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Sharpened Words for
Little Ones
Dear
Parents,
The soul of a child is molded one day at a
time, 365 days a year, for twenty years. Although this is a long
commitment for a father and mother to make, it is the way God has
ordained for a small baby to be brought to a place of Christian
maturity. There are many ways we could look at this task. We could
say "Oh no! 7,300 days of duty until I’m done." Or we could say
"Praise God! I have 7,300 precious days to mold the mind, will and
emotions of my child for God." You may be at either end of this
spectrum of parental desire or somewhere in the middle. I must
confess that there are days when I am filled with enthusiasm for the
task of the day, and there are days when I simply do what I do out
of a sense of duty. We call it holy grit at our house. I have been
amazed through the years at how many times I have entered into my
responsibility out of duty only to see the Lord add to my task the
inspiration and enthusiasm.
Sharpened Words is designed to
aid you on those days when you lack ideas from which to
teach. Take these ideas and
build upon them. Add your own personal illustrations and make family
applications. Oh, the beautiful, rewarding exercise of molding
the
soul of a child! The potential of each one can hardly be measured
at the time of the molding. I want to encourage you to keep
on being
faithful to the task. The days will come when you will begin to see
the beautiful character of Christ forming in your son or
your
daughter. May God bless your times of teaching. –The Editor.
God bless you as you teach!
The Word is a Lamp and a Light
You will need to find a lantern for this
lesson. Most people have one after Y2K. The verse you want to use is
found in Psalm 119:105, "Thy word is a lamp unto my feet, and a
light unto my path." This is a nighttime family devotion, as it will
work best in the dark. While sitting in a dark room, take the lit
lantern in hand and explain how a lantern is used for dual purposes.
Not only do we use it to see where we are to place the next step,
but we also use it to shine out ahead.
After you have explained the use of the lantern,
teach on the verse and make the applications in everyday life. Take
the family on a walk through the dark house with the lantern on.
They will love it. It is like camping out to them. You can keep
making illustrations as you are going through the house, using the
lantern to show the next step at times and to show the way out ahead
at times.
Walk in the Light
If we walk in the light that God gives us,
He will give us more light. If we chose to ignore the light that God
gives us, eventually we will experience clouds and darkness. This is
a principle in the word of God. The text you want to use is I John
1:5-9. You want to read this whole portion because it speaks about
light and darkness. Look for a very thin piece of material around
the house, one you can easily see through. Some kind of netting or
gauze would be best. I used some three-inch strips of mosquito
netting. You will need a couple of three-foot lengths to make the
illustration very clear.
You might want to explain how this whole process
of light and darkness works in the soul of man first and give a
couple of stories out of your own journey. Having done this, call
for a volunteer. As the child is standing before the family, discuss
how people reject light by saying no to some new principle in the
Word. Take the netting and wrap it around the eyes of the child one
time. He or she will still be able to see but it will be foggy. This
is what happens to the eyes of our conscience each time we say no.
Go around a few times illustrating ‘no’ each time you cover his
eyes. It will keep getting darker as you go. Soon he will be blind,
seeing nothing.
Getting out of Darkness
This is the second half of the previous
lesson on light. You want to begin where you left off before. Take a
child and wrap his or her eyes till the child cannot see. Review
with them how a person gets into this darkened state of heart. In
this lesson we are going to learn the steps involved in getting
clear. These are very important foundation stones in a child’s life.
They will use them often as they learn to walk in the Spirit. Here
you will emphasize the principles of confession, godly sorrow
(mourning) and repentance. This should be a teaching time on these
three words. After you have taught them briefly, you can start to
unwrap the child’s eyes one turn at a time. Act out the exercise as
you are going. Things will get clearer and easier to see as you go.
Keep on repenting until all the netting is off and your child can
see again. Make a time of rejoicing over it and then sum up the
lesson.
The Parable of the Sower
There are many family devotions hidden in
this parable. I should probably call this a combination home school
project and family teaching. The idea for these lessons came from a
dear brother and friend of mine who lives in Holland.
You will want to enlist your dear wife to help you
prepare for these lessons, as there are a good bit of preparations.
Have your wife obtain four pots for planting seeds. In these pots we
are going to prepare four different kinds of soil. The first two
will need to have hard packed soil in them, and the other two must
have soft, loose soil. You will need some good seeds to use in the
illustrations and also some weed seeds, (these are easy to find). I
recommend a larger pot for one of the pots with loose soil because
we want this one to actually produce fruit.
Pot 1: Hard packed
soil. Place a seed on top of the soil and let it lie.
Pot 2: Hard packed
soil. Dig a short distance into the soil and place a seed in the
hole. Cover it with soil. You will want to water this one so it
will spring up and then die.
Pot 3:
Soft, loose soil. Plant a good seed and many weed seeds together
so they can all grow up together. We know from experience that the
weeds will outgrow the good seed. They will soon choke the good
plant, and it will not produce good fruit.
Pot 4: Soft, loose
soil. Plant a good seed and be prepared to care for the plant. It
must produce fruit; so you cannot neglect it.
Now that you have done this with the family, it is
a good, teachable opportunity to spend a couple of days teaching
from the parable in the Bible. After a few days, you will want to
come back to the pots. By this time the seed that had no root in it
will have sprung up and begun to wither. A few days later, the seed
that was sown among thorns will be ready for illustration. Finally,
the seed that was sown in the good ground will be ready to use. If
you care for this plant well the children will refer to it often,
even as they eat its fruit around the family table.
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