Primary Teacher Book
Transcription
Primary Teacher Book
Primary Teacher Book Welcome Welcome to BugZone....................................................................................................2 A Day at BugZone........................................................................................................3 Things You Should Know Understanding Your Primaries.......................................................................................6 Learning That Lasts.......................................................................................................7 Teaching Tips................................................................................................................8 Motivating Desirable Behavior....................................................................................10 Sharing the Salvation Message....................................................................................12 Operation India: Good News for Kids........................................................................14 Decorating Your Classroom.........................................................................................15 Clip Art.......................................................................................................................18 Using Reproducible Certificates..................................................................................20 Bible Lessons Lesson 1 Changed: Joshua. ......................................................................................23 Lesson 2 Changed: Gideon......................................................................................31 Lesson 3 Changed: Naomi and Ruth.......................................................................39 Lesson 4 Changed: Zacchaeus. ................................................................................47 Lesson 5 Changed: Saul of Tarsus............................................................................55 “O give thanks unto the Lord; call upon his name: make known his deeds among the people” (Ps. 105:1). A fuzzy caterpillar crawls along a leaf, attaches itself to a twig, hangs upside down, and spins a chrysalis. Then God changes that little caterpillar. And it emerges, transformed into a beautiful butterfly. Our great God transforms people in even bigger ways. BugZone: Transformed by Our Big God challenges students with life stories of people who were transformed by God. Students follow Joshua’s transformation from a slave in Egypt to the man who led God’s people into the Promised Land. God transformed Gideon from a frightened man into a confident leader who believed in what God would do. God provided for Naomi and Ruth, transforming Naomi from a sad, bitter woman into a happy grandmother, and bringing Ruth a husband and joy. Zacchaeus had been a dishonest tax collector who charged people more money than they owed, but God changed him. God transformed Saul from a man who hated Christians into a man who served God by teaching boldly about Jesus. Our God transforms lives in big ways! Responding to God is an extreme, life-changing experience. BugZone challenges students to obediently follow God’s leading; to bravely trust in His promises, power, and presence; and to obey Him even in hard times. Believing in Jesus as Savior transforms our lives so that we want to live to please God and tell other people how God can change them too. Let’s respond to God’s wonderful love with love, trust, and courageous obedience. The BugZone theme verse is the expression of a person whose life has been transformed by God: We give thanks to God. We call upon Him. We tell others about Him. 2 A Day at BugZone: Transformed by Our Big God is adaptable to your situation. Do you divide students according to their ages, divide them into teams with mixed ages, or invite whole families for the intergenerational approach? Do students stay with the same teachers all the time, or do they rotate to different sites? Will your program be in the morning? all day? evenings? one day a week? in the park? in the backyard? at church? You can customize the schedule to meet your needs. Each daily program is designed to take between two and three hours. Arrival Teachers should arrive at least fifteen minutes before the program begins. Each teacher should wear a nametag. If parents know the teachers’ names, they will feel freer to talk with them. Keep in mind that Vacation Bible School is an opportunity to reach parents as well as students. Designate a central location as the registration area. As students arrive, smile and greet them warmly. Take a moment to greet the parents and learn their names. Use the registration cards to record important information about the students. Give out nametags. If many of your students arrive early, take them to the opening assembly area for an extra time of singing. If you prefer, take attendance and use the welcome activities as students gather before the opening assembly. Nametags (30733) Opening Assembly (15 minutes) Get the day off to a great start. BugZone provides songs for drawing students into the theme and celebrating our great God together. Puppets or a skit can introduce the theme of the day. The Director’s Guide includes a sample schedule for the opening assembly. At the close of the opening assembly, dismiss students to their classrooms. Registration Cards (30208) Puppet Script & CD (30748) 3 Bible Exploration (40 minutes) Welcome to BugZone! Attendance Chart (30732) Students can record their attendance on their BugZone Passes (30734). Each lesson includes ideas you can use while students wait until all have recorded their attendance. If you prefer, record attendance in the main registration area as students arrive. Introduction Each lesson begins with a creative, attention-getting introduction. Explore the Bible! This is the most important part of the day—the time when students learn truths from God’s Word. Each Bible lesson has an accompanying visual book. Decision Time Each lesson is designed to help your students understand God’s wonderful plan of salvation. BugZone Pass with stickers (30734) Discover! Each lesson includes a variety of activities to continue the learning and reinforce the truths of the stories. Students need to be actively involved in the story. Each lesson includes ideas to help students work together to apply the truths they are learning. Scripture Memory Each lesson includes an activity to help students understand and learn God’s Word. Apply It Now! Fun activities will help students apply God’s Word to their lives. Music (15–20 minutes) Celebrate our awesome God with a time of singing. People remember truths set to music. Any time is a good time to praise God—before the lesson, after the lesson, or even in the middle of the lesson! With the BugZone Music CD, students can sing along with the music or with the recorded children’s voices. BugZone Music CD (30730) 4 Games (20 minutes) The Director’s Guide contains games related to the theme as well as games specifically designed for each day’s lesson. Games are fun, and they are also a good way to continue the learning. Snacks (15–20 minutes) Visit the snack area and enjoy snacks that reinforce the Bible lesson. Look for optional ideas to allow student participation in preparing the snacks. Snack time is a good opportunity to chat informally with students. The Director’s Guide includes snack ideas and conversation starters. Director’s Guide (30701) Crafts (20–25 minutes) The craft book includes crafts and ideas for guided conversation that reinforce each Bible lesson. The completed crafts will be long-lasting reminders of the lessons and the fun of VBS. Activity Sheet Time (20 minutes) You can use the activity sheets in a variety of ways. The choice is up to you. Use the activity sheets during your program. As students work on these sheets, discuss the lesson. Also use this time to talk one-on-one with students about salvation. Send the activity sheets home. The directions and any necessary answers are included on the sheets. Craft Ideas Book (30728) Closing Assembly (15 minutes) End your time together each day with the closing assembly. Use this time to sing and to enjoy the puppets or skits. A suggested schedule for the closing assembly is in the Director’s Guide. Primary Student Book (30711) 5 Understanding Your Primaries Get to know your students! The better you know your students, the better equipped you’ll be to meet their needs and introduce them to the Savior. All workers—including the game director, snack director, and craft director—will benefit from knowing the age characteristics of the students. I am special! Primary Students I like . . . • Variety in activities and presentations. • Learning by doing. I like to do skits and act out the story. • Doing, seeing, hearing, touching. I learn best when you use all five senses in the story. • Others to like me. I am very aware of what others think of me. • My teacher. I am eager for your approval. Do you like me? I can . . . • Worship God. I love to sing. • Love God. I need to know that God values me and loves me unconditionally. • Care about others. I can pray for others. I need to be learning how to actively love others. • Understand the simple truth of the gospel. God loves me. Jesus died to take the punishment for my sin. He rose again from the dead. I need to believe in Jesus and ask Him to be my Savior. • Start applying God’s Word to my life. You can help me by teaching me clearly what God wants me to do. Practical role plays can help me practice Biblical responses to everyday situations. • Learn right from wrong and choose the right. 6 Learning That Lasts Your students are very precious to God. God made them with different hair and skin colors, different abilities and interests, and different learning styles. How can you be sure this VBS will make a difference in the life of each student? •• Pray that God will prepare the hearts of your students and will work in their lives in a life-changing way. Before a student is ready to hear about God and His love, that student needs to experience your love. Smile. Spend time talking with the students as well as teaching them. You are the first step toward Learning That Lasts. •• Teach with an open Bible, emphasizing that these lessons present the truth of God’s Word. God’s Word is always new, exciting, and relevant. Learning to know God makes a lasting difference. •• Motivate each student to make a personal decision that will bring about lasting change. Effective teaching should lead to changed lives. What decision do you want your students to make today? How will this lesson help with a problem your students face in everyday life? What do you want them to know, to do, to change as a result of this lesson? Each class should be a time of decision, first about salvation and then about spiritual growth. Each BugZone: Transformed by Our Big God lesson is designed to partner with you to reach each student with Learning That Lasts. Each one begins with an introduction designed to help you capture the students’ attention from the start. “Explore the Bible!” presents truth from God’s Word. “Decision Time” encourages students to invite Jesus to be their Savior and to choose to follow Him in their everyday actions. “Discover!” is designed to actively involve the students in the lesson and to help them apply it to their lives. Students are invited not only to memorize Scripture but also to investigate how the verses apply to their everyday lives. “Apply It Now!” challenges each student to immediately take action, putting God’s Word into practice in daily life. 7 Teaching Tips Know your students. Effective teachers understand how students learn. People learn in four basic ways: visual, auditory, tactile, and kinesthetic. Visual learners understand and remember the lesson when they can “see” it. Captivate your visual learners by using body language and motions. Using the visual packet and other objects suggested throughout the program will help you reach your visual learners. Auditory learners learn best by hearing. Include sound effects that allow the students to participate in the lesson. Auditory learners also learn through singing songs that reinforce the truths taught in the Bible lessons. Tactile learners enjoy hands-on activities. They learn best when they are able to feel or touch something related to the lesson. Crafts that students make and take home also help reinforce the lesson. Kinesthetic learners need action! The more physical the activity, the more kinesthetic students pay attention, and the more they remember. Visual Packet (30707) Visual Packet (30707) 8 God made different students with different learning styles. Use a variety of teaching methods to help all your students learn. Does your lesson have something to see? something to touch? something to do? Are you using the activities that are designed to reinforce the lesson application? This program will help you teach all the different students in your class. Make each lesson come alive. Help students experience the story—the sounds, the sights, and the emotions. Use the visual packet. Use action verbs and colorful nouns to paint a picture in the mind of each listener. Share your enthusiasm for the story. Use your eyes, face, gestures—your whole body. Use your voice to show different moods. Speeding to the climax expresses intense action. Slowing creates suspense. Emphasize by speaking more loudly or more softly. Try using different voices for different characters. Before you teach, ask a friend to listen to and evaluate your lesson (or record your lesson and do a self-evaluation). Did you keep the desired student response in mind as you taught? Did you use your voice and your body to paint a picture of the story’s action? Did you know the lesson so well that you could maintain eye contact with your audience? Did you use the visuals effectively? Actively involve your students in the learning process. Students learn best by doing. They quickly forget most of what they hear. They re- member a little more of what they both see and hear. But students best remember what they do themselves. The “Discover!” section of each lesson contains ideas to actively involve your students in the lesson. When possible, offer your students choices. Some students enjoy drama, while others prefer drawing or puppets. Here are some additional ideas. •• Act out the Biblical account. As your students “become” the people in the account, they can see how the situations recorded in the Bible are similar to those that students face today. •• Sing. Many students will remember a song longer than they remember the words of a story. Songs help students remember Scriptural truths. •• Pray. Start with short sentence prayers: “Thank You, God, for loving me.” “I love You, Jesus. Please help me to tell my friends about You.” Work together to find Biblical guidance for everyday living. Help your students find answers in God’s Word. How do I know what is right and what is wrong? Where can I find the strength to choose right? Talk together about practical ways students can apply each lesson. 9 Motivating Desirable Behavior You want to do much more than enforce a set of rules. You want to teach and encourage Christlike behavior—behavior that is patient, loving, kind, respectful of others. When a student learns to respond to God’s Word, we call it Learning That Lasts. Create an atmosphere in which students thrive. Come early, ready to minister to the earliest students. Smile. Learn their names. Get to know them. Be enthusiastic. Your words, actions, and attitude should show that you like students and you enjoy VBS. Be a positive role model. Be an example in word and deed. Change “Do as I say, not as I do” to “Do as I say and as I do!” Students learn by example. Show them that you think the lesson is important. If teachers are whispering during the lesson, why shouldn’t the students? If teachers are attentive and enthusiastic, students likely will be also. State specifically how you expect students to act. Don’t assume newcomers know what you consider appropriate behavior. “Walk when inside” helps them know exactly what you do want them to do. If you say, “Don’t run,” there is still a question of what is acceptable. Hopping? Skipping? Behavior expectations need to be realistic for the age group. Correct negative behavior quickly without attacking the person. “I want you to . . . ” is more effective in guiding them toward Christlike behavior than “No. Don’t . . .” Notice and praise students when they do things right. Young people are naturally lively and want attention. Don’t wait for them to do something wrong before you notice them. Plan ahead. Think through potential trouble spots. Discipline problems often occur when the teacher is not prepared. Be ready to go with prayer and an attention-grabber. Don’t expect students to wait quietly while you rearrange chairs, set up visuals, or go for forgotten supplies. Keep your lessons exciting and relevant to students’ lives. Use visuals and a variety of active learning methods. Boredom leads to trouble. Students learn best when actively involved in the learning. They may become restless if expected to sit still for longer than their age and attention span allow. This program was developed with young people in mind. It offers a variety of studentoriented learning activities with each lesson. 10 11 Sharing the Salvation Message Always use the Bible when talking with a student about salvation. Even if the student can’t read the words, look up the verses and read them aloud. This emphasizes that salvation is from God, not from you. By watching you use your Bible, the student will learn that the Bible has the answers concerning eternal life. The following questions will help you share the gospel one-on-one. Ask the questions and let the student respond. It is unnecessary to use every question with every student. Listen to the responses. Be sure the student understands the gospel. 1. What would you like to talk with me about? (This question lets you know the reason the student responded to the invitation or wanted to talk with you.) 2. Who is God? Does God love you? How do you know God loves you? God is the great creator of the universe and us. The Bible tells us that God loves every person in the world. God loves you and wants you in His family. He showed His love by sending His Son, Jesus, to earth to die for our sins (Gen. 1:1; Rom. 5:8). 3. What is sin? Who has sinned? Sin is disobeying God. It is doing what God told us not to do, or not doing what God told us to do. Everyone has sinned (Rom. 3:23). 4. What does God say about sin? What is the punishment for sin? God loves us, but sin separates us from Him. God hates sin. Sin must be punished. The Bible says that the punishment for our sin is to be separated from God forever (Rom. 6:23). 5. Can you take away your sin? No, you cannot do anything on your own to take away your sin. Forgiveness of sin is a free gift from God (Eph. 2:8, 9). 6. Who is Jesus? Did Jesus ever sin? Jesus is God the Son, Who came to earth as a man and lived a perfect life (Heb. 4:15). 7. What did Jesus do to take away your sin? Jesus died on the cross to take the punishment for your sin. Only Jesus could take the punishment for your sin because He is the only man Who had no sin of His own (1 Cor. 15:3; 2 Cor. 5:21). 12 8. Did Jesus stay dead? No, in three days He came back to life. He now lives in Heaven, preparing a special place for all who believe in Him (1 Cor. 15:4; John 14:2, 3). 9. John 3:16 says we are to believe in Jesus. What does it mean to believe in Jesus? We need to believe Who Jesus is—the only Son of God, Who became a man and lived a perfect life—and what Jesus did. He died on the cross to take the punishment for our sin. He rose back to life the third day. We need to accept His free gift of salvation by believing in Him (Rom. 6:23). 10. If you believe in Jesus, what will He do for you? If you believe in Jesus as your Savior, He will take away all your sin; He will give you everlasting life and make you His child so you can know and love Him. God will take you to Heaven someday, where you will live forever with the Lord Jesus ( John 1:12; 14:2, 3). 11. Would you like to believe in Jesus as your Savior right now? If you believed in Jesus as your Savior, what did Jesus do for you? If you have believed in Jesus as your Savior, you now have everlasting life. Your sin has been forgiven. You are part of God’s family, and you can be sure you will go to Heaven someday (Acts 16:31; John 5:24). 12. Jesus loves you and died to take the punishment for your sin. After you believe in Jesus, how can you show your love and thanks to Him? You should love God and want to please Him. You can talk to God in prayer. You can learn what He has to say to you by reading your Bible and going to Sunday School and church to learn more about Him. When you sin, you should confess that sin to Him. He will forgive you so you can be happy with Him again (1 John 1:9). You can tell others this wonderful good news about Jesus so they can know Him too (Matt. 28:19, 20). 13 Operation India: Good News for Kids 2012 VBS Missions Offering Director Tip Stories and images are available on the Director’s Resource CD. To learn more about Operation India, visit www.rbpVBS.org or www. GARBCinternational.org. Did you eat dinner last night? Thousands of boys and girls in India go to bed hungry and don’t get to go to school. Many of them live in orphanages or on the streets. They have no money, no knowledge of the one true God, and no hope for the future. These children need to learn about Jesus and His power to forgive sins and change lives. And we can help them do that! This year’s VBS missions project is called Operation India: Good News for Kids. Your offerings will be used to reach children all over India through Sunday School, VBS, and Christian orphanages and schools. Pastor Mohan Kumar and his wife, Padma, run two orphanages and a Bible college. They also travel throughout India to hold VBS camps all year long! Their goal is to reach ten thousand children and to train two hundred VBS workers a year. Producing enough materials for that many children is a financial challenge. Your donation can help provide the Kumars with curriculum and help them train teachers to share the good news with countless kids! In northeast India, Berean Baptist Academy and Hope Baptist School provide Christian education to hundreds of children, mostly from Hindu families, while caring for many orphans who live at the schools. Books, clothing, food, and medicines are daily needs that your donation will help supply! Pastor Pandu Madalla is ministering to unsaved children at the poorest level of Indian society in Agra, home of the Taj Mahal. As Pastor Madalla provides basic life needs and school supplies to the children, he prays for their salvation. We can join him with our prayers and gifts! Here’s your opportunity to inspire VBS students to take part in what God is doing in India. Display the “Operation India: Good News for Kids” missions poster. Show the pictures and read the stories from the Director’s Resource CD about the Indian children whose lives have been transformed by the gospel. Let your students know that their prayers and offerings for this VBS project will help children in India learn about Jesus as their Savior and have real hope for the future. Please send your offering to: International Partnership of Fundamental Baptist Ministries Operation India 1300 N. Meacham Road Schaumburg, IL 60173‑4806 14 Decorating Your Classroom Family Photo Corner You’ve watched parents drop off their kids for VBS and return to pick them up at closing time. Now here’s an idea for getting parents out of their cars and into your church! Set up a photo corner. Use the BugZone backdrop or scene setters (30795, 30818) to create a great photographer’s background. Use the instructions on the Decorating CD (30702) to make a tree from wood grain paper and green balloons. Suspend butterfly inflatables (30793) and hang butterfly punch-outs (30798), butterfly cutouts (30799), and jumbo tissue butterflies (30800) from the ceiling. Make large bugs by projecting clip art onto large sheets of cardboard or plywood. Paint your bugs. Cut a face hole so students can be photographed with their faces showing through the hole. Attach stands to the back so the bugs will stand up. Provide butterfly nets (30774), BugZone magnifiers (30815), and mammoth insects (30771) for students to hold. Invite parents to bring their cameras and photograph their students. Encourage students to get their pictures taken with the BugZone puppet, Bugzi (30749). Have friendly church members on hand to greet your guests and distribute information on your church’s services. Offer to show each visitor the classrooms where their family members would attend Sunday School. 15 1 2 3 4 8 BugZone Director’s Resource CD and Decorating CD (30702) 16 1. Posters •• Display the BugZone theme poster (30720), salvation poster (30736), and Operation India poster (30766). •• Display the 58" x 80" backdrop (30703). •• Get a large supply of jumbo 22" x 34" theme posters (30721) and sets of five BugZone posters (30722). Each student will want a poster to take home. •• Watch for bug posters at teacher stores and on Internet sites. 2. Doorways •• Over each doorway hang a 3' x 6' BugZone banner (30727) or add a sign—“BugZone” or “Transformed by Our Big God.” •• Purchase a green glitter curtain at a party store. Cut in an arch shape so it falls just above the head height of your students, or let it dangle to the floor. 3. Bulletin Boards •• Outline the bulletin board with a butterflies border (30794). •• Add BugZone clip art, posters, decorations. 4. Science Centers •• Set up a science center. Decorate a table with a green raffia table skirt and silk vines. Plan to include the butterfly garden (30816) and one or two reversible caterpillar to butterflies (30814). Station a teacher nearby. •• Set out BugZone magnifiers (30815), bug containers, bug catchers (30775), and BugZone bugs (30770). Place butterfly nets (30774) nearby. •• Provide jumbo bug stickers (30781) for students to attach to their clothing. •• Add camp chairs or tree stumps for seating. 5. Giant Wall Mural •• Attach rolls of paper to the wall to create a giant wall mural. •• Using BugZone clip art, make, color, and attach bugs and other clip art. Use cute cartoon clip art for young children. Use the lifelike clip art for older students. •• Attach BugZone bugs (30770), mammoth insects (30771), butterflies (30768), and caterpillars (30769). 6 5 4 7 •• Suspend from the ceiling butterfly inflatables (30793) to dangle in front of your mural. •• Hang butterfly punch-outs (30798), butterfly cutouts (30799), and jumbo tissue butterflies (30800) from the ceiling. •• Stand ladybug inflatables (30792) in front of your mural. 6. Walls •• Attach the lower scene setter of grass (30795) and the upper scene setter of sky (30818) to the wall. •• Dangle butterfly inflatables (30793). Add BugZone clip art and BugZone friends cutouts (30797), butterfly punch-outs (30798), butterfly cutouts (30799), and jumbo tissue butterflies (30800). •• Extend your scene into the room. Cut tall poster board grass shapes and attach a stand. Lay a brown or green length of fabric on the ground and add ladybug inflatables (30792), mammoth insects (30771), and the Just Buggy! 3-D bug set (30791). 7. BugZone Accessories •• Your classroom needs its own Bugzi puppet. Bugzi comes as a set of two puppets—a caterpillar and a butterfly (30749)! Kids will love him. •• Encourage students and workers to wear BugZone buttons (30742). •• Store supplies in BugZone backpacks (30739). Fill a BugZone backpack with fun items students can interact with: mammoth insects (30771), bug-eyed bugs (30779), and wind-up flipping ladybugs (30772). 8. Balloons, Balloons, Balloons •• Make giant balloon flowers and bugs. •• Group white balloons; dangle as clouds. •• For balloon sculpture ideas, see the Decorating CD. YouTube.com has wonderful instructions for making a variety of balloon flowers and bugs. •• Check the Director’s Resource CD to find more decorating information and step-bystep instructions. Order these and more decorations at www.rbpVBS.org or 1-800-727-4440. 17 Clip Art 18 Clip art may be photocopied for local church use. More clip art is available on the Director’s Resource CD. 19 Using Reproducible Certificates Use these certificates to recognize and encourage each student. Recognize good behavior, Scripture memory, listening, kindness, friendliness, following directions, and smiling! Copy the certificates onto colorful paper. Present the certificate to the student in a public manner—for example, in the classroom or during the closing assembly. Let everyone at the program know what a great job the student has done! Be sure to honor each of your students. When you reward a student, place a mark next to the student’s name on the attendance chart. This record will help you keep track of who has received a certificate and whom you need to catch being good. Even the most difficult child can be caught smiling. Often when a student receives a certificate and a smile from a teacher, his or her attitude and behavior change for the better. Your workers may enjoy receiving the certificates too! The children will have fun giving you awards. Share a certificate and a smile with everyone. © RBP • This page may be photocopied for class use only. 20 © RBP • This page may be photocopied for class use only. © RBP • This page may be photocopied for class use only. 21 22 Changed: Joshua Num. 13; 14; Deut. 31:6–8; Josh. 1:1–11; 3 1 Memory Verse “Have not I commanded thee? Be strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee whithersoever thou goest” ( Josh. 1:9). Topic Courage and strength Theme God’s presence and power give us courage and strength to obey Him. Desired Student Response Each student will practice making obedient choices in a variety of circumstances. WELCOME Select one of the following activities to start your session. • Smile, greet, and get to know each student. • Make sure you have a completed registration card (30208) for each student. • Distribute nametags (30733) and BugZone passes (30734). Option 1: Science Station—Weight, Weight, Don’t Tell Me! Materials •• Leaves; clear jar with lid; food scale; scale; whiteboard and marker; grasshopper or plastic grasshopper from BugZone bugs (30770); paper; pencil. ACTIVITY: Before class: 1. Place some leaves in a clear jar. Poke air holes in the lid. 2. Weigh the jar and write its weight on the whiteboard. 3. Place the live or plastic grasshopper in the jar. During class: 1. Invite a student to weigh the jar containing the grasshopper and subtract that weight from the weight of the jar. 2. Weigh an adult volunteer and a student volunteer and have a student record the weights on the whiteboard. 3. Discuss the comparison between the grasshopper’s size and weight and that of a person. Even the smallest person is large compared to a grasshopper. Yet even the biggest person is tiny compared to God! We don’t have to be afraid of anyone if we have God on our side. God’s presence and power will give us courage and strength to obey Him. Materials Option 2: I Spy a Bug! •• Mammoth insects (30771). Before class: Hide mammoth insects where students can look through their “binoculars” and find them fairly easily. ACTIVITY: Show students how to cup their hands around their eyes as if looking through binoculars. Encourage students to take turns describing the bugs they spy. Ask the other students to raise their hands if they think they saw the same bug. ASK: What is a spy? Your mission was to look through your spy binoculars and tell the class about any bugs hiding in this room. Spies are sent on a secret mission to find information about something or someone and then tell what they learned. In our lesson today, we are going to hear about twelve spies who were sent on a very important mission. 24 Option 3: Lions and Tiger and Bears! Oh My! Materials •• Large box containing a stuffed animal (preferably a lion, bear, or other wild, frightening animal); rope. 1 ACTIVITY: Tell the following story of being chased by a dangerous animal. (Use in your story the same type of animal as the stuffed animal in the box.) Speak quickly, acting fearful and frantic—overdoing it to produce laughter and not fear. At the appropriate time, open the box. I’m going to tell you a story. When I’m done, you tell me whether you think it was a true story. I was taking a walk when . . . suddenly I was chased by a huge lion. I ran and ran. I jumped over fallen trees, tripped over a rock, ran through a stream. The lion was roaring and getting closer and closer. Finally I climbed a tree and crawled out onto a branch. When the lion ran past, I captured him with my rope. ASK: Do you think my story is true? I brought that lion with me today. Do you want to see him? Take a look. ASK: Can you believe he almost got me? He is so big and scary, isn’t he? No, I guess you’re right. He’s not as big as I said he was, is he? Sometimes doing the right thing doesn’t seem safe or easy. We are afraid, and our problems look much bigger than they really are. We forget that God can help us. This lion story is not a true story. But now we are going to hear a true story from the Bible. We will learn about some people who didn’t think about God’s promises to them and that He was always there to help them. They looked only at the danger—and then they didn’t have the courage to obey God! INTRODUCTION Master Says ACTIVITY: Play a game of Master Says. Tell students they must do what their master (the teacher) says when the command is preceded by the words “Master says.” Students who do a command without first hearing “Master says” must sit down. Give commands rapid-fire: “Master says touch your nose,” “Master says jump up and down,” “wave your arms,” and other actions with and without “Master says.” In today’s lesson, we’ll learn about a man who changed from being a slave in Egypt to being the courageous leader who led the Israelites into the Promised Land. 25 EXPLORE THE BIBLE! Materials •• Lesson 1 visual book (30707) and/or PowerPoint visuals from the Director’s Resource CD (30702); box; two dowel or curtain rods; gold spray paint; blue fabric; poster board cloud; grasshopper from BugZone bugs (30770); 2 blue tarps. Before class: Spray paint a large box and two dowel rods (at least two feet longer than the box) with gold paint. Push the dowels through the box so it can be carried. Cover the box with blue fabric. ASK: What is a slave? Joshua was a slave in Egypt—forced to work hard without pay. God sent Moses to lead His people, the Israelites, out of slavery. What an exciting day when Joshua and other Israelites followed Moses out of Egypt! They headed across a dry, dusty wilderness on their way to the land God had promised them. God led the people with a pillar of cloud during the day and a pillar of fire at night. DISPLAY: Show visual picture 1 or PowerPoint visual 1. ACTIVITY: Guide students to pretend to be Israelites, walking day after day. The cloud reminds you that God is with you. When the cloud stops, set up camp, and go to sleep. When the cloud moves, pack up camp and start walking again. Finally, after a long time, you are almost there—God’s Promised Land! Lesson 1 Visual 1 Moses sent twelve men on a secret mission to find out what the land was like. Two of those spies were named Joshua and Caleb. ACTIVITY: Guide students to pantomime as you teach—tiptoe, look, point, act excited and then scared, and return to camp. As the spies report, pantomime alternating the fear and crying of the people and the bold urging of Joshua and Caleb. A spy doesn’t want people to know he is there. Let’s be very quiet. Look! A green field! Trees! A river! Wow! This is a good land! The spies cut down a huge bunch of grapes to show the people. The bunch of grapes was so big it took two men to carry them. Uh-oh! Look at those big people! Giants! They look much bigger than us! When the spies got back, everyone wanted to know what they found in God’s Promised Land. “What’s it like? What did you see?” DISPLAY: Show visual picture 2 or PowerPoint visual 2. Point out the grapes. Lesson 1 Visual 2 26 “Well,” said ten spies, “we have good news and bad news. It’s a wonderful land. Look at the incredible fruit we brought back. But the bad news is—we saw big, strong giants! They make us look like little, tiny grasshoppers!” 1 DISPLAY: Show the grasshopper. ASK: How big would those giants have to be if normal humans were the size of a grasshopper compared to them? Do you think the spies were afraid and exaggerating? Because they were thinking about the problem instead of their great God, the problems seemed bigger than what they really were. The Israelites began to cry. “Oh no. What will we do?” “Stop!” cried Joshua and Caleb. “Giants are no match for God! God promised this land to us. God said to be strong and have courage. Let’s go!” But the people would not listen. They cried and cried. They even wanted to go back to Egypt and be slaves again! What were they thinking? They did not have courage. They did not trust God. They chose to focus on the problem instead of on their great and powerful God and what He told them to do. “Please listen,” begged Joshua. “Don’t sin against God. Obey Him. Trust Him. The Lord is with us. Don’t be afraid. Have courage.” But the people would not listen. They disobeyed. They sinned. The Bible says that we all sin. “Sin” is the Bible word for the wrong things that we think, do, and say. We want our own way. We don’t obey. God loves us, but He must punish sin. God loved His people, but He knew they were not ready to go into the Promised Land. God made the Israelites wander around the wilderness for forty years. Before Moses died, he called all the people together and told them God had chosen Joshua to be the new leader of His people. DISPLAY: Show visual picture 3 or PowerPoint visual 3. ASK: Why do you think God chose Joshua to be the new leader? (Joshua had obeyed God and wanted to go into the land. Joshua was a courageous leader.) Finally God said it was time to go into the Promised Land. God told Joshua to obey Him and be strong and courageous. Imagine how excited you would be if you had waited a long time and now it was time to go into the Promised Land! But first the people would have to cross the Jordan River. The people couldn’t wade across the river. They couldn’t swim across. Lesson 1 Visual 3 ASK: Do you think the people will be afraid and disobey this time? Or will they have courage and remember to trust and obey God? Let’s find out. Joshua told the people that when they saw the priests walk by, carrying the ark of the covenant, they should follow. As soon as the priests’ feet touched the water, God would make the water pile up in a big heap so they could walk across. The ark of the covenant was a special gold box that was usually in a tent called the tabernacle. It reminded the people that God was always with them. When the ark of the covenant was outside the tabernacle, it was covered with a blue cloth. 27 ACTIVITY: Lay the tarps side by side. Guide four volunteers to carry the ark by its rods and stand where the two tarps come together. At the appropriate time, pull the tarps apart, revealing a path between. Guide students to stand and follow the ark of the covenant. Guide their responses by showing your excitement at what is happening. DISPLAY: Show visual picture 4 or PowerPoint visual 4. Lesson 1 Visual 4 When the priests carried the ark toward the river, the people followed. And what do you think happened as the priests’ feet touched the river? Yes! It happened just like God said it would. Upstream, the waters piled up in a giant heap. God made the river stop flowing! Only a powerful God could do such a miracle! The people walked across the river on dry ground. The people obeyed! We need to be like Joshua. We need to trust that God is always with us. Knowing that God is with us can give us the courage to obey and make wise choices. DECISION TIME Materials •• Bibles; salvation poster (30736). Do you believe that God is greater than anything or anyone else? Here at BugZone you can hear what God’s Word says about sin and Who Jesus is. Today you can choose to trust Jesus, Who will never leave you. ACTIVITY: Use the salvation poster to present the gospel. Ask students to bow their heads and close their eyes. Invite students who want to learn more about salvation to look up at you. Assign workers to responding students. If you have already asked Jesus to be your Savior, then you are a child of God and should obey Him. If you are already a child of God, how do you show it? Jesus wants you to live so that others will know you are part of His family. Do you need to ask your mom or dad for forgiveness for not obeying them? Do you need to stop doing something you know is disobeying God? Do you need to share the great news about Jesus with someone? Believe that God will give you the strength and courage to obey Him and do it today! DISCOVER! Materials Option 1: Creepy Bug Contest •• Enlarged photos of scary-looking insects, including the Goliath beetle and giant water bug. DISPLAY: Display enlarged pictures of insects and have students vote for the creepiest-looking bug. 28 Just as creepy bugs might scare us, the Israelites were scared of the giants in the land. They didn’t get to go into the Promised Land because they didn’t trust God to help them. Materials 1 Option 2: Crossing the Jordan Role-Play •• 2 blue tarps; ark from Explore the Bible. Assign one Joshua and four priests to carry the ark. The rest of the class will be Israelites. Lay the tarps, end to end, on the floor. Guide students to gather at the river—making sure they have all their belongings, family members, and animals. Pull one tarp away as if it is water going downstream, and rumple up the other one in a heap. Guide the students to express that they will be brave and do what God told them to do, to express amazement at crossing on dry ground, and to express how strong and wonderful God is. SCRIPTURE MEMORY “Have not I commanded thee? Be strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee whithersoever thou goest” ( Josh. 1:9). Is God asking us not to be afraid? No. He is commanding or telling us. If you are God’s child, God promises to be with you. He can give us the strength and courage to obey Him. Joshua 1:9 (Form open book.) “Have not I (Point up.) commanded thee? (Shake pointer finger.) Be strong (Make muscles.) and of a good courage; (Stand up straight and tall.) be not afraid, (Look afraid, then stand tall.) neither be (Shake head no.) thou dismayed: (Put face between hands; look sad.) for the Lord thy God (Point up.) is with thee (Point to the children.) whithersoever thou goest.” (Walk in place.) Materials Option 1: Bug Zapper •• BugZone clip art; marker; butterfly net (30774). Before class: Write one word from the verse on each clip art bug. Display bugs in the same order as in the memory verse. Recite the verse together several times. Invite a student to remove one bug and place it into the butterfly net. Recite the verse. Continue until all of the bugs have been “zapped” and the students know the verse. 29 Materials Option 2: Commander Says •• Whistle. Tell students they must follow orders and do what their commander says when the command is preceded by the words “Commander says.” Give commands rapid-fire in an authoritative voice. “Commander says march in place.” “Commander says jump up and down.” “Wave your arms.” Blow your whistle, and in a commanding voice instruct the students to stand and repeat after you. Say the first phrase of the verse and have them repeat it. In best drill sergeant manner, inform them that you can’t hear them. After they repeat, inform them that you still can’t hear them. Repeat phrase by phrase. ASK: Who is our commander? What does God tell us to do? Will knowing that God is with you help you be courageous and obey Him? APPLY IT NOW! Option 1: Be Strong! Have Courage! Obey! Encourage students to think of situations when it might be hard to do what God wants them to do. Idea starters could include watching a DVD (or listening to music) students know they shouldn’t watch (or listen to) but that peers want them to enjoy, and deciding whether to be “loyal” to a group of friends or to stand against them if the group is snubbing other people or planning to do wrong. ASK: How can you be brave and obey God at home? at school? at church? with friends? Can you think of something hard that God can help you do? Obey right away? Be kind to someone who has not been kind to you? Help a friend? Is it sometimes hard to obey? Should you obey anyway? Why? (God’s power can help us obey.) How can learning today’s Bible verse help? God can help you be brave and make good choices that please Him. Option 2: Show Me How to Obey After talking through situations in option 1, invite groups of students to act out possible ways of obeying in each scenario. GAMES (Director’s Guide) •Caterpillar Race •Butterfly Catcher Freeze Tag 30 SNACKS (Director’s Guide) •Joshua Clusters •“Hit the Trail” Mix •Milky and Honey •“Be Strong!” Snack CRAFTS (Craft Book Ideas) •Bug Sun Catcher •Bug Buzzer •Bug Mask •Critter Catcher •Grasshopper Magnet