3 minute read
Resources
CHILDREN’S DISCIPLESHIP
Austen Hardwick highlights the importance of the relationship between young people and leaders
WE have each emerged at different speeds from the cocoon of the Covid-19 pandemic, sifting the positives and negatives from a digitally connected world. Until March 2020, any reference to ‘Zoom’ was confined to a 1982 hit by Fat Larry’s Band from Breakin’ Out, but it is no surprise that the album’s cover features inmates tearing through a red backdrop – some of us couldn’t wait to get out again.
In exploring children’s discipleship, let’s commence with a primary school classic, The Very Hungry Caterpillar. Eric Carle’s picture book follows a voracious caterpillar before it pupates and emerges as a butterfly. Eric’s tale and Fat Larry’s cover are both about transformation and a biological and emotional emergence. How did you awake from your isolation?
The call for children to return to corps post-pandemic has been complex, with changes in weekend routines and the maturing of age groups over the past two years. This altered landscape requires a recalibration of how we disciple.
I’m wrestling with it too, but I believe that we have been gifted a line in the sand to re-think meaningful investment, and Jesus often drew lines. Of the 694 uses of the word ‘child’ in Scripture, probably the most quoted is Luke 18:16, where Jesus corrects a disciple: ‘Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the Kingdom of God belongs to such as these.’ This must be aligned with other significant Kingdom inclusions such as tax collectors, prostitutes and lepers, for they all made Jesus’ team sheet.
In his 1942 paper Conspiracy and Imprisonment, Dietrich Bonhoeffer wrote: ‘Jesus’ acceptance of children like that of the blind, lame, poor, signifies an eschatological event of salvation… the miracle of God, who humbles the lofty and raises up the lowly.’
Perhaps this line prompts us to confront previous agendas and diminished relationships. In achieving the best children’s work we can, this is a time for us to prioritise the relational love of God ahead of transactional exchanges. Being saved means being taken up into acceptance, into relationship. Bonhoeffer’s place-sharing theology reflects God in Christ, a cruciform love that comes alongside humanity in this world as opposed to being a bridge to an unseen other. It is a shared solidarity in a world of danger, suffering and death.
In a recent feedback session from the Online Children’s Leader’s Network we heard first-hand about the impact of children’s teams who stood at garden gates each week during the pandemic, maintaining relationships and physically place-sharing in the only way possible. We also connected with a leader in Pakistan who joined at midnight to tell us about 51 junior soldiers currently swimming against the tide of opposition and religious disputes. Over Zoom, we shared her place as best we could.
These inspiring leaders and volunteers are journeying alongside their children, telling us of a transformed approach after a line in the sand. I don’t believe that the headline here is of better children’s discipleship through feasting on resources like a hungry caterpillar. It is about breaking out, transformed and invested in place-sharing.
AUSTEN HARDWICK
Children’s Specialist (Discipleship) Chil Youth and Children’s Ministries Unit
CONNECTING CHILDREN AND LEADERS
There are many resources available on salvationist.org.uk that promote relationships between children and their leaders:
Every Picture Tells a Story
This group resource uses photographic techniques to nurture curiosity, creativity and spirituality outdoors. Users have found this easily adaptable and engaging because participants use mobile phones to take pictures.
Hi-5
Encourages children to address the five ways to wellbeing. Each session features conversation starters and activities, suggestions for games, craft ideas, creative prayer stations and a verse linked to the theme.
Explore It
This 30 to 40-minute Bible teaching session is designed for small groups aged 7 to 12. Created in response to social distancing, it was the most downloaded resource of 2021. The weekly notes in the Resources section of salvationist.org.uk marry with KA! Jam content in Kids Alive!.
Other resources from around the web:
Prayer Partners
A digital resource to encourage and equip children by spending time praying with a committed adult.
Energize
This popular subscription-based package from Urban Saints comes with a 30-day free trial. Email energize@urbansaints.org.
Saddleback
Videos that provide fun ways to teach children about God’s word. Visit youtube.com/saddlebackkids.
RaiseUPFaith
A multimedia platform providing a 52-week curriculum for each age range, including cartoons, songs and games provided through a subscription. Visit raiseupfaith.com.