Posts tagged ‘Bible’

June 15, 2012

Introduction to The 7 Days of Creation

Title: Introduction to The 7 Days of Creation

Subject: God created the world

Brief Description: Stories from the Bible that are adapted for specific age groups. (This is a common practice for children who do not read or who do not understand advanced vocabulary.)

Grade Level: preschool -2nd grade

Goals/Objectives:

  • Students will listen and respond to the story of creation derivative from the first chapter of Genesis. 
  • Students will cut and paste images under specific categories discussed during the lesson.

Resources:

  • A printed copy of this lesson plan by Charlotte M. Yonge
  • A Bible

Supplies Per Student:

  • Magazines and pictures for students to cut from that represent animals, people, places and things that were created by God
  • Washable white glue or paste stick
  • Age appropriate scissors (rounded edges, easy grip handles)
  • Five 8 1/2 x 11 sheets of copy paper folded in half and stapled together to make a ten-page book per each student.

The Main Activity: Listening to a Bible Story

Biblical Reference: Genesis 1:1-31

First Reading:

In the Bible we are told how God made this earth we live on. Sunday is the earth’s birthday, for on the first day of the week the Creation began.

The world was all one mass dark, empty, and shapeless till God made the light by His Word, and said that the light was good. Without light we could not live: even the very trees and flowers would die. When we have been in the dark, how glad we are to see light come back, even if it be only one grey line beginning in the sky! This shows how blessed is this gift. It was good, too, that we should have quiet dark night for rest and stillness.

The second great change enclosed the earth in an outer ball of air, which we call the sky or firmament. That is the deep blue into which we look up and up. The water rises up from the earth and makes the clouds that take such strange shapes, sometimes dark and full of rain to water the earth, sometimes shining white, or pink and golden with morning or evening light.

The third great change was, that water filled the deep hollows of the earth, while the hills rose up dry above them, with rivers and streams running down their slopes into the deep seas below. God did not leave the land bare and stony: He clothed it with green fresh plants and herbs, with leaves and flowers, and trees to give us their fruit or their wood, and filled even the sea with plants formed to live under water.

Questions:

  1. Who made the world?
  2. What was the first thing that God made?
  3. What is the book from the Bible that tells us about how the earth was made?

Quick Assessment: Observe and listen for understanding and general happiness among student participants. Encourage students to listen to the story as it progresses so that they will know the answers to your questions when you ask. This is an important technique used in classrooms everywhere that promotes comprehension in children. Take your time with the technique and make sure all of your students learn “how” to listen carefully. Smile as you go.

Second Reading:

Next, God allowed the rays of the sun to gladden the earth, and let it see the moon lighted up by the sun, as well as the stars far beyond our firmament.  We count the months by the changes in the moon; and our earth s journey round the sun marks our years and seasons. We all rejoice in a bright sunny day, though the sun is too bright and glorious for us to bear to gaze at him; and how lovely the moon looks, either as a young crescent, or a beautiful full moon!

The waters began to be full of live things, that swam, or crept, or flew; fishes, and birds, and insects. By that time this world was nearly as we see it, and a beautiful home for us to live in. Then God made the four-footed beasts sheep and cows, horses, dogs, cats, elephants, lions all that we use or admire; and, last of all, when He had made this earth a happy, healthy place, He planted the Garden of Eden, and put in it the first man and woman, the best of all that He had made; for though their bodies were of dust, like those of the beasts, yet their souls came from the Breath of God. They could think, speak, pray, and heed what is unseen as well as what is seen.

Questions:

  1. What is there in the sky that God made?
  2. What is there on the earth?
  3. What do you see round you that He made?
  4. Can we make birds, or beasts, or flowers?
  5. Or could we make them live?
  6. Who makes them and us live?
  7. Where does all our food come from?
  8. Who gave us corn?
  9. What must we ask God to do for us?
  10. What must we thank Him for?
  11. Do you not think it would be pleasant to whisper to yourself, when you see a pretty flower, or a beautiful sky, or when the sun shines bright and warm, “Thank you God for being so good to me”?

Quick Assessment: Observe and listen for understanding and general happiness among student participants. Encourage students to listen to the story as it progresses so that they will know the answers to your questions when you ask. This is an important technique used in classrooms everywhere that promotes comprehension in children. Take your time with the technique and make sure all of your students learn “how” to listen carefully. Smile as you go.

Supporting Activity: Students will cut and paste pictures that represent all that God created in the first chapter of Genesis. Teachers should cut and paste or write by hand the Bible memory verse for this lesson on the front cover of each student’s booklet. Teacher’s may choose to number the order of the pages to correspond to the days of creation.

Step-by-step:

  1. Welcome the students into your room with warm smiles and enthusiasm.
  2. Seat students on a large area rug along with Sunday school volunteers.
  3. Sit on a low stool or chair and hold a Bible opened to the book of Genesis. Tell the children that the story your going to share comes from the Bible.
  4. Give the first reading. Make eye contact frequently with every child and smile. Ask the first set of questions and wait patiently for young students to respond.
  5. Give the second reading by the same method.
  6. Gather children around a low table to cut and paste the pictures representing the days of creation from the story after passing out the blank books one per child.
  7. If the students are very young you may not choose to remind them of the specific days or order of creation. Students in older grade levels should be able to remember more specific information.  It is up to the Sunday school teacher to assess the aptitude of her students during the readings in order to determine how much of the story students have retained.
  8. Remind the children that their memory verse is included with their book so that their parents may “listen” to their own accounts of the lesson while looking at their new book.
  9. Close the lesson with the prayer included below.

Closing Activity: Prayer Time

There are many, many lessons to be learnt from this wonderful story. Let us try to take home one of them:

 “Father let the ground below, the light above, the sky and sea, the sun and moon, the trees and flowers, the birds and beasts, and Your holy day of rest,  remind us that they come from You. Help us to be very thankful for all the wonderful parts of creation that You have blessed us with. Amen”

Memory Work:

” In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” Genesis 1:1

More Introductory Lessons to The Creation Story:

May 2, 2012

The Widow’s Mites

And now the Lord was sitting where

He could the people see

As they cast their gifts of money

Into the treasury.

And many rich cast in large sums;

Then came a widow, poor,

And she threw in two mites, which make

One farthing, and no more.

Then the Lord called His disciples

And said to them: “Verily,

This poor widow has cast the most

Into the treasury.

“For all they, of their abundance,

Offered, some less, some more,

But she, of want and penury,

Did cast in all her store.”

April 28, 2012

Testimony To The Bible

In the district of Allahabad some conversions had taken place among the women and girls which had greatly stirred up the opposition of the men. The reading circles in the Zenanas had to be stopped and the missionaries were prohibited from visiting the women. One old woman, explaining the situation, said: “Our men say you come and take us away. It is not you who take our women away and make them Christians; it is your Book. There are such wonderful words in it; when they sink into the heart nothing can take them out again.”

More Links To Thoughts On The Bible:

April 20, 2012

JHS (iota eta sigma)


JHS (iota eta sigma) in black by Kathy Grimm


JHS (iota eta sigma) in yellow by Kathy Grimm


JHS (iota eta sigma) in pink by Kathy Grimm

Titles (Names) of Christ In the Old Testament

  • Seed of the woman. Gen. 3: 15.
  • Mine Angel. Ex. 23: 23.
  • A Star out of Jacob. Num. 24: 17.
  • A Prophet. Deut. 18: 15,18.
  • Captain of the host of the Lord. Joshua 5: 14.
  • A Friend that sticketh closer than a brother. Prov. 18: 24.
  • My Beloved. Song of Solomon 2: 10.
  • Chiefest amoung ten thousand. Song of Solomon 5: 10.
  • (One) altogether lovely. Song of Solomon 5: 16.
  • The Mighty God. Isa. 9: 6.
  • The Everlasting Father. Isa. 9: 6.
  • The Prince of Peace. Isa. 9: 6.
  • The Lord Our Righteousness. Jer. 23:5,6.
  • The Son of God. Dan. 3: 25.
  • The Son of Man. Dan. 7: 13.
  • Michael, . . . the Great Prince. Dan. 12: 1.
  • The Branch. Zech. 6: 12,13.
  • The Messenger of the covenant. Mal. 3: 1.
  • The Sun of Righteousness. Mal. 4: 2.

Titles (Names) of Christ In the New Testament

  • The Word. John 1:1
  • The Lamb of God. John 1: 29.
  • The Bread of Life. John 6: 35.
  • The Light of the world. John 8: 12.
  • The Door of the sheep. John 10: 7.
  • The Good Shepherd. Verse 11.
  • The Ressurection and the Life. John 11: 25.
  • The Way, the Truth, and the Life. John 11:25.
  • The True Vine. John 15:1.
  • The Rock. 1 Cor. 10: 4.
  • The last Adam. 1 Cor. 15: 45.
  • The Chief Corner-stone. Eph. 2: 20.
  • The Man Christ Jesus. 1 Tim. 2: 5.
  • A Great High Priest. Heb. 4: 14.
  • The Author and Finisher of our faith. Heb. 12: 2.
  • The Chief Shepherd. 1 Peter 5: 4.
  • An Advocate. 1 John 2: 1.
  • Michael, the Archangel. Jude 9.
  • The Lion of the tribe of Judah. Rev. 5: 5.
  • The Morning Star. Rev. 22: 16.
  • King of kings, and Lord of lords. Rev. 19: 16.

Christ is referred to in the Bible under something like three hundred different titles and figures, of which the above are only examples. Why this is so is because He is all that these names and figures represent.

April 18, 2012

What has an “algorithm” got to do with me?

What you see on the outside and what I see on the inside are not always the same. There is great potential if you are willing to listen and understand.

Below is a definition for something that takes time to describe. This little something is called an “algorithm.” Now I know that some of you are feeling a bit confused right about now, but wait and read closely. I am not a mathematician nor am I a scientist but I do know that algorithms are a very necessary part of filing on the internet.

“In mathematics and computer science, an algorithm is a step-by-step procedure for calculations. Algorithms are used for calculation, data processing, and automated reasoning.

More precisely, an algorithm is an effective method expressed as a finite list of well-defined instructions for calculating a function. Starting from an initial state and initial input (perhaps empty), the instructions describe a computation that, when executed, will proceed through a finite number of well-defined successive states, eventually producing “output” and terminating at a final ending state. The transition from one state to the next is not necessarily deterministic; some algorithms, known as randomized algorithms, incorporate random input.”

So, why bring this up? Getting the scripture into people cannot be simply be accomplished by cutting and pasting it onto your web pages. Seekers, those who do not know Christ, will not enter Bible scripture into a search box in order to find what you post.

I hope some of you are now asking, how do I witness effectively for Christ? Include the scripture but also include topics that seekers wish to read about, topics that address their felt needs or intellectual curiosity. Also be cautious about how you discuss these topics.

Oh. Did I hear one of these? Not everything that I post on this blog is intended for your reading alone. I love the choir folks, but I also have purposes for introducing some “odd” topics into your reading. I do this by selecting written content that sometimes can be a bit challenging but it is a legitimate practice on the internet.

How often do you think the name “Jesus” is typed into a browser by people on the internet? Let me help you here, billions of times daily or even minutely. Every one of you hopes to somehow reach people for Him, but you are using the same vocabulary, hence identical tag words and key word phrases.

Listen to me. I am not trying to confuse you; I am trying to use you for the very purpose that you are writing for Him but my methods are not always direct. When I am direct, I speak to you because those are the words you speak everyday. When I am indirect, I speak to those who seek because those are the words they use everyday.

I am putting them together in the same place for your mutual benefit. However, I must do this legitimately. I cannot lie about how it is accomplished because this conduct is frowned upon by search engines. In other words, when I say there is content here it must be true. I cannot ethically include tag words without including actual text or without somehow covering the topic with real content like pictures, quotes, poems etc.. There are some people who do this without a second thought but this is not what God wants from me. He wants me to conduct myself appropriately. He does not want me to offend those who create the algorithms to help folks find what they are interested in reading or downloading.

Try to remember that I am not the enemy. I love the Lord’s people very much. I am here giving up my living in a way that I can perhaps never recover within my time spent on earth. I am willing to let you use my time and energy but please try to understand that I have a family and obligations outside of cyberspace.

I know that all of you are different. I know that you have different culture, different skin color, different ways of expressing yourselves and have people chase you down and hurt your feelings. I know all of this, I have been there and “done that,” as my children would say. It’s okay, this is only a Christian clip art file and I’m only an ordinary mom, but I will help you because God loves you and He wants me to.

April 15, 2012

Willing Service

A musician is not recommended for playing long, but for playing well; it is obeying God willingly, that is accepted: the Lord hates that which is forced, it is rather a tax than an offering. Cain served God grudgingly; he brought his sacrifice, not his heart. To obey God’s commandments unwillingly is like the devils who came out of the man possessed, at Christ’s command, but with reluctance and against their will. Good duties must not be pressed and beaten out of us, as the waters came out of the rock when Moses smote it with his rod; but must freely drop from us, as myrrh from the tree, or honey from the comb. If a willing mind be wanting, there wants that flower which should perfume our obedience, and make it a sweet-smelling savor unto God. by T. Watson.

April 13, 2012

Money Cannot Buy Heaven

  Let us recognize the fact, however, that while there is a lawful and profitable use of it, money cannot satisfy a man’s soul. It cannot pay our fare across the Jordan of death. It cannot unlock the gate of heaven. Salvation by Christ is the only salvation. Treasures in heaven are the only incorruptible treasures. However fine your apparel, the winds of death will flutter it like rages. A homespun and threadbare coat has sometimes been the shadow of coming robes made white by the blood of the Lamb. Oh, my dear hearers, what-ever you lose, though your house go, though all your earthly possessions go–may God Almighty, through the blood of the ever-lasting covenant, save all your souls! “What is a man profited if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?”  Talmage.

April 8, 2012

Christ’s Resurrection Body

      I think if you would look through your Bible carefully, you will find that ten different times He appeared to his disciples, not in the spirit, but in the body, in person. I want to get this thing established in all our minds, that Christ has come out of the grave personally, that His body has gone back to heaven. The same body they crucified, the same body they laid in Joseph’s sepulchre has come out of the jaws of death and out of the sepulchre; and he has passed through the heavens and gone back on high. We are told He had an interview with Peter, who is alluded to as Simon and as Cephas. We can imagine what took place at that interview, and that Peter’s old difficulty was settled. Peter denied Hm, but at that interview Christ forgave him. What a Sabbath it must have been for Peter! What a blessed day for that poor backslider! And if there is some backslider here to-day, who will have an interview with the Son of God, he will forgive you this Easter morning, and blot out all your wanderings and all your sins, if you will come back; and it will be a joyful day for you. by D. L. Moody

April 4, 2012

Bible Outwears Assault

by Dr. John Clifford

Last eve I paused beside a blacksmith’s

door,

And heard the anvil sing the vesper

chime;

Then, looking in, I saw upon the floor

Old hammers, worn with beating years of

time.

 * * *

“How many anvils have you had,” said I,

“To wear and batter all those hammers

so?”

“Just one,” he said; then, with a twinkling

eye,

“The anvil wears the hammers out, you

know.”

* * *

And so, I thought, the anvil of God’s word

For ages skeptic blows have beat upon;

Yet, tho the noise of falling blows was heard,

The anvil is unharmed–the hammers gone.

March 31, 2012

The Poverty Which Maketh Many Rich

by Rev. Carl J. Segerhammer

We sometimes come across passages in the Bible with statements that are anti-thetical and which seem really to contradict one another. One of these is found in 2 Cor. 6, 10: “As poor, yet making many rich; as having nothing, and yet possessing all things.” “How shall we explain this?” How can such a thing be possible?” you ask. Well, let us look into the matter a little. Let us take our dear Savior as an illustration. Surely, He could be said to be poor during His state of humiliation here on earth! His first days on earth were spent in a manger, for there was not room for Him — as it seemed, on account of His poverty — in the inn. Even after having taken up His Messianic calling, this poverty pursued Him. When, for instance, the representatives of the government asked of Him the tribute-money, the common treasury of Jesus and the little group of disciples was found to be empty, so that Peter must needs be sent to procure the necessary coin through a miracle that Jesus wrought. At another instance, Jesus Himself said: “The foxes have holes, and the birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has no where to lay His head.”

Yes, He was poor, and yet, did He not make many rich? Could we have asked the hungering multitude in the wilderness after they had filled, and the twelve basketfuls had been gathered of pieces left over from five loaves and two fishes; or the frightened disciples on the Sea of Galilee, whose lives had been saved by the stilling of the tempest; the widow of Nain, whose only son, having been dead, was returned to her living; Lazarus and his sisters after the former had been called forth out of the tomb, — their answer would surely have been in the affirmative. Again, the woman taken in sin to whom Jesus said: “Neither do I condemn thee; go and sin no more;” the malefactor on the cross receiving the forgiveness of his sins and the assurance of a place with Christ and Paradise– in short, the multitude of weary and with sin heavy-laden souls, to each of whom Jesus spoke words of hope, of peace, of joy, saying: “Be of good cheer, thy sins are forgiven thee,” — could we have asked all these, they would surely have answered that Jesus had, in truth, made them “rich;” that there are no riches to be compared with those that we receive from Him, “who, though immeasurably rich, was made poor for our sakes.”

But how shall we, who are poor, make many rich? By becoming truly “poor in spirit,” by realizing that we have, indeed, nothing in ourselves. When we have come to that point, realizing that we are poor and helpless, yea, destitute in ourselves, then the Lord can fill our hearts with “riches” that know no measure, with treasures that fade not away, “that neither moth nor rust can corrupt, and where thieves do not break through nor steal.” From such a storehouse of real treasures we are then enabled, through the grace of God, to “make many rich.”

Related articles

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 72 other followers