Acts 16:9-15
U There is a lot of action and are
several unfamiliar place names in this story.
To help children hear the story through them, have it pantomimed
by an older children’s or youth class while the usual worship leader
reads the story from the Bible in the lectern.
As the reading begins, Paul stands to one side of the chancel in front
of a person holding a sign that says TROAS.
Spread out across the chancel in story order are people holding signs
that say, MACEDONIA, SAMOTHRACE NEAPOLIS, and PHILIPPI. At the far side of the chancel just past the
PHILIPPI sign, sit 2 or 3 women in a circle.
Lydia wears a purple scarf or dress.
As actors take their places, comment on the geography noting the
significance of the sea to be crossed between Troas and Macedonia and pointing
out that Macedonia was the area (like a state?) in which Samothrace, Neapolis
and Philippi were cities. (No one will
remember all this geography, but explaining makes the story feel more real.)
E E E E E E E E E E E E E E
Acts
16:9-15
During
the night Paul had a vision: there stood a man of Macedonia pleading with him
and saying, “Come over to Macedonia and help us.”
Paul looks up curiously. The person holding the MACEDONIA sign may
yell out the “Come over to Macedonia and help us.” Or, it may be read by the reader.
When
he had seen the vision, we immediately tried to cross over to Macedonia, being
convinced that God had called us to proclaim the good news to them. We set sail from Troas and took a straight
course to Samothrace, the following day to Neapolis, 12 and
from there to Philippi, which is a leading city of the district of Macedonia
and a Roman colony.
Following the
text Paul goes from one place to the next.
We
remained in this city for some days. On
the sabbath day we went outside the gate by the river, where we supposed there
was a place of prayer; and we sat down and spoke to the women who had gathered
there.
Paul joins the
women in the circle. He makes gestures
as if speaking and they turn their heads and bodies to listen to him.
A
certain woman named Lydia, a worshiper of God, was listening to us; she was
from the city of Thyatira and a dealer in purple cloth. The Lord opened her heart to listen eagerly to
what was said by Paul. When she and her
household were baptized, she urged us, saying, “If you have judged me to be
faithful to the Lord, come and stay at my home.” And she prevailed upon us.
Pause long
enough for Lydia to kneel and Paul to baptize her. Paul then offers her his hand and she
rises. She may say the phrase “If you
have judged me to be faithful to the Lord, come and stay at my home.” Or the
reader may read it.
E E E E E E E E E E E E E E
U With this story we turn from the empty tomb toward
Pentecost and the Holy Spirit. On
Pentecost the Holy Spirit comes with fire.
Today the Holy Spirit works more quietly sending Paul a vision and Lydia
a visiting preacher with a new message about God. Being Easter People, they both listen and
act on what they encounter. Both had to
be brave. Paul was moving into a new
place with lots of different people to whom he was to speak. Lydia responded by being baptized and
inviting Pal and his friends to stay at her house – which could have made some
local people angry.
From Wikimedia Commons |
U Both Paul and Lydia had to listen carefully to new
ideas and decide what to do about them. Native
American dreamcatchers capture this process in a web and some feathers
or beads. Hung wherever people will be
dreaming – maybe their beds, maybe their reading place – the net in the center
of the circle is meant to catch all the dreams and visions and sort them out
letting only the good ones through.
Display a dreamcatcher or picture of one describing its use. Then talk about how we must listen carefully
to both the dreams that come when we are sleeping and the visions that come
when we are awake. We have to figure out
which are important ideas and suggestions from the Holy Spirit/God and which
are just crazy old dreams and wishes in our own heads.
U Talk about the importance of listening – to dreams,
to other people, to whatever is around us.
Then, bless the children to be good listeners like Paul and Lydia. If children are gathered close to you
conclude this discussion with a blessing of each child’s ears or head putting
your hand in place saying, “May God help you listen for dreams and visions and
figure out what to do with them.” If
there are too many children for one person to bless, show them how to bless
each other and allow time for them to bless those around them.
U If your congregation regularly uses the Apostles’ Creed in
worship, this Sunday and Pentecost give you an opportunity to highlight two
phrases near the end of the creed that often get lost for children in the
string of phrases that seem unrelated to each other. Today focus on “I believe on the Holy Ghost.” On Pentecost pick up with “the holy catholic
church” to explore how the Holy Spirit starts the church. Begin by either interrupting the creed as it
is being recited by the congregation or challenging the congregation to recite
the creed interrupting it with a clap at this phrase. Talk about the phrase, then recite the whole
creed together again.
The
term “Holy
Ghost” calls to mind a friendly Halloween spook maybe wearing a
halo. They need to hear that to the
people who originally translated the creed into English “ghost” meant the
invisible you that was what made you the unique person you are. Everyone had a ghost. Today we might say Holy Spirit instead of Holy
Ghost. The Holy Ghost or Holy Spirit is
the invisible unique goodness that makes God God. So when we say “I believe in the Holy Ghost”
we are saying that we believe that God comes to each and all of us. We can know God and God can communicate with
us in lots of surprising ways. Connect
it today’s stories in which the Holy Ghost speaks to Paul in a dream and to
Lydia in the words of a visiting preacher.
This
worship activity also connects to the gospel reading promising the Holy Spirit.
U Paul and Lydia each responds to their messages from
God by doing what they are best able to do.
Paul preaches because he is a teacher.
Lydia offers her home as a place to stay because that is what she has to
offer. Use Lydia’s offer to introduce
the word “hospitality” – being sure to point out both the connect and
the disconnect between it and today’s word “hospital.” Describe the details of what she did –
provide a place to stay and food. She
also seems to have let her home become a meeting place for the church Paul
started in Philippi. Describe ways your
congregation extends hospitality including some in which children
participate. Also describe ways
individuals can extend hospitality to people every day wherever they are. For children this includes inviting new
children or lonely children to join their groups.
Psalm 67
U For a congregational
reading of this psalm the One
could be a worship leader, a children’s class or choir, or any choir. All is
the entire congregation. (I chose The New Jerusalem Bible because its
vocabulary is most familiar to older children, e.g. “fairness” instead of the
“equity” in NRSV.)
IGBCIGBCIGBCIGBCIGBCIGBCIGBCIGBCIGBC
Psalm 67
One: May God show
kindness and bless us,
and make his face shine on us.
All: Then the earth will
acknowledge your ways,
and all nations your power to save.
One:
Let the
nations praise you, God,
let all the nations praise you.
All: Let the
nations rejoice and sing for joy,
for you judge the world with justice,
you judge the peoples with fairness,
you guide the nations on earth.
One: Let the nations praise you,
God,
let all the nations praise you.
All: The earth has yielded its
produce;
God, our God has blessed us.
May God
continue to bless us,
and be revered by the whole wide world.
Based on The New Jerusalem Bible
IGBCIGBCIGBCIGBCIGBCIGBCIGBCIGBCIGBC
U Go to Psalm 67 for a script in which the congregation responds with
the “let all the people…” phrase. That
script is based on the New Revised Standard Version.
Revelation 21:10, 22-22:5
U The codes in this section of John’s vision are
very hard for children to crack.
They are very detailed, e.g. a tree that bears fruit every season and is
fed by a crystal river that flows out of the throne. It is not easy to unpack the meaning of each
of those details and then combine them.
And, if you do that you end up with an abstract message about the
fullness of eternal life that does speak meaningfully to children. Given that I would simply introduce this as a
complicated picture of life in the world when it is completely as God intends
it to become. And ask a few simple questions:
Is
this a good or bad place to live?
What
makes it sound good?
Who
is in charge?
How
would this picture of the end of the world help Christians who are having hard
times now?
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U When this text showed up in
2013, Dr. Laura Sugg went on line to collect this page of jewel pictures. The jewels are in the order on the page that
they appear in the text. Children, and
other interested worshipers, were offered pages and invited to follow the
pictures as they listened to the text read aloud trying to imagine what the
city they were hearing about looked like.
U Sing “We Are Marching in the Light of God”
after rereading verses 23-25. The
repeated words in both the original Zulu language and English are easy for
children. Just for fun take a look and
listen to what a group of middle schoolers in Singapore did with this African
music. If you search the name of the
song you will find wonderful videos of everyone from children in an African
school, to wonderful African adult musicians, to a bunch of white kids doing a
less outstanding but no less credible job of singing this song.
U Children are amused to hear that in this picture of
God’s City there is no Temple or Church. Take time to point this out and explain that
the reason for this is that Church is everywhere, every day as people love God
and each other all the time. For the
relief of some children point out that this does mean that life in God’s City
will be endless choir rehearsals and Sunday School lessons. Instead we will know all the songs so well we
will whistle and sing them no matter what we are doing and will treat others
and be treated by them with love all the time without needing lessons to remind
us to that.
John 14:23-39
U Best friends are very important to children. They often show their devotion to their friends
by wearing matching clothes and signing up for the same teams or clubs. To show their devotion to more distant
friends like sports hero/ines they collect cards, put posters on their walls,
etc. So the question “how
can I show that I love Jesus?” is a good question to pose for
them. Talk about possible ways (maybe
wearing a cross necklace or coming to church on Sunday). Then reread Jesus’ answers to the question - “Whoever loves
me will obey my teaching” (verse 23) and “Whoever does not love me does not
obey my teaching” (verse 24). (This TEV wording makes more immediate sense
to children than the NRSV “keep my word.)
U Jesus continues in the friendship mode by promising to be
with us, to be loyal always – in good times, in bad times, even after
we die. We can count on God/Jesus to be
with us. That kind of loyalty is a
meaningful Easter promise for children.
U Highlight any reference to the Holy Spirit in your
communion liturgy. In my
tradition, I would look for a form of the great prayer of thanksgiving that
mentions the Holy Spirit. Before the
sacrament, would read it putting it into
my own words and explaining the connection to the bread and cup.
U Go to the Acts material above for a way to explore “I
believe in the Holy Ghost” from the Apostles’ Creed.
U To pick up on some of the images in this word
picture:
Sing
“Dona
Nobis Pacem” with its simple repeated Latin words. Sing it in unison or as a round between
several choirs or sides of the aisle in the congregation.
Sing
“I’ve
Got Peace Like a River” being sure to add “I’ve got joy like a
fountain….”
U After reading about Jesus passing the peace to us,
explain your practice of passing the peace during worship. Then, do it.
You might pass the peace a second time as the benediction at the end of
worship today.
John 5:1-9 (Alternate Reading)
This is one of the harder
healing stories for children to understand and appreciate because they first
have to deal with all the sick people who were waiting to be first in the pool
when the waters were troubled. For that
reason (and the wealth of other material for this day) I would not use this
story. If however you do use it, simply
tell the children that people in Jesus’ day believed that if they were first into
the water at this particular pool they would be healed and that seems weird to
us today. Then, direct their attention
to the fact that the paralyzed man had almost no chance of being first in. Children understand wanting something that
you have little chance of getting because everything is against you. Imagine wanting to be on the travel soccer
team but knowing others will be chosen before you. Even imagine being a hungry refugee child
wanting to get to food being handed out before it is all gone but being pushed
aside by bigger stronger people. Then,
talk about Jesus “seeing” the paralyzed man and giving him what he needed. The trick with this is to admit that Jesus
doesn’t get us everything we want – e.g. get us on travel soccer no matter how
good we are – but to challenge worshipers to look with Jesus for the people who
are stuck “at the back of the line” and reach out to them. The difficulty of doing that sends me back to
my original inclination to skip this story for the children, but for what it is
worth I’ll leave it in this post.
Thanks! You've given me some ideas for the kids talk I'm giving in church tomorrow! Blessings for your ministry.
ReplyDeleteKirsten
I am connecting the "Holy Spirit" to school spirit, team spirit, and so forth. Most of my children for Children's Time are five or six and under in age. They know how to say, "Yea!" for their team. Thanks for your "sparks" to ignite ideas!
ReplyDeleteJan