Tag Archive - Advent

Last Sunday: Darkness and Hope

The second floor children’s wing of the 930 has been transformed into a winter wonderland!  With lights, trees and a whole lot of Christmas cheer, SojournKids is celebrating the advent.  Although the hallway may be a little darker than normal, the lights and trees are creating an attraction environment that kids will hopefully remember for years to come.  Advent should be dark anyways, as Pastor Mike Cosper recently said, “Advent should be dark and tense. The world desperately needs a Savior, and in advent we should feel the weight of that longing.”Each week during the month of Advent each student will be making a Christmas ornament to celebrate an aspects of Jesus’s coming.  Last week we made candle ornaments to teach about the hope that we have in Christ.  The teachers went over 1 Peter 1:3 – “Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, in his great mercy he has given us new birth into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead.”  The next three weeks are doves for peace, horns for joy, and crosses for salvation/love.

Our Advent tree is adapted from this National Ministries Advent project.

Celebrating Advent!

Advent is the season before Christmas when we celebrate Jesus’ coming as a light into our dark world. Here is a great theological explanation of Advent from Sojourn member, Dr. Timothy Paul Jones. SojournKids has put together a number of resources for celebrating the Advent season.  You can link to the Bible lessonmusical liturgy and art projector download the full lesson plan (PDF).

We also hope you enjoy the video documentary of the project (below), which was created by our own Drew Layman.

The Light Has Come from Jared Stewart Kennedy on Vimeo.

Also, check out our Jesse Tree family devotions…

… and these Advent coloring sheets by Sojourn artist Mandy Groce.

The Jesse Tree: An Advent Celebration, Part 5

Jesse Tree Outlines for December 19th-25th
(adapted for our toddlers from the RCA website and The Glorious Coming. The symbols and patterns used below are copyrighted by Reformed Church Press)

December 19th: The Watch Tower

Habakkuk 2:1a (NIV)  I will stand at my watch and station myself on the ramparts; I will look to see what he will say to me and what answer I am to give.

Christmas is less than a week away! Waiting is so hard! These are the days of counting calendars and numbering the shopping days left.  But we know that Christmas will eventually come, and our waiting will be over. We wait for so many things, some of them happy and some of them not so happy. Waiting means we are looking ahead to the future.  Before Jesus was born, the people were waiting for a savior. They had faith that God would keep his promise. They waited a long time; some of them forgot to keep looking for God’s promised son. They no longer cared about God or God’s promise, and when Jesus arrived they didn’t recognize him.  But those who remembered and trusted God recognized Jesus and their waiting was finally over.  We are not only waiting for Christmas.  We are waiting for Jesus to come again as well.  Do we wait anxiously… on the edge of our seats… for Jesus to come again?  Or are we distracted?  Have we forgotten to keep on looking for his coming?  Father, help us to wait patiently and persistently.

December 20th: Zecharaiah and Elizabeth

Luke 1:17 (NIV) And he will go before the Lord in the spirit and power of Elijah, to turn the hearts of the fathers to their children and the disobedient to the wisdom of the righteous-to make ready a people prepared for the Lord.

Zechariah and Elizabeth honored God, and God loved them, but they did not have a child.  One day while Zechariah was working in the temple, an angel brought him a message from God.  The angel told Zechariah that he and Elizabeth were going to have a very special son and his name was going to be John. Zechariah didn’t believe the angel’s good news.  So, God took away Zechariah’s voice as a sign of God’s power. Imagine if you had seen an angel who had told you wonderful, happy news, and you weren’t able to tell anyone what had happened!  Sometimes it is difficult to believe God’s good news.  Zechariah and Elizabeth were happy to know that they would have a son chosen by God to do important work.  They were blessed by God even though the blessing was difficult to believe at first.  Father, prepare our hearts to believe the good news about your Son.

Continue Reading…

The Jesse Tree: An Advent Celebration, Part 4

Jesse Tree Outlines for December 12th-18th
(adapted for our toddlers from the RCA website and The Glorious Coming. The symbols and patterns used below are copyrighted by Reformed Church Press)

December 12th: God Chooses a King

1 Samuel 16:7 (NIV) But the LORD said to Samuel, “Do not consider his appearance or his height, for I have rejected him.  The LORD does not look at the things man looks at.  Man looks at the outward appearance, but the LORD looks at the heart.”

In Bible days, if you wanted to be king, “You did not have to be the richest or the cleverest (although that was always nice).  You had to look like a king, which meant you had to be the tallest and the strongest.  So you could carry the longest swords and biggest armor and defeat everyone.”(1)  Most of the grown-ups who saw David thought he was just a kid who tended the sheep, but while David was still a child God chose him to be a king.  God’s servant Samuel went to Bethlehem (David’s hometown), poured oil on David’s head, and anointed him as the future king of Israel.  God chose David to be king because he was getting his people ready for an even greater King who was coming.  He would not look like much at first.  He would be born in a tumble-down stable in Bethlehem.  Father, help us to remember that you choose the weak things of the world to shame the strong. Help us not to brag about our bigness but only about Jesus.  Amen.

(1) From “The teeny-weeny… true king” in The Jesus Storybook Bible by Sally Lloyd-Jones (Zonderkidz, 2008), page 118.

December 13th: King David

Psalm 23:1 (NIV) The LORD is my shepherd, I shall not be in want.

David was chosen by God to be king when he was a boy, he didn’t become king until he was thirty years old. David was a good king because God guided him and because David listened to God.  Being a king is an important job. Kings must be wise and strong.  They must do what is good for the people of their land. Sometimes David fought wars and made other hard choices, because kings must protect their people like shepherds protect their sheep.  King David knew that God was his good shepherd.  Lord, help us to trust you as our provider and protector.  Watch over us and protect us, holy God.  You are our true king. Continue Reading…

The Jesse Tree: An Advent Celebration, Part 3

Jesse Tree Outlines for December 9th-11th
(adapted for our toddlers from the RCA website and The Glorious Coming. The symbols and patterns used below are copyrighted by Reformed Church Press)

December 9th: The Law

Galatians 3:24 (NIV)  So the law was put in charge to lead us to Christ that we might be justified by faith.

God wants us to love him and to love one another.   God wants us to treat others the way that we want to be treated.  To help us to understand how to care for each other, many years ago God gave Moses ten ways to live and love others perfectly.  These ten rules are called the Ten Commandments, and they are still good rules for us today.  But there is a problem.  No one can keep them.  Israel promised to keep them, but they could not.  We cannot either.  God gave us his rules to show us that we have sinful and selfish hearts, hearts that do not work properly, hearts that do not want to trust and believe that God is good.  God’s rules lead us to make a true confession about ourselves.  We are sinners, and we need the Savior to come and take away our sins.  Come Lord Jesus.  Give us your perfect goodness because we cannot be good without you.

December 10th: Rahab

Joshua 2:9 “I know that the Lord has given this land to you.”

The Israelites were ready to enter the land that God had promised them. They sent two men into the land to find out more about the land. It was very dangerous to go into the land; if the people who ruled the land had found the two Israelites they would have been killed.  Rahab saved the lives of two of God’s people.  She hid the two men in her house and then helped them to escape.  She knew that God had promised the city of Jericho to Joshua and the Israelites, and she believed that God is a powerful God.  Brave Rahab honored God because she believed in God’s power. Even though Rahab was a sinful woman, God protected Rahab and her family.  Rahab hung a red rope from the window in her house so that the Israelites would remember to protect her.  God remembered Rahab’s faith and took care of her for the rest of her life.  Jesus was one of her children’s children.  Father, help us to trust in your strength.  Come and help us to believe.  Let your grace cover our sins.

December 11th: Ruth

Ruth 1:16 (NIV) But Ruth replied, “Don’t urge me to leave you or to turn back from you.  Where you go I will go, and where you stay I will stay.  Your people will be my people and your God my God.”

Ruth and Naomi had lost all the people they loved. Naomi’s two sons–one of them was Ruth’s husband–had died, and Naomi’s husband had died too. Naomi had been living in Ruth’s country, far from her family, and so Naomi decided to return to Bethlehem. Ruth could have stayed in her own country with her own family, but she chose to go to Bethlehem with Naomi.  She chose to follow Naomi’s God, the true God, instead of the pretend gods that her own people worshiped.  Naomi was so sad that she thought that God had forgotten her. In the days of the Bible, most women did not work at a job, so women would go into the fields and take the grain that the farmers left behind. Ruth went into the field to gather grain, and there she met Boaz, a relative of Naomi’s, who took care of them.   Boaz and Ruth married and had a son.  One of their children’s children was King David, and one of his children’s children was Jesus.  God does not forget his children.  He remembers.  He keeps his promises.  Thank you father for your faithfulness.  Help us to remember you.  Help us to believe that you alone are the true God.

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