing up was...
God is great
God is good,
Let us thank him for our food
Amen
From good ole' Romper Room!!
|
664.17 | Passed down mealtime prayer | ALLVAX::KWALSH | Kathy Walsh - Avoid the noid! | Mon Feb 04 1991 15:54 | 12 |
|
I grew up with this mealtime prayer and have since taught it to
my children.
Thank you God
for the food
which we are
about to eat
Amen
At special meals one member of the family would add on
an extra thank you for what ever the occasion.
|
664.18 | If you really want "new age" :-) thank your food | SUPER::MATTHEWS | | Fri Feb 08 1991 13:18 | 13 |
| Joseph Campbell, in "The Power of Myth," points out that we have long
forgotten the once-commonplace practice of giving thanks to the animals
that give their life for us. (If you're not serving meat you don't have
to worry about this, though if you're sensitive to plants you could
thank them too.)
Campbell says that in a hunting society the hunter would be the one to
thank the animal before killing it. Obviously, today you can't assume
that anybody has made peace with your food on your behalf, so I think a
tableside ritual might be nice. For the exact words, you're probably on
your own.
Val
|
664.19 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | hanging in there | Sun Feb 10 1991 14:25 | 8 |
| Val
When we raised our own meat we did give thanks for the life of the
animals - since we'd known them - when we ate them.
it may be a factor of being closer to the process.
Bonnie
|