The Ascension of the Lord is always on a Thursday which
means most people never worship around that story. Thus, The Revised Common Lectionary both
offers the Ascension story from Acts on the Seventh Sunday of Easter and
suggests that worship planners might want to use Ascension Day texts on the
Seventh Sunday of Easter at least occasionally.
Planning worship around Ascension once a year is an especially good
option for children for two reasons:
1.
The Ascension
story answers the child’s question, “where is Jesus now?” His life walking around on the earth is over,
but he lives with God and continues to love the whole world from there. As he left, he clearly passed the baton to his
disciples – and to us.
2.
As you complete
the cycle of liturgical seasons about Jesus’ life and passion (Advent,
Epiphany, Lent, and Easter), Ascension Day is a chance for worship review (How
did we follow and celebrate Jesus in each season?) and a peek ahead to the rest
of the liturgical year.
+ Go to Ascension of the Lord
for detailed suggestions about exploring the Ascension Day versions of the story.
Look below for ideas about using the
other texts of the Seventh Sunday of Easter.
ALLELUIA!
+ Celebrate the last Sunday of Easter season with lots of alleluias in songs, and processing the alleluia banner
+ Also, remember that this may be the last week of school. Actually children feel that rising from one
grade to the next is similar to Jesus rising from earth to heaven. They expect their lives in the next grade to
be totally different – and hopefully more wonderful. It is an important day to recognize in some
way during the congregation’s worship. There is one
text-based suggestion below. Go to School is Out!!! (2014)
for more general ideas.
The Texts for Today
Acts 1:6-14
+ This is the story of the Ascension. Go to Ascension of the Lord
for suggestions about
Exploring the Ascension with great
artworks – and creating your own
Using batons as props for this
story
Hymns that review Jesus’ life and
ministry
+ The Roman Catholic lectionary suggests reading only
verses 12-14 which tell tells of the disciples gathering to wait
together for Pentecost. For children it
answers the question what did they do for the 10 days between Ascension and
Pentecost. They waited and they
prayed.
+ Highlight the section on Jesus in the Apostles’ Creed. Before reciting/reading the whole creed
together, read the phrases about Jesus stopping to elaborate a little on each
phrase. You might offer a teaching
picture poster to go with most of them.
If you do, lead the congregation through the Jesus phrases pointing to
each picture as you go.
With older children note the
change in the verb tenses starting with “he sits on the right…” Point out that Jesus is not only in the
past. Though he is no longer walking
around on the earth, Jesus is very much alive and with us today and in the
future.
“Why are you
looking up?”
+ At the end of the school year and beginning of summer this
is a good question for children. The
messengers’ point was that God/Jesus is not somewhere off in the sky or in
heaven. God/Jesus is all around us,
wherever we are – at school, at the pool, on the field, at camp, on vacation,
etc. We are to look for signs of God at
work everywhere we go and join in the work.
+ Take time to unpack what it means to be a witness.
+ Write WITNESS on a poster in large
letters. Together talk about what a
witness is and does.
+ A witness tells what he or she saw
happen. Discuss the importance of
getting the story right and the problems that ensue when one tells a story that
did not happen quite that way. This
leads to the importance of knowing the Bible teachings and stories very well.
+ Ponder the difficulties of having
witnessed something that is hard to share.
For example, Jesus told us to love everyone and your friends are
teasing a kid in a very unloving way.
How is hard to be a witness in this situations?
+ List some of the ways your
congregation witnesses. Be sure to
include some in which children are active participants.
+ Offer children a coloring sheet divided into sections. Using a map or globe, point out the places
the angel named and note that those places were well known in Jesus’ day. Challenge children/all worshipers to label
each section of the paper with the name of one part of their world this
summer. Invite them to add words or
drawings about ways they can witness for Jesus in that place. These might be dropped in a prayer basket,
posted on a bulletin board, taped on the altar rail, or posted at home as a
reminder to be a witness every day.
+ Sing your way into Ordinary Time with “Lord, I Want to be a Christian”
which is simple and familiar or “God of Grace and God of Glory.” Before singing the latter point to the
refrain describing it as a good song for the disciples just after the Ascension
–and for us today. Either one points us
to how we will live in response to the story of Jesus.
Psalm 68:1-10, 32-35
+ Focus with children on the praises of verses 32 -35. Because these verses pile up rhyming ideas,
they lend themselves to reading by different parts of the congregation. Those parts might be the 1. Minister, 2. the
choir and 3. the congregation or 1. the choir, 2. one side of the congregation
and 3. the other side. Or, you may see
another configuration. Before reading it
together suggest that this is a psalm the disciples might have sung as they
watched Jesus ascend.
U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U
Psalm 68:
32-36
1.
Sing to God,
kingdoms of the world,
2. sing praise to the Lord,
3. to him who rides in the sky, the
ancient sky.
All: Listen to him shout with a mighty roar.
1.
Proclaim God’s
power;
2.
his majesty is
over Israel,
3. his might is in the skies.
1. How awesome is God as he comes from his
sanctuary—
2. the God of Israel!
3. He
gives strength and power to his people.
All:
Praise God!
From TEV
U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U
1 Peter 4:12-14,
5:6-11
+ At the simplest these verses point out that Christians may face
very hard times. Sing this truth with “Jesus
Walked the Lonesome Valley” or “We Shall Overcome.” Neither require much explaining and can be
sung on many levels by worshipers of all ages.
+ Display a cross or other work of art from Christians who are
facing hard times today. Briefly discuss
what they are up against and how their faith shines through it. Pray for them.
+ Using a globe or world map take a prayer trip around the
world. Name groups of Christians who are
suffering making them real by pointing to where they are on the earth. Pray for them. At the moment I am aware of Christians whose
churches are being burned in Egypt and Pakistan, people in African who are
being killed just because they are Christians, Christians in Central America
standing up for justice. There are of
course more.
John 17:1-11
+ John does not tell the story of the Ascension. But these verses answer all the questions the
Ascension stories answer. The
language is so abstract and the sentences so complex that children do not get
the message as it is read. But, they can
hear it if they are guided though the key phrases.
Acts answers the question “where is
Jesus now?” by telling the story of the ascension. John answers the question with Jesus’ words
in verse 4 and 5. Jesus says that he has
completed what he came to do on earth.
Now it is time to go back to God’s presence – back to where he was from
the beginning of everything.
Jesus is not leaving us
behind. Verses 6 and 10 insist that we
and God and Jesus are closely bound together.
We belong to each other. We are
closer than best friends or even loving family.
We are together for always.
Verses 10-11 then point out that
Jesus is no longer on earth. We are AND
Jesus is turning over his ministry to us.
We are witnesses and forgivers and lovers and peacemakers and…. in
Jesus’ place.
So some things have changed. We no longer see Jesus walking around and
talking on earth. But, some things are
still the same. God/Jesus is still with
us every bit as closely as when Jesus was on earth. And, in the “after the Ascension” world, we
are to take Jesus’ place on earth. (That
is not all that new, since God’s people were to be God’s hands and feet all
through the Old Testament. The
difference is that now we know all the things Jesus taught us and did for us.)
+ Verses 6 - 8 and 11 can be Jesus’ prayer for us at the end of
the Advent – Ascension part of the church year and the beginning of Ordinary
Time. To help listeners follow all the
pronouns, point out before reading it that Jesus is talking to God about his
disciples and us.
I have made your name known to those
whom you gave me from the world. They were yours, and you gave them to me, and
they have kept your word. Now they know
that everything you have given me is from you; for the words that you gave to
me I have given to them, and they have received them and know in truth that I
came from you; and they have believed that you sent me. And now I am no longer in the world, but they are in
the world, and I am coming to you. Holy Father, protect them in your name that
you have given me, so that they may be one, as we are one.
John 17:6-8,11 (NRSV)
+ Pray in response to Jesus’ prayer
God, thank you for coming to us in
Jesus of Nazareth. We have heard all
that he taught us. We can see what he
showed us when he fed the crowds and healed people and made friends with people
everyone else ignored. Mostly, we are
amazed and deeply thankful for his dying on the cross and rising again. His story is the most important story in our
lives. Be with us as we tell that story
to others and try to live like he did today and every day of our lives. We pray this in his name. Amen
+ Jesus was praying for us and Christians everywhere. To follow his example, invite children (all
worshipers) to create prayers for others on paper. Begin by drawing a large loopy design that
covers the whole page leaving big spaces.
Write God and/or Jesus in one of the central spaces. Then write names of other people you
especially want to pray for and be one with today. Add words and or designs to each space as you
pray for the person in it. Worshipers
might work simply with pencil or might use colored markers or crayons. (Find Praying In Color or Praying
in Color (Kids’ Edition), by Sybil MacBeth, for a more detailed explanation
of this way of praying.)
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