…a great and joyful event that is meant for everybody, worldwide: A Savior has just been born. The Message, Luke 2:10
Celebrate this good news!
Merry Christmas!
–Love, Carol
Photo credits:
From my archives: My family together at worship last Christmas eve.
Are you seeing ads? They are not from me! They are placed by WordPress, who otherwise offers a free platform from which to share lots of good-ness. If you see an inappropriate ad, please report it to support@wordpress.com. Include the URL, the date/time the ad appeared, and a screenshot of the ad.
Look for God. (See here for help in tying this quest to Christmas.)
Tell the faith stories!
For help in how to talk to your children about the tragedy in Newtown, CT, Mr. Rogers says it best: Look for the helpers.
Photo credits:
Click here for info on banner photo (not visible in readers or email). The Angelic Announcement to the Shepherds a painting by Gaddi Taddeo, in the public domain, via Wikimedia Commons.
Our Rotation this month is about Jesus’ birth with a focus on the shepherds and angels portion of the story. The Message version of the Bible describes these shepherds as “camping in the neighborhood.”
Hmmm… Camping… How about a family camping expedition in the living room? Pitch a “tent” (drape a blanket over some chairs), stuff the backpacks with snacks or maybe even hold a picnic! (Try something simple, like sandwiches.) Use this opportunity to talk about shepherds, ask some questions, and add some spiritual growth memories!
Is it easy to stay clean when you are camping?
If you’ve ever been camping, you know how hard it is to be neat. You can image how hard it was for shepherds in the time of Jesus. They also probably smelled like sheep. And they had another stigma: in those days, shepherds were looked down upon. They were considered as lowly as a tax collector.
Yet these were the people who first heard the good news of Jesus’ birth!
And heard the news in grand style!
Tell the story of the shepherds and angels (from Luke 2:8-18) around your pretend campfire. (What is camping without a campfire!)
Why are shepherds the perfect audience for angels announcing the birth of the Christ child? Why do you suppose God didn’t chose “important” people to tell first?
Who would you expect God to tell?
There is a momentous message in God’s choice of society’s outcasts as the first visitors he invited to see his baby son!
Have you ever felt not good enough to hear from God?
God’s gift of his son Jesus is for everyone, even you and me.
God sent his son Jesus as a way to bring people back into a relationship with God. Those who are young, old, broken, a mistake-making-mess, tired, forgotten, feeling unworthy… His message of love comes once again, perhaps as quietly as a sleeping baby or as unexpectedly as God’s glory blazing around!
Photo credits:
Click here for info on banner photo (not visible in readers or email). A young Bedouin shepherd boy by Ed Brambley from Cambridge, UK, who licensed this photo via Wikimedia Commons under a Creative Commons License, via Wikimedia Commons. Campfire also licensed under Creative Commons, by Mike Davis.
Are you seeing ads? They are not from me! They are placed by WordPress, who otherwise offers a free platform from which to share lots of good-ness. If you see an inappropriate ad, please report it to support@wordpress.com. Include the URL, the date/time the ad appeared, and a screenshot of the ad.
What child doesn’t have difficulty waiting for Christmas! (Perhaps strange behavior will result?)
It probably won’t do any good to tell your vigilant kids about how people, two thousand plus years ago (when Jesus was born) had been waiting a long, long time. They had waited for the coming of Christ for hundreds of years! Can’t our kids wait a few more weeks?
Make use of your Advent waiting time.
Here are ideas and resources for waiting Advent:
Encourage various ways of telling the Christmas story; how about using a crèche? (Also known as a “manager scene.”) Is yours off-limits to the kids? Get everyone involved in making a version that children can play with. And tell the story over and over! Use air-drying clay or even toilet paper tubes dressed in fabric. Move Mary and Joseph around the room. Anyone for a trip to Bethlehem? Create a shepherds scene in another part of the house. Where should the wise men go?
Got a LEGO®-maniac in your house? Make the figures for a nativity scene from LEGO® bricks. Camels, Sheep, a Holy Family, and more! Visit this site for building instructions.
Another way to “tell” the story: act it out. Get creative with props and costumes: a flash light becomes the star that guided wise men, a bath robe makes an on-the-spot shepherd.
Get into the RACK act! RACK is “Random Acts of Christmas Kindness.” How fun! Do one a day or a bunch all at once. Can you sense the surprise pleasure in finding a quarter stuck to a vending machine or a candy cane on the ATM?
To print out cards to stick wherever you “RACK” someone go here. Or to print out cards that you can write your own message on, go here.
Want your kids to be more grateful? It needs to be taught! Consider these ideas for ways to teach gratitude. (I like this idea: Pin up a long piece of paper and record gifts you already have!) Or, continue filling up your family blessing box!
Do you have lots of Christmas (or winter) story books? Have the kids wrap them and tag them with the date. As part of your bedtime routine, read the storybook-of-the-day. You can make this idea “Advent-y” by adding a Bible verse with each book. Talk about the verse and what it means to you. (Print out a set of possible verses here.)
Christmas will be here before you know it!
Photo credits… Bizarre children by SMN, who had originally licensed this photo under a Creative Commons License. Holy Family from LEGO® bricks, by Leo Dorst. Reproduced by permission. (Yes! I asked!) RACK card from Tracie. Used with permission.
Happy Advent! This is the perfect season to bring faith conversations to your family and this blog will help. To ensure you don’t miss a thing (usually only one post a week) subscribe over on the right. Enter your e-mail address to have posts sent directly to your inbox. Or click on the orange RSS icon to subscribe in a reader.
On Saturday nights and on Sunday mornings at FUMC our kids, whom we call “Cool Disciples,” experience Rotation Model Christian education, as they learn about Bible stories and concepts through kid-friendly multimedia workshops. Scroll down to view our December schedule of workshops.
Since this is December, we are learning about Jesus’ birth! Because Christmas happens once a year, each Advent we focus on a different aspect of the Christmas story. In the past we have covered Jesus’ birth through the eyes of the prophet Isaiah, the story of the magi, the birth from his mother’s perspective, and the overall details and sequence of the Christmas story. This December we target the key role of angels and shepherds. Read about our story in Luke 2:1-20.
For Saturdays at the Green Wood location, here is the schedule…
Date
What’s happening
12/1
Children will be singing and assisting with the service, so please arrive early (between 4:30-4:45) for rehearsal and instructions. There will be a short time spend downstairs watching part of the video Why Do We Call It Christmas? Don’t forget to stay after service for a chili supper, making ornaments, & decorating cookies!
Date
Workshop
Activity
12/8
Storytelling Workshop
Hear the Christmas story via a “visitor” from Bible times – a shepherd!
12/15
Cooking Workshop
Bake candy cane cookies to give away.
12/22
Art Workshop
Choose from a variety of media to create a scene of shepherds and/or angels.
12/29
Worship with your family
For Sundays at the downtown location, here is the schedule of workshops…
Date
What’s happening
12/2
Enjoy worship and Communion with your family
Games 1
Games 2
Storytelling
Cooking
Video
Art
Room 211
Room 215
Room 204
Social Hall
Pine Room
Room 212
12/9
3rd grade
5th & 6th grade
2nd grade
4th grade
{closed}
1st grade
12/16
1st grade
4th grade
3rd grade
{closed}
5th & 6th grade
2nd grade
11/23
2nd grade
{closed}
1st grade
5th & 6th grade
4th grade
3rd grade
12/30
Enjoy worship and Communion with your family
What’s happening in each workshop at the Downtown location?
In the Art Workshop students will create a shepherds & angels picture using mixed media.
In the Cooking Workshop students will become messengers of the good news by making candy-cane cookies to give away.
In the Games Workshop students will test their knowledge of the details of the Christmas story in a quiz game.
In the Storytelling Workshop students will hear from a shepherd, who describe his experience on the night of Jesus’ birth.
In the Video Workshop students will watch portions of that all-time favorite video A Charlie Brown’s Christmas.
Photo credits:
Click here for info on banner photo (not visible in readers or email).
Shepherds photo from my archives, sewn by the Paraments committee at church.
Here’s a fresh take on an answering machine message:
Hello. This is not an answering machine, This is a question machine. And there are really only two questions that matter: who are you and what do you want?
Jacob got to answer those questions during his wrestling match with God.
Picture the scene: Jacob is feeling doomed. Twenty years ago he left his home and his family to escape the anger of his brother Esau. Now God has told him to return home, but Jacob is nervous: Does Esau still want to kill him? Jacob has learned that his brother Esau is coming to meet him with an army of 400 men! That doesn’t sound very peaceful.
Jacob has tried every trick in the book including prayer and an attempt to appease his brother with gifts. (Cattle, and camels, and goats, oh my!) Now he finds himself engaged in a full-throttle wrestling match with God! What next?!
Who are you?
Jacob got his name from the way he was born. As the second-born twin he entered the world holding on to the heel of his brother, so they named him “Heel-catcher.” In those days “Heel-catcher” had other not-so-nice meanings: “trickster,” “swindler,” or “scoundrel.” Hmm, Jacob lived up to his name, I’d say?
Now that God has asked him his name, Jacob has to admit it…
But God has a new name for “The Grabber!”
Your name is no longer Jacob. From now on it’s Israel (God-Wrestler); you’ve wrestled with God and you’ve come through. Genesis 36:28 MSG
In giving Jacob a new name it is like God is saying: You may not think that you are “good enough,” but I love you anyway. I’m giving you a second chance. Here is how I mean for you to be.
Hmmm, this means that I could be…
OR
How would you answer the question: What is your name?
What name would you like to live?
Discuss these questions with your family.
Photo credits:
A slightly altered “Hello, my name is…” originally by kirrilyrobert, who licensed this photo on Flickr under a Creative Commons License.
Are you seeing ads? They are not from me! They are placed by WordPress, who otherwise offers a free platform from which to share lots of good-ness. If you see an inappropriate ad, please report it to support@wordpress.com. Include the URL, the date/time the ad appeared, and a screenshot of the ad.
And then there are entries on my list of things that I should be thankful for every day… but I just forget.
That God has chosen me for my weaknesses. (My weakness amplifes my need for God.)
That God is always present with me! (Whether I sense him or not, he is a constant companion!)
…So easy to forget!
Perhaps we are all like Jacob who experiences God in his life and says,
Surely the Lord is in this place, and I was not aware of it. Genesis 28:16
Our Cool Disciples story about Jacob and Esau is such a large story that we’ve broken it into two parts (part one and part two). With such a big story it is easy to loose sight of the main point. We could become embroiled in the details — who are all of the characters, and what happens, and in what order — which is important to know, but is not the most critical. Here is the point which we hope stands out:
God makes his presence known in our lives.
The world is a place where one can encounter God, reaching out to us.
If we take notice.
+++++++
As we head into the crazy-busy days ahead, can we make time to notice God? God seeks an encounter with us; God endeavors to get your attention!
For this I can say:
Thanks God!
Happy Thanksgiving — Carol
Photo credits:
Photo of the Thanksgiving altar at church is from my archives.
Are you seeing ads? They are not from me! They are placed by WordPress, who otherwise offers a free platform from which to share lots of good-ness. If you see an inappropriate ad, please report it to support@wordpress.com. Include the URL, the date/time the ad appeared, and a screenshot of the ad.
Every fall our church has a tradition: the third graders all get their own Bible. The presentation happens in the worship service, during the “Children’s Moment” so that all of the other kids get to see what’s happening.
3rd graders & their parents, in the worship service, in a moment of prayer
Look at how excited they are!
The new Bibles are wrapped in bright gift paper – because they are a gift from the church. But that is only the top layer of paper! The first of five layers! After the presentation in church, the children gather together with their parents for a special class about their new Bible. They are told that each layer of paper has a special meaning and to unwrap one layer at a time. In the past some students have saved a piece of each layer and created a bookmark.
So some students unwrap carefully…
And some unwrap with abandon…
I wonder what layer is next?
At last! Finally! The Bible!
In part of this special class, students learn that the Bible is like a library — it has 66 books! That’s a lot of stories. They also learn that the entire message of the Bible can be summarized in one word:
LOVE
God loves you and cares about you. The Bible is God’s love letter to each of you! Take our current Rotation on Jacob and Esau… what is it about?
Are you seeing ads? They are not from me! They are placed by WordPress, who otherwise offers a free platform from which to share lots of good-ness. If you see an inappropriate ad, please report it to support@wordpress.com. Include the URL, the date/time the ad appeared, and a screenshot of the ad.