LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Grace Dickinson is blunt in her 12-year-old
wisdom — the Catholic missalette is boring. But not because of the Scriptures,
which are filled with exciting stories of our faith, but the presentation
itself.
"It doesn't appeal to kids," she said. "It only
has color on the front page."
And in a family of eight — parents Kevin and Tiffany Dickinson,
both 37, and six children 14 and younger — staying focused at Mass can be a
challenge.
"It's trial and error," Tiffany said, with Kevin
adding, "Bribes," of doughnuts after either 9 a.m. Mass at St. Joseph
Church in Fayetteville, Arkansas, or the 10:30 a.m. Mass at St. Raphael in Springdale,
Arkansas.
To make the Scriptures come alive, the family is creating
"Diary of a God Man," a comic-book-style missalette to not only keep
children engaged in the liturgy, but to give them an understanding of the Bible
on their level.
Their team includes mom Tiffany as the spiritual director and dad
Kevin as supervisor. Tiffany is a graduate student, working on her doctorate as
a nurse practitioner, and her husband is a small-business owner of Preferred
Office Technologies in Fayetteville.
But the creative geniuses making it relatable are the children,
who attend St. Joseph School, and each of them has a job — Gabbi, 14,
treasurer; Grace, 12, head of sales; Joseph, 11, illustrations; Ann Marie, 9,
digital marketing; Eli, 7, creative; and Catherine, 4, moral support. And the
titles are not just honorary — from Gabbi creating profit/loss statements to
Ann Marie handling emails and the website to Grace leading the promotions,
they're growing spiritually.
"The whole point of this is because we wanted kids to be
engaged in the Mass and really get something out of the Scriptures; not just
sit still and be quiet at Mass and be good, but to leave Mass learning
something," Tiffany Dickinson told the Arkansas
Catholic, newspaper of the Diocese of Little Rock.
The family offered the Easter season readings and illustrations
for free on their website, diaryofagodman.com, while public Masses were
canceled amid the COVID-19 threat.
"It's challenging enough for kids to pay attention at
church, let alone at home," Kevin Dickinson said. "In these uncertain
times having Mass streaming, we just wanted it to be a resource" for
families.
To make this book a reality, the family has started a $12,000
Kickstarter campaign. As of May 19, $11,213 had been raised. The fundraiser
ends June 9.
"If we don't raise the total amount, we don't get
anything," Kevin Dickinson said, explaining money is returned to donors if
the set goal isn't achieved.
On Feb. 26, Grace Dickinson won $1,000 in the IdeaFame Business
Pitch Contest hosted by Startup Junkie in Fayetteville. She had 60 seconds to
pitch their business plan, no notes in hand, and beat out 22 other contestants.
"When I was actually up there, I wasn't too nervous because
I've been a dancer for a long time so I don't really have any stage fright. I
was pretty comfortable being up there," she said.
They invested in a Kickstarter video, an attorney and free online
illustrations, created by close friend Travis McAfee, a parishioner at St.
Raphael and owner of McAfee Studios.
"The unique thing about it is at its foundation, it's
kid-led," McAfee said. The illustrations are based in "modern kid
culture," which as a volunteer youth minister along with his wife, McAfee
said it's important to connect it to a child's world. It's also fulfilling his
childhood dream to be a cartoonist.
"I just see God working through it," he said. "The
kids are using their insights and gifts, I'm using mine and we're all using it
to build up the kingdom."
All illustrations get theological approval from Msgr. David
LeSieur, pastor of St. Vincent de Paul Church in Rogers, Arkansas.
"That's been very humbling and overwhelming that people
really like this enough and believe in it enough and want to help encourage it
to keep going," Tiffany said.
Those who pledge money for the project receive incentives for
different levels of pledges, ranging from $5 for an original digital proof of
the book concept to $250 or more, which includes gifts such as a signed hard
copy, merchandise and a personalized character of the donor or someone of their
choice to appear in a Bible reading of their choice.
The plan is for the first missal to be completed by November. It
will be for Year A — the Catholic Church's liturgical calendar follows a
three-year cycle, A, B and C. It will be 232 pages, for 52 Sundays and six holy
days and will include the Sunday liturgy first reading, responsorial psalm,
second reading and Gospel illustrations in full color.
Sales from the first book will be invested in books for years B
and C and later on in merchandise, coloring books and publications in multiple
languages. The family also will put 10% of the book proceeds toward St. Joseph
School and the church building fund.
They're currently setting up meetings with publishers.
On Sundays, the Dickinsons sit around their dining room table and
Tiffany reads the Sunday Scriptures. The children then discuss and sketch their
interpretations, which are combined by Kevin before being sent to the
illustrator.
The ultimate goal is to move children closer to God.
"I don't want them to just go through the motions. I don't
want them just to sit in church and be good for an hour. I really want them to
have that personal relationship" with the Lord, Tiffany Dickinson said.
Hanson is associate editor of Arkansas Catholic,
newspaper of the Diocese of Little Rock.
Find out more
For more about the missalette project or to donate, go to
diaryofagodman.com.