Login / Signup

Free Access

God's Math

Children's sermon
Object: A blank piece of poster paper, markers, and the attached list of numbers. See the note on the list of numbers for more details. An option is to also have a few mustard seeds to show the children.

NOTE: As mentioned in the notes on the attached page, when you come to putting the numbers on paper for the children to see, you can adapt how you do that to best fit the age and attention span of your children.

* * *

Hello, everyone! (Let them respond.) Are you ready for our story today? (Let them respond.) One day, Jesus was talking with some of his friends and they told him they were getting really nervous. Jesus had been telling all of them that he was going to be leaving them soon, and some of the people were afraid they wouldn’t be able to do what God wanted them to do if Jesus wasn’t right there with them.

Jesus told them to remember what God wanted them to do. Just like the scribes who wrote the books for people to read, their job was to tell people how things have changed, so they know what God wants them to do from now on.

He told them the old law was that everyone was supposed to love God, and that was still very important. But he said now there is a second law, just as important as the first one. Does anyone remember what that new law said? (Let them respond.) The second law said that we are supposed to love each other, too.

He asked them if they understood and they said, “Yes, but what if we just aren’t strong enough to make people do what God wants them to do?”

Jesus said they didn’t have to make people do anything at all. They didn’t need to argue or fight with anyone. All they needed to do was tell people what God wanted them to do. That’s all. He said they were like the tiny mustard seed. (Show the mustard seed if you have it.)  It is one of the tiniest seeds and looks pretty useless, but it can grow into a big, strong tree.

And we are like the mustard seed, too, aren’t we? (Let them respond.) Sometimes we feel like we are pretty small and can’t do important things, don’t we? (Let them respond.) But even if we are as small as a mustard seed, we can still do some pretty powerful things. Let me show you something. (Get your big piece of paper and marker.)

I want to show you just how powerful you really are. Jesus said that God wants us to take care of each other, so let’s imagine something, okay? (Let them respond.) I want you to imagine that you are going to do something to help one person every day this week. It doesn’t have to be anything big and fancy. Maybe you help someone just by smiling at them and saying, “Hi!”. But this week, you are going to help one person each day. Can you imagine that for me? (Let them respond.) Great. Now let me show you something.

 (Draw the first week’s boxes on the big paper, explaining what the boxes are as you draw. Then begin with today and explain that if they help one person today, the one and one adds up to two people. Then tomorrow, if both of those people help someone, four people help others. Go through the week until you come to next Sunday.)

If all you do is help one person each day, and then they help one person each day, look at what can happen! When we come back here next week, you will have helped and hundred and twenty-eight people. That’s pretty cool, isn’t it? (Let them respond.) And it doesn’t sound all that hard, does it? (Let them respond.)

But look at this. If we do it again next week, at the end of that week we will have helped 16,384 people. That’s a lot of people. And if we kept helping one person each day like that when we came back here in four weeks, do you know how many people we will have helped? At the end of three weeks, we will have helped more than four million people!

And do you know what is even cooler about that? (Let them respond.) Helping more than 4 million people is what happens if only one of us tries to help one person each day. How many of us are here today? (Let them respond.) What if every one of us here helped one person each day for the next three weeks? (Let them respond.) If we all did that, when we came back here in three weeks, we would have helped more than (multiply 4 times the number of children.)

Now THAT is cool!

We don’t have to be bigger, or stronger, to do what God wants us to do. Our job is to help take care of each other. Being a friend to someone who is lonely. Helping someone who is afraid. Feeding someone who has nothing to eat. Taking care of someone who is sick. Taking care of someone who has no home or place to live.

That is our job. Taking care of each other. Even just one person each day.

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.

Notes: Here are the numbers for today’s activity. After explaining the story of the power of the mustard seed, I begin with a blank piece of poster paper and recreate this list to show that no matter how small or powerless we may feel sometimes, if we just try to help one person each day, we can make a HUGE difference in the world. Depending on the ages of your group, you may use all or just some of these numbers. The big thing is to show that even if we just try to help one person each day, in three weeks over one million people might be helped. Wow!

WEEK 1 - 7/30

Starting the day

New

Total

Sunday

1

1

2

Monday

2

2

4

Tuesday

4

4

8

Wednesday

8

8

16

Thursday

16

16

32

Friday

32

32

64

Saturday

64

64

128



WEEK 2 – 8/6

Starting the day

New

Total

Sunday

128

128

256

Monday

256

256

512

Tuesday

512

512

1028

Wednesday

1028

1028

2048

Thursday

2048

2048

4096

Friday

4096

4096

8192

Saturday

8192

8192

16,384



WEEK 3 – 8/13

Starting the day

New

Total

Sunday

16,384

16,384

32758

Monday

32758

32758

65536

Tuesday

65536

65536

131072

Wednesday

131072

131072

262144

Thursday

262144

262144

524288

Friday

524288

524288

1,048,576

Saturday

1,048,576

1,048,576

2,097,152



WEEK 4 – 8/20

Starting the day

New

Total

Sunday

2,097,152

2,097,152

4,194,304

Monday

 

 

 

Tuesday

 

 

 

Wednesday

 

 

 

Thursday

 

 

 

Friday

 

 

 

Saturday

 

 

 

UPCOMING WEEKS
In addition to the lectionary resources there are thousands of non-lectionary, scripture based resources...
Signup for FREE!
(No credit card needed.)
Ascension of the Lord
25 – Sermons
160+ – Illustrations / Stories
19 – Children's Sermons / Resources
23 – Worship Resources
25 – Commentary / Exegesis
2 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Easter 7
27 – Sermons
130+ – Illustrations / Stories
20 – Children's Sermons / Resources
19 – Worship Resources
22 – Commentary / Exegesis
2 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Pentecost
33 – Sermons
180+ – Illustrations / Stories
32 – Children's Sermons / Resources
23 – Worship Resources
31 – Commentary / Exegesis
5 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Plus thousands of non-lectionary, scripture based resources...
Signup for FREE!
(No credit card needed.)

New & Featured This Week

The Immediate Word

Thomas Willadsen
Christopher Keating
Dean Feldmeyer
Mary Austin
Katy Stenta
Elena Delhagen
Quantisha Mason-Doll
For May 12, 2024:
Thomas Willadsen
Christopher Keating
Dean Feldmeyer
Mary Austin
Katy Stenta
Elena Delhagen
Quantisha Mason-Doll
For May 12, 2024:

CSSPlus

John Jamison
Object: A sheet large enough for your children to stand around it. A dozen or so golf balls, or other small unbreakable balls. If you have a large number of children you could use two sheets to make room, or just ask for volunteers to play the game.

* * *

Hello, everyone! (Let them respond.) Are you ready for our story today? (Let them respond.) Excellent! But we’re not starting with the story today. I have something else I would like you to try. (Lay the sheet on the floor and put the balls in the middle of it.)
John Jamison
Object: A piece of clothing that a superhero might wear. I used a simple cape made from a sheet, but you could also use a belt, a ring, or anything else your favorite superhero might wear.

* * *

Emphasis Preaching Journal

Mark Ellingsen
Frank Ramirez
Bonnie Bates
Bill Thomas
Acts 1:15-17, 21-26
Over the Christmas season, I saw a picture of Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes with his wife Brittany and their two young children. Like many people, the Mahomes’ took their kids to see Santa Claus. Patrick, Brittany, and Santa are all smiles, however, two-year-old daughter Sterling and one-year-old Bronze looked just like thousands of other kids, scared, and wanting to be somewhere else. It reminded me of how alike people are.
Mark Ellingsen
Bonnie Bates
Frank Ramirez
Bill Thomas
Acts 1:1-11
As I write this, world events have inspired any number of Christians in my area to speculate that these are clear signs of the end. By the time you read this those great events will be history, but don’t worry, stuff is happening as you read this that is causing some to speculate those current events are clear signs of the end.
Frank Ramirez
Today’s scriptures call upon us to listen carefully — to Jesus, through his words in the New Testament, and to the Spirit helping us to interpret that word and speaking directly in our hearts. And sometimes God is also speaking to us in the created universe. But make sure it is God we are listening to, and not ourselves.

Acts 1:15-17, 21-26
Mark Ellingsen
The lessons for this Festival of Ascension all testify to the heavenly power and cosmic presence of Christ. 

Acts 1:1-11

StoryShare

John E. Sumwalt
…God gave us eternal life, and this life is in his son. (v. 11b)

Have you ever experienced the presence of God? Have you felt, seen, heard, smelled, tasted or known in some way that the Creator was near?

My colleague Becky Ardell Downs, pastor of John Knox Presbyterian Church in Houston, tells of a time forty years ago when she was attending the funeral of her uncle in the Chicago suburbs. He had died of multiple sclerosis at a relatively young age.
Frank Ramirez
When he had said this, as they were watching, he was lifted up, and a cloud took him out of their sight. (Acts 1:9)

Then he led them out as far as Bethany, and, lifting up his hands, he blessed them. While he was blessing them, he withdrew from them and was carried up into heaven. (Luke 24:50-51)

Defying gravity! What a concept? Is there anyone here who has not dreamt at one time or another that you were actually flying? Or floating? Or in some way defying gravity?

SermonStudio

John Jamison
Have you ever come across a piece of scripture that you really just didn’t know what to do with? Everything you read before it makes sense, and everything after it, but that one passage just sits there staring at you, almost defying you to understand why it is there and what it means.
Stan Purdum
Both Psalms 47 and 93 (the alternative psalm for this day) are enthronement psalms, praise hymns celebrating God's rule over the nations. They were most likely used on festal occasions when Israel again declared that God was its king.

While Psalm 47 was for Israel's celebration, verses 1-2 call all the nations of earth to recognize God as their monarch as well. Verses 3-4, however, return to the specific relationship between God and Israel.

David H. Webb
Today is Ascension Sunday.

Today we commemorate the day when Jesus bid farewell to his followers and friends and ascended into heaven to sit at the right hand of the Father.

In some ways it's an anxious day. "How will we go on without him?" they surely whispered among themselves. "How can we possibly maintain the strength and perspective -- the motivation to live according to his teachings and promises? How can we live with determination and purpose if he is not here to sustain us?"

John T. Ball
One of the blessings of God is the gift of writing, of putting our thoughts and observations on clay tablets or jars, on parchment, or on paper. Scholars are not certain when humans first began to write. Many think it happened in Samaria, the civilization between the Tigris and Euphrates, now modern-day Iraq. It may have happened about 3000 B.C.E. Nor is there a consensus on how writing was first used. It may have come from Shamans using it to pass on their skills and secrets. Or writing could have originated as a means to inventory the goods of merchants.
Mark J. Molldrem
Mark -- warlike

Shirley -- bright meadow

Jennifer -- fair lady

Jeffrey -- God's peace

Jesus -- God saves

What's in a name? Ever since God gave Adam the privilege of naming all the creatures, humankind has had a fascination with names. Names are important. Parents take great care when they select a name for their baby. They know the name will be with this new person for a lifetime and will identify him or her to other people.
Jerry L. Schmalenberger
It simply was unthinkable that the appearances of Jesus should grow fewer and fewer after Easter until they finally 'petered out' and melted away. That would have effectively weakened the faith of all people who had seen him. There had to come a day of dividing -- when Jesus of earth became Christ of heaven.
Richard E. Gribble
Many years ago one of the most popular shows on weekly television was Mission Impossible. Each episode of the show opened in a similar way. The head of the Impossible Missions Force, or IMF for short, would be found alone in some isolated office, home, or similar space. He would find a large manilla envelope, generally hidden in a desk drawer or possibly in a safe. Inside the envelope he would find materials that described the next mission of his IMF team. There would be lots of printed material, photographs of the principal people involved, and often maps to show various locations.

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
Sandy wasn't very good at prayer. Privately he thought it was probably a waste of time, although when things went really wrong he always found himself praying. He wasn't sure that God ever heard his prayers.

Special Occasion

Wildcard SSL