Welcome!
Children's Activity
Object:
Teachers or Parents: The ministry of welcome is often
overlooked or assumed. We just assume that everyone is welcome
when the reality is that our assumption may not be entirely true.
Every congregation tends to welcome different kinds of people.
People of another economic strata or another race or religious
background may not be welcome at your parish.
*Make welcome mats out of place mats and use them the next time you have a church social function.
*Make a giant paper welcome mat out of print sheets or butcher paper or use sheets of paper with each child doing a letter on the mat. Glue or tape together.
*Make a large welcome banner. You could make this using a computer and have the children color and decorate the banner with welcoming phrases or figures.
*Make "welcome" cards to send to unchurched friends or relatives.
*Plan a special "Welcome Sunday." Send invitations and make special efforts so that all guests feel especially welcomed and appreciated.
*Talk about rejection and what that feels like. Ask if there are people who might feel rejected at your church. "What about someone of a different race?" "What if someone who dressed poorly came to church? Would that person feel welcomed?" Explore ways of making "strangers" into "guests" at your church.
*Ask, "What makes a person worthy of welcome?" Get to the point that since all people are created in God's image and Jesus says that whoever welcomes anyone welcomes that person as if she or he were Christ himself or God, therefore each person is worthy simply by virtue of her or his humanity.
*Grace ties in with being welcomed despite our human restrictions of unworthiness. Grace is that "free gift" mentioned in today's second lesson children's sermon. Unearned, unmerited grace is what makes all people welcome in God's eyes. Explore that amazing grace with the children.
*Raise funds for a special welcome mat for use in your church or Sunday school.
*Make welcome mats out of place mats and use them the next time you have a church social function.
*Make a giant paper welcome mat out of print sheets or butcher paper or use sheets of paper with each child doing a letter on the mat. Glue or tape together.
*Make a large welcome banner. You could make this using a computer and have the children color and decorate the banner with welcoming phrases or figures.
*Make "welcome" cards to send to unchurched friends or relatives.
*Plan a special "Welcome Sunday." Send invitations and make special efforts so that all guests feel especially welcomed and appreciated.
*Talk about rejection and what that feels like. Ask if there are people who might feel rejected at your church. "What about someone of a different race?" "What if someone who dressed poorly came to church? Would that person feel welcomed?" Explore ways of making "strangers" into "guests" at your church.
*Ask, "What makes a person worthy of welcome?" Get to the point that since all people are created in God's image and Jesus says that whoever welcomes anyone welcomes that person as if she or he were Christ himself or God, therefore each person is worthy simply by virtue of her or his humanity.
*Grace ties in with being welcomed despite our human restrictions of unworthiness. Grace is that "free gift" mentioned in today's second lesson children's sermon. Unearned, unmerited grace is what makes all people welcome in God's eyes. Explore that amazing grace with the children.
*Raise funds for a special welcome mat for use in your church or Sunday school.
