PROVERBS
PROVERBS
10:00-10:15 - Get to know new kids, entertain early arrivals until lesson begins
The Lord decides what steps you should take!
Proverbs 16: 16-19
"How much better to get wisdom than gold, to get insight rather than silver! The highway of the upright avoids evil, those who guard their ways preserve their lives. Pride goes before destruction. a haughty spirit before a fall. Better to be lowly in spirit along with the oppressed than to share plunder with the proud."
Throughout history, mankind has made plans for what they will do each day. In the office, I start out my day with a planning sheet I created for myself and organize my day and prioritize tasks to ensure the most important ones get done. We also make plans for holidays and vacations. We set financial goals and makes plans for how to achieve them. We make plans for weddings, birthdays, and other events. Expectant parents plan and prepare for a new child.
When I travel for work, I need to plan for what time I need to leave and I use my GPS to plan my route for me. A pilot must make his flight plan or your trip to Paris might end up in Australia. A ship’s captain has to chart his course to reach his destination. The Army general must make his battle plans. Teachers make lesson plans. The corporate owner plans for her business to grow and expand. We all make plans.
There is nothing wrong with planning. In fact, it is good to set goals and plan. If we didn’t, our lives would be a little here and a little there – kind of like a balloon you blow up and then let go without tying a knot in it – and we’d really never accomplish much. Planning is definitely a good thing. However, as Christians our plans should always begin with prayer and seeking God’s will for our lives. If God has been included in the planning process, we can be assured our plans will succeed, even if we experience some bumps and detours along the way. (Click to tweet) When our planning is contrary to God’s will, we become guilty of sin. In James 4:13-17, James wrote, “Come now, you who say, ‘Today or tomorrow we will travel to such and such a city and spend a year there and do business and make a profit.’ You don’t even know what tomorrow will bring — what your life will be! For you are like smoke that appears for a little while, then vanishes. Instead, you should say, ‘If the Lord will, we will live and do this or that.’ But as it is, you boast in your arrogance. All such boasting is evil. So it is a sin for the person who knows to do what is good and doesn’t do it.”
God may allow you to make your own plans without consulting Him. He will even allow you to make your own plans when you don’t particularly like His will and decide to do things your way. But you can be assured that regardless of what you plan, God will be the one directing each step your take. And if your arrogance and pride you choose to do things your way, God will still bring about His divine will.
Jonah is an example of someone who didn’t like what God was telling him to do and so he made his own plans. God wanted Jonah to go preach in Nineveh and Jonah didn’t want to go. He got on a boat and went in the opposite direction from Nineveh. As a result, a great storm came up and everyone on the boat became afraid they would die at sea. They started throwing the cargo over to lighten the boat’s load and then Jonah told them they had to throw him overboard and the storm would stop. The sailors thought Jonah was crazy, but after a while, they conceded and tossed Jonah into the storm-tossed waves. God was not only directing Jonah’s steps, but he also directed the swim path of a great fish who came along at that exact moment and swallowed Jonah up. After living three days in the belly of the fish, Jonah finally repents. God then has the fish throw up Jonah and Jonah goes to Nineveh and preaches.
Joseph’s life is another example of how plans were made for Joseph but God used those plans to have Joseph in the exact spot he needed to be at just the right moment in time. Joseph’s brothers were all jealous of him so they made plans to put him in a pit and then sale him off as a slave when a traveling caravan comes by. Sold as a slave, Joseph lands in Egypt. But in Egypt is right where God wants Joseph to be because God will use him years later during a great famine to save his entire family. Throughout Joseph’s time in Egypt, God directed the steps of his life that led him to become the 2nd in command of all of Egypt answering only to Pharaoh. However, it wasn’t just Joseph’s brothers that had plans for him. Others had plans for him too. Potipher’s wife had plans to sleep with Joseph and when Joseph ran from her presence, she grabbed his outer cloak and waited for her husband to get home, then claimed that Joseph had attacked her. As a result Joseph landed in jail for the next few years of his life. But if Joseph had not been in jail where he could interpret the dreams of two of Pharaoh’s servants, he may not have then been called before Pharaoh to interpret his dream about the upcoming famine and provide Pharaoh with a plan to see the nation through the famine. Pharaoh liked Joseph’s plan so well that he put Joseph in charge of it, which set Joseph in the exact place that God wanted him to be so that when his brothers came to buy grain during the famine, Joseph did in fact save his family from perishing in the famine. When Joseph finally reveals himself to his brothers, he tells them, “What you meant for evil, God meant for good.” (Genesis 50:20) I’m sure that Joseph’s life plan did not include a pit or a prison – but it was the pit and the prison that got him to the palace. Through the story of Joseph, we find over and over again that the Bible says God was with Joseph. God was with him in the pit, in the prison, and in the palace.
In the New Testament, a group of shepherds made plans for tending their flock through the night. But God interrupted the night and sent angels to proclaim the birth of Jesus which brought the shepherds to worship the new born King. Their plans were to simply care for their flock of sheep – God’s plans were to bring them to worship Jesus.
Mary and Joseph made plans for going to temple when Jesus was 12 years old. Their plans had to include both getting there and returning home. But along the way back home, they realized Jesus wasn’t with them and they returned to find Jesus teaching the religious leaders. Their plans were to fulfill their religious obligations at the temple and return home – God’s plans were for Jesus to be teaching the religious leaders.
A lame man who had been lame since birth had plans for going to the temple to beg for alms but as Peter and James saw him and listened to the leading of the Holy Spirit, Peter said to him, “Silver and gold I do not have, but what I do have I give to you. In the name of Jesus Christ, rise up and walk.” In an instant, he was healed and he went walking and leaping and praising God. The Lame Man’s plans were to get enough alms so he could eat – God’s plan was a miraculous healing.
Judas made plans to betray Jesus into the hands of the Pharisees and Saducees. The Pharisees and Saducees made plans to kill Jesus by getting the Romans to crucify Him. While they thought they were in control, God used their plans to bring about His own plans for providing redemption for all mankind. (Click to tweet) Their plans were to kill Jesus and silence His teaching – God’s plan was for Jesus to pay the wages of our sin so that we could have eternal life and fellowship with God.
Ultimately, none of us controls our own plans. God directs each step we take to bring about His perfect plans. For some, the idea that God controls everything in our lives can be disturbing. But when you realize that the omnipotent and omnipresence God who created each one of us and the entire universe knows infinitely more about the plans we make than we do, we can realize that knowing God is in control is actually for our benefit. (click to tweet) Jeremiah 29:11 tells us that God has good plans for us – plans for our welfare and not destruction. If we truly believe this, then we should have no problems starting our planning time in prayer and seeking God’s will to be sure that the plans we make align with God’s will. If they do, then we can surrender our plans into His hands and trust that even if the path to get where we were planning looks different than how we planned it, that ultimately God will get us there, that He will work all things our for our good (Rom. 8:28), and he will be with us every step of the way, just like Joseph. But if we try to go our own way like Jonah, we might find ourselves in some trouble just like Jonah did and then find ourselves right where God wanted us in the first place. Had Jonah simply cooperated with God’s plan in the first place, he could have saved himself three days in the belly of a fish – and if we will cooperate with God’s plans for our lives, we can save ourselves from the unpleasant consequences that running from God brings.
So go ahead and make your plans, but start every plan with prayer, seeking God’s will first. Then as you make your plans centered around His will, ask that your plans will bring Him honor and glory. If, like Joseph, the path getting to where God wants you looks different than you thought it would and includes a “pit” or “prison” along the way, remember that God is always with you and if the “palace” is God’s plan for you, you can trust Him to get you there at just the right moment so you are in position for what God wants to do in your life.
Pride pop: (Proverbs 16:18- “Pride goes before destruction, a haughty spirit before a fall.”)
Okay, you guys. Who loves bubble gum? I know I do. What’s more fun than blowing a huge bubble and popping it? Except when it gets in your hair. Did you know that my volunteer today is good at blowing bubbles? (Call your volunteer up and ask him to begin blowing the bubble slowly.)
I want to share with you a verse from the Book of Proverbs and my friend is going to slowly blow a big bubble. He may have to take a few turns to get the best bubble possible. The bible talks about something called pride. Does anyone know what pride is? There’s the good kind of pride, like when you drew a nice picture or won the spelling bee. Then there’s the bad kind of pride. The bad kind of pride is when you think that you are better than others, even better than God.
Nobody can ride a bike as good as you or read faster. The Bible says that being proud will lead to destruction. Let’s say you are like the gum and the air inside your bubble is pride. What happens when you get too much pride?
(Pop the bubble! Of course, meet with the volunteer before you start and let him know you plan to pop the bubble. If not, you may have one mad kid.)
Time: 10-20 minutes
Materials needed from the cart:
Construction paper
Glue
Scissors
Markers
Pipe Cleaners (optional)
Get the details by clicking here!
FOR DIRECTIONS WITH PICTURES CLICK HERE
There is a lot of tearing up of the construction paper in this craft, so kids get practice on their fine motor skills, as well as following directions. Depending on the age of your students, there is a bit of prep work. Our kids are 3 and 4 year olds, so we precut the black and yellow paper into 1 inch strips, the paper towel wings, as well as cut out all of the template pieces. If you are short on time, you could tear up some of the yellow and black ahead of time so that kids don’t have so much to tear. We had to actually show our younger 3 year olds how to hold the strip and tear off part of it, which I hadn’t figured we’d need to instruct but it was a good opportunity to teach them.
We started the activity by passing out the body pieces and asking the kids to start tearing their yellow construction paper into pieces. They loved that there was really no specific size to tear them, so everyone’s looked unique. When they had a good pile of them, we asked them to cover about a 1/3 of the body with glue stick. If you cover too much, you end up getting alot of glue on hands and the construction paper sticks to the hand more than the paper. They started laying out the yellow pieces onto the bee’s body in rows, and then repeated the process until the body was covered, as well as the head. We told them to cover up ALL of the white part with the paper. This takes a surprisingly long amount of time, so start the craft early in your class time.
Time: 10-15 minutes
Materials needed from the cart:
None
Get the details by clicking here!
Tell the kids they are now part of the “Clump” family. The Clumps LOVE to be together!
Have everyone scatter and randomly waddle and move around the room.
When the leader shouts a number, everyone must quickly form Clumps with that number of people.
For example, if the leader shouts 5, everyone must form Clumps of 5.
Players who cannot join a Clump of that specified number are out.
Continue playing until only 2-4 players remain.
Time: 10-15 minutes
Materials needed from the cart:
Balloons (1 per child)
Cups (10 per team)
Get the details by clicking here!
Once you're through the lesson/games use these to fill any remaining time, or the ideas listed below
Materials needed from the cart (varies based on the game you choose):
Christian just dance videos below
If they don't want to play the Christian Just Dance game they can play follow the leader.