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Choose from the following Children's Sermons:
-
Holy Week in an Eggshell, Holy Week
by Ponderin' Pastor in IL (see below)
-
Palms and Ashes, Palm Sunday
by Chuck in DC (see below)
-
Following Jesus Every Day, Palm Sunday
by Rev. Frank Schaefer (see below)
-
Jesus and the Mule, Mark 11:1-11, Palm Sunday
by Rev. Frank Schaefer (see below)
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Holy Week in an Eggshell
Holy Week
Ponderin' Pastor in IL
The Firelight curriculum through Augsburg Fortress has a great idea for
children called "Holy Week in an Eggshell":
Fill plastic eggs with the items listed below and number them in order.
Then tell the story as you pull the items out in order of the numbers to help
tell the story of Holy Week.
Be sure you have enough filled plastic eggs to send one home with each
child so they can tell the story to someone else this week.
1. A piece snipped from a palm branch for Jesus' entrance into Jerusalem.
2. A round oyster cracker for the bread shared on Maundy Thursday's Last
Supper. 3. A nickel or penny wrapped in silver foil for Judas' betrayal of
Jesus for 30 pieces of silver. 4. A masonry nail for Good Friday crucifixion.
5. Two small pieces of wood glued together (matchsticks with the ends snipped
off) to symbolize the cross. 6. A clove to symbolize the spices used to
prepare Jesus' body for burial. 7. A smooth, round stone to symbolize the
gravestone that was rolled away. 8. A small piece of white silky fabric to
symbolize the shroud left in the tomb. 9. A butterfly sticker or wrapped
chocolate Easter egg as symbols of resurrection bringing new life.
Palms and Ashes
based on Palm Sunday
by Chuck in DC
I am planning to bring in a fresh palm branch and a left-over one from last
year. I will then tell the story of how the people praised the Lord with
"Hosannas" and waving palm branches (I demonstrate waving with the fresh palm
branch).
Then I'll show them last year's dried-up palm branch and ask them how it
looks different from the fresh one. I'll ask them if anyone knows what we do
with the old palm branches, and then proceed to tell them that we burn them
and use the ashes to put on our foreheads on Ash Wednesday. (I may even burn a
little piece in a container for emphasis).
Then I tell them that we do that because just as the people cried "Hosanna"
and waved palms in one week, and cried "crucify" a week later, we praise God
on Sundays but often forget about God during the week, and we do sinful
things. So the ashes of the palms reminds us that we need God's forgiveness
over and over again.
Following
Jesus Every Day
a children's sermon for Palm Sunday
by Rev. Frank Schaefer
Props: a fresh palm branch and a left-over branch from last year (if you
don't have a leftover one, you may want to make one: take a fresh one and put
it in an oven until it is brownish and dried up).
Good morning boys and girls. And what a great morning it is. Palm Sunday
is surely a great feast and a celebration in the church of Christ.. You know,
on that first Palm Sunday people welcomed and praised Jesus just as we are
this morning. Only that they actually saw Jesus riding in on a donkey. We
kind of have to imagine that.
Wouldn't it be something if Jesus would ride in on a donkey right down the
center isle of our sanctuary? That'd be great! We could wave our palm
branches at Jesus, and shout: "Hosanna!" which is Hebrew for "Praise the
Lord!" and we could put our coats out for Jesus, like the people did on that
first Palm Sunday.
Today I brought two things with me (show both palm branches). What are
they? That's right, I have two palm branches. Are they exactly alike?
No? What's the difference? You're right, one is a fresh palm branch and the
other one is old and dried up. That's because this one (wave the fresh palm
branch) is a fresh one and this one (wave the old palm branch) is one that we
used a year ago.
And do you know why I brought a fresh palm branch and an old one? Because
we want to remember that the people cried "Hosanna" and waved palms on Palm
Sunday and . . . only one week later, the same people turned away from Jesus
and they pretended that they didn't know him when he was hung on a cross to
die.
And we want to remember that we, too, turn away from Jesus at times. You
know, it is easy to follow Jesus on Sundays when we go to Sunday school and
church, but what about during the week? During the week we often forget
Jesus, and sometimes we do things that are not Christian-like.
So the fresh palm branch can remind us that we should praise Jesus and the
old palm branch can remind us that we should not be like the people who turned
away from Jesus. We need to follow Jesus not only on Sundays but . . . all
the time. And to do that we need God's help. Let's pray that God will help us
follow Jesus all the time.
Prayer: "Dear God, we thank you for Palm Sunday. We thank you for giving
us Jesus, who loves us so much. Help us to follow Jesus every day of our
lives, and not just on Sundays. Thank you, Lord. Amen.
Jesus
and the Mule
a children's sermon based on Mark 11:1-11
by Rev. Frank Schaefer
props: palm branches; a youth volunteer to
be the donkey
Get one of the congregation's youth to act the part of a
stubborn donkey. Ask the kids for a volunteer to act the part of Jesus riding
triumphantly into Jerusalem (the youth is supposed to carry the kid volunteer
on all fours on his/her back). you may also ask for a kid volunteer to play
the part of the young colt. Hand out palm branches to the other children to
wave at "Jesus" as he rides in.
Retell the story of the triumphant entry in your own words and
invite the kids to act out this story.
Instruct the youth to act like a stubborn donkey (act like
this is a spontaneous idea on the part of the youth--you may want to repeat in
a somewhat raised, articulate voice: "And Jesus rode into Jerusalem on the
donkey...")
Following the played out drama, praise the children and thank
them and the youth volunteer. Conclude the children's time by emphasizing how
important it was for the donkeys to be cooperative. Normally, donkeys that
have never been ridden may buckle. But not Jesus' donkeys. These must have
been special donkeys that helped and obeyed the Lord Jesus.