Kidz@First Kronicle
Transcription
Kidz@First Kronicle
Kidz@First Kronicle Colossal Coaster World Summer Bible Camp was sooo much fun! We screamed our heads off pretending to be dipping and diving on a roller coaster. We played really cool games— some involving squirting or playing in water. The snacks were awesome! I don’t know whether the confetti crispy treats or the banana/marshmallow kabobs were the favorite snack. Or it could have been the fruit in cones. We made some really great souvenirs to take with us to remind us of the good time we had. And then there was the really fabulous music. What fun to sing about “The Ride of Your Life” and making the HUNHs to “Stand Strong”! The most important part of the week was following Paul’s life as he faced many fearsome things—blindness, having to escape before he was killed, being beaten and put in jail, being shipwrecked. But he always knew God was with him and he could trust God to get him through all the hard times. That is true for us too. Compliment Happy Birthday, Kylin Hawkins Your Mirror Day David Anointed King and Fights Goliath Happy Birthday, Bret Pudenz David and Jonathan Become Friends Happy Birthday, Jeremiah Cogan, Jeremy Chambers & James Howell Video Games Day Happy Birthday, Rachael ChandlerEngemann Happy Birthday, Charlie Compton & Cooper Price Pecan Pie Day Peach Ice Cream Day Happy Birthday, Ann Engemann Vanilla Ice Cream Day Reception for Elaine Graham Cheesecake Day Amelia Earhart Day Parents’ Day Happy Birthday, Amanda Skaggs Happy Birthday, Amanda Humphrey Backyard Kids’ Club & Associational Kids’ Camp God Makes a Covenant With David David Sinned and Was Restored Happy Birthday, Makani Cogan Independence Day Happy Birthday, Carson Smith Colossal Coaster World Backyard Kids’ Club Edition If you didn’t get to come to Summer Bible Camp, there is good news! The fun isn’t over. Backyard Kids’ Club is July 15-19 from 10:30-noon across the street from the church. This fun adventure is open to anyone who wants to come. The Bible stories and songs are the same as for Summer Bible Camp. The club is designed to be a shorter, simpler, but just as fun event. So invite a friend to come with you. Even if you were here for SBC, come enjoy the stories and songs all over again. The children will officially promote to their next class September 1, 2013. While this is after they start school and are officially in their new grade, delaying promotion here at church allows the children to complete their unit of study before moving to the next level. We have learned so much about how the Bible fits together. We are also seeing how God has a plan through the whole Bible to give Israel and the world a Savior, Jesus. There is much more to learn. In the Fall the lessons will center around “Trouble at the Top,” dealing with the divided kingdom and exile in 1 Kings, Isaiah, Esther and selected minor prophets. The Gospel Project for Kids We are completing the first year of our three-year journey chronologically through the Bible on Sunday mornings at 9:30. We have been through the Beginnings of Genesis, God freeing the Israelites from slavery in Egypt and going to the land God had promised Abraham, the beginning of the nation through the battles for the land and the work of the judges. Through the summer we are studying the early kings of Israel. Ten Things Kids Want While at Church Kids Promotion Follow the Leader Associational Kid’s Camp July 15-19 Camp New Hope Holt, MO It is not too late to register for Clay-Platte Associational Kid’s Camp. The cost is $138. There are brochures outside Vivian’s office. You may also go to www.clayplatteba.org for information and forms. A leader who knows their name To have fun A lesson that keeps their attention To talk and share their thoughts Rooms decorated with them in mind An opportunity to serve A friend their age To be prayed for To be listened to To be affirmed Worship 4 Kidz Worship 4 Kidz is for children who have completed kindergarten through the 3rd grade. This worship time for children is held on Sunday mornings in room NB03 (by the water fountain and bathrooms) at 10:45 (during the contemporary service). During the worship time the kids will sing, give their offering, pray, continue the lesson from the first hour and participate in either crafts or games. There is also a missions component most weeks. Reception for Elaine Graham Elaine Graham has been a fixture in our nursery for decades. She retired in April 2013 after tireless service to more than one generation of children at FBCNKC. Immediately after the second service on July 28, there will be a cake and punch reception for her. The whole church is invited to celebrate her love and care for children through the years. If she has taught your children, or you, in the nursery you are encouraged to bring a card of appreciation for her. Go d, and crea te ren ac wit ew lea hin as tea n hea me . rt dfa for st spi me ri Psa t lm 51: 10 Looking for a way to have fun with the neighbors this summer? Young or old, everyone can have fun with these ideas. Face painting! Use small brushes and this recipe for make-up to paint balloons, stars, hearts, etc. on your friend’s cheeks. Mix 1 Tbsp. soft shortening, 2 Tbsp. cornstarch, and food coloring. Let the artist in you shine. Garage Door Banners! Hang a large piece of butcher paper on your garage door. Write across the top, “Hey neighbor, sign me and tell me something about yourself!” Have a supply of markers and see how many people leave you messages. Water Balloon Volleyball! Use a volleyball net or tie a string to two trees. Use water balloons in place of a volleyball. Each team takes turns serving water balloons over the net. If the other team catches a water balloon without letting it bust, they get a point. If the water balloons busts, the serving team gets a point. To discover what is written around the sun, start at the arrow with the letter G and write down every other letter. You must go around the sun twice to find the hidden message. __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ Watermelon Faces! Cut thin round watermelon slices and have people make funny faces with whipped cream. Then eat’em up before the whipped cream melts. Who is God to Our Kids? How would your child describe God? How would your child fill in the blank “God , You are…”? Is God a hero to your child? The hot topic in children’s ministry today is Christian education vs. spiritual transformation. In brief, Christian education model focuses on learning facts and memorization. The spiritual transformation model focuses on who God is. There is much discussion among those with lots more education than I have over which model better serves our children. I think we need both. Kids need facts to be able to understand the events of the Bible--in order to “see” God at work. They need to memorize the books of the Bible so they can use their Bible to experience what God says. Having Bible verses in their memory banks brings the guidance and comfort of scripture close to their hearts. But we also need to give kids the freedom to explore who God is. I do not mean some new-age type touchy-feely spiritual experience where the kids are sent off to discover on their own who they think God is. Rather, we as the adults in their lives can monitor their thinking for clues to how they perceive God and guide and instruct as needed. And we can give kids space to have experience with the God we want them to love and follow all their lives. In an article in the K-Magazine (the magazine for the International Network of Children’s Ministry), Teresa Welch says we need to focus our Bible storytelling on God, the real hero. Very often we make David or Daniel or Paul or Peter the hero. Really, God is the hero. He is the one who saved, helped, strengthened and provided whatever the person needed in the story. We need to make God’s nature the primary point of the story. In the story of Noah, God is the provider, sustainer, protector, maker and keeper of promises. Noah is the man He uses to reveal those attributes to us. So from a practical view, what does all this mean to us? As we teach and guide our kids we will keep a balance. We will see to it that our kids get the basic facts and memorize key passages and learn how to use the Bible for themselves. But we also need to give our kids the freedom to process at their level all the information we give them into an understanding of the character and attributes of God. When you read a Bible story with your child, ask “What does this story tell us about God?” As you listen carefully to the answer you will know where to affirm and where to guide or correct the thinking. When you pray with your child, give him or her an open-ended prayer such as “God, You are…” or “God, I love you because You…” Give your child paper and markers to draw a picture of what God is like or how he or she feels when thinking about God. Use this conversation to springboard into who God is. One child thought God had to be British. Her parents were able to turn that conversation to explain that God is not tied to a nation or people. This led to a discussion of the nature of being human and the nature of God. Ask “Why do you think it is important to obey God?” Depending upon the answer you may direct the conversation toward all that God has done for us, or how we can respond to the attributes of God. Be on the lookout for ways to share both information and experience with your child. It is easy to have casual conversations in the car or on a walk or while working together. Deuteronomy 6:4-9 charges us with sharing “the Lord our God” with our children. We can help them know God by showing them how He has revealed Himself to us in the stories of the Bible. Kids are looking for a hero—someone who has all the good attributes we can admire and worship. In our culture of hero worship, let God be the hero in our stories. He certainly fits the role!