Sheryl Haystead loved teaching kids God's Word. These writings are from her last years of teaching Sunday School and are full of wisdom and compassion for the little ones Jesus loves so dearly--Sheryl loved them, too.
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Sunday, October 25, 2009

It's Okay!

In Sunday School, it's okay

  • if you're new and shy and want to stand behind the table and just watch when we gather for our large group time
  • if you want to put your stickers on the "wrong" side of the TalkTime paper
  • if you want to keep your eyes open when we pray
  • if you ask over and over "When's my grandma coming?"

All of those things and many more are okay because God doesn't require any of us to be perfect before we can receive His love and hear His voice. As we learned in today's Bible story, it even took Eli three times to figure out that the voice Samuel had heard was God speaking!

So it's okay if I didn't get the words of the puppet script just right, and wasn't as attentive as I should have been to parents when they arrived. God's love is for me, just as I am.

What I learned today: I can invite parents to help their children "Come and listen to the words of the Lord" (today's Bible verse) by using the PrayerTime suggestion on the take-home paper. It's just right for bedtime!

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Whatever You Do

What jobs were on your To Do list this weekend?

My list included trim the bushes in the backyard, pay bills, collect candlesticks to help kids picture the story of Samuel helping at the Tabernacle, go grocery shopping, dust the furniture, make a birthday cake, practice telling the Bible story, go for a walk! And now, I'm adding take a nap!

Sometimes my job list just seems like so much never-ending work. But this morning as I played with kids pretending to polish candlesticks, listened to kids tell how they are helpers, and talked about how doing our best work shows our love for God, the lesson's Bible verse came alive for me: "Whatever you do, do your work for the Lord" (Colossians 3:23). I'm ready to face my To Do list with God's perspective, not mine.

And I'll defnitely remember Cameron wearing his decorated dusting sock and dusting EVERYTHING in the room. (Cameron, can you please come to my house?)

Monday, October 12, 2009

Teacher, I Prayed for You

So there I was, sitting on a too-small chair, pretending to eat plastic chicken and to drink invisible coffee. It was a busy morning in the Dramatic Play center at Sunday School!

Suddenly a little girl snuggled up next to me and whispered, “Teacher, I prayed for you.” At first, I wasn’t sure what she meant. But then I remembered that when I was recovering from a broken wrist, her mom had told me that my little friend Lily had prayed for me every night at bedtime. That was a year ago!

The friendship we have built over many cups of invisible coffee has continued to grow. In Sunday School, we play with each other, we listen to each other and we talk together. We do all those things so that teachers and kids can learn about loving God and loving others.

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Winners and Losers

With all the talk about what's fair and what isn't these days, it was an unexpected joy to watch the kids in my Sunday School class have such fun playing a game today. They eagerly and cheerfully took turns hiding and finding pretend manna as they acted out the story of God's people gathering His provision of food. It didn't seem to matter if the "gatherers" watched the "hiders" set out the manna around the classroom. And then the "hiders" were more than happy to point out to the "gatherers" exactly where the manna had been hidden! There was no thought of who was winning or not as this fun game was played.

What I learned today: everyone's a winner when the sheer delight of playing a game trumps competition. And I hope the kids came away knowing that in God's eyes they can be winners every day as they depend on God's provision for them.