Tag Archives: Year C

Children’s Sermon Oct. 27th, 2013, Reformation Sunday, Jeremiah 31: 31-34

20130822-223520.jpg As the children come forward be playing with a lump of play-dough. Talk about how what is so cool about play-dough is that you can make it into anything that you want. You can make a snake, a letter, a shape, whatever your imagination allows (make one or two of these things if you can). If we don’t like what we have made we can start over and try again, over and over-that’s the really neat part of play-dough.

 

20130822-223633.jpg In a book of the Bible called Jeremiah, the people had forgotten about God. They did not remember to pray to God or that God loved them very much. God wanted the people to remember that they are loved and so God tells the people that God will make a new promise with them. God will forgive them for forgetting God and will help them to know about God in their lives. God reminds them that they belong to him/her and that nothing changes that. God will work in their hearts to help them remember to whom they belong and forgive the things that they had done that were not nice.

God does that with us too! We know that changes us and makes us new, day after day, over and over. Each day God promises to be with us and to help us to live God’s love in the world.

Here is a piece of play-dough for each of you to have. Let’s make a heart out of it to remind us that God changes our hearts to live in God’s love and to share God’s love every single day.

20130822-223749.jpg God, you promise to be our God and that we are your people forever. Thank you for making us new every day and for loving all people. Amen.

20130822-223908.jpg Make the sign of the cross and say, “You belong to God.”

Faith + Home Connection November 2013

20130822-223454.jpgGather your household to a comfortable location. Share your highs and lows for the day/week.

20130822-223633.jpg Read Ephesians 1:11-23.

For children: Who talks to you about God in your house or at school? Is there someone who prays with you? Ask your mom or dad who told them about Jesus. Do you talk to your friends about God? Is that hard sometimes? It can be hard but God is with you always, especially when you might feel nervous or afraid! Say a prayer today for someone that you are grateful for in your life.

For adults/youth: Is there someone in your life who helps you to see God’s work in your life and in the world? What reminds you of God’s promise and of hope in your life? Is it a person or nature? How do we reveal God’s power in Jesus Christ in our communities?

20130822-223749.jpg God of all, you sent Jesus to reveal your love and mercy to a broken world. In Christ’s death and resurrection, you revealed your power over death and suffering and declared that nothing separates your people from you. We give thanks for all the people who show us your love, power and mercy in our lives. May we also be that light for others, amen.

20130822-223908.jpg (Make the sign of the cross on one another) You are sealed by the promise of the Holy Spirit and marked with the cross of Christ forever.

FaithCross_ServeALTThis Ephesians text is appointed for All Saints Sunday, a day where we remember those witnesses of Christ who have died and those witnesses in our lives who are still living. Write a note with a prayer for someone in your life who reveals God’s love to you. You can sign your name or give it anonymously.  Another idea is to decorate a simple white candle with symbols of God’s love with permanent markers and give it to someone this week who is the light of Christ for you or for someone else.

Weekly Devotion Pages for October 27, 2013

Here are the Weekly devotion pages for the twenty-third Sunday after Pentecost – October 27, 2013

49 October 27 - 23rd Sunday Pentecost Lec 30 Year CFor the month October we have two devotion pages for each week.  There is a set that has a “Faith on the Go” section based on the Gospel readings for the month and as set focused on stewardship and using the 2 Timothy readings.

Download the Gospel text version

Download the 2 Timothy version

Did you miss a week? Go to the Weekly Devotion page to download past weeks!

Children’s Sermon 22nd Sunday After Pentecost (Lec 29), Luke 18:1-18 – October 20, 2013

Prepare:  Bring a picture or ad of something outrageous that you want, like a new car, or an expensive guitar, or the newest phone, or whatever you dream about having that is just unattainable.

20130822-223520.jpg  Pretend to be totally absorbed in picture/ad that you brought as the children gather.  Look at them with sudden surprise once they are all gathered up.  Then show them the picture and talk about how much you want it.  Then . . .

FaithCross  I know what I’ll do!  I’m going to go [to the store, etc] and beg them to give it to me until they do.  I’ll just stand there and pester them all day, all week if that’s what it takes!  Do you think that will work?  (I hope that you get some “no” answers here!)  You think it’s a bad idea?  But wait, it says to do that in the Bible!  Here, listen to this – (You can either read the story, or just tell it in your own words, whatever you think will work best for you.  This one doesn’t show up in many children’s Bibles!  Make sure you emphasize that the judge is unjust, mean, doesn’t care about people or God, etc – AND that the widow is seeking justice, not just some toy that she wants.)

Hmmm . . . now that I read that story again, maybe this isn’t a good idea.  The widow was trying to get the judge to fix something that was wrong, something that was not fair.  She was persistent because she knew what was right and good and needed the judge to help her fix things.  If I went to a store and begged for this I would just be annoying!  This isn’t anything that I need, and it doesn’t make the world better for me to have it.

What Jesus is really saying here is that we should ask for things that make our world better, and if we know that something is wrong we should ask for things to be fixed.  Jesus even says that if an unjust and mean judge can figure out how to do the right thing, imagine what God can do!

20130822-223749.jpg  Right and true God, thank you for giving us good things, and for giving us people in our lives who know how to take of things and make thing right. Amen.

20130822-223908.jpg  Make the sign of the cross and say, “God be in your head, God be in your heart, God be on your left, and God be on your right.  Amen”

~GB

Permission to use for nonprofit. When printing give credit to Faith Formation Journeys. Intellectual property rights apply.

Weekly Devotion Pages for October 20, 2013

Here are the Weekly devotion pages for the twenty-second Sunday after Pentecost – October 20, 2013

48 October 20 - 22nd Sunday Pentecost Lec 29 Year CFor the month October we have two devotion pages for each week.  There is a set that has a “Faith on the Go” section based on the Gospel readings for the month and as set focused on stewardship and using the 2 Timothy readings.

Download the Gospel text version

Download the 2 Timothy version

Did you miss a week? Go to the Weekly Devotion page to download past weeks!

Weekly Devotion Pages for October 13, 2013

Here are the Weekly devotion pages for the twenty-first Sunday after Pentecost – October 13, 2013

47 October 13 - 21st Sunday Pentecost Lec 28 Year CFor the month October we have two devotion pages for each week.  There is a set that has a “Faith on the Go” section based on the Gospel readings for the month and as set focused on stewardship and using the 2 Timothy readings.

Download the Gospel text version

Download the 2 Timothy version

Did you miss a week? Go to the Weekly Devotion page to download past weeks!

Children’s Sermon 21st Sunday After Pentecost (Lec 28), Luke 17:11-19 – October 13, 2013

Prepare: Bring something with you that is “broken”, but that a child could obviously fix.  Something really simple, like two pieces of wood that fit together.

20130822-223520.jpg  As the children gather be trying to fix whatever it is you that brought, and then ask them for help.  Once it is fixed be sure to NOT say thank you!  Just grab it back, maybe be even a little rude.

FaithCross  Wait, was that what I was supposed to do?  Shouldn’t I say something to (name of child who helped)?  Yeah, what is it that I should say?  Oh!  “Thank You!”

We all know to do that, right?  We all say “thank you” when someone helps us, right?  Here’s a question for you, though – how often to you say thank you to God when you ask God for help?  I don’t know about you, but I pray most often when I am scared or worried, or when I just want God to do something for me.  I pray for God to give me good weather when I want to be outside, I pray for God to help people feel better, I pray for God to comfort people who are scared.  You know what else I say when I pray?  I say, “thank you.”

In today’s Gospel story there are ten people who are really sick, and the disease that they have is really easy to give to other people, so they are not allowed to live in town with all the other people.  They ask Jesus to heal them so that they can go back home, and Jesus does it.  What should they do next?  They should say thank you, right?  Well, only one of them comes back to Jesus and says thank you, just one!  That’s not good!  I said thank you for help with a simple toy, Jesus healed them!  They should all say thank you, and so should we.

Let’s try it together.  I’m going to start a prayer and then I’m going to stop talking so that we can all say thank you to God for something that we prayed for.  (If you children’s sermon happens as part of the main worship at your church invite the whole congregation to do this!)  Ok, think for a minute of something that you prayed about that you would like to say thanks to God for. . . ready?

20130822-223749.jpg  Gracious God, we pray to you all the time for help and comfort, but sometimes we forget to say thank you.  Please accept our thanks for these wonderful gifts you have given us ___________.  Amen.

20130822-223908.jpg  Make the sign of the cross and say, “God be in your head, God be in your heart, God be on your left, and God be on your right.  Amen”

~GB

Permission to use for nonprofit. When printing give credit to Faith Formation Journeys. Intellectual property rights apply.

Weekly Devotion Pages for October 6, 2013

Here are the Weekly devotion pages for the twentieth Sunday after Pentecost – October 6, 2013

46a October 6 - 20th Sunday Pentecost Lec 27 Year CFor the month October we have two devotion pages for each week.  There is a set that has a “Faith on the Go” section based on the Gospel readings for the month and as set focused on stewardship and using the 2 Timothy readings.

Download the Gospel text version

Download the 2 Timothy version

Did you miss a week? Go to the Weekly Devotion page to download past weeks!

Children’s Sermon (Updated!) 20th Sunday After Pentecost (Lec 27), 2 Timothy 1:1-14 and/or Luke 17:5-10 – October 6, 2013

Prepare: Find a broom that can be a used as a horse.  Don’t dress it up!  If you are planning on focusing on the Luke passage you should also bring some poppy seeds.

NOTE:  You could modify this for a different imagination-based toy, but the important part is to make the clear distinction between imagination and faith.

20130822-223520.jpg  Ride in on your broom “horse” and round-up the children as they gather together.  Make this into something fun!  Maybe a little “YeeHaw!” would be good.  Try to get them into the game.  Once you have them all rounded up and sitting down move on.

FaithCross  Wow!  That was fun!  Don’t you love playing imagination games?  I just got to ride a horse in church!  Do you like to use your imagination?  That’s great!  Imagination is fun.  For example, I can imagine that this broom is a horse, like I just did, or it could be balance pole and I could be a tight-rope walker, or it could be a shovel as I dig for dinosaurs, or it could be almost anything!  Now here is the tricky question, what is the difference between imagination and faith?  (Give them a little time to think, maybe even take a few answers.)  Maybe I could say it this way, I can imagine that this broom is a horse, but I don’t have faith that I could really ride it someplace far away.

When we imagine something we know that it isn’t real, that we are just pretending, no matter how real the fun is.  When we have faith in something we know that it is real and true even if we can’t always explain why we know that.  Like our faith in Jesus, we have faith that Jesus loves and came to save us, but sometimes it is really hard to explain why we know it is true, or why we believe it.  (Here is where you can choose between 2 Timothy and Luke, or you can use both!)  We heard part of a letter that is in the Bible today, it was written to a man named Timothy.  In that letter we hear that the faith that we have is a gift from God.  We have faith in God’s love and forgiveness.  There is nothing that we can do to earn more love from God and nothing we can do to make God stop loving us.  We know this is true, but we can’t always explain why we know.

Faith can be a powerful thing, too.  We heard Jesus say today that if we had faith the size of a mustard seed we could tell trees to go jump in a lake and they would do it!  Do any of you know how big a mustard seed is?  Well, I brought some seeds, these are really poppy seeds, but they are about the same size.  Here, take a look, I brought more than enough in this little jar for each of you to have one!  (Had out some poppy seeds).  See how small that is?  Now, I think that Jesus picked something just silly and crazy when we talked about trees jumping into lakes to show just how powerful faith can be.  We don’t really ever expect trees to jump into lakes, but sometimes those kinds of crazy things happen.  And it’s not our actions or even our faith, it is God’s love and grace moving through us and through the world.

So, I can imagine that this is a powerful horse that I can ride across the mountains, but I know that it is just a broom.  I have faith that God loves me and cares for me, and I know that it is true, even when I can’t explain why.

20130822-223749.jpg  Gracious and Loving God, thank you for the amazing gift of imagination!  What fun to be able to pretend to be people and things that we are not and to have things that we don’t.  Thank you also for the gift of faith, to know that you are real and that you care for us, love us and forgive us everywhere and all the time.  Amen.

20130822-223908.jpg  Make the sign of the cross and say, “God be in your head, God be in your heart, God be on your left, and God be on your right.  Amen”

FaithCross_Worship

You will need postcards or something similar and some poppy seeds.  Invite people to tape a (or some) poppy seed to the card. Write “Our faith is a gift from God” on the card.  Then write or draw 3 ways that they can live out their faith this week.  These can be individual cards, or household cards, or cards with friends.

~GB

Permission to use for nonprofit. When printing give credit to Faith Formation Journeys. Intellectual property rights apply.

Children’s Sermon Luke 16:19-31 Pentecost 19C September 29, 2013

20130822-223520.jpgGather the children up front with you and welcome them. Divide the children in half by something like boys and girls, or by hair color –  something so that they are obviously ‘different’ groups. Talk about what is different. Then have a boy and girl or a couple boys and girls create a ‘bridge’ between the two groups. Have each child go under the bridge to show that they are all in one group now. (an alternative idea would be to show the children pictures of bridges that go across a chasm and describe how a bridge connects two sides)

20130822-223633.jpg Summarize the gospel or read from the Storybook Bible pg. 387.

Say, “Lazarus and the rich man were divided by this big space. What were the things that made them different?” (take answers, getting across the idea that they lived totally different lives, wealth and poverty and that the rich man did not even see Lazarus as a person deserving his help or attention) “Jesus is telling this story to show that it does not matter what kind of differences or chasm is between us and other people we are free to reach out and help anyone, no matter if they are a different person or different religion or different way of living. Also, Jesus is like this bridge. Because he came to show that God has love for all people, Jesus bridges all those things that divide us and connects us together. We are all one through Christ. So just like you came through that bridge from your two different groups, Jesus brings all people together no matter their differences.”

20130822-223749.jpgGod, Thank you for sending Jesus to be like a bridge. Help us to see others who are different from us and be your love in the world. Amen

 

20130822-223908.jpgGod in my head, God in my heart, God on my left, God on my right +