Yes the foundation of faith is very comforting especially in tough times. |
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I want my small children to learn that
God is good. God's creation is good. God loves them. God wants them to love each other and all people. They can pray to God any time. |
I was going to ask “saved from what?" |
| At that age I think it is important that they learn that Jesus is always with them and will help and guide them through life. If they let Him |
From themselves |
or they can find human guides and learn to guides themselves. |
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Catholic parent of a child with significant special needs (intellectual disability + physical disability + significant facial difference).
I want my child to know that they are made in the image of God. |
Oh, great. Now there's a recipe for failure in life. |
Not mutually exclusive. We are meant to connect to others, too. |
I want my children coming away with a sense of personal relationship with God. I wan them to understand that prayer is just like talking with a friend. If they truly have this relationship all the other values come with that. |
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Hi, OP --
Welcome to the wonderful world of Sunday School teaching, where you will make new friends (of all ages) and challenge, renew and and go deeper in your faith! Plus, you're now in the same club as Jimmy Carter, Stephen Colbert and Anne Lamott -- how cool is that?
I've taught Sunday School in an Episcopal church for grades K-8, and, as you've probably guessed, I love it. It's definitely the best church lady gig I've had. From this experience, as well as my perspective as the parent of young people in their teens and early 20s, I'd suggest that you emphasize the following themes: God is love. We're all broken; God knows it and loves us anyway. Be kind and loving toward others in your intentions and actions -- even when they're mean or petty. Everyone is broken; everyone is fighting a difficult battle (yes, I know this is attributed to Plato, but it's a beautiful and succinct statement of Christianity as well). Pray -- I have found that kids have really interesting and original ways of praying, and are surprisingly comfortable talking about prayer. Everyone has doubts -- yes, even your Sunday School teachers, but we still show up on Sundays and try to do our best to grapple with them. God is totally OK with this. This church and congregation are here for you. There are adults here who care about you, and you can have friends here who love you for who you are -- not for where you are on the popularity food chain at school. As Christians we are called to create God's kingdom here on earth -- to love and serve one another and to care for God's creation. Kids love to do service projects -- look for every opportunity you can to work with them in service. Acts will nurture faith. Hope this is helpful, and that you have a great time with your class! |
Several major religions still have eye-for-eye justice. Jesus explicitly and very clearly said that eye-for-eye justice is a bad thing, instead people should turn the other cheek, forgive, not judge, et cetera. |
Actually that's not correct for one, and probably two reasons: First, eye-for-eye justice amounted to a revolution in thought. This came from Judaism. It was saying people are equal. Before, if you were of a lower class, and accidentally injured someone in power, or even insulted them, you could be killed. This brought everyone down, or up, to the same level. The individual in power could not kill in revenge for one who had not killed their kin; the power had to be evenly distributed. Second, there is an alternate explanation for Jesus's "turn the other cheek" comment, given the context of his words at the time. People at that time slapped slaves with the back of their hand, and slapped their equals with the palm of their hand. Turning the other cheek has been interpreted by many scholars as Jesus saying, "don't slap me like a slave; slap me like your equal,"--a challenge. |
| Op here - thank you all very much. |
| To keep an open mind because most people in the world don't believe what I am about to teach you. |