What is a neighbor?
Children's sermon
Object:
a photo of a house or a small doll house
Love does no wrong to a neighbor; therefore, love is the fulfilling of the law. (v. 10)
Good morning, boys and girls! How are you this morning? (allow answers) Today we're going to talk about neighbors. How many of you have neighbors? (allow answers) Tell me about your neighbors. Are there kids your age who live near you? Do your neighbors like to have parties? Do they have pets? (allow answers)
There are lots of different kinds of neighbors, in lots of different kinds of homes. If you live in an apartment building, you have a lot of neighbors who live very close to you. If you live in a suburb or a small town, your neighbors live in houses near yours. If you live in the country, your nearest neighbor might live a few miles away.
So how do you decide who is your neighbor? Are neighbors people who live in the same building? Or are neighbors people who live within a certain distance of each other? If you live in a city, thousands of people could live within a mile of your house. If you live in the country, maybe only one or two people live within a mile of your house. So how do you decide who someone's neighbor is? (allow answers)
The Bible has an idea for deciding who our neighbors are. The Bible's way doesn't have anything to do with distance -- how close people live, what kinds of houses they live in. Can you guess what the Bible might have to say about this? (allow answers) In fact, the Bible says that being someone's neighbor has nothing do with how close you live to them. The Bible says that our neighbors are... everyone!
The Bible tells us that everyone we meet -- whether they live down the hall, next door, or in another country -- is our neighbor. They may not be sharing our building or our neighborhood, but they are sharing the world in which we live.
If everyone is our neighbor, then Jesus' commandment to love our neighbors as ourselves takes on a different meaning. Jesus doesn't want us to just love the people who live close by. He wants us to love everyone: in every neighborhood, in every town, in every country, across the world. That's a lot of neighbors!
This week, think about how many neighbors you have. Try to treat everyone with the same kindness you would treat someone who lived right next door to you. Amen.
Good morning, boys and girls! How are you this morning? (allow answers) Today we're going to talk about neighbors. How many of you have neighbors? (allow answers) Tell me about your neighbors. Are there kids your age who live near you? Do your neighbors like to have parties? Do they have pets? (allow answers)
There are lots of different kinds of neighbors, in lots of different kinds of homes. If you live in an apartment building, you have a lot of neighbors who live very close to you. If you live in a suburb or a small town, your neighbors live in houses near yours. If you live in the country, your nearest neighbor might live a few miles away.
So how do you decide who is your neighbor? Are neighbors people who live in the same building? Or are neighbors people who live within a certain distance of each other? If you live in a city, thousands of people could live within a mile of your house. If you live in the country, maybe only one or two people live within a mile of your house. So how do you decide who someone's neighbor is? (allow answers)
The Bible has an idea for deciding who our neighbors are. The Bible's way doesn't have anything to do with distance -- how close people live, what kinds of houses they live in. Can you guess what the Bible might have to say about this? (allow answers) In fact, the Bible says that being someone's neighbor has nothing do with how close you live to them. The Bible says that our neighbors are... everyone!
The Bible tells us that everyone we meet -- whether they live down the hall, next door, or in another country -- is our neighbor. They may not be sharing our building or our neighborhood, but they are sharing the world in which we live.
If everyone is our neighbor, then Jesus' commandment to love our neighbors as ourselves takes on a different meaning. Jesus doesn't want us to just love the people who live close by. He wants us to love everyone: in every neighborhood, in every town, in every country, across the world. That's a lot of neighbors!
This week, think about how many neighbors you have. Try to treat everyone with the same kindness you would treat someone who lived right next door to you. Amen.

