Wednesday 12 December 2012

What's on the youth group's minds.

The members of our youth group have been using the prayer area they made, and writing on the prayer wall.  We've also been rehearsing for our Christmas pageant, in which two members of our youth group, Margot and Ted, are playing Mary and Joseph.

I had a chance to pop in to the prayer area and look at what they were writing.  I found the following:

PRAY FOR AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL.

We pray for all the children who are less fortunate than we are.  Please give them a better life and protect them.

A drawing of a church building with a bunch of stick figures inside and on their way inside.

Advent!  Xmas soon!  Celebrate!, with a drawing of a holly branch

And finally, a piece of paper that said:

Divorce proceedings, between Margot (aka Mary) and Ted (aka Joseph).  Lawyer: Serena.

 


Thursday 29 November 2012

"What's in the box?" An assembly for Advent (primary level)



You will need:
A canvas bag or a box

Inside it, you will need:
The figures of Mary, Joseph and the Christ child from a Nativity set
An Advent wreath with 4 candles and matches
A mirror

Sit down in the chair and do nothing, with the bag or box clearly visible in front of you.  Look in it once or twice and smile at the children.

When they start getting impatient, say “raise your hand if you want to find out what’s inside this bag.”

Ask them how it feels to be waiting to find out what you’ve brought.

Tell them that Advent is a special time in the church’s year.  Advent is a time of WAITING and GETTING READY.  The word “Advent” means “coming.”  What are we waiting for?  Who is coming?  Explain that people of many different religions get ready for Christmas - the tree, the presents, Christmas dinner - but Christians are waiting for another part of Christmas.  What special story do Christians remember at Christmas?  Who are Christians waiting for during Advent, apart from Father Christmas?
Ask if they know how Christians get ready for Jesus to come.

Bring out the Advent wreath and place the candles in it.  Mention that purple is our “waiting” colour.  If you have a pink candle in your tradition, mention that it’s a colour of happiness – our waiting is joyful because we know that Jesus is coming into our lives.

Turn off the lights and light the candles.  Explain that we light a new one every week.

Tell the children that the Bible talks about Jesus by saying “the light shines in the darkness and the darkness has not overcome it.”

We are waiting for Jesus, who is the light of the world.  As the world outside gets darker and darker, our Advent wreath gets brighter and brighter, as Jesus gets closer and closer.

Take out the figure of Jesus from the crib scene and place it in the centre of the Advent wreath.

Ask if anyone knows the difference between a LIGHT SOURCE and something that reflects light.  Come up with as many light sources as you can.

Then take out the mirror and hold it up behind the Advent wreath.

What happens to the light?  (Many different answers are okay here - it gets reflected, it bounces back, there is more of it, etc.)

Take out the figures of Mary and Joseph and place them on either side of the Advent wreath.

If Jesus is the light of the world, shining in darkness, Mary and Joseph – and all who follow Jesus – are like mirrors.  We reflect the light of God into the world.  The light comes from God, but we can make it brighter and bigger, we can make it shine into new places, we can see the light reflected in each other.

You can turn the lights back on here, or leave them off as you finish and reflect.

I wonder what ways there are to see the light of God in other people?

Prayer:

Almighty God, give us grace to cast away the works of darkness and put on the armour of light, now in the time of this mortal life in which your son Jesus Christ came to visit us in great humility.  Grant that as our world grows darker this winter, we may feel the light of Christ growing in our hearts, as we get ready to welcome him into the world.  And help us to shine with the light of Christ, reflecting his brightness into the darkness.  Amen.

Tuesday 27 November 2012

Youth Group Prayer Space

Last week, the youth group made their own prayer space.  I had a variety of materials out on a table on the balcony.  Adapting a Journey to Adulthood lesson plan, I started by having them take off their shoes.  We talked about when in our lives we take off our shoes - to bathe, to sleep, to go to dance class, to enter the drama studio at school, to enter Buddhist temples and Muslim mosques, etc.  We talked about what shoes protect us from - they protect us from the dirt and glass of the road, they make us able to kick harder.  Without our shoes we are more vulnerable.  We are exposed.

I reminded them of God's commandment to Moses to remove his shoes because he was on holy ground.

Then we went out onto the balcony and found the materials.  We looked at them for a while and then the young people picked a spot for their prayer space.  I made it clear to them that they didn't have to use all the materials on the table - they could choose which ones they wanted and which they didn't.

We also made a list of stuff we want to add to it.

We will add cushions and a prayer box for private prayers that we don't want to put on our prayer wall.  We will also exchange the plastic tub that currently serves as our altar for a small wooden table or stool.

All the pictures and the fabric are held up with drawing pins pushed into the grooves of the wood, so they're not actually making holes.  I plan to replace the drawing pins holding up the pictures with Blu-Tak, but I don't think Blu-Tak would work to hold up the fabric.

The red fabric will, at their request, be replaced with blue.  "Red is too violent; blue is peaceful," one of them said.

Sign posted at the entrance.  Note the "no shoes please" addendum, which they insisted on.

They made a prayer wall.  The map of the world is at its centre, and there are Post-It notes and a pen to write prayers with.  Believe it or not, the "I heart church" note was done without ANY adult prompting.

Our altar.  There's a scallop shell, lots of candles, an icon that has the Madonna and Child on the left and Christ Pantocrator on the right, and a rubber stamp with a cross on it.  There's an inkpad on the floor so they can stamp themselves  or each other with the cross, and to the left, you can see a dark shape - that's a Bible.

Overview of the whole space.  They included a CD player and some meditative music.  I suspect we'll add to our library as time goes on.

I included a stack of laminated pictures.  The young people decided they each wanted to pick one that was meaningful to them.  The two kids who were absent will pick theirs later. Top left: a picture of the birth of stars, taken by the Hubble telescope. Top right: statue of Mary Magdalene turning to see Jesus in the garden.  Bottom left: Quilt square showing the burning bush.  Bottom right: The New Jerusalem.

Tuesday 9 October 2012

Out of the mouths of babes, part the thousandth.


As we were learning about the Christmas story in the older Sunday School group, I decided to make some Old Testament-New Testament links by using the book The Animals' Christmas, which makes links between the Nativity and Isaiah 11 (the Peaceable Kingdom).  The book concludes with a group of animals, both predators and prey, around the manger (see picture).  I finished reading, and started the wondering questions by saying "I wonder what you can see in this picture."  I hoped they would start naming the animals, leading us to a discussion of the fact that there were animals both eating and eaten around the manger, and thus to a discussion of Jesus as the prince of peace.

This is what happened instead.

"God," one kid said.

"You can't see God," someone else said.  "How do you know he's there?"

"Can you see love, or hope?" I asked.

"Maybe the beam of light is God," the original child responded.

Tuesday 2 October 2012

Safe and happy.

Last Sunday, we did the story of Jesus and the teachers in the temple in the older Sunday School group.

The kids had some wonderful ideas about what Mary, Joseph and Jesus would have been thinking and feeling at different parts of the story, as well as why Jesus would have chosen to go to the Temple instead of somewhere else in Jerusalem.

One child suggested that the Temple was where Jesus felt "safe and happy."  So I grabbed on this and used it as my theme for introducing our activity (which was to use the various art supplies that were out - clay, paint, felt tips, craft sticks, pipe cleaners, etc., to make a picture or model of a place that is special to us.)  I told children to make or draw "a place that makes you feel safe and happy."

Several children made very elaborate paintings of their own houses.  One did a brightly coloured painting of the trampoline in her back garden.  One did her grandmother's house and told me her grandmother had died last year.  I happened to be doing a painting of my late grandfather's house as well, so this gave us a chance to talk about bereavement, which was unexpected but pastorally important.  Two boys, who are brothers, made sculptures of each other (a person can be your safe and happy place, can't they?).  And one boy did a 3-d model of the Garden of Eden.

People, this is why I do this job.

Tuesday 18 September 2012

New term, new post!

Hi there, everyone.  Sorry for the summer break - I was in Thailand for a few weeks, then running a very intense Summer Programme (see pictures of our children making a Narnia film here!), and then getting ready for the new year, which hasn't left much time for blogging.

But I'm back and ready to share this coming year with you.  Lots of things are happening - since it's the inter-regnum, I'm now doing assemblies at Hawkesdown House School every week, instead of every other week, so I'll have some assembly ideas for you all.  We've also started our Youth Group, with a group of seven 11-to-13-year-olds, who are all wonderful and amazing in their own ways.  We're doing the New Testament in our older group and the Old Testament in our younger group, so we'll have some lesson plans and craft ideas, as well as reports on "stuff kids say in Sunday School."  And finally, as the publication date of my book, There is a Season: celebrating the church year with children comes closer, we'll have promotions and contests and proposed cover images for you all to comment on.

But to start with, I wanted to reflect on the two and a half years I've already spent here, and the changes that have happened in that time.  This job revolves around ritual and the building of communal tradition.  Looking over old photos, I began to realise how many new traditions have already become a part of our work and worship with children at St. George's.  Some of these were my own idea, some came from Father Michael or Father Robert, some were compromises worked out over several staff meetings, and some are transplanted traditions from my own childhood, which I am now passing on to the children at St. George's.

But here they are:

1. Blessing "Bread for the Journey," which has been made by children at our Family Days or in Sunday School, at the end of our All-Age Eucharists.

Our congregation is very attached to the use of wafers, rather than real bread, as communion bread.  However, the children bake bread as a part of many of their celebrations together, and I wanted it to be used in our worship together - bread is a symbol of community and the Body of Christ, and so having the children's bread be used in a liturgical setting was important for reinforcing this.  I didn't want "their" bread to just be sent home with them - I wanted it to be part of our life together and a sign of God's presence among us.

So Father Robert suggested that on these occasions we adopt the Orthodox tradition of blessing bread "for the journey," which is handed to the congregation at the end of the service.  This way, the children themselves can take charge of the distribution, and, more importantly, partake of the bread, even if they don't yet receive communion.

2. Holy Week and Easter (3 traditions).  Many of our children are away over the Easter holidays and don't celebrate Easter itself with us.  So on the first Sunday back, after the holidays, we celebrate Easter together by acting out the stories of the Great Vigil of Easter, reading out the sermon of St. John Chrysostom, and, shouting "CHRIST IS RISEN!!" going into the Sunday School room, Hallelujah chorus blasting from the CD player, and eating cake together.  (This liturgy is included in the book, by the way.)

But even before that, we have two traditions during Holy Week itself - on Palm Sunday, the children carry a banner and lead the procession into the church, then go upstairs and, while the adults read the passion, we act it out.

And on Good Friday, we have our children's stations of the cross, which is, for me, one of the most profound spiritual experiences of the year.  I look forward to it not only for what it does for the children, who always amaze me with their insights and their willingness to engage with the story, but for me.

3. Ascension Day Balloon Release.  Okay, this can't be called a tradition yet because we've only done it once, but it was so fabulous we're definitely doing it again.  Before the blessing and dismissal, we sang a hymn and processed out of the church - the sidesmen (who were both women) were waiting by the door with bunches of helium balloons (biodegradeable balloons on biodegradeable ribbons) and handed one to each of us.  We gathered outside, read a prayer, and then, as the priest said, "God has gone up with a shout!" we released our balloons!  I'm thinking that next year we might attach cards with the church's name and address to the ribbon, so people who find the balloons will know where they came from.

4. "People, Look East" Christmas pageant. This is a Nativity play we do as the main service on the third Sunday of Advent.  This will be our third year.  It's a dramatised service of Lessons and Carols, and it IS the main Sunday service, not just a part of it or a separate event.  The children have become familiar with the lessons, helping them to put the birth of Jesus in its theological context.  Doing the same play year after year is a liturgical experience - you hear the first line and think "oh yes, this is like Christmas last year - and the year before that."  The play, and its religious content, becomes as familiar to you as the secular traditions that are repeated year after year, and as you grow in understanding, you see more and more depth to the play.

Traditions are important.  They help us mark the year, providing a shortcut, through the use of sense and memory, for our brain to realise, "oh yeah, it's THAT time!"  They also get easier and easier to do, as the congregation becomes used to how they work.  The first balloon release is nervewracking - you wonder if you have enough, if everyone can hear the prayers, if the hymn is long enough to get everyone out, if people will know when to release the balloons, etc. etc.  The second is easier, as people remember how to do it.  The third is a doddle.  It's important not to forget to try new things, but think carefully about what you might already be doing that could become a beloved tradition.  What are the really important times of the year?  How could you mark them with traditions?

Tuesday 26 June 2012

1 Simple Thing the Church of England Can Do To Be More Welcoming to Children


      Add a section entitled “Children’s names and dates of birth” to the Electoral Roll form.  At present, churches have no way of keeping track of the names, ages, and contact details of the children they work with, unless someone takes the trouble to hunt down all the parents and get the kids’ contact details from them.  When I arrived at St. George's, I had a list of "people on the electoral roll who have children" - but no information about which kids in Sunday School belonged with which names on the list, or how old the kids were.  You can comb through the Baptism registry for some of this information, but not every kid coming to your church was baptised there.

Tuesday 19 June 2012

Final track list for the youth group CDs.

For anyone who's interested, here's the track list.  The CDs will be presented in church on the last day of term this year, as we bless the children for their Sunday School year that's finishing and pray for them over the summer.  We have a special prayer for those moving from Sunday School to Youth Group, and that's when I'll give out the CDs.


1
Dear God 2.0
The Roots
2
River of Dreams
Billy Joel
3
Hallelujah
Leonard Cohen (sung by Rufus Wainwright)
4
Precious Lord
Traditional
5
Sabbath Prayer
From the musical Fiddler on the Roof
6
Let It Be
The Beatles
7
Picture of Jesus
Ben Harper and the Blind Boys of Alabama
8
On the Willows
From the musical Godspell
9
Letter to God
Sheryl Crow
10
Down in Yon Forest
Steleeye Span
11
By the Rivers of Babylon
The Melodians (sung by Tracy Wells)
12
Turn, Turn, Turn
The Byrds
13
Finale
From the musical Les Miserables
14
The Lord of the Dance
Sydney Carter (sung by The Revels)
15
Amazing Grace
Sung by Judy Collins
16
Now is the Cool of the Day
Jean Ritchie

Monday 18 June 2012

Synchronicity!

Yesterday, the younger Sunday School group was doing the story of the Road to Emmaeus.  There was a bread-tasting table, with different kinds of breads on it (naan, breadsticks, gluten-free lemon biscuits, matzoh, granary bread, etc.) and a table where they could make their own "road" by putting peanut butter or Nutella on a row of biscuits and covering them with "pebbles" (big sugar dots) or "dust" (brown sugar strands).  They could then draw the rest of the scene on the paper plate.

But just as the storytelling was finishing - with the words, "Jesus is alive! We knew him in the breaking of the bread!  Alleluia!" the main church had reached the Gospel acclamation, and the whole congregation sang out "Alleluia - Alleluia - Alleluia!" echoing the final word of the story.

You can't plan for this stuff - it has to just happen.