A confession:

I have been a Catholic for thirteen years this Easter, and I  still don’t know what to do with the palm branches I carry home dutifully every Palm Sunday.

They’re blessed, right?   So I can’t just toss ’em, unless I burn them or something.  Yet I can’t see myself standing over the sink and setting light to them. 

I never learned how to weave one of those nifty little crosses out of them.  And it’s too late this year to learn, because they’re all dried up and stiff and I am pretty sure that the cross-weaving thing only works when they are green and pliable. 

I have seen them artfully arranged by sticking ’em through the back of a crucifix.  But we moved house a couple of months ago and I haven’t gotten around to hanging any up.  (Subsidiary confession:  I have gotten around to making curtains and buying several pieces of furniture.)

But I seem to have inadvertantly come up with a good, or at least a final, solution this year: 

Leave them lying around where a two-year-old with a pair of scissors can find them.

Now that it can no longer be recognized as a blessed palm branch, I think I’m allowed to compost it. 

At least I hope so, because the shreds of plant fiber that are left will look rather unconventional stuffed into the back of a crucifix.

Maybe I can save it for the creche this Christmas.


Comments

2 responses to “Palm branch confetti.”

  1. Next year, just leave them at the church if you don’t have a purpose in mind. They are collected and burned to make the Ash Wednesday ashes.

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  2. When I was in college and my future dh was going through RCIA, our priest encouraged everyone to bring them to the Easter vigil service (IIRC) and they were added to the fire and reserved for the following year’s Ash Wednesday. The two parishes we’ve been at since then don’t offer this, though we left our palms this year. I have about half a dozen palm crosses sitting around already…

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