Barb Szyszkiewicz peeks into Raymond Arroyo's new Christmas picture book, which retells an Eastern European legend.
I am of the mind that you can never have too many Christmas storybooks for your children to enjoy. When my children were younger, we had a large basket of Advent- and Christmas-themed picture books, which we would bring out on the First Sunday of Advent, along with our Advent wreath and the empty stable from our Nativity scene. The kids looked forward to rereading their favorite stories, and sometimes I'd surprise them and slip a new one into the basket.
Raymond Arroyo's new picture book from Sophia Institute Press is a wonderful addition to your collection of Christmas storybooks. The Spider Who Saved Christmas: A Legend, beautifully and vividly illustrated by Randy Gallegos, begins with the Holy Family on the run from King Herod, during the Slaughter of the Innocents.
Entering a cave to hide from Herod's soldiers, Mary and Joseph notice a large spider protecting a sac of eggs. Joseph, fully on alert and wanting to protect Mary and Baby Jesus from all threats, slashes at the spider's web with his staff, but Mary stops him, noting, "All are here for a reason. Let it be."
As the family rests in the darkness of the cave, the distant wails of the slaughtered innocents and their bereaved mothers are heard. The spider, who wants to repair the web Joseph damaged with his staff, realizes that she needs to protect a Child not her own -- so she calls forth her dozens of older children to help spin a thick web at the entrance to the cave, so that Herod's soldiers will be tricked into thinking that no one is hiding inside.
Readers familiar with Charlotte's Web will enjoy another story in which a friendly spider selflessly takes risks to save someone else. Unlike most stories that feature "saves Christmas" in their title, The Spider Who Saved Christmas isn't about removing obstacles that threaten to prevent Santa's delivery of gifts to children. Instead, it's about a lowly creature willingly accepting a dangerous mission to save the Son of God.
The Spider Who Saved Christmas is based on an ancient Eastern European legend which tells the origin of the tinsel we often use to decorate Christmas trees.
Not only does this book tell a wonderful story, it's an excellent catechetical tool for the Feast of the Holy Innocents.
Copyright 2020 Barb Szyszkiewicz
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About the Author
Barb Szyszkiewicz
Barb Szyszkiewicz, senior editor at CatholicMom.com, is a wife, mom of 3 young adults, and a Secular Franciscan. Barb enjoys writing, cooking, and reading, and is a music minister at her parish. Find her blog at FranciscanMom and her family’s favorite recipes with nutrition information at Cook and Count. Barb is the author of The Handy Little Guide to Prayer and The Handy Little Guide to the Liturgy of the Hours, available from Our Sunday Visitor.
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