This week’s RCL texts provide an
embarrassment of riches for children.. Then, to add to the feast, the Episcopalians
offer yet another intriguing set of readings. To Matthew’s story about Jesus and Peter
walking on the water in the middle of a storm, they add Jonah being tossed into
the sea during an Old Testament storm, and Psalm 29 which celebrates the power
of a storm. This is a set of readings
with a clear theme that worshipers of all ages can respond to from where they
are – everywhere from trusting God in a season of storms to trusting God in all
life’s storms (even the ones we, like Jonah, create). If you pursue this…
At
the very beginning of the service, maybe just before the Call to Worship, speak
to the children (either in their pews or on the steps). Talk briefly about weather storms describing
how they scare us because they are so powerful.
Then, suggest that there are storms that have nothing to do with
weather, e.g. fights between best friends or between brothers and sisters, even
wars. After very bluntly connecting the
power and potential for harm in these different kinds of storms, urge the
children to listen for all the storms in the songs, hymns, and stories today
and to listen for ways we can face frightening storms of all sorts.
Go
to Psalm 29 in Baptism of the Lord
for several ways of reading
Psalm 29 with sound effects generated by the congregation and a stormy art
project to be done in pews during worship.
If you are using
the Revised Common Lectionary readings….
Genesis 37:1-4, 12-28
~ Children who are constantly pushed by their
parents to get along better with their siblings LOVE THIS STORY. There may have
been times they wished a troublesome brother or sister would disappear, but few
have seriously contemplated making it happen, much less done something about
it. The fact that such a story appears
in the Bible leads them to think that God may understand the realities of their
daily lives after all.
~ The story begs for dramatic presentation both so everyone can enjoy it and so the children get
it. This may be a day for longer more
elaborate scripture presentation and shorter sermon that really is commentary
on the story.
~ At the very least tell (in your best story teller style)
the stories of the coat and Joseph’s dreams as “two things you need to know
about Joseph and his eleven older brothers before you hear today’s story.” This could be done as a children’s time after
which you send the children to their seats to listen the reading from the
Bible.
~ Gather 12 older
elementary, teenage, and young adult guys (and maybe a white haired man for
Jacob) to pantomime the story. If
possible provide costumes. If you do not
have that many biblical costumes have all but Joseph wear jeans and a white or
dark colored t-shirt. Have Joseph wear
jeans and a very fancy shirt of some sort – maybe a tie-dyed t-shirt or a
tuxedo tucked or ruffled shirt? In
rehearsal work on showing feelings with your face and body. Consider adding the coat and dream stories
and omitting the stop at Dothan. (This
is one great male bonding opportunity!)
~ Go to http://seedstuff.blogspot.com/2008/07/proper-14-ordinary-19-pentecost-13.html for a simple humorous, bring it to life, reading
script for this story. In an
informal worship setting enlist readers during the service, handing out
highlighted scripts. (Another great
resource from Ann Scull’s Mustard Seeds blog.)
~ If
you use projections during worship consider using
Ø The appropriate sections of “Joseph – King of Dreams”
the animated DVD
Ø Selected “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor
Dreamcoat” songs
1.
Joseph’s Coat
2.
Joseph’s Dream
3.
Poor, Poor Joseph
(Joseph is sold and ends up in prison in Egypt)
~ The Bible is not clear about what kind of coat
Jacob gave Joseph. Depending on the translation it was a fancy
coat, a beautifully decorated coat, a coat with long sleeves (for one who does
not have to work), or a coat of many colors.
Point out to the children that the Bible was written in another language
centuries ago and no one knows exactly what kind of coat it was. Name some of the possibilities, then explain
that whatever kind of coat it was, it did cause trouble. From there ask what causes jealousy between
siblings today – electronic gadgets, special shoes or clothes, special
privileges, special lessons or teams,
anything I would like to have but can’t have/do and my sibling can. These things make brothers and sisters
everywhere say aloud or grumpily to themselves – “It is not fair!”
The Family Story Bible by Ralph Nelson Used by permission. |
~ Children sympathize with the brothers. Joseph was an
arrogant pain. They also had a
legitimate complaint against their father who was playing favorites. It wasn’t fair that Joseph got the fancy coat
and they had their old clothes. It
wasn’t fair that the youngest brother was not required to work with the others
and was actually sent to check up on them.
Where the brothers got into trouble was when they used an unfair
strategy (selling their defenseless brother) to get what seemed only fair for
themselves. That is something for
children to remember today. It also
worth highlighting Judah and Ruben’s attempt to save Joseph as proof of how
hard it sometimes is to be a peacemaker.
~ If
you did not read The Pain and the Great One, by Judy Blume, to explore
the sibling problems between Jacob and Esau, to Proper 10 for ideas about reading it today.
~ Invite worshipers to pray about anger like
that of the brothers using their fists. Instruct worshipers to keep their eyes open. Feed them the sentences one at the time for
them to repeat each each one after you. When you get
to the part about fists, have them copy your hand motions curling your fingers
into fists, pounding on your own legs with your fists, making punching
motions. Then, pull your fists to your
chest, relax your fingers, and reach out to shake hands or pass the peace with
those around you.
God,
people say the meanest things. They do cruel
things that make us so mad. They don’t
play fair. They hurt us. Our anger moves through our whole
bodies. We tense up. We feel our fingers curl until they are hard
fists. We want to pound something with
those fists. We want to hit someone with
them. Before we explode, speak to
us. Help us pull in our fists. Teach us to relax our fingers. Guide us to find ways to work with people to
solve problems between us. Even to find
ways to pass the peace to them. We pray
in the name of Jesus who forgave even the people who were killing him. Amen
Psalm 105:1-6,16-22, 45b
~ This psalm assumes the readers already know
the rest of the story of Joseph.
Many do not. So, either omit it
or read it suggesting that listeners look for clues about what lies ahead for
Joseph and his brothers and promising that you will pick up that story next
Sunday.
OR
~ Introduce this psalm as a long
story poem that might have been told as families sat around their fires or on their
roofs on summer evenings (before DVDs, computers, TV or even books). People
sat around telling stories about what was important. They enjoyed retelling those stories in new
beautiful ways. This psalm told the
story from Abraham through Moses. We’ll
just read the beginning and the verses about Joseph. Everyone responds with 45b, as family might
have done after the story at night.
1 Kings 19:9-18
~ This story raises the question “How
does God speak to us?” Literal
thinking children assume that when the Bible says God spoke, people heard God
with their ears. When adults who they respect
use this same language they assume those adults hear God speak with their ears and
wonder why God never speaks to them that way.
Often they conclude that they are not good enough for God to speak
to. This story provides an opportunity
to explore how God speaks to people.
Point out that the Hebrew slaves knew God was with them as they left
Egypt and started across the desert because there was a tall column of fire in
from of them at night. But when the fire
came past Elijah on the mountain, God was not there. When the disciples were hiding out after
Jesus was resurrected there was a strong wind that blew through them and they
felt God explaining to them who Jesus was, but when the wind passed Elijah on
the mountain, God was not in it. Some
people have felt God with them in earthquakes, but not Elijah. Then read the NRSV translation that says Elijah
heard God in “the sound of sheer silence.”
Clearly explain that sometimes we know God is telling us something, even
when we do not hear a word with our ears.
We feel God telling us deep inside us.
SILENCE
~ God came to Elijah in sheer
silence. Especially in today’s world,
silence does not come easily to children.
So, they miss one way to meet God.
Encourage them to try silence by sitting silently in the
sanctuary. Before the silence
note that music is wonderful, but there will be no music. The Bible is filled with wonderful words, but
in the silence we will not read any of them.
Even insist that preaching is important but in the silence, no one will
speak about anything. It will be a time
for everyone to sit quietly, to think about what is important to them, maybe to
tell God about something and to listen to the silence of everyone else doing
the same thing. Instruct them to ignore
outside sounds they can hear and pay attention to the silence. Allow about one full minute for silence. Afterwards note that sometimes not much
happens in the silence and insist that when people regularly spend time in silence they
find important things to think about and hear God pushing them deep in their
hearts. Suggest spending time in silence
as a discipline. To get started assign
as worship homework spending some time (maybe one minute, maybe more) in
silence each day during the coming week.
Psalm 85:8-13
This psalm is so full of
metaphorical language that it makes little sense to children. It appears again in Year B on the Second
Sunday of Advent when it fits the texts in ways that can more easily
interpreted to children. I’d wait until
then to explore it with children. Go to Year B Second Sunday of Advent.
Romans 10:5-15
~ Children don’t understand Paul’s
problems with legalism. Preschool
children believe the “biggest” person present makes the rules and everyone else
follows them. It’s just the way it
works. Elementary school children begin
to understand that rules are set by the community and can be negotiated (hence
the game playing sessions in which more time is spent arguing about the rules
than playing the game). They also
believe that good people obey the rules and will tell you with conviction that
they keep the important rules like the 10 commandments perfectly. They simply cannot grasp Paul’s more
”experienced” concerns about the problems with “living by the rules.” That will have to wait a few years for them.
~ If you did not read it with the parables about growing, read The Carrot Seed, by Ruth Krauss, today as an example of faith.
Everyone tells a little boy that his carrot seed won’t grow, but he
keeps watering and weeding and watching and it does grow. That watering and weeding and watching is
faith.
Matthew 14:22-33
Like the Genesis text, this
story begs for dramatic presentation.
~ Read it
dramatically reading faster and
louder as the storm grows. Say “It’s a
ghost” like you think the disciples might have said it. Pause when the storm ceases and read the rest
in a very calm voice.
~ To get
the congregation “in the boat with the disciples” tell them to pretend
they are not sitting in a pew/chair but in a boat. When all are aboard, push off, enjoy bobbing
around in the water, even do some rowing together. Then, notice the storm coming at you across
the water. Rock and roll as the waves
and wind build. Hold onto the sides of
the boat. Remark on water coming into
the boat. Then, point in fear at an
imaginary Jesus coming across the water.
Tell what Peter did. Once Peter
and Jesus are back in the boat, whip your arm in a stop signal and quietly say
“the winds stopped” and read the last verse.
(This could be a children’s time, but is more effectively done as the real
gospel reading with the whole congregation.)
~ After enjoying
the storm and admitting to our shared fear of storms, tell the congregation
that the
storm was not what scared the disciples. They were fishermen. They knew about storms. Sort of like us, knowing about the storms we
have in our area. We get scared, but we
don’t lose it. What did scare the
disciples was seeing Jesus, who they knew as a man just like them in many ways,
walking across the water in the storm.
If Jesus could do that, who was he… really.. and what was going on and
what was going to happen next.
The key word is FAITH.
Children understand it best as trusting God. Trust is almost a better word for them
because it is more familiar.
~ Introduce FAITH
and TRUST at the beginning of the service.
Briefly define them and urge children to listen for them in the prayers,
readings, songs, and stories of the day.
For big impact, put a real boat in the center of the sanctuary. Equip it with a large paper sail on which is
printed FAITH and/or TRUST and any other synonyms that you will be using
today. Or, display a large drawing of
boat with the same sail.
~ If your
children are among those going back to school in early August, use
this story to talk about all the things you can do (master new subjects, learn
new skills, make new friends…) if you are willing to try. Instead of being hard on Peter for flunking
water walking, praise him for trying while the others stayed in the boat. Note that God made us able to learn and do
many amazing things. We need to trust
God enough to try new things. (Be sure
to point out that this does not mean we can do anything – like jump off a
building expecting to fly like Superman.
God gave us brains and expects us to use them to figure out what to try
and what to avoid.)
~ Common
childhood experiences that parallel this story of faith include:
-
Riding a bicycle
for the first time without training wheels
-
Realizing that
you are halfway across the pool the first time you try to swim all the way
across the pool in the deep end
-
Realizing what
you are doing in the middle of standing up to a bully, even if he/she is
responding well
-
Realizing what
you are doing halfway through your recital piece (people often lose their
concentration and mess up when this happens)
-
Realizing what
you are doing the first time you stay home on your own
~ If all the talk of the sea leads
you to sing “Eternal Father Strong to Save” begin by pointing out that it
is a prayer for people who spend a lot of time on the sea. List or ask the congregation to help you list
some of these people (sailors, fishing crews, scientists studying the ocean,
travelers on cruise ships, people who work on off-shore oil well platforms,
etc.) before singing the song together.
~ Two hymns about trusting God:
“I
Sing the Mighty Power of God”
answers the question “why can we trust God” with examples of God’s great power
and loving care. So suggest that it is a
good song to sing when we are doing something new and scary.
The
short hymn “Give to the Winds Thy Fears” is another good song for scary
moments. Especially if it is unfamiliar
to the congregation, read through the words stopping to put a few phrases into
your own words for clarity. Then, invite
the congregation to sing it thinking about the disciples in the boat or
themselves in a scary situation.
Thank you so much for another inspiring children's worship blog! Our kids in Hawaii are starting school this week, so I love the idea you gave toward the end about using the Gospel to inspire them to reach beyond their perceived limits. Genius! Warm aloha...Mary Forde, Ewa Beach, HI
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