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Monday, April 18, 2011
What about Easter?

Monday, April 4, 2011
Three Web Sites to Check Out
- Growing in Christ http://sites/cph.org/sundayschool/ This Web site was created when the Growing in Christ Sunday School materials were released by in 2006. It is updated regularly in a couple of areas. Under "Podcasts and Downloads," any corrections that need to be made to material already distributed for use are posted here. This also one route to the "Seeds of Faith" podcasts, a weekly discussion of the Bible accounts in the Growing in Christ curriculum (click on "Learn More" under "Podcasts"). The next lesson's discussion should come up first; pervious lessons are archived. Once you have started the player, you can click on the progress bar in your player to skip ahead or go back in the recording. Many teacher find these podcasts invaluable to their teaching.
- SundaySchoolSpot.com http://sundayschoolspot.com/ A great place for "Growing in Christ" product information and teaching resources. Under "Teacher Spot," you can access basic information about the age-level you are teaching, view some tips, and find some additional resources. You can also access the "Seedlings" podcasts through this site.
- Bible Quizzes Onlive http://biblequizzesonline.com/ My wife created this Web site last year to promote Bible literacy and accountable reading practice. Quizzes are being created for every Bible account in the Growing in Christ curriculum, as well as for One Hundred Bible Stories, the popular Bible story book from CPH. The quizzes are written to follow both the NIV and ESV translations. Students can read or listen to the Bible account (ESV for Growing in Christ, NIV for One Hundred Bible Stories) and then take a ten-question quiz while receiving feedback on their answers. It's a cool site! And it's free!
What Web sites have you found helpful? What kind of resources do you find yourself looking for regularly online?
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Integrating Sunday School and Worship
A while back I offered some criteria for excellent Sunday School materials (see it here). Included was the suggestion that such material "integrate with the congregation's worship." What does that mean?
I believe that children of any age have a place not only in Sunday School and Christian education, but also in the Divine Service. The congregation needs to understand that worship is for children as well as adults, and children should feel welcome and included in the congregation's worship. While it's true that a restless child may occasionally need to be taken out of the sanctuary briefly during worship, their complete absence troubles me. It makes me wonder at what age they are then expected to return?
An excellent Sunday School curriculum will support and equip families to worship together. It will teach children about the elements of the Divine Service, teach and use the hymns that the congregation sings, and connect to the lessons and sermons that the children will hear in the service. It will cause children to say in worship, "We sang/heard/learned about that in Sunday School!" And it will cause children in Sunday School to say, "We sang/heard/learned about that in church!"
CPH's Growing in Christ Sunday School material have several features that promote this kind of synergy. More than two-thirds of the Bible accounts taught in Sunday School are drawn from the Gospel readings or liturgical occasions used by congregations following the three-year lectionary. Since GiC is a unified curriculum, that means that the family will share many connections in worship and Sunday School that can inform their discussion and devotion throughout the week. Elements of the liturgy are often taught in the curriculum, including many "Liturgy Connections" that are introduced in each quarter. Hymns are suggested for each lesson that come from the standard repertoire of a congregation.
How does your congregation encourage (or hinder) the participation of children in worship?
How does your Sunday School support and integrate with the congregation's worship?
Monday, March 28, 2011
Bible Translations

Monday, March 7, 2011
Site Rotation or Workshop Rotation?

Monday, February 28, 2011
Worship or Christian Education?
In too many, however, the decision has been made to schedule a worship service concurrent with Sunday School. Often this is seen as a stewardship decision: How can we justify a multi-million-dollar building project to handle the growing number of worshipers when we can increase our worship capacity by simply adding another worship service? I have attended and served in congregations that took this route. I confess to my shame that even advocated such a decision in my youth. I would no longer do so.
But, let me know avoid the question: which is more important? Without a doubt, worship get my vote. In the Divine Service, God provides His Word and Sacraments and, with them, the precious gifts of forgiveness, life, and salvation. The Divine Service fulfills the commands of God in a way that Sunday School cannot.
Yet I would insist that Christian education, adult Bible study and Sunday School, runs a close second, so nearly matching worship in importance that I would urge parents to do all they can to provide for both experiences on Sunday morning for their children, and for themselves.
But won't young children get more out of an age-appropriate Sunday School class than from a worship service that seems designed primarily for adults? While this may seem true from a human perspective, how can it be true? God promises that His Word will accomplish what He desires, even in the ears, eyes, and hearts of children. At what age will this not be true? The worship service is a rich tapestry of Word that touches us through all our senses---music, speech, drama, symbols and images, and even aromas---with opportunities to impress the Gospel on even the youngest of children.
So, let's not force our families to make a choice. Let's provide excellent worship opportunities that share God's Word with those of all ages. And let's encourage attendance in Sunday School or Bible class for children, youth, and adults.
What's is your Sunday morning schedule for worship and education? How happy are you with that schedule?
In your opinion, does concurrent worship and education opportunities have a positive or negative impact on Sunday School?
Monday, January 24, 2011
A Unified Curriculum
A unified curriculum is designed to teach the same topics to all students in a given lesson. In Growing in Christ, the same Bible text is presented in all levels of the curriculum each Sunday. Not all curricula are unified. Even CPH Sunday School material has not always been unified, at least not on all levels. (Mission: Life is probably the most obvious example; published in the 1970s, this curriculum provided topical units that were completely different for each level of the curriculum. The Life in Christ and New Life in Christ curricula, which followed Mission: Life, were largely unified, but had a few weeks when especially the younger grades did not tackle the same texts as the upper grades.)
What are the pros and cons of a unified curriculum?
The chief benefit, the one that convinced the Growing in Christ team to prepare a completely unified curriculum, is that the entire family can, if the congregation chooses, study the exact same Bible text each week, children of all ages, junior high and high school students, and even adults. This provide the natural opportunity for the family to continue the discussion and learning in the home. The normal question, asked by so many parents each week, "What did you study in Sunday School today?" becomes a springboard, as each family member can enter such a conversation informed, armed with an understanding of the text appropriate to his or her age level.
This can also benefit the family's participation in worship during the seasons (generally December through May) when the Growing in Christ curriculum often mirrors the Gospel lesson read and perhaps preached on in the worship service.
There is some small potential that a few Bible accounts may stretch the developmental ability of a family's youngest children. I can honestly say, though, that our editors at the early childhood and lower grades levels of Growing in Christ have done a masterful job of addressing even difficult biblical subjects in ways that young children can comprehend.
Given that God's love for us, shown best in the gift of His Son as a sacrifice for our sin, is at the heart of every Sunday School lesson we create, it is not surprising that even the youngest of children can come away having gotten the main point.
Is the curriculum you use unified?
What do you see as the challenges and benefits of this approach?
What advice do you have for CPH as we prepare new and revised curriculum for Fall 2012 and beyond?