By Mark Pierce
Mark Pierce is the pastor of a new church in Mansfield, Ohio called
Church Requel. In the first half of his life, Mark provided investment
advice as a Certified Financial Planner. He began his ministry career at
the age of 47 as the executive pastor of another church before founding
Church Requel in 2009. Mark and his wife, Mary Kay, have four grown
children and six grandchildren. He writes about his experiences as a
church planter every day at www.ChurchRequel.org.
A mom came up to me at the end of a recent Church Requel service: "I
wasn't going to come tonight. I worked all day, and I was tired. I came
home, and I just wanted to crash. But Anna would have none of it. 'Mom, I
want to go to church!'"
Church Requel is a small church. Typically, we have fewer than 60
people attending our Sunday evening services. Yet our fastest growing
demographic is children under the age of 10. Why? Because we make our
services child friendly.
This year, we have added children's sermons to our services. We invite
the elementary-aged children to come up front with me. Usually, I will
sit on the platform and have them sit around me. These talks typically
last 7 to 10 minutes. What is it about these short talks that makes a
child ASK to come to church? Here are four guidelines that can help you
create great children's sermons.
Guideline #1: Use Object Lessons. I usually have a
small table up front that contains an object lesson for the kids. It is
always covered up, creating a curiosity factor. The kids can't wait to
see what is under the tablecloth. Every sermon includes something
different. When talking about living a fruitful life, I showed them two
dishes—one with really rotten bananas and one with fresh bananas. "What
kind of life do you want to offer God?" I asked. When talking about
God's help in life, we set up bowling pins of plastic liter bottles.
When we tried to do things on our own without God's help, we bowled with
a ping-pong ball. With God's help, we bowled—much more
successfully—with a basketball. The key is to be creative and
imaginative. Kids love seeing how things work, and they have a much
greater imagination than adults. Have fun here. Be a kid yourself!
Guideline #2: Focus your entire attention on the children. Usually at
first the kids are nervous about being in front of everyone else. Look
them in the eyes. Tell them that this is their special time with the
pastor. Everyone else can listen in, but this is THEIR time. Ask
questions. Listen to their answers. Respond. Don't be locked into a
script. Have a general plan, but be willing to adjust on the fly. Kids
really do say the darndest things. They will ask the questions everyone
wants to know! Enjoy this conversation with the kids.
Guideline #3: Never forget your adult audience. While
your attention is entirely focused on the children, know that the
adults in the audience will be hanging on your every word. Pastor, you
work hard on every adult sermon and dream of the adults tuning in to
your every word. After a few years, you begin to realize this will
probably never be as true as you wish it to be. Until it comes to
delivering kids' sermons! Suddenly adults are craning their necks,
leaning forward, entirely focused! Why? Because of the kids. Because of
the "who knows what will happen?" uncertainty. Because of the fun.
Bottom line: the children's sermon may be your best chance to connect
with your adult audience.
Guideline #4: Be simple but not surface. Because your
attention will be focused on the children, your teaching must also be at
a child's level. Simple should be your motto. One main message. Or one
main Bible verse. Or one main challenge. However, this doesn't mean the
children's sermon has to be surface only. In fact, if you dialogue with
the kids, you'll discover they often are wondering about some of life's
deepest questions. Don't be afraid to admit that you haven't got it all
figured out yourself. Keep your children's sermon simple, but don't be
afraid to go deep!
If you are the pastor of a small church like I am, you probably wish
you had some of the advantages of a larger church. But the children's
sermon is one ace you possess that your large-church pastor friends can
only dream about. While you are small, you have the size and flexibility
to invite all the kids up front. This gives you the chance to know all
the kids—and their parents—so much better than you ever would otherwise.
I love the time I spend with our CR kids during the children's sermons.
How about you? What are you doing to connect with the kids—and their
parents—in your congregation? Leave me a comment below. I'd love to hear
your ideas!
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