Login / Signup

Free Access

Take Off the Gloves!

Children's sermon
Object: A pair of medical gloves for each child. It is best to avoid latex gloves in case anyone has an allergy to that material.

* * *

Hello, everyone! (Let them respond.) This morning I want to talk about gloves. Sometimes we wear gloves to help keep our hands warm, don’t we? (Let them respond.) And sometimes we wear gloves to protect our hands from things that are too hot or cold, don’t we? (Let them respond.)

I have something for each of you this morning. Let’s all put these on. (Hand out the gloves and help anyone who might need it.) Have you ever worn gloves like this before? (Let them respond.) Does anyone know when we might want to wear this kind of glove? (Let them respond.) We usually wear these gloves to protect our skin from touching things that we don’t want to touch, don’t we? (Let them respond.) Sometimes we wear them to protect us from germs. Sometimes we wear them to protect our hands from chemicals. They protect us from things we aren’t supposed to touch, things that are untouchable, don’t they? (Let them respond.)

Today’s story is about things that are untouchable, but not things like germs and chemicals. It is a story about three people that no one was ever supposed to touch. Not because of chemicals or germs, but just because of who these people were. However, since they didn’t have gloves like these back then, they had other rules for how to treat untouchable people. Let’s see what they did with these three untouchables.

The first was a man who was a religious leader from the town. The religious leaders did not like Jesus and did everything they could do to stop Jesus and his disciples from helping people. They told everyone that Jesus wasn’t with God but was just a fake and was trying to trick them into doing bad things.

One day, this man came to Jesus and said his daughter was very sick, and he asked Jesus to please come to his house to help his daughter. Jesus’ friends said, “No way!” and believed that Jesus should not even talk to the man, let alone go to his house and help his daughter. They thought the man was an enemy because he was one of the religious leaders that had been fighting against them. They didn’t want to help him. They believed he was untouchable.

While they were talking, they walked passed a woman sitting on the ground who reached out and touched the bottom of Jesus’ robe. Jesus stopped and looked at her. He saw that she was very sick and had been bleeding for twelve years. That’s a long time to be sick, isn’t it? (Let them respond.) The religious leaders said the woman was unclean and that no one should ever touch her. They believed that if anyone was sick it was because God was punishing them because they had done something bad. So, they said that no one should ever touch her, and if she ever touched anyone else, that made the other person unclean, too. The laws said that if she did ever touch anyone, she should be taken out of the city and killed. They believed she was untouchable.

When they got to the man’s house, they saw a bunch of people standing outside in the yard and in the street. No one would go inside to see the man’s daughter or help her because she was sick and that made her unclean. If anyone went in the house or touched her, that made them unclean, too. The little girl was untouchable.

So, who knows what did Jesus do about those three, untouchable people? (Let them respond.)

When the untouchable religious leader asked Jesus to please come to his house and help his daughter, Jesus didn’t tell him to go away and leave them alone. Instead, he started following the man to his house. (Take off one of your gloves.)

When the untouchable sick woman touched Jesus, he didn’t have her dragged out of the city. Instead, he looked at her and said, “Your faith has healed you.” And she was healed. (Take off your other glove.)

When Jesus got to the man’s house. All of the people standing outside said that the little girl had died. But Jesus didn’t stand there with them and say how sorry he was. Instead, he went inside the house and came back out walking with the little girl holding his hand. (Toss your gloves on the floor.)

Jesus touched the untouchable.

Let me ask you, who are the untouchable people that you see? (Let them respond.) Maybe they aren’t sick, but they are just different than some other people. Most people won’t talk with them, sit with them, touch them, or even smile at them. They just make fun of them or treat them badly because they are different. They think those people are untouchable. Do you know any untouchable people like that? (Let them respond.)

Jesus did not treat anyone like they were “untouchable” because they were different, and he does not want us to do that either. Let’s take our gloves off now. (Have the children take off their gloves and toss them on the floor.) I hope you will remember that Jesus wants us all to take off our gloves and not treat anyone like they are untouchable.

Let’s pray 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...
Proper 10 | OT 15 | Pentecost 5
30 – Sermons
160+ – Illustrations / Stories
30 – Children's Sermons / Resources
29 – Worship Resources
34 – Commentary / Exegesis
4 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Proper 11 | OT 16 | Pentecost 6
29 – Sermons
160+ – Illustrations / Stories
27 – Children's Sermons / Resources
20 – Worship Resources
29 – Commentary / Exegesis
4 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Proper 12 | OT 17 | Pentecost 7
34 – Sermons
160+ – Illustrations / Stories
32 – Children's Sermons / Resources
26 – Worship Resources
31 – Commentary / Exegesis
4 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Plus thousands of non-lectionary, scripture based resources...

New & Featured This Week

CSSPlus

John Jamison
Object: This is a role play activity.

Note: You will need to select six children to play roles in this activity. If you have a smaller group, you might ask some older youth or even adults to play the parts of the two attackers and the man being attacked. I will give suggestions for how they can play their roles, but feel free to help your children make the story as fun and memorable as you can. I have used boys and girls in the various roles, but you can change those however you want to change them.

* * *

The Immediate Word

Dean Feldmeyer
Katy Stenta
Thomas Willadsen
Christopher Keating
George Reed
Mary Austin
Nazish Naseem
For July 13, 2025:
  • Samaritans Among Us by Dean Feldmeyer based on Acts 2:1-21. Samaritans were despised and dismissed by the original audience who first heard Jesus tell this parable. Who are the Samaritans in our lives and how does this parable apply today?
  • Second Thoughts: The Helpers by Katy Stenta based on Amos 7:7-17.

StoryShare

Frank Ramirez
I say, “You are gods,
    children of the Most High, all of you;
nevertheless, you shall die like mortals
    and fall like any prince….”
(vv. 6-7)

There have been any number of brother-sister acts that achieved a measure of fame. Take the Carpenters, famed for their singing, musicianship, and songwriting skills. Also worthy of mention are John and Joan Cusack who have acted together in over sixteen films.

Emphasis Preaching Journal

Wayne Brouwer
An ancient legend tells of a remote mountain village where people used to send their senior citizens out into the woods to die. The villagers had an eye to the future; they felt that those beyond a certain age would only slow down progress or use up valuable resources to no economically profitable end. Those who reached a certain age weren’t “put out to pasture” or “put out of their misery”; they were simply put out of other people’s way.
Mark Ellingsen
Bill Thomas
Frank Ramirez
Amos 7:7-17 and Psalm 82
The tallest building in the world is the Burj Khalifa in Dubai. It is more than 2,700 feet high—over half a mile tall. It has 160 floors and is twice as tall as the Empire State Building in New York City. It is home to the world’s fastest elevator which reaches speeds of forty miles an hour. The Burj Khalifa also hosts the world’s highest outdoor observation deck (on the 124th floor) and the world’s highest swimming pool (on the 76th floor).

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
Mabel hummed a familiar hymn tune as she made her way to church. She always enjoyed her Sunday morning walk. It was one of the few times she felt safe to walk alone through the inner city, for she knew nobody would be up at 7.45 in the morning. Today was a particularly beautiful morning, with blue sky, warm sunshine, and the song of a few intrepid blackbirds who still inhabited the city.

SermonStudio

James Evans
Often, a distinction is made between the pastoral or priestly work of the church and the prophetic work. Pastoral care has to do with the care of souls, the offering of comfort in times of loss. The priestly character of pastoral work seeks to mediate the presence of God to those who are hurting.

Schuyler Rhodes
Trusting is never easy. Even in the best of relationships, people step into trust slowly. There is wariness -- questioning -- worry. What happens if trust is betrayed? What if this doesn't work? Sometimes it's like a dance. We step in and out of trust, moving to the rhythms of fear. For many, the routine is achingly familiar. Indeed, it's not easy to trust.
John Jamison
It was back in the days when the railroad was the most common mode of transportation. There were automobiles, and some airplanes, but the steam locomotive was the way most folks traveled and the way that most of the goods were distributed around the country. After dinner, people sat in the drawing room and listened to the radio programs, fading in and out from some faraway location, over the magical broadcasting signal.
Robert Leslie Holmes
Not many tourists to Washington, D.C., look for the Federal Bureau of Standards offices. It's the Capitol and the White House, the Supreme Court Building or the Smithsonian most of us want to see when we go there. Yet, at the Bureau of Standards offices something very important is stored, something that impacts your life and mine every single day. Have you ever bought the materials for a new project? When you did, most likely you purchased so many inches or feet or yards. Or, you stopped to buy gasoline for your car and purchased it at a certain price per gallon.
David O. Bales
I have the two best jobs in the world. I teach social studies at Leon Griffith Junior High School (a fairly small junior high) and I am Sunday School Superintendent at Calvary Presbyterian Church (an enormous church school). Each job is my vocation. I tell people that at school they'll find my room where the halls cross. At church they can look but probably won't find me. I'll be in someone's classroom. At each job I practice what I most deeply believe: it's how you see the world that determines how you respond to it. I'll give you an example, actually, two examples.
Erskine White
O Lord my God! When I in awesome wonder,
Consider all the worlds Thy hands have made,
I see the stars, I hear the rolling thunder,
Thy power throughout the universe displayed,
Then sings my soul, my Savior God to Thee,
How great Thou art, How great Thou art!
(Stuart K. Hine)

Special Occasion

Wildcard SSL