My
Church, Our Home
Session
II: The Household of God
This session is all about the meaning of home. It is in, it’s completeness, a place where we feel connected, loved, welcomed, supported, nurtured, encouraged, and challenged. It is our safe place where we can feel at rest, and is a base from which we sojourn and always return. We will begin with discussions of our own homes, the gifts each member contribute to their homes, and the significance of our homes in our lives. We will also begin to discover our parish as our home, the importance of the gifts we bring to the church and their meaning to our salvation.
These are the understandings we will teach in this session.
Understandings:
These questions,
when answered and discussed, will lead back to the understandings for this session.
Activity Session:
All sessions begin and end with a prayer.
Explain that there will be many ways to discover the answers. Some might include discussions, reading, role-playing, and creating pieces of art, constructing things, and even singing.
Essential Questions:
Introduction:
For this session, you will be developing the concept of home and how our church, our parish is a home that is provided for us by God. We can begin by asking the question, what is a home? What is your home like? What does it mean to you? These can be answered in a group session, or even in a private journal. The participants may then share if they wish. Then ask the question, what does “home is where the heart is” mean? How does this relate to our parish as our home?
Ask the question, what is a cornerstone? If it is not defined, then explain that they will be participating in an activity that will help them to understand the term. Then pass out blocks to each small group of four, or less, (working in pairs is the best way to do this if there are enough materials) and have them build a structure. Explain that it should be a tower, a house, an office building, a church etc. Then ask them to identify the cornerstone. What happens when you try to take it out? How does the cornerstone support the whole structure? How do we relate this activity to our understanding of Christ as the cornerstone of the church?
Review the structure of the church. How is an Orthodox Church built? How is the inside structure set up? Even though all churches come in different sizes, shapes, colors etc., what do they all have in common? They all should have a narthex, a nave, and an altar. Some may say, iconostas, windows, choir lofts or bays etc., but we are first seeking the understanding of the structure of the building. There will be a handout for the students and they will fill in the areas with labels to identify the parts of the church structure.
Activities:
*Not all activities
will be done in one session. Some will overlap into other sessions, and some
may not be done at all. It will all depend on the amount of time we will have
with the participants in each session.
Closure:
Think and
Write Prompts:
These prompts may be used in a few different ways. They can be passed out to
the participants at the beginning of their journal writing, and they may choose
which one(s) they would like to address, based on their own individual experiences
with the material they have just studied.
They may be given directions to choose one or two prompts, and choose to write to them, or they may be directed by the teacher to very specific questions for a specific response that the teacher wants to elicit from them. (ie. What made you “wonder” in this session? (could be from a reading, discussion, project etc.) Why? What confused you about the session? Why?
Most participants love to choose their own questions, because they are not being asked to respond to something they have not experienced, but ARE responding to thoughts, emotions, feelings, etc. that they HAVE experienced. It also is a private communication that should remain private. This is not meant as a whole group sharing, but a time for personal reflection. These should however, be responded to by the teacher before the next session.
Questions
to Direct Journal Writing:
Use these questions to help you write in your journals. This list is not meant
to cover all of the issues that might concern you as you write, and it is meant
to be used when you need a starting point for a journal entry. Your own thoughts
and feelings are always the best source for your writing.
NOTE: If you have trouble developing your ideas in your journal try writing some of your entries nonstop. Nonstop writing (at least five minutes) will help you unlock some of your best ideas.
Skills:
Explain the term journaling. How do you respond in a journal? Do you have to write in complete sentences all the time? Do you have to spell everything correctly? A journal is a place to write your thoughts, ideas, dreams, fears etc.
Go over vocabulary words that children might not be familiar with: (for appropriate age levels) Examples: Parish, significant, secular, temple, architecture, society, cornerstone.
Develop the understanding of a temple as the building where the Church assembles and experiences God.
Develop the understanding that the church is a group of people who include the world-wide Orthodox Church and the saints, with Christ as it’s Head.
Develop the understanding that living in “God’s home” is not just about attending church on Sundays and Holy Days - but that it is a way of life for an Orthodox Christian.
Useful Texts:
1 Tim 3:15: if I am delayed, you may know how one ought to behave in the household of God, which is the church of the living God, the pillar and bulwark of the truth.
1 Tim 3:19: Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit within you, which you have from God? You are not your own;“My soul is restless until it finds its home in God”
Ephesians 2:19-22: So then you are no longer strangers and sojourners, but you are fellow citizens with the saints and members of the household of God, built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Christ Jesus himself being the cornerstone, in whom the whole structure is joined together and grows into a holy temple in the Lord; in whom you also are built into it for a dwelling place of God in the Spirit.
The teachers can use this quote in a session as a discussion starter or journal prompt.
Quotes:
“You never find God asking persons to dream up what they want to do for
Him”
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Department
of Youth, Young Adult, and Campus Ministry |
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