Login / Signup

Free Access

The Bee-Attitudes

Children's sermon
Object:  A jar of honey. I used a 16-ounce jar, but if you use another size just do the math to change the number of bees that would have been needed to create that much honey. It takes at least 12 bees to produce 1 teaspoon of honey. Sometimes I have given the children a taste of the sweet honey at the end of the message, but that depends on whether any of your children might have allergies to honey or have problems with that much sugar.

* * *

Hello, everyone! (Let them respond.) Who can tell me what I have here in my hand? (Show the honey and let them respond.) It is a jar of honey, isn’t it? (Let them respond.) And who can tell me where honey comes from? (Let them respond.) Honey is made by bees, isn’t it? And that’s why we call them honeybees. Did you know that Jesus talked about honeybees? (Let them respond.) Well, he didn’t really talk about honeybees, but it sure sounded like it. Let me tell you the story so you can see what I mean.

One day when Jesus was just starting to go around to talk to people about God, he was on a hill next to the Sea of Galilee. And when people heard what he was doing they came from all around the country to see him. The story says that many of the people who came to see him were very sick or hurt. Back then, if you were sick or had a problem like that, people thought you were unclean. They thought that if there was something wrong with you, it was because God was punishing you, so they wouldn’t try to help you or even touch you. If you were sick or broken, you were left completely alone. That would be pretty sad, wouldn’t it? (Let them respond.) But when Jesus saw someone who was sick, he not only talked to them and touched them, but he healed them and made them better. As sick people heard about it, they all went to see him and hoped he would help them too.

Well, one day, Jesus looked at the big crowd of people who had come to see him and he told them about honeybees. (Let them respond if they look doubtful.) He said things to them like, “God will bless you if you take care of each other and protect each other.” And, “God will bless you if you don’t hurt anyone or be mean to anyone.” “God will bless you if you treat everyone the same and don’t act like you are better than anyone else.” “God will bless you if you share what you have so no one is hungry or doesn’t have a home;” And, “God will bless you if you do the work God wants you to do to help each other.”

Those are the things Jesus told the people that day on the hillside. Do you know why I said he talked about honeybees? (Let them respond.) It’s because the things that Jesus said he wanted those people to do are the same things that honeybees do. Honeybees all live together in a hive, just like we all live together in the world. When a honeybee is born, its first job is to clean its room. (Let them respond.) The honeybee cleans out the place it was born in to make sure it was ready for the queen to put eggs in it for new bees to be born. And when the honeybees get a few days older, they start helping clean the rest of the hive to make sure it is safe for all of the other bees that live there. They all work together and help each other do the work. Some of the honeybees are a little bigger or more colorful than others, but it doesn’t matter. They all help each other do the work to make sure everyone in the hive is safe.

When the bees get a little older, they start going to the door of the hive to meet the older bees who are going out to find food and water for the hive. And the younger bees meet them at the door and carry the food and water inside and put it where it needs to be to stay clean and safe so everyone has enough to eat. And when the honeybees get older, they go out the door and start flying around to find water and food to bring it back for everyone to have. The honeybees don’t fight with each other, and they don’t want to fight with anyone else either. Did you know that if a honeybee stings someone, the honeybee will die? (Let them respond.) That’s what happens. So, the honeybee does not want to sting anyone. They just want to do what they are supposed to do to take care of everyone in their hive. And if they do those things (show the honey) all of that food and water they bring in will turn into a big bunch of honey that will keep them all alive and safe.

It does kind of sound like what Jesus told those people, doesn’t it? He said that if we do the things we are supposed to do, we will all be blessed with what we need. If we do what we can to take care of each other, to make sure everyone has enough to eat and a safe place to live, to treat everyone the same even if they aren’t just like us, and not to fight with or be angry with anyone but to just do the things God asks us to do, then we will be blessed with everything we need. It sounds just like the honeybees, doesn’t it?

Did you know that we have a special name for the things Jesus said to the people on the hillside that day? (Let them respond.) We call them the Beatitudes because it comes from the old Latin word, “beatitudo,” which means blessing.

But I call them the Beatitudes because those things Jesus said we should do are the attitudes that honeybees have. They are the Bee-attitudes, and every time I see a honeybee it reminds me of what God wants me to do.

Before we go (show the honey) does anyone know how many honeybees it took to make the honey to fill this jar? (Let them respond.) It took over one thousand honeybees to make this much honey. And every one of the honeybees in the hive worked together to help them create it.

Let’s pray together and ask God to remind us that Jesus loves every one of us and wants us to follow him and take care of each other the way God takes care of us.

Prayer
Dear God, thank you for reminding us how much you love us, and for forgiving us when we forget that. And please help us remember that you love all of the people you have created, and help us let the people around us know that we love them just like Jesus loves us. Amen.
UPCOMING WEEKS
In addition to the lectionary resources there are thousands of non-lectionary, scripture based resources...
Baptism of Our Lord
29 – Sermons
120+ – Illustrations / Stories
40 – Children's Sermons / Resources
25 – Worship Resources
27 – Commentary / Exegesis
4 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Epiphany 2 | OT 2
30 – Sermons
120+ – Illustrations / Stories
39 – Children's Sermons / Resources
24 – Worship Resources
30 – Commentary / Exegesis
4 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Epiphany 3 | OT 3
30 – Sermons
120+ – Illustrations / Stories
31 – Children's Sermons / Resources
22 – Worship Resources
25 – Commentary / Exegesis
4 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Plus thousands of non-lectionary, scripture based resources...

New & Featured This Week

The Immediate Word

Nazish Naseem
Dean Feldmeyer
Mary Austin
Thomas Willadsen
Katy Stenta
George Reed
Christopher Keating
For February 15, 2026:

CSSPlus

Bethany Peerbolte
The disciples see Jesus transfigured with Moses and Elijah, and then Jesus tells them to tell no one. I don’t think I would have been up for the task of keeping that secret. I know this because the first time I played The Green Wall a friend told me the secret and I had the hardest time not telling everyone else the answer.
Good morning, boys and girls. Kermit the Frog came along with me this morning. How many of you watch Kermit on public television? (Let them answer.) I've watched a bit of Kermit myself. One of the things he does that I like the best is when he pre tends that he is a television newscaster. When he does this he always reports events as an eyewitness. How many of you like his eyewitness TV reports? (Wait for a show of hands.) Can anyone tell me what it means to be an eyewitness? (Let someone answer.) It means that someone actually saw an event take place. That
SHARING THIS WEEK'S GOSPEL THEME AT SUNDAY SCHOOL AND AT HOME

Materials:
Blue construction paper
White cotton balls
Glue
Alphabet pasta

Directions:

1. Give each of the children a piece of blue construction paper.

2. Tell the children to use the cotton balls to make clouds and glue them onto the paper.

3. Have the children use the pasta letters to spell, "Listen to him," by gluing the letters on the blue construction paper under the cotton ball clouds.
And he was transfigured before them, and his face shone like the sun, and his clothes became dazzling white. (v. 2)

Good morning, boys and girls. Today is the Transfiguration of our Lord and it is one of the special days of the church year. Today we talk about Jesus changing in several ways while three of his disciples -- Peter, James, and John -- watched. How did he change? The Bible says that the face of Jesus became as bright as the sun and his clothes became gleaming white. There were other things that happened that the disciples remembered and

Emphasis Preaching Journal

Mark Ellingsen
Transfiguration is a celebration of God’s glory and how that glory is revealed in Christ when he was transfigured. The festival was observed as early as the sixth century in Eastern Christianity, but did not become a festival in the Catholic Church and its Protestant heirs until just 70 years prior to the Reformation. Sermons in line with this festival will aim to focus the flock on coming to appreciate a bigger, more majestic picture of God and Christ than what they brought to church. Assurance will be provided that this majestic God overcomes all evil.
William H. Shepherd
It was the most boring sermon I ever heard, until it became the most interesting.

At first, I did not understand what had come over my student. Up to this point in the class, I thought she had been getting it. She laughed when I quoted Kierkegaard, "Boredom is the root of all evils." She nodded her head when I said that the dullest presentation would not be redeemed by the soundest content. Her critiques of the other students' sermons were right on target.

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
Call to Worship:
When Jesus was transfigured up on the mountain, God said, "This is my son whom I love, listen to him." In our worship today, let us listen to Jesus.

Invitation to Confession:
Jesus, sometimes I find it difficult to hear your voice.
Lord, have mercy.
Jesus, sometimes I hear so many voices that I don't know which voice is yours.
Christ, have mercy.
Jesus, sometimes I turn away from your voice because I don't want to hear it.
Lord, have mercy.

Reading:

StoryShare

John E. Sumwalt And Jo Perry-sumwalt
Contents
What's Up This Week
A Story to Live By: "Seeing Clearly"
Shining Moments: "Charlie Is Glowing" by Deb Alexander
"The Horse Whisperer" by William Lee Rand
Scrap Pile: "Picture This" by John Sumwalt


What's Up This Week
by John Sumwalt

Argile Smith
Keith Hewitt
Peter Andrew Smith
David O. Bales
Contents
What's Up This Week
"Glenda's Surprise" by Argile Smith
"It Was Just My Imagination" by Keith Hewitt
"The Terrible Dark Day" by Peter Andrew Smith
"In Secret" by David Bales


What's Up This Week

SermonStudio

Mark Wm. Radecke
You go into the movie theatre, find a seat that's suitable, clamber over some poor innocent slumbering in the aisle seat, taking pains not to step on toes or lose your balance. You find a place for your coat, sit down, and get ready to watch the movie. The house lights dim; the speakers crackle as the dust and scratches on the soundtrack are translated into static, and an image appears on the screen. It is not the film you came to see. It is the preview of coming attractions, a brief glimpse of the highlights of a film opening soon.
John N. Brittain
Leslie D. Weatherhead, the great British preacher who served many years at City Temple on Holborn Viaduct in London, told the story of the elderly gentlemen who sat on the benches near the church trading stories. As one might expect, in addition to the good old days, a popular topic of conversation was their aches, pains, and ailments. "I have heard that such-and-such a clinic has a very effective regimen of treatment for this," one fellow would say. "Well, I understand that Dr. So-and-So is very efficacious in dealing with this particular ailment," another would counter.
Stephen M. Crotts
Grandma was well into her eighties when she saw her first basketball game. It was a high school contest in which two of her great-grandsons played. She watched the action with great interest. Afterwards everyone piled into the van to get some ice cream, and a grandson inquired, "Grandmama, what did you think of the game?" "I sure liked it fine," she chirped. And then a little hesitantly she added, "But I think the kids would have had more fun if somebody had made the fellow with the whistle leave the players alone!"
R. Glen Miles
Whenever I read from the book of Exodus, especially a text which includes a visit by Moses to the mountaintop to be in the presence of God, I get an image in my mind of Charlton Heston in the movie version of The Ten Commandments. I'll bet you have that problem too, don't you? It doesn't matter if you were born a decade or two since that movie was first released. It gets a lot of play on television, especially during "holy seasons" of the year like Easter.
Joe E. Pennel, Jr
Remember that fog we had last November? I had to venture into it early that Sunday morning. I left home about 6:00 a.m., long before most people even thought about getting up. The fog was dense. My automobile headlights would not cut it. Visibility was reduced to about ten feet. I turned on my dimmer lights and hoped that on-coming traffic would do the same. As I drove, I felt like my car was pushing through a tunnel of smoke.
John T. Ball
There is an old story about a Sunday school teacher who asked a young girl in her class why her little brother wasn't coming to Sunday school any longer. The girl replied, "Well, to tell the truth, he just can't stand Jesus!" Her brother had more of Jesus than he wanted.
Thom M. Shuman
Call To Worship
One: We gather as the faithful of God,
we come to listen to what God has to say to us.
All: God has invited us to this place;
may our faces reflect our hopes and our hearts.
One: We gather as the faithful of God,
people of the new covenant of hope and promise.
All: We boldly enter into the presence of God,
hoping to be transformed into new people.
One: We gather as the faithful of God,
our fears melting away in the heart of God.
All: We come to share in the freedom of the Spirit,
Amy C. Schifrin
Martha Shonkwiler
Gathering Litany
Divide the congregation into two parts (left and right would be easiest here) with the choir or assisting minister as a third voice besides the pastor (marked "L" in this litany).

L: Looking for the Light.
I: Looking for the Light.
II: Looking for the Light.
P: This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased.
L: Looking for the Light.
I: Looking for the Light.
II: Looking for the Light.
P: Do not be afraid.

Intercessory Prayers

Special Occasion

Wildcard SSL