My goodness this IS an
overload Sunday. It is the Sunday before
Thanksgiving in Canada and Children’s Sabbath in the USA. The 2 Kings story of the healing of Naaman
and the gospel story of the healing of the 10 lepers appear several times in
the lectionary. The Naaman story
appeared on July 3, 2016. The gospel
story is a Thanksgiving Day text for Year A.
(Canadians, After I post this material I will go to work on and post the
Thanksgiving
Day ideas for Year C so you can have them in time. We Americans will catch up with you in
November.) As I said, there are lots of
choices to be made.
> If
you are keeping the Children’s Sabbath in USA, one theme to explore is LISTENING TO
or PAYING ATTENTION TO PEOPLE. Jeremiah
instructed the people who were being led into captivity in another country to
get to know their new cities and the people in them. They were to pray for them. Naaman was cured because he listened to the
little slave girl and his servant. Jesus
listened to the lepers calling out to him.
In today’s world worshipers of all ages need to work at listening to people
around them and responding to their needs.
Go
to Children's Defense Fund for all sorts of resources for celebrating Children’s
Sabbath.
Texts for
the Day
Jeremiah 29:1, 4-7
> Jeremiah
insists that God’s people living in exile look around, get to know the people
and place where they are living, and contribute to its well being. Children today need to be reminded that they
are to look around themselves and notice what is going on with other people in
their family, neighborhood, class, team….
They are to both pray for these people and also do things that make life
better for all these people. That makes
this an opportunity to introduce several methods of intercessory
prayer and explore the reality that praying for someone usually leads us to
take act on their behalf.
>
If your congregation publicly collects
prayer concerns before a prayer
that focuses on intercession, take time to explain what you are doing and
why.
Introduce the practice of praying
on the run, i.e. offering very short silent prayers for a person while
you are with them, e.g. “She looks really unhappy, God. Please take care of her.”
> Many
children’s bedtime prayers include a long list of “God blesses.” Encouraging children to pray this list
thoughtfully adding people they have encountered during the day who they want
to name to God, encourages them to see other people and develop a sense of
relationship with them. For younger
children simply naming people, “God bless my teacher,” is enough. Older children can be more specific, “God
thank you for my teacher. I really like
him.” Or “God, help my teacher. She was
really crabby today. Help her feel
happier tomorrow.” (A children’s time
about this subtly encourages parents to work on this practice at home. Including it in The Sermon invites children
to listen to sermons and encourages adults to practice bedtime reflection on
their day and intercessory prayer based on the day. Bedtime prayers are NOT just a kid thing.)
> Often
the “God blesses” sound like a list of our favorite people and activities. Jeremiah challenges his readers to pray for
those who are holding them captive. The
Story of Ruby Bridges may be the best parallel story from fairly recent
history. First grader Ruby was one of
the African American children who integrated a white school in the 1960s. Every day for months she was escorted by
policemen through a crowd of jeering, angry adults to a classroom where she for
a long time was the only student. She
told her teacher that each day she asked God to forgive the people in the
crowd. Ruby obviously knew how to pray
for other people. Her church and family
had taught her that practice and prayed with her. This story is often read to children as a
window into racial problems in America.
Today, tell it and explore it as an example of the possibility of
praying for those who are definitely not your friends. Ruby’s prayer was:
Please, God, try to forgive those people.
Because even if they say those bad things,
They don't know what they're doing.
So You could forgive them,
Just like You did those folks a long time ago.
Because even if they say those bad things,
They don't know what they're doing.
So You could forgive them,
Just like You did those folks a long time ago.
> Praying
for others is only half the task. We
are also to work on the behalf of those for whom we pray. As children pay attention to people around
them and pray for them, they can say kind words to people who don’t get many
kind words. They can make friends with
those who don’t have many friends. They
can comfort a person who is sad. They
can congratulate and celebrate with someone who done something really cool. They become God’s partners in making what
they prayed for happen.
> I am
told by one who knows Hebrew that the word in verse 7 is SHALOM or peace. Point that out. Briefly describe passing the peace in
worship as a first step (or practice run) for working for peace for everyone we
meet every day. Then even if you have
already passed the peace, pass it again with new understanding.
> If
you are displaying Prophet Quotes, today paraphrase Jeremiah, “seek the shalom
of the city where I have placed you.”
Psalm 66:1-12
>
SELAH divides this psalm into sections or verses praising
God. To separate those “verses” divide
the congregation into three group with each group reading verse verse”. To end on a positive note all reread verse 1
together at the end.
Verses
1-4 Group
1
Verses
5-7 Group
2
Verses
8-12 Group
3
Verse
1 All
>
This is a hard psalm for
children to follow. This year I would
save it for the adults. When this psalm
came up in 2010 there was lots of news about several young people who had
committed suicide in response to bullying by peers. It seemed like a good time to high light
verses 10-12 about living through hard times.
Go HERE for ideas about teaching children to expect hard
times. This could link to the call for
perseverance in 2 Timothy.
2 Kings 5:1-3, 7-15c
>
This story appears 3 times in
the lectionary, but remains unfamiliar to most children and adults. Though it is not long, it is filled with
complex action. That makes it a good
candidate for pantomiming as read. An
older children’s or youth class could do the pantomiming. It would also be interesting to use players
of the appropriate age for each character. Players might wear jeans and dark
shirts. Most characters have one
defining prop.
>
This could simply be the scripture reading for
the day. Or, you could ask the characters
to stay in place on stage and move into the sermon by moving among the
characters, commenting on their actions. With prepared players, you could even have
conversation with the characters about what they did and how it felt. Whichever you do, some rehearsal is required.
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Players and
Props/costumes:
Naaman
(military headgear – a costume
helmet or a modern military/police officer hat)
Naaman’s wife (hand held mirror)
Naaman’s wife’s servant girl
(hairbrush)
Naaman’s servant
(He will
carry the scroll between the kings)
King of Syria (crown and a rolled
paper scroll)
King of Israel (crown)
Elisha (no prop)
Elisha’s servant (no prop)
Jordan river
(a 2-3 yard long piece
of muddy colored fabric
held by a person at each end)
Reader/Stage Manager: Our story today is only fifteen verses long
but involves eight characters, two kingdoms, and one river. First, of course, the kings: There is the king of Syria.
Beckon deferentially
for the King of Syria in his crown to take his place.
And there is the King of Israel – a much smaller country
and so a less important king, but still a king.
Beckon deferentially
for the King of Israel in his crown to take his place, possibly on a lower step
from the king of Syria.
And there is Naaman the general of the army of the King of
Syria – another very important man.
Grandly direct Naaman
to a spot near the King of Syria.
Naaman has a wife - I forget her name. And the wife has a young servant girl - who
cares what her name was.
Point dismissively to
their spots.
Naaman also has a servant, sort of his right hand man.
Point to a spot by
Naaman for his servant.
That is the cast in Syria.
Over here in Israel, there is also a prophet named Elisha. The prophet also has a servant.
Point to spots for
Elisha and his servant.
There are several large, beautiful rivers in Syria, but for
our story the important river is the muddy little Jordan River in Israel.
Spread out the muddy
river and show the river shakers where to stand or describe the muddy Jordan
River pointing to where it is to be imagined.
Oh, our story involves a disease, a dreaded disease, called
leprosy. It was and is a horrible
disease. Its symptoms are sores that do
not heal and spread. Eventually toes,
fingers and even whole limbs fall off.
In the time at which our story takes place, people were so frightened of
the disease that victims were sent away from their homes and communities. They lived together in caves. Some of their families or kind folk from town
left food and clothes for them near the caves, but they never got very
close. When no food appeared the lepers
had to call out to travelers begging for what they needed. Today we have drugs to treat leprosy. But, in the days of our story there were no
cures.
Shiver and shake your
head as you conclude this description.
Now, we are ready for our story. It begins with Naaman at home in Syria.
Point to Naaman.
Reader:
Naaman, the commander of the Syrian
army, was highly respected and esteemed by the king of Syria, because through
Naaman the Lord had given victory
to the Syrian forces.
Naaman stands tall and folds his
arms across his chest.
He was a great soldier, but he
suffered from a dreaded skin disease.
Naaman inspects the back of his hand
and hides it behind himself.
In one of their raids against
Israel, the Syrians had carried off a little Israelite girl, who became a
servant of Naaman’s wife.
Servant girl pretends to brush
mistress’s hair.
One day she said to her mistress, “I
wish that my master could go to the prophet who lives in Samaria! He would cure
him of his disease.”
Servant girl pantomimes
speaking. Mistress turns to listen, then
turns toward Naaman and reaches out to him.
When Naaman heard of this, he went
to the king and told him what the girl had said. The king said, “Go to the king of Israel and
take this letter to him.”
Naaman turns toward the king of
Syria. The king gives him a letter
(rolled up piece of paper).
When the king of Israel read the
letter, he tore his clothes in dismay and exclaimed, “How can the king of Syria
expect me to cure this man? Does he think that I am God, with the power of life
and death? It’s plain that he is trying to start a quarrel with me!”
Naaman bows before the king of
Israel and hands him the letter. The
king opens it, reads it, and puts his hands over his face or makes other signs
of despair.
When the prophet Elisha heard what
had happened, he sent word to the king: “Why are you so upset? Send the man to
me, and I’ll show him that there is a prophet in Israel!”
Elisha puts his hand to his ear as
if listening, then sends his servant to the king. The servant bows to the king who sits/stands
up and looks relieved. As the servant
backs up to take his place beside Elisha, the king looks at Naaman and points
toward Elisha.
So Naaman went with his horses and
chariot, and stopped at the entrance to Elisha’s house.
Naaman and his servant go to Elisha.
The servant pretends to knock on the door.
Elisha sent a servant out to tell
him to go and wash himself seven times in the River Jordan, and he would be
completely cured of his disease.
Elisha’s servant standing in front
of Elisha, pretends to open the door and points toward the river, then closes
the door.
But Naaman left in a rage, saying,
“I thought that he would at least come out to me, pray to the Lord his God, wave his hand over the
diseased spot, and cure me! Besides,
aren’t the rivers Abana and Pharpar, back in Damascus, better than any river in
Israel? I could have washed in them and been cured!”
Naaman stamps his feet, scowls, and
puts his hands on his hips.
His servant went up to him and said,
“Sir, if the prophet had told you to do something difficult, you would have
done it. Now why can’t you just wash yourself, as he said, and be cured?”
Naaman’s servant, cautiously taps
Naaman on the shoulder, pretends to speak reasoning with his master using his
hands to suggest the possibility of trying the river. Naaman listens, shrugs his shoulders, and
turns toward the river.
So Naaman went down to the Jordan,
dipped himself in it seven times, as Elisha had instructed, and he was
completely cured. His flesh became firm and healthy, like that of a child.
Naaman squats sever times pretending
to pour water over his head each time.
His servant keeps count on his fingers for both Naaman and the
congregation. (Or, have muddy brown
cloth fabric laying on the floor as a river.
People standing at the ends pick it and wave it in front of Naaman seven
times as the servant keeps count.) After
the seventh dip Naaman looks at his hand in amazement, shows it to his
servant. Both show signs of joy (maybe a
high five?)
He returned to Elisha with all his
men and said, “Now I know that there is no god but the God of Israel…”.
Naaman and his servant return to
Elisha’s door. The servant knocks
again. Elisha pretends to open the door
this time. Naaman and his servant bow
before Elisha.
(Biblical story is
from Today’s English Version)
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< > > > < < > < > > > < <
>
God works through the powerless is the key idea of this story for children. Children, who often feel powerless and sense
their ideas are ignored, are delighted that a little girl is the heroine. She speaks up and is listened to. Naaman actually takes her idea to the king,
who produces a letter of introduction to a second king, then travels to find
the prophet she mentions. Naaman’s
powerless servant is the other hero who speaks up to convince his master that
he ought to try following the prophet’s instructions. All the “powerful” people in the story
(General Naaman and the two kings) save the day by submitting to the advice of
the “powerless.” That preaches on many
levels. It assures children that God works
through them now (not when they grow up) and encourages them to speak up and
act boldly based on what they know about what God wants and does. On Children’s Sabbath it calls the adults to
pay attention to and take seriously what children say.
> With
the area where this story is set being so much in the news now, point
to Syria, Damascus and Israel on a map or globe. Note briefly what is going on there now and
insist that this story happened thousands of years ago in that place. This gives the story a sense of reality to
older children.
Psalm 111
> This
psalm is one of the alphabet psalms. It
might be titled “The ABCs of Praising God.”
A group of children (a class or choir?) might read the psalm to the
congregation with each child reading one lettered line and the minister or
other worship leader saying the letter of the Hebrew alphabet before each
lines. Or, the congregation might read
the lines after a worship leader says each Hebrew letter.
! * ! * ! * ! * ! * ! *! * ! * ! *! * ! * ! *! * ! * ! *! * ! * ! *
Psalm
111
The
ABCs of Praising God
All Praise the Lord!
Aleph With all my heart I will thank the Lord.
Bet In the assembly of God’s people I will praise
the Lord.
Gimel How
wonderful are the things the Lord does!
Dalet All who are delighted with them want to
understand them.
He All God does is full of honor and majesty!
Waw God’s righteousness is eternal.
Zain The Lord does not let us forget these
wonderful actions.
Het The Lord is kind and merciful.
Tet God provides food for those who honor him.
Yod The Lord never forgets his covenant.
Kaph God has shown his power to his people
Lamed The Lord gave them the lands of foreigners.
Mem Everything God does is faithful and just.
Nun All the Lord’s commands are dependable.
Samek They last for all time.
Ain They were given in truth and righteousness.
Pe God set his people free
Zade The Lord made an eternal covenant with them.
Qoph Holy and mighty is God’s name!
Resh The way to become wise is to honor the Lord;
Shin The Lord gives sound judgment to all who obey
his commands.
Taw God is to be praised for ever.
Based on the TEV
! * ! * ! * ! * ! * ! *! * ! * ! *! * ! * ! *! * ! * ! *! * ! * ! *
> When
the story of Namaan appears on The Sixth Sunday after Epiphany (Year B) the
lectionary pairs it with Psalm 30. Go HERE for suggestions for using this psalm as a psalm Naaman
and the leper might have prayed after they were healed.
2 Timothy 2:8-15
PERSEVERE
> Paul
is still giving Timothy advice. Today he
is urging him to be persistent in his ministry.
Children will not hear what he is saying as his words are read. One way to share his advice with children is
to introduce the word “persevere.” Print it in large letters on a large sheet of
paper. Practice saying it together. Then tell them that it means “stick with it”
or “don’t give up.” Explore the meaning
of perseverance with one of the stories below. Conclude by noting that Paul
wanted Timothy to persevere in his work as a minister. He was to keep at it even on the days when it
wasn’t very interesting or exciting and on the days when it felt hard, even
dangerous.
>
Tales about perseverance: In Lord of
the Rings Frodo and Sam must overcome many obstacles to get their ring back
to where it belongs. The same is true of
Peter, Susan, Edmund and Lucy on their adventures in The Chronicles of
Narnia. While it sounds more
exciting to persevere in the kinds of daring tasks they did, we are called on
to do the same in refusing to give up on learning hard subjects at school,
conquering our fears, etc.
> A
few real life stories about perseverance:
When Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone in 1876. After making a demonstration call, President
Rutherford Hayes said, "That's an amazing invention, but who would ever
want to use one of them?"
When Thomas Edison invented the light bulb, he tried over 2000
experiments before he got it to work. A young reporter asked him how it felt to
fail so many times. He said, "I never failed once. I invented the light
bulb. It just happened to be a 2000-step process."
Many famous authors got dozens of rejection slips before their
books get accepted for publication and went on to become best sellers.
> Pray
for perseverance. Invite worshipers of all ages to name times they
feel like giving up. Either
gather the list, then let a leader voice prayers on behalf of the congregation
or turn the suggestions into prayers as they are offered by asking the
congregation to respond to each one “God, help us to persevere.”
Luke 17:11-19
> Before
reading
the scripture gather 10 “lepers” at the front. The lepers might be a collection of folks of
different ages – including at least one child.
Or, they might come from a single class of older children, youth, or
adults. As the lepers come forward pose
each one handing them, even wrapping them in props that describe the life of
lepers. You will need several big cloth
bandages to wrap around limbs.
1.
Instruct one to
wrap up an arm as you describe the open, oozing sores.
2.
Tie a bandage
around the head of another, explaining that the sores could show up anywhere,
even on your head.
3.
Put a sticky
bandage across another’s nose and imagine what it would feel like if you had
sores right in the middle of your face (not unlike acne for teenagers).
4.
Wrap a bandage
vertically around one’s head covering the ears noting that sometimes the sores
on one’s ears made the ears fall off completely.
5.
Have another make
a fist and wrapped it up in a bandage as you point out that fingers often got
so diseased that they fell off.
6.
Hand another a
crutch or cane and bend one leg up so their toe just balances on the floor,
noting that toes also fell off.
7.
Tell one to put
his/her hands out in the stay away gesture telling how contagious leprosy is
and noting that people had to live away from town, often in caves.
8.
Get another down
on knees with hands outstretched to beg explaining that the only way they could
get food was for people to bring it to them.
Note that some families regularly brought food to a family member living
with the lepers, but others had to beg from passers-by.
9.
Throw a larger
raggedly piece of cloth around the shoulders of another pointing out that they
were also dependent on others to bring them clothes which meant they were often
wearing dirty ragged clothes.
10. Sit one down on the floor facing away from everyone
with head in hands looking down. Imagine
how discouraged and sad one would get living this way, often for years, with no
hope of getting better.
Either pose the lepers then
read the story, thank the lepers, and send them back to their seats. Or, instead of sending them back to their seats,
unwrap them and send them back
OR
Involve the lepers in telling the rest
of the story. (This will require one brief rehearsal with
the lepers.) Point out that one day all
these lepers saw Jesus coming. Knowing
that he had cured people with many diseases they called out to him saying
“Jesus, Master, have mercy on us!” Ask
several of the lepers or people in the congregation to say the phrase the way
they think the lepers would have said it.
Instruct the lepers to be ready to say the phrase when it appears in the
story. Then go to the lectern to read
the story. Point to the lepers to call
out in verse 13. All lepers then all
move slowly off toward the side after they are healed in verse 14 maybe leaving
their props as they go. The
tenth leper who was discouraged slowly turns and comes back to the center
facing the reader, kneels and raises his or her arms in praise. The reader takes the role of Jesus, stepping
toward the leper, reciting verses 17-19 while holding out a hand to the leper,
pulling him to his feet, and turning him to join the others. The leper walks off. The reader turns to the congregation to say
“The Word of the Lord.”
Because children are
constantly reminded to say “please” and “thank you,” this story can sound like
one more demand for good manners. The
trick is to get past good manners to the gratitude that underlies the
spoken “thank you.” One way to do that
is to focus on identifying our blessings rather than on saying thank you.
> Define
blessing as something wonderful
that makes your life good and that you did not earn or provide for
yourself. Note that anything can be a
blessing - or not. Food is a good
example. In the movie Shenandoah, the father of a family prays
over a table loaded with good food, “We planted it, tended it, harvested it,
and cooked it. Nothing would be on this
table if we had not put it there, but thanks anyway.” Food was not a blessing to that man. Another pray-er over food describes each
wonderful dish on the table and where the food in it came from thanking God for
creating each fruit and vegetable and meat.
For that person, food is a blessing.
> Recite
the first line of The Doxology. Name some
of your blessings. Ask other worshipers
to name some of their blessings. Then,
invite the whole congregation to sing the Doxology.
This may be reproduced for non-commercial purposes. |
>
Give children the words to “For
the Beauty of the Earth” in the center of a page leaving ample margins
around the edges. Invite children to
write and draw their blessings around the margins to illustrate the hymn. The colored words in the hymn may offer then
suggestions or they may draw things and people not mentioned in the hymn.
I love coming to this website to get ideas for our Children's Chapel and worship service. Thank you so much!
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