Spring Curriculum Is Almost Here!


The new Spring curriculum will start on March 7th. Look for the books in the curriculum bin on the weekend of February 27th-28th. The Craft Title and Opening Activities will also be posted on this blog at that time. Please review the lessons and be sure to get back to me or Nicole with any comments, questions or concerns.






Spare Time?

In the course of a week, we have 168 hours to spend. This is a fixed amount that every person has. If you sleep eight hours a night, that's 56 hours a week. If you work full time, you spend at least 40 hours on the job. If you spend an hour for each meal, then you spend 21 hours per week eating. If you spend two hours a day cleaning, cooking and doing yard work, that's 14 hours per week. If you spend an hour going to and from your job, then you use seven hours per week in your car. That leaves thirty hours of leisure time that you have in a given week to shower, shop, watch TV, attend church, read, play, or study for next week's lesson!!!!!!

Albert Einstien, the theorist who theorized that time was relative, tried to explain the theory of relativity with the following: "When you are courting a nice girl, an hour seems like a second. When you sit on a red-hot cinder a second seems like an hour. That's relativity."

Your experience will tell you how much time you need to prepare for the week's lesson. Everyone needs different amounts of time to prepare. Experience can shorten the time needed. Anxiety can lengthen the time required.

Your expectations will tell you how much time you need. If you are a perfectionist, there is not enough time in a week to get it right. If you are a freer spirit, more in awe of whimsy than logic, you will have more than enough time in the car on the way to church to prepare your lesson.

Your results will tell you how much time you need in the future. Unfortunately, by the time you realize what you've done it's too late. But the best way to measure results is one week at a time. Did the craft go too quickly? Was the lesson understood in half the time? Did the kids breeze through the questions? Should you have spent more time in the Bible exploration activity that everyone laughing with excitement?

Your faith journey will tell you how much time you need. Don't overlook the fact that, as you prepare to teach, and even when you are in the act of teaching, you will be changed! The teacher always learns more than the student. The time you spend on your lesson will add to the richness of what God is saying to you and through you. Allow enough time in your preparation for your personal growth.

Take a look at the lesson early in the week so you understand how much time your lesson planning will take. If you start the week with a strong understanding of your topic, you can look for connections and pick up any extra supplies throughout the week. Last-minute planning limits your effectiveness. With a little forethought, preparing for your lessons can actually be an enjoyable and enriching time rather than a harried, panicked drain.

New Year's Resolutions for Volunteer Ministry


The beginning of a new year is traditionally a time for examining the past and resolving to make improvements in the coming year. Here are a few things I will be thinking about in 2010:
I will stop treating church service as optional. Jesus called his followers to complete life changes. In fact, he went out of his way to make sure people understood how much he demanded before they became his followers. Jesus made it clear that he expected people to be actively serving him. For Christ-followers, giving time to ministry is not optional.
I will be a cheerleader. In a world full of negative attitudes and criticism, I will demonstrtae Christ's love by celebrating the accomplishments of others. I will give personal, meaningful affirmations.
I will forgive myself for last year. God chose to do his ministry through us, knowing that we are broken vessels. I plan to spend time determining what I need to learn from mistakes, and then I will join God in casting them into the Sea of Forgetfulness.
I will remember the one thing. In Luke 10:38-42, Jesus reminded Martha that while all her attempts to serve him were good, the one most important was developing a growing relationship with Jesus. I will remember that ultimately it is not about my ministry or my church. It is about me and all those around me developing a growing relationship with Jesus.