Beginner Bible Teacher
Transcription
Beginner Bible Teacher
BEGINNER Bible Teacher March, April, May 2015 SPRING QUARTER Vol. LXXXIV No. 2 Beginner Bible Teacher SPRING QUARTER March, April, May 2015 Teaching Aids ........................................................................................................ 3 The Spirit Comes UNIT I: The Pledge of God’s Presence Mar. 1—The Lamb of God—John 1:29-34......................................................................... 5 Mar. 8—The Promise of a Helper—John 14:15-26 ........................................................... 9 Mar. 15—The Holy Spirit Will Be with You—John 16:4-15................................................. 13 Mar. 22—Receive the Holy Spirit—John 20:19-23 ............................................................. 16 Mar. 29—Welcoming the King—Mark 11:1-11.................................................................... 19 UNIT II: The Community of Beloved Disciples Apr. Apr. Apr. Apr. May 5—Christ Is Alive (Easter)—I Cor. 15:1-11, 20-22 .................................................... 12—Love One Another—I John 3:11-24 ..................................................................... 19—Believe God’s Love—I John 4:13—5:5................................................................. 26—Believe in Jesus Christ Alone—II John 1:1-13 ................................................... 3—Helpers in the Truth—III John 1:1-14................................................................... May May May May 10—Gifts of the Spirit—I Cor. 12:1-11......................................................................... 17—Many Members in One Body—I Cor. 12:14-31 ................................................... 24—Gift of Languages—Acts 2:1-7, 12; I Cor. 14:13-19 ............................................ 31—The Greatest Gift Is Love—I Cor. 13:1-13 ........................................................... 22 25 28 31 34 UNIT III: Woven Together in Love Editor in Chief: Grace M. Todd Writer: Valerie Wilson 37 40 43 46 Edited and published quarterly by THE INCORPORATED TRUSTEES OF THE GOSPEL WORKER SOCIETY UNION GOSPEL PRESS DIVISION Rev. W. B. Musselman, Founder Price: $1.80 per quarter* $7.20 per year* *shipping and handling extra ISBN 978-1-59843-266-4 Lessons based on International Sunday School Lessons; the International Bible Lessons for Christian Teaching, copyright © 2011 by the Committee on the Uniform Series and used with permission. Edited and published quarterly by The Incorporated Trustees of the Gospel Worker Society, Union Gospel Press Division, 2000 Brookpark Road, Cleveland, Ohio 44109-5812. Mailing address: P.O. Box 6059, Cleveland, Ohio 44101-1059. www.union gospelpress.com Dear Beginner Teacher, How often do you think about the ministry of the Holy Spirit in your life? If you are like me, you probably do not think of it as often as you should. Several of this quarter’s lessons are about the Holy Spirit, and you will find you need His help to “guide you into all truth” (John 16:13) as you teach. I have certainly needed His help in writing these lessons! The first five lessons of the quarter make up the unit “The Pledge of God’s Presence.” Two lessons focus on Jesus—first as the Lamb of God and then as the King entering Jerusalem. The other three lessons are about the Holy Spirit. You want your students to grasp the truth that God the Holy Spirit helps us learn and obey God’s Word. Ask God for wisdom as you teach. He has promised to give it (cf. Jas. 1:5)! The second unit is “The Community of Beloved Disciples.” The first lesson deals with the resurrection of Christ (I Cor. 15:1-11, 20-22). The remaining four lessons are taken from John’s epistles. These lessons present truths about the church. Lesson 8 provides a good opportunity to explain God’s plan of salvation. Not all little children are ready to make this decision, so be sensitive to the needs in your class. The final unit, “Woven Together in Love,” continues with church truth—this time from the book of I Corinthians. These lessons contain some figurative language— for example, the “gifts” of the Holy Spirit and the church as a “body.” I have tried to provide concrete examples to aid understanding, but you may want to ask questions following each lesson to make sure your students understand. Do not assume they do. You can also use informal conversation during the handwork time. You may need to correct some wrong thinking. Lesson 7 and lesson 14 are especially practical. You will be able to help your students think of specific ways to show love to other people. It is always a joy to teach God’s Word—even when it is challenging. Pray for yourself as you study and prepare. Pray for your students by name during the week. Pray about all the elements of the class session. “And this is the confidence that we have in him, that, if we ask any thing according to his will, he heareth us” (I John 5:14). May God bless you as you teach the children He has entrusted to you! A fellow teacher, Valerie Wilson 2 TEACHING AIDS Visualize Your Teaching We live in a visual society. No matter where you turn, people are looking at something: their phones, their tablets, their e-readers. Even billboards are no longer static; they often change before you drive by them! Toddlers are being exposed to early-learning programming on tablets, and computer training begins as early as first grade. When these children come to Sunday school, what do they see? Often they see the same thing week after week, even month after month. If we want to hold the attention—and attendance—of today’s children, we need to commit to stepping up our visual efforts. First, consider your classroom itself. An early-childhood classroom could easily have two bulletin boards—one for the current season or holiday and one for the quarter’s Bible lessons. Consider the possibilities for bulletinboard backing. You can purchase backing paper in a wide variety of colors at an educational store, but you can also use brown craft paper, fabric, burlap, or dry wallpaper, depending on what you are putting on the board. Bulletin-board borders are also available at educational stores. A border helps define your board. For holiday or seasonal boards, use pictures from magazines. For biblical themes, use verse visuals, Bible story pictures, and even flannelgraph figures. If you want to put simple captions on your boards, use precut letters from educational stores, or make your own on a paper-cutting machine. To maintain interest, change your bulletin board(s) regularly. That means at least once a quarter. Next, consider how you will visualize the Bible lesson. A well-illustrated children’s Bible storybook will be a valuBeginner Bible Teacher able resource for you. You may also be able to find Bible story pictures and flannelgraph figures to illustrate main characters in the lessons. Some lessons include references to specific objects—for example, a scroll, a rod, a staff, or a crown. Once you obtain these objects, you can use them over and over. A good way to visualize the story that is part of each week’s lesson is with figures from catalogs or advertisements. Cut out the figures, and mount them on poster board to make them more durable. Do not use the same figure for different characters within the same quarter. Your students will remember the first use. Make sure the figures you use are the correct age and appropriately dressed. You can visualize many of the golden texts. While it is true that young children cannot read all the words, they do begin to recognize biblical words as they see them over and over. The suggested shapes are also an aid to memory. Finally, you may want to visualize some of the songs you repeatedly use. Red heart shapes can be used to print words for songs about love. (Most children readily associate a heart with love.) Song words about the Bible can be printed on open-book shapes. Use church shapes for songs about church. When you print verse visuals or song visuals, use capital and lowercase letters. This is the style that children will see in school. While we may never be able to compete with the latest electronic gadgets, we can take steps to appeal to our students’ visual world. Commit to the time it takes to visualize your teaching! 3 4 LESSON 1 MARCH 1, 2015 The Lamb of God LESSON: John 1:29-34 John the Baptist directed his followers to Jesus, the sinless Lamb of God. GOLDEN TEXT—“Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world” (John 1:29). Scripture Lesson Text JOHN 1:29 The next day John seeth Je⬘sus coming unto him, and saith, Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world. 30 This is he of whom I said, After me cometh a man which is preferred before me: for he was before me. 31 And I knew him not: but that he should be made manifest to Is⬘ra-el, therefore am I come baptizing with water. Beginner Bible Teacher 32 And John bare record, saying, I saw the Spir⬘it descending from heaven like a dove, and it abode upon him. 33 And I knew him not: but he that sent me to baptize with water, the same said unto me, Upon whom thou shalt see the Spir⬘it descending, and remaining on him, the same is he which baptizeth with the Ho⬘ly Ghost. 34 And I saw, and bare record that this is the Son of God. 5 THOUGHTS FOR TEACHERS AIM: to understand what John meant when he called Jesus the Lamb of God. The “lamb” theme permeates Scripture. Perhaps God killed a lamb to make the coverings for Adam and Eve (Gen. 3:21). “Abel was a keeper of sheep,” and he “brought of the firstlings of his flock” as his offering to God. “And the Lord had respect unto Abel and to his offering” (4:2-4). Every Israelite family in Egypt had to kill a lamb and put its blood on their door in order to escape the tenth plague. When the Lord went through the land on the designated night, He passed over the homes with the blood of the lamb (Exod. 12:1-13). The Law given at Sinai (recorded in Leviticus) described the various sacrifices God wanted from His chosen people, the Israelites. For all those centuries the people offered their sacrifices in obedience to God. But all that blood served only to cover their sin; it could not take away sin. “For it is not possible that the blood of bulls and of goats should take away sins” (Heb. 10:4). “Not all the blood of beasts / On Jewish altars slain, / Could give the guilty conscience peace, / Or wash away the stain” (Watts, Not All the Blood of Beasts). No wonder John’s announcement was so astounding. “The Lamb of God” had come, and He would take “away the sin of the world” (John 1:29). The Lord Jesus Himself was the fulfillment of Isaiah’s prophecy: “He is brought as a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before her shearers is dumb, so he openeth not his mouth” (Isa. 53:7). In a day yet future, those of us who have trusted the Lamb of God to take away our sins will gather in heaven. We will say with the saints of all ages and 6 all tongues, “Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and honour, and glory, and blessing” (Rev. 5:12). What a day that will be! Your young students will not grasp all of these great truths, but you can teach with an overflowing heart as you introduce them to the Lamb of God. Getting Ready For Telling the Lesson, obtain a children’s Bible storybook with an illustration of John the Baptist preaching or baptizing people. For Showing How to Live, make a cross template, filling an entire 9-by12-inch sheet. Use the template to cut six crosses from red construction paper. Print the verse on the crosses as indicated: (1) “Behold” (2) “the Lamb of God,” (3) “which taketh away” (4) “the sin” (5) “of the world” (6) “(John 1:29).” For Handwork, use the cross template from Showing How to Live to trace a cross on white construction paper for each child. Print this week’s golden text on self-stick labels. You will also need a sheet of red construction paper for each child, glue sticks, and children’s scissors. Beginning Worship Good morning, boys and girls! How happy I am to see each of you in Sunday school today. This morning I want to talk to you about names. All of you call me (insert the name the students use). But that is not the only name I have. (Adapt the following illustrations to your situation.) My children call me “Mom.” Sometimes my husband calls me “honey” or “dear.” I have some nieces and nephews, and they call me “aunt.” Now let us talk about your names. First, let me say each one of your names. (Call each child by his or her first name.) Now I want you to think of some other names your parents or other people