PCPC KIDS!








and taking it in


his arms,


he said to them...




​

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Children and Families of Palma Ceia Presbyterian
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Seventeenth Sunday after Pentecost- Week of Sept 19, 2021​ - Proper 20

Lifting up the Vulnerable - Listen to Followers of the Way
Rev. Kenny Hubbell speaks to the text this week in Followers of the Way in such a true and faithful way regarding welcoming children with these words, "That tension between what is comfortable and easy vs. what is right is still the call to the church now. Allowing the space to be more uncomfortable and to be ok with some distraction to realize the challenge in front of us is worth working at. Children come with a host of challenges and we embrace them all the same."

Praying

Begin your devotion time by praying this prayer: Holy God, through your Son, Jesus, we learn how to love you and love other people. Open our ears to hear the message of love, and open our hearts to share it with others. Amen.
​

Reflect on the Way of Love together: This week’s practice on the Way of Love is LEARN. In this passage from Mark, the disciples learn an important lesson about loving and serving others. Who has taught you how to serve other people? What have you learned from them?
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preparing


Prepare to read aloud Mark 9:30-37.  Provide some context for the text.  Note that when Jesus was alive, children were not viewed the same as they are now.  Children were particularly helpless because they had little protection.  They could not contribute to households, so they were seen as a burden and extra mouths to feed.  Children were not only powerless, they also didn’t have value until they reached an age where they could be productive for their families.  Encourage the children you move through this lesson with to hold these ideas in mind as they hear the Scripture reading.

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Reading

Mark 9:30-37
9:30 They went on from there and passed through Galilee. He did not want anyone to know it;

9:31 for he was teaching his disciples, saying to them, "The Son of Man is to be betrayed into human hands, and they will kill him, and three days after being killed, he will rise again."

9:32 But they did not understand what he was saying and were afraid to ask him.

9:33 Then they came to Capernaum; and when he was in the house he asked them, "What were you arguing about on the way?"

9:34 But they were silent, for on the way they had argued with one another who was the greatest.

9:35 He sat down, called the twelve, and said to them, "Whoever wants to be first must be last of all and servant of all."

9:36 Then he took a little child and put it among them; and taking it in his arms, he said to them,

9:37 "Whoever welcomes one such child in my name welcomes me, and whoever welcomes me welcomes not me but the one who sent me."
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​Reflecting and Responding

Ask the children to recount how the passage begins.  It starts with the disciples arguing about who is the greatest.  They try to hide their disagreement from Jesus, but he knows what they have been saying. Jesus then offers his own view of who is “the greatest.”  Share that Jesus tells them, “Whoever wants to be first must be the last of all and the servant of all.” Have the children wonder about this statement.  What does Jesus mean?  What does it mean to be “last” in society?  Note that Jesus tells the disciples that those who are considered outcasts or least important by the world are the “first,” or those who will lead the way to God.  They will understand what it means to be a disciple.  Jesus lifts up a child as an example.  Have the children share what Jesus tells the disciples about children. Then ask them to wonder what Jesus means when he says “whoever welcomes one such child in my name welcomes me.”   Share that Jesus is telling the disciples that children clearly reflect Christ to those who welcome them into a life of faith.  Children were not as important as adults and were very vulnerable.  By welcoming them, we welcome Jesus.
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Continue the discussion by encouraging your child to think about how Jesus might want the church to treat children today.  Share that Jesus’ words were spoken to the particular disciples he engaged in ministry with during his life on earth.  However, they are also words that all future disciples, including us, listen to and try to follow.  Ask the children to think about how the church might come to know Jesus better by involving children.  What do children offer?  How are children like Jesus?  What can adults learn from children?


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Connecting


Help your children connect the Scripture reading to their own lives through one or more of these activities:
  • Together with the children, create a visual representation of the ideas they have discussed.  Below are two activity options.  Select the one that best fits the children you are working with.  If you’re doing this lesson at home, share your children’s art with the congregation by taking a picture and emailing or texting it to some of your fellow church members, especially those in leadership positions.  If you’re doing this lesson with a group of children at your church, display their work so that other worshippers can see it.  By sharing their art, you’ll be demonstrating to the adults they worship with the ways that our youngest disciples enrich the church.
  • Paper people activity (simple): Gather the materials you’ll need for the activity: a large piece of blank paper (preferably chart paper size), printouts of these paper people, scissors, glue, and crayons or markers.  Begin by asking each child to draw a church on the large piece of paper.  Then give them a sheet of paper people.  Ask them to color each paper person so that it looks like a child involved in the life of your church.  Be sure they include themselves.  After coloring, ask them to write a word or two that the person represents on the corresponding paper person.  Have each child cut out the paper people and glue them on the paper church.  Talk about how each of these people helps make the church what it is.
  • Origami people activity (intermediate): Gather the materials you’ll need for the activity: a large piece of blank paper (preferably chart paper size), several sheets of origami paper, string, scissors, glue, and crayons or markers.  Begin by asking each child to draw a church on the large piece of paper.  Then hand each child several sheets of origami paper. Show them this video demonstrating how to make origami people. Before making each origami person, ask them to write the name of a child in the life of the church on that sheet of paper.  Be sure they include themselves.  When they fold the paper, the name will not be visible.  After completing each person, have them write a word or two on that figure that represents the corresponding person.  When they have finished making their origami people, join them together using string.  Affix the string of people on to the paper church.   Talk about how each of these people helps make the church what it is.
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Praying

Close your time together by praying for one another, your neighbor, community and the world.

​Sources: 

REBECCA DAVIS is the associate professor of Christian education at Union Presbyterian Seminary in Charlotte, North Carolina. A teaching elder and certified educator, she served congregations for over 20 years before moving into academic teaching. In addition to teaching and mentoring students, her passion is child advocacy and ministry.

​John Passage 
JOELLE BRUMMIT-YALE is the director of children’s and youth ministries at Chapel in the Pines Presbyterian in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.  When not at the church, she can usually be found at home with her son and husband caring for their many animals and developing their family homestead.
Q&A link on what a Prayground is and discussion surrounding it 


What else is happening?



  • Home Page
    • Meet Our Staff
    • Sunday Ministries >
      • Nursery
      • Godly Play
      • PRAYground
      • Baptism
      • Faith and Fellowship Hour
      • Justice Seekers
      • Year of the Bible
    • Weekday Ministries >
      • Children's Choirs
      • Courtyard Fun
      • Music and Movement
      • Play Groups
      • Wednesday Night Dinner
    • Summer >
      • Vacation Bible School
      • Cedarkirk Day Camp
    • Seasonal >
      • Back to Basics Play/Service Day
      • Rise Against Hunger
      • Parents' Night Out
      • Living Nativity
      • Cedarkirk Retreat
      • Open Playground
      • Family Fun Night
      • Family Movie Night
      • Jolley Trolley
      • Post Storm Popsicles on the Playground
    • Milestone Ministries >
      • Remember Your Baptism Anniversary - Splash Day
      • Touch the Water
      • Welcome to Worship and Taste the Bread
      • Third Grade Bible
      • Human Sexuality
    • Partner Organizations >
      • Cedarkirk Camp and Conference Center
      • Montreat Conference Center
  • Vacation Bible School
  • What's Happening
  • Summer Opportunities
    • Cedarkirk Traveling Day Camp
  • Milestones
  • Liturgical Calendar
    • Lent >
      • Ash Wednesday
  • Anti-Bias
    • Resources for Parents
    • Resources for Children
    • Black History Month
  • Photo Gallery