The
curriculum I’m following jumps from Adam & Eve to Isaac; for a couple of
reasons I didn’t want to do that. I
compromised with a brief overview of Abraham.
So had to totally make it up myself and yes, I’m afraid it was a bit
boring. Sigh.
We needed a starry sky for our
story, so rather than make one myself, our opening activity was sticking star
stickers (everyone got a little baggie with 20 stars) onto a big piece of black
paper. That done, we had a brief review
of last week’s theme of making good choices.
(For example, if you have homework, do you do your homework or play on
the computer? “Do your homework!” Ka Ho
shouted out. Yea, Ka Ho!) Said we were
going to learn today about a man who made a good choice, the choice to believe
and obey God.
But first, we illustrated the
idea by choosing one volunteer as “God” (complete with halo), who held a
mysterious bag of goodies. Then each kid
was offered a choice. I would give them
a piece of chocolate, or they could believe “God” when He said He had something
much better in the bag that they could trade it for. We had seven kids, altogether 3 of them opted
for the chocolate, and 4 for the mystery gift which turned out to be a whole
box of chocolate pretzels. Then all the
kids had to wait, though; we marked down on a list what they had chosen &
they would get it at the end of class.
Next, to our story. We introduced Abraham and Sarah, who lived in
a big city called Haran. God had already
blessed them, since they were rich and lived in a big city with lots of friends
and neighbors and relatives. But God
told them that He would bless them even more if they would follow Him to
another land. They had to make a choice,
and they chose to believe God and follow Him.
So we had a couple of the kids help move Abraham & Sarah from their
home in the city in the back of the room to the “bleak,” empty whiteboard at
the front of the room. So there they
were, and they expected God would bless them right away, but just like with our
game, they had to wait. Had they done
the right thing? Look at how empty this
place was! They didn’t even have any
kids; if they died who would bury them?
Should they give up and back to Haran?
Everybody who answered verbally said no, they should stay and believe
God. Good choice. Not long after this, God tells Abraham to
look at the night sky, which we now put up on the board. Could anybody count all those stars? No. Well, God said, you’re not going to be able
to count all the grandchildren & great-grandchildren you’re going to have
either! So now Abraham and Sarah think
they’re going to have a baby real soon.
But still they wait, and wait.
Abraham is really old now—one of the kids glues on a cottony white
beard. He’s almost 100 years old—that’s
even older than ME! :-) But God says,
now you’re going to have a baby. And
sure enough, they did (out comes the baby doll). So now Abraham and Sarah knew that when God
made a promise, he would keep it, even if it seemed impossible.
Then we talked for a little
about why it is good to know that God keeps His promises. I asked if any of the kids had ever had been
promised they could go to McDonald’s, for example, and then later been told
they couldn’t go. Or if a teacher (like
me) had ever promised them they could play at the end of the class, and then
they didn’t get to. I’m pretty sure such
things had happened to most if not all of them (I know our play time got cut
short last week!), but no one seemed to remember any such things. I guess I should have expected that. It made for a very short & flat “discussion”
time. :-(
Okay, so if God always keeps His
promises, we can be glad about that, but only if we know what His promises are!
I
had one ready as an example, but they would have to work to find out what it
was. I held up one of the “promises” and
asked if anyone could read it. It was
written in black crayon on black construction paper, and you could read it if
the light hit it just right—and apparently the angle was just right for our
smartest kid, who called out “他賜平安”(God gives peace).
So much for the element of surprise!
Everyone got one of the black sheets, and a paintbrush and a small cup
of watered-down yellow paint. What I hadn’t
realized, and so neglected to emphasize,
was that you needed to paint over the paper LIGHTLY for the words to show up. Most of the kids really ground the paintbrushes
into the paper so the crayoned characters got drowned out. :-( I hate it when this happens—when a craft
works beautifully at home and bombs in the classroom. Sigh.
Then we tried to talk about when we need peace, what things they are
afraid of. (Too much homework? Mean kids?
Dogs or cats? I got NO clear
responses except from one boy who said he’s afraid of wolves. Wolves?
There are no wolves in Macau! At
first I thought he must mean high waves like when you take a boat to Hong Kong,
since it’s the same sound in Cantonese, but no, he meant wolves. Kind of weird to pray that he would have
peace when facing wolves!
After we cleaned up, the kids
got to eat their long-awaited snacks.
The ones who’d chosen the small piece of chocolate ended up with the
better deal, as the other kids were generous and shared their chocolate
pretzels with the kids who still wanted more to eat!
I hope next week goes better,
somehow!
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