Sacred Steps

Each Wednesday during the winter and spring I’ll post some ideas to help you think about crafting the 5-7 minutes of worship called the children’s moment or children’s sermon. Even in pandemic time congregations are including this aspect of worship, usually prerecorded, but sometimes safely masked and distanced in the live stream on Sunday.

A few years back my companion and I published a weekly subscription called, “Sacred Steps: Children’s Sermon Journal.” It was exegesis and commentary on each lectionary text for the week along with some starter ideas for crafting the children’s sermon. I condensed the three years to just the ideas for each week. You can find those ebooks on this site if you want to purchase a copy.

Who knows, some of these suggestions might apply to the sermon or homily for Sunday.

Nehemiah 8:1-3, 5-6, 8-10

  • One way to approach the story with the children is to think about it, and talk about it, like a family reunion or gathering for a holiday.  There are stories that are always told, foods shared, and the entire family (that can make the journey) is together.
  • One could also use a family bible, or an old bible from your congregation’s archives, to talk with the children about the gathering of people in Nehemiah.  They heard words from the Torah for this special gathering and celebration.  We do the same kind of thing for important moments and each week during worship.  You could bring your family bible or the congregation’s first or older bible and talk about the memories that it represents as well as the stories that are in it.

Psalm 19

  • This psalm is another opportunity to talk with the children about how all creation helps us know or understand God.  Animals, air, water, and the sun don’t speak, but they help us know something about God in their beauty, constant existence, and our trust that the sun will rise tomorrow.
  • You could focus on adding to the “images of God” list (a poster to create and refer to during the year). The image of God as a rock.  What does that mean, and how is it a helpful way to think about God?

1 Corinthians 12:12-31a

  • A fellowship pot-luck could be a good teaching metaphor for this text.  We all bring different foods to share:  some our favorite, some our family recipes, some just what we do best; but we bring all the food to share.  It doesn’t matter if you brought chips, the ice for the drinks, or the fried chicken, all are important for the meal.
  • If you have several persons willing to help, one could talk with the children about all the different skills in the church. “Children it takes many different people for our congregation to offer ministry here in our community.” (I suggest you identify the people, by name, who have skills your congregation relies on to do the work.  Someone from property, an elder that visits the shut-ins or sick, computer skills, the prayer group, etc). 
  • Three weeks of children’s sermons could be crafted from this “spiritual gifts” text.  Week 1:  Understanding how the church defines gifts.  Week 2: What are spiritual gifts, and how do they help the common good of your congregation?  Week 3: What spiritual gifts do you think the children embody, and who in the congregation could help them develop their gifts?

Luke 4:14-21

  • You could talk with the children about doing what is right even when it is not popular.
  • This is an opportunity to talk with the children about doing the kinds of things that Jesus did.  How do the children help the poor?  What does it mean to be “oppressed”, and how does your congregation work in this area of ministry?  Another way to help the children understand how they participate in your congregation would be to explain how your congregation fulfills the scripture as followers of Jesus, bringing:  good news to the poor, release for the captives, recovery of sight to the blind, and freedom to the oppressed.

, 01/19/2022. Category: SSCSJ.

New in ’22

Time doesn’t scale

That’s why it’s worth so much.

Sure, you can outsource. You can look for shortcuts. You can hire folks. You can use mailmerge. You can even send it to voice mail.

But all of these time shortcuts fail to express the thing we want the most.

Your time, my time, their time–we all get the same number of minutes per day.

If you spend them on someone, they can tell.
(Seth Godin, January 2, 2022)

What will be new for you in 2022?  Apps? Books? Friends or Relationships? Prayer or Meditation?  Your use of technology? Your participation at church or youth group?  Vaccination Booster?  What?

Maybe add a “worry journal” as a new thing this year.  I meetup with colleagues that serve children and youth in the denomination, and heard about the idea of a worry journal.  It might be helpful for you.

First, get a journal or create one that you can write in rather than use a digital journal or notepad.  There is something different about handwriting rather than typing or “thumbing” your thoughts. It’s hard to explain, but hand writing, though probably difficult, is a satisfying process. Having to erase or scratch through something on a page means you may often give more thought to what you might write, rather than hitting delete or backspace on a screen.

When you have a “worry” turn to your journal to answer these questions.

  • What is “worrying” or “bothering” you?
  • Why is this a worry or bother?
    If you cannot identify the tangible “why” then scratch through this worry and take it off the list. It’s not a real worry.
  • How can you take action to change the outcome of this worry in a meaningful way?

I am not one that “worries.”  I am “concerned” which I think is more than semantics.  But, I found this journal process helpful in the last few months of 2021, reminding me what is my responsibility, my obligation, and within my control.  It helped me remember what is within my sphere of influence.

A new goal for me in 2022, will be reading.  I do a lot of reading on my screen each day (news, resources, blogs, social media), but I’m not one that reads a complete book each year.  I haven’t intentionally done that since sabbatical time.  I began a book back in October while I was on holiday, but haven’t picked it up again.  I’m setting a reasonable goal for myself: 6 books in 2022.  Help me out and ask me what I’m reading.

Current books on my list.

  • Klara and the Sun, by Kazoo Ishiguro. Recommend to me by a colleague that I began while on holiday.
  • All About Me!: My Remarkable Life in Show Business, by Mel Brooks.
  • Post Corona: From Crisis to Opportunity, by Scott Galloway
  • Peaceful Neighbor: Discovering the Countercultural Mister Rogers, by Michael Long

Another new for 2022, is being intentional about listening to new music. I stay in touch with the pop-culture music scene to stay conversant, but I don’t give pop-culture’s music a serious listen very often.  Who is writing the lyrics that will be the soundtrack of your memories when you are 45 year olds?

TV in early ’22:

  • The Wonder Years (reboot)
  • Star Trek: Discovery Season 4
  • The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel Season 4
  • Star Trek: Picard Season 2
  • Lost in Space Season 3

We traveled in October ’21 to Mexico for some beach time. There is some travel on the calendar for ’22, which feels new, though it is a reboot of a pattern, if it happens. Right now, the spring break study trip, International Affairs Seminar, that I plan and help lead for my denomination is still a go. This trip takes high school juniors and seniors to Washington DC and New York on an eight day adventure. This year the trip will study Faith and Economics. In April we plan to return to the sea on a Celebrity Cruise. Travel to see family will also fill the calendar.

There will be more hand written notes snail mailed this year.

Time doesn’t scale. Add something completely or mostly new in 2022.