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Showing posts from January, 2021

Joshua, Jericho and Using Stories to Pray

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  We talked in this story about our favourite foods, homemade pizza might be mine! I often feel a burden to pray for the children around me. I think all of us who spend time alongside children and young people in schools, churches, and out in the community experience this. For children with additional needs especially there seems to be an endless supply of issues to worry about on their behalf, their development, their health, their family, their happiness, their access to education indeed their access to anywhere. I’ve often felt an overwhelming sense of concern for the families and children whom I encounter. Occasionally it has presented itself as a sense of real despair or fear. When I remember these words from Philippians I know I can and I should bring all these worries to God, Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard ...

John the Baptist and the Return from Lockdown

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There are so many occasions where the sensory story we’ve run on a particular week feels coincidently relevant to my life or to something happening in the wider world. The story of John the Baptist might be my favourite example of this. We ran this story in September 2020 on the first week which we were able to meet after over six months of churches been closed due to covid-19 restrictions. Our mainstream children’s and youth ministries were both studying Mark that term so I searched that gospel for something which might lend itself to being turned into a sensory story. John the Baptist with his honey and locust-based snacks, his itchy clothes and straggly hair and his connection to water seemed to fit the bill. I was so excited to be able to come back to church in person and to be able to share Bible stories with the children and young people in our group once again. We were aware of how difficult the preceding months had been for those with additional needs and their families and i...