© 2015 Published by Morehouse Education Resources, www.MorehouseEducation.org. All rights reserved. Permission is hereby granted to reproduce this page for use in the purchasing congregation only.
session essentials
Helps for Catechists◆ More about Today’s Scriptures◆ Reflection◆ The Scriptures and the Catechism◆ The World of the Bible: Baptizing
with Water and the Spirit
Enrichment◆ Discover the Good News◆ Singing Together (optional: blue-silk
or crepe-paper streamers)◆ Baptismal Play (bowl of water,
pitcher, plastic doll, sea shells)◆ Music and Movement: Sosa’s “El
Cielo Canta”◆ Info: Young Children and the
Gospel◆ Info: Sosa’s “El Cielo Canta”◆ Info: Where You’ll Find Everything
Else
Core Session◆ Getting Started (bowl, pitcher
of water, smocks, finger paints, dishpan of water)
◆ Gospel Story: Jesus Is Baptized
◆ Action Rhyme◆ Praying Together
We explore God’s call to Jesus and us in baptism.◆ Today’s gospel tells the story of Jesus’ baptism, marked by God’s voice naming him
beloved child. ◆ This is the most powerful message of the gospel: God calls each one of us, “Beloved child.”◆ In today’s core session, we enact the words and gestures of baptism, exploring both the
baptism of Jesus and the sacrament of baptism today.
The Baptism of JesusScriptureLuke 3:15-16, 21-22
1
P r eschoo l /K i nde r ga r t en
Living the Good News | Preschool/Kindergarten | Baptism of the Lord – C
Bap t i sm o f t h e L o r d – C
Question of the WeekWhat might we do to celebrate Jesus’ joyous presence with us?
core sessionyour b
asic and co
mple
te session
© 2015 Published by Morehouse Education Resources, www.MorehouseEducation.org. All rights reserved. Permission is hereby granted to reproduce this page for use in the purchasing congregation only.
2
Getting Started (5-10 minutes)Gather children around an empty bowl and a pitcher full of water.
Slowly pour the water into the bowl as you ask:◆ What can we do with water?◆ What can we do in water?
Then invite children to use finger paints to imagine water scenes. Use the discussion to introduce a simple definition of baptism—going in and out of water.
Ask the children:◆ What’s the most water you’ve ever seen? (Encourage
several answers to this question.)
Use the children’s answers to talk about the sizes, colors, sounds and movements of different bodies of water: ponds, lakes, rivers and oceans.
Invite the children to paint pictures of water. Dress the children in paint smocks. Give each child a piece of wet paper—dip the paper in a dish pan of water—with blobs of blue and green finger paint.
You can show the children how to use their fingers to make ripples and waves. You can also invite the children to make soft water sounds as they paint.
After the children are finished with painting and clean-up, gather them together in the storytelling area. Ask again:◆ What can we do with water?◆ What can we do in water?
Affirm all the children’s answers. After sharing some ideas with the children, say:◆ One way we use water in church is when we baptize
people. ◆ When we baptize someone, we put them in and out of
water.◆ Someone gets baptized in today’s story: someone goes
in and out the water. Listen and tell me who.
Gospel Story (5-10 minutes)Jesus Is Baptized
Jesus says, “It’s time to be baptized.” Jesus walks to the water. John is standing in the water.
“Hello Jesus,” says John. “Should I baptize you?”
“Yes,” says Jesus. “It’s time for me to be baptized.”
Jesus walks into the water. John baptizes Jesus. John puts Jesus in and out of the water.
When Jesus comes up from the water, he hears God.
God says, “Jesus, you are my special child. I love you.”
Action Rhyme (5-10 minutes)Children learn the words and movements to this rhymed version of today’s story about the baptism of Jesus.
Gather the children in a circle. Ask each child to hold hands with a partner.
John in the water; Jesus comes, too. (Step forward with right foot, then left foot.)
“Jesus, shall I baptize you?” (Face partner and put hands on each other’s shoulders.)
In the water. (Stoop.) Out the water. (Stand.)Hear God say: (Cup ear with one hand.)
“Jesus, you’re my child today.” (Hug self.)
Praying Together (5 minutes)Stand with the children in a circle. Turn to the child on your left and say:◆ You are God’s child. God loves you.
Help this child pass the message along to the next child. Continue until all the children have heard themselves affirmed as God’s children.
Pray:◆ God, thank you for baptizing Jesus and us. Thank you
for making Jesus and us your children. Thank you for loving us. Amen.
Note: If you use At Home with the Good News, either distribute this week’s papers to the children before they leave or e-mail the papers to their families.
Living the Good News | Preschool/Kindergarten | Baptism of the Lord – C
enhance your core
sessio
n w
ith enrich
me
nt a
ctivities
enrichment
© 2015 Published by Morehouse Education Resources, www.MorehouseEducation.org. All rights reserved. Permission is hereby granted to reproduce this page for use in the purchasing congregation only.
3
Discover the Good News (5-10 minutes)On page 1 of today’s Discover the Good News you’ll find a seasonal prayer of thanksgiving to share with the children.
Children can extend this activity by drawing pictures of things for which they are thankful on page 2.
Singing Together (5-15 minutes)From Singing the Good News you and the children can sing together:◆ “Jesus Went to be Baptized” (p. 32 of the songbook)
Note: To access both the songbook and its attached MP3 files, open your Winter-C Seasonal Resources folder, then click on Singing the Good News. You could also sing these words to the traditional children’s song, “Go In and Out the Window”:
Go in and out the water,Go in and out the water,Go in and out the water:It’s time to be baptized.
For a movement activity to accompany this song, divide the other children into two groups and have them line up facing each other several feet apart.
Distribute blue-silk or crepe-paper streamers so that each child is holding one end of a streamer, the other end of which is held by a partner in the facing line. Show the children how to move the streamers slowly up and down to make waves of “water.”
Ask children to make waves as they sing the song above: “Go In and Out the Water.”
As children wave the streamers and sing, ask a volunteer to be “baptized” by going under the streamers, coming up in the middle and going under and out the other side. Repeat with other volunteers.
Baptismal Play (5-15 minutes)Gather children around a bowl of water. Show children what you mean by a baptism by using a plastic doll as a model.
Follow these steps:◆ First we bless the water. (Touch the water in the bowl
and say, “Thank you, God, for water.”)◆ Then we pray for the child who will be baptized. (Hold
the doll and pray, “God give your Spirit to [name the doll]. Amen.”)
◆ Then we put the child in and out the water. (Hold the doll over the water and use the shell or scoop to dip water over the doll’s head.)
Invite children to take turns “baptizing” the doll. Help each child remember the three steps you used.
After the activity, set up a center in the room where children can play freely with the water, bowl, pitcher and sea shells. Allow two children at a time to explore the materials at this center. If time and space allow, you can take children to the baptismal font of your church. See the ideas for a Baptismal Tour attached to this document.
Music and Movement (5-15 minutes)Sosa’s “El Cielo Canta”Read aloud for children these words from today’s gospel: “Jesus also was baptized. While he was praying heaven was opened, and the Holy Spirit came down upon him...And a voice came from heaven, ‘You are my own dear Son.’”
Invite children to imagine they are gathered at the river where Jesus is baptized, when the heavens open. Play for them the song “El Cielo Canta.” (Open your Winter-C
Seasonal Resources folder, then click on Companion Music for options on obtaining this music.) The lyrics in
English begin, “Heaven sings with joy.”
Ask children to show you how they would move when the heavens open and sing with joy. You can also distribute blue-silk or crepe-paper streamers to the children, and invite them to use the cloths freely as they move to the exuberant music.
Living the Good News | Preschool/Kindergarten | Baptism of the Lord – C
enhance your core
sessio
n w
ith enrich
me
nt a
ctivities
enrichment
© 2015 Published by Morehouse Education Resources, www.MorehouseEducation.org. All rights reserved. Permission is hereby granted to reproduce this page for use in the purchasing congregation only.
4
Young Children and the GospelAfter the celebration of the infant Jesus Christ in earlier sessions, we now encounter the adult Christ as he faces another moment of beginning: his Baptism in the river Jordan.
In today’s session we explore with children the sacrament of Baptism. The Church’s sacraments function as signs of God’s acts, in history and in human life today. In Baptism, we encounter a powerful sign of new life shared among God’s people.
For young children, the first step in exploring the sacraments is simple observation. Have they seen a Baptism? What happens in Baptism? What happens at the font? What happens with water? Encourage children to share their stories of what they have seen and heard, knowing that they will want to enter more fully into the meaning of the sacrament in the years to come.
Sosa’s El Cielo CantaSince 1975, Pablo Sosa, an ordained Methodist minister, has served as Professor of Choral Conducting at the Carlos Lopez Buchardo National Conservatory of Music in Buenos Aires, Argentina. His passion for sacred music that reflects Latin American culture has greatly influenced the nature of church music in both South and North America.
Sosa wrote “El Cielo Canta Alegria” in 1958 for a picnic of theological students. It celebrates the joy of community found in the Body of Christ. The lyrics in both Spanish and English invite us to joyful meditation. We share the first verse here.
El cielo canta alegría,¡Aleluya!porque en tu vida y la míabrilla la gloria de Dios.¡Aleluya! ¡Aleluya!¡Aleluya! ¡Aleluya!
Heaven is singing for joy,Alleluia!for in your life and in mineis shining the glory of God.Alleluia! Alleluia!Alleluia! Alleluia!
“El Cielo Canta” by Pablo Sosa. Copyright © Choristers Guild. Used by permission.
Where You’ll Find Everything Else
◆ Attached to this Session Plan you will find:— Backgrounds and reflections for today’s readings,
titled More about Today’s Scriptures.— A Baptismal Tour activity you can use in today’s
session, if your church layout allows, to invite children to explore the setting and gestures of the rite of Baptism.
— A copy of today’s Gospel Story to hand out to children or e-mail to their families.
— This week’s At Home with the Good News to hand out to children or e-mail to their families.
◆ Open your Winter-C Seasonal Resources folder, then click on Seasonal Articles to find:— Information on Winter-C’s Models of the Faith.— An article for catechists and/or families exploring
Jesus’ role as The Messiah.— An article for catechists and/or families exploring
The Creed in the Christian Tradition.— An article for catechists and/or families titled
Learning through the Visual Arts.— The Introduction for Preschool/Kindergarten for
Living the Good News.
Living the Good News | Preschool/Kindergarten | Baptism of the Lord – C
© 2015 Published by Morehouse Education Resources, www.MorehouseEducation.org. All rights reserved. Permission is hereby granted to reproduce this page for use in the purchasing congregation only.
helps for catechistsbackground in
form
atio
n and bonus m
ate
rials
5
More about Today’s ScripturesToday’s readings invite us to respond to God’s call in baptism. Isaiah suggests that God chooses and gathers us to bring compassion and justice to a suffering world. Peter and John spread the good news of Jesus beyond their comfortable social and ethnic borders. In today’s gospel, Jesus is baptized, and we are invited to acknowledge him as God’s “Son, the Beloved.”
Isaiah 42:1-4, 6-7Today’s reading is the first of four “servant songs” in Isaiah (the others are 49:1-6, 50:4-11 and 52:13–53:12). It is not clear whom the author intended the servant to represent. The servant could stand for a collective identity: the people of Israel as the historical nation, as a faithful remnant or as an idealized body.
Others believe that the servant represents an individual such as the king, a prophet or a future ideal figure, such as a messianic ruler. Christians have always identified the servant as Jesus.The song in today’s reading is a recognized formula for the king’s designation of a court official. The servant is presented, his power is attested, his mission and manner of accomplishing it are defined. He will “bring forth justice to the nations” (v. 1) by bringing all people, par-ticularly the oppressed, into the covenantal relationship with God and one another.
The depiction of the servant forms an important element in the Church’s understanding of Jesus’ mission, especially as presented in accounts of his baptism.
Acts 10:34-38Today’s reading is a selection from Peter’s speech to the pagan centurion Cornelius and his household. Cornelius was a “God-fearer,” a Gentile who worshiped God but had not adopted all of the Jewish religious practices. Peter’s sermon is an example of the basic preaching of the early Church.
Including Gentiles into the Christian community was a divisive issue in the early church. Some rejected and feared the possible inclusion of Gentiles, but the passage makes it clear that Peter’s willingness to consider including the Gentiles is not something he came to simply on his own. Peter acted under the direction of the Holy Spirit (1:8).
Cornelius’s conversion marks an important turning point in the outreach of the early Church. But even more it marks a distinctively Christian insight into the inclusive attitude of God. Through his dream Peter learns that creating human barriers that hinder persons from relating to God is not the way God acts. Because God is inclusive, so must we be!
Luke 3:15-16, 21-22Like Mark and Matthew, Luke records John’s denial of his own importance. It is the mightier one who is coming who will baptize with the Holy Spirit and with fire. Jesus is baptized along with “all the people,” identifying himself with sinful humanity.
As Jesus was praying (in Luke, often a prelude to major events), the Holy Spirit descends upon him. With the title formerly applied to the nation, to the king and later to the Messiah, Jesus is now openly identified as the Son of God, dramatizing and confirming what was implicit in his conception (1:35). Thus Jesus is anointed for his mission.
Living the Good News | Preschool/Kindergarten | Baptism of the Lord – C
© 2015 Published by Morehouse Education Resources, www.MorehouseEducation.org. All rights reserved. Permission is hereby granted to reproduce this page for use in the purchasing congregation only.
helps for catechistsbackground in
form
atio
n and bonus m
ate
rials
6
ReflectionThe gospel gets off to a rolling start, describing “a people filled with expectation.” We know that feeling of standing on tiptoe when we await a special holiday, or yearn for the arrival of someone we love but haven’t seen in a long time.
In the spiritual life, we must also wait expectantly, knowing that we cannot go it alone, that we desperately need a redeemer. Do we long for God—or can we be easily satisfied with a new car, a restaurant meal? In the sixteenth century, St. Ignatius of Loyola asked each seeker the same question: “what is your deep desire?” It’s not a bad question to ask ourselves, and it can’t be answered quickly or superficially.
Jesus models how to wait: praying and together. He enters the waters with the rest of the community, not setting himself apart. The outpouring of the Spirit which he then receives awaits us too: the voice affirming us as beloved child, God’s delight. From his baptism flow all the other graces of his life.
What remains for him—and for us—is then to live out of that blessing. It takes him forty days in the desert to internalize the message, which fires all his subsequent ministry. What is the foundational experience, the fundamental grace in our lives?
The Scriptures and the CatechismThe feast of the Baptism of the Lord reminds us that our response to Christ’s call to follow the way of discipleship is formalized in our baptism (CCC, #1213–45). Jesus’ baptism included both the confirmation of his identity as God’s Son (the voice from heaven) and his empowerment for the ministry that will now begin (the Spirit descending like a dove). So likewise our baptism seals our identity as Christians and empowers us to continue the saving work begun with Jesus (CCC, #830–56). Baptism transforms us into “Christs” for our world.
The World of the BibleBaptizing with Water and the SpiritFor the early Christians, there were two great signs of God’s saving activity that would bring a new life: the resurrection of Jesus from death to new life and the outpouring of God’s Holy Spirit on the community. John likens his purifying washing with the equally cleansing action of the Holy Spirit and fire.
The outpouring of God’s Spirit (the power of life associated with breathing) in a baptismal washing not only purifies the person but signifies one’s desire to change one’s ways and be more closely united with God’s saving activity. Once empowered by the indwelling of God’s holy presence, the baptized will be able to carry on the mission and ministry of God in our world.
Living the Good News | Preschool/Kindergarten | Baptism of the Lord – C
Winter • Year C
©2015 BY MOREHOUSE EDUCATION RESOURCES • ALL RIGHTS RESERVEDPermission is hereby granted to reproduce this page for use in the purchasing congregation only.
Jesus is Baptized
Jesus says, “It’s time to be baptized.” Jesus walks to the water.
John is standing in the water.
“Hello Jesus,” says John. “Should I baptize you?”
“Yes,” says Jesus. “It’s time for me to be baptized.”
Jesus walks into the water. John baptizes Jesus. John puts Jesus in and out of the water.
When Jesus comes up from the water, he hears God.
God says, “Jesus, you are my special child. I love you.”
PK-WC-BALO-DL-C-Gospel Story
Gospel Story
Winter • Year C
©2015 BY MOREHOUSE EDUCATION RESOURCES • ALL RIGHTS RESERVEDPermission is hereby granted to reproduce this page for use in the purchasing congregation only.
Children take a tour of the church’s baptismal font.
Take the children to the baptismal font. Invite the children to rub their hands on the outside, look at any decorations and explore the font’s inside.
Read any words written on the font aloud to the children and tell the children that it is named a font. Ask:◆ What happens here? (Encourage children to talk about baptisms they have seen.)
Ask a volunteer to pretend to be baptized. Invite the children to mime with you a make-be-lieve baptism using these steps:◆ First we pour water into the font. (Pretend to pour water from a pitcher.)◆ Then we pray for the child who will be baptized. (Touch the volunteer as you pray: “God, give
your Spirit to (name the child). Amen.”)◆ Then we put the child in and out the water. (Help the child dip his or her head into the font.
Pretend to pour water over the child.)
Repeat the mock baptism with as many children as wish to be “baptized.”
Baptismal Tour
PK-WC-BALO-DL-A-Baptismal Tour
Winter • Year C
©2015 BY MOREHOUSE EDUCATION RESOURCES • ALL RIGHTS RESERVEDPermission is hereby granted to reproduce this page for use in the purchasing congregation only.
More about Today’s ScripturesBaptism of the Lord
Today’s readings invite us to respond to God’s call in baptism. Isaiah suggests that God chooses and gathers us to bring compassion and justice to a suffering world. Peter and John spread the good news of Jesus beyond their comfortable social and ethnic borders. In today’s gospel, Jesus is baptized, and we are invited to acknowledge him as God’s “Son, the Beloved.”
Isaiah 42:1-4, 6-7
Today’s reading is the first of four “servant songs” in Isaiah (the others are 49:1-6, 50:4-11 and 52:13–53:12). It is not clear whom the author intended the servant to represent. The servant could stand for a collective identity: the people of Israel as the historical nation, as a faithful remnant or as an idealized body.
Others believe that the servant represents an individual such as the king, a prophet or a future ideal figure, such as a messianic ruler. Christians have always identified the servant as Jesus.
The song in today’s reading is a recognized formula for the king’s designation of a court official. The servant is presented, his power is attested, his mission and manner of accomplish-ing it are defined. He will “bring forth justice to the nations” (v. 1) by bringing all people, particularly the oppressed, into the covenantal relationship with God and one another.
The depiction of the servant forms an important element in the Church’s understanding of Jesus’ mission, especially as presented in accounts of his baptism.
Acts 10:34-38
Today’s reading is a selection from Peter’s speech to the pagan centurion Cornelius and
his household. Cornelius was a “God-fearer,” a Gentile who worshiped God but had not adopted all of the Jewish religious practices. Peter’s sermon is an example of the basic preaching of the early Church.
Including Gentiles into the Christian community was a divisive issue in the early church. Some rejected and feared the possible inclusion of Gentiles, but the passage makes it clear that Peter’s willingness to consider including the Gentiles is not something he came to simply on his own. Peter acted under the direction of the Holy Spirit (1:8).
Cornelius’s conversion marks an important turning point in the outreach of the early Church. But even more it marks a distinctively Christian insight into the inclusive attitude of God. Through his dream Peter learns that creating human barriers that hinder persons from relating to God is not the way God acts. Because God is inclusive, so must we be!
Luke 3:15-16, 21-22
Like Mark and Matthew, Luke records John’s denial of his own importance. It is the mightier one who is coming who will baptize with the Holy Spirit and with fire. Jesus is baptized along with “all the people,” identifying himself with sinful humanity.
As Jesus was praying (in Luke often a prelude to major events), the Holy Spirit descends upon him. With the title formerly applied to the nation, to the king and later to the Messiah, Jesus is now openly identified as the Son of God, dramatizing and confirming what was implicit in his conception (1:35). Thus Jesus is anointed for his mission.
©2015 BY MOREHOUSE EDUCATION RESOURCES • ALL RIGHTS RESERVEDPermission is hereby granted to reproduce this page for use in the purchasing congregation only.
00-WC-BALO-SB-C-More About Today_s Scriptures
ReflectionThe gospel gets off to a rolling start, describing “a people filled with expectation.” We know that feeling of standing on tiptoe when we await a special holiday, or yearn for the arrival of someone we love but haven’t seen in a long time.
In the spiritual life, we must also wait expectantly, knowing that we cannot go it alone, that we desperately need a redeemer. Do we long for God—or can we be easily satisfied with a new car, a restaurant meal? In the 16th century, St. Ignatius of Loyola asked each seeker the same question: “what is your deep desire?” It’s not a bad question to ask ourselves, and it can’t be answered quickly or superficially.
Jesus models how to wait: praying and together. He enters the waters with the rest of the community, not setting himself apart. The outpouring of the Spirit which he then receives awaits us too: the voice affirming us as beloved child, God’s delight. From his baptism flow all the other graces of his life.
What remains for him—and for us—is then to live out of that blessing. It takes him 40 days in the desert to internalize the message, which fires all his subsequent ministry. What is the founda-tional experience, the fundamental grace in our lives?
Com
mon
sense an
d the experts agree: faith
form
ation m
ust occu
r in th
e hom
e. Th
e chu
rch’s edu
cational program
s have a m
uch
better ch
ance of su
ccess if these efforts are expan
ded an
d enrich
ed by the fam
ilies wh
ere children
spen
d a hu
ge proportion of th
eir time.
Th
is resource is design
ed to help fam
ilies an
d chu
rches m
eet that n
eed. Often
parents
wan
t to participate in th
eir children’s religiou
s edu
cations, bu
t aren’t sure h
ow to do it. T
hese
pages give families m
any w
ays to bring th
e Su
nday readin
gs into th
e hom
e. At H
ome w
ith the G
ood New
s is designed for th
e parents of
children
aged preschool th
rough
grade six.
Each
reproducible page con
tains:
•B
ibleBackgroun
d
Th
is section lists th
e readings for each
Su
nday an
d briefly explain
s how
they relate
to each oth
er or to a comm
on th
eme.
•W
hatYourChildD
idThisW
eek
Th
is section su
mm
arizes wh
at Presch
ool/ K
indergarten
, Prim
ary and In
termediate
groups did in
their session
s. It gives parents
a specific startin
g point for a con
versation
about w
hat th
eir children
learned or
accomplish
ed. For parents w
ho are n
ew to
an experien
tial, lectionary-based approach
, it serves as an
introdu
ction th
at will
increase th
eir familiarity.
•P
rayerStarter
Th
ese can be u
sed at hom
e, after a meal,
at bedtime or w
hen
ever a family gath
ers to pray togeth
er. On
e person can
serve as th
e leader, reading alou
d the w
ords of the
prayer or the prom
pt that in
vites others to
participate.
•Parentin
gTip
Health
y parentin
g is a skill learned over
time. T
hese su
ggestions give paren
ts con
crete ideas for cherish
ing th
eir children
an
d makin
g the C
hristian
message th
eir w
ay of life at hom
e.
How
to U
se This R
esource
Brin
gin
g th
e Sunday R
eadin
gs to
Your Fa
mily
•FamilyD
iscussionQ
uestion
In th
is section appears a qu
estion based on
th
e gospel. Since m
ost families don’t h
ave lon
g, un
interru
pted time for discu
ssion,
this qu
estion can
come u
p in th
e car after ch
urch
, durin
g the w
ait at the drive-in
ban
k or fast food restauran
t, or at bedtime.
Paren
ts can adapt it to th
e ages and
interests of th
eir children
.
•GospelR
eflection
T
his m
editation on
the gospel lin
ks Jesus’
story and ou
r daily lives. People w
ho pray
over the gospels regu
larly can begin
to m
ake them
the tem
plate for the w
ay they
live. Th
us, th
ey can tran
sform th
e message
from w
ords proclaimed in
chu
rch to valu
es en
shrin
ed in th
e heart.
Wh
ile some fam
ilies may h
ave time for
extended refl
ection on
the readin
gs and
utilize all th
e sections of th
e page, others m
ay h
ave time for on
ly a quick Fam
ily Discu
ssion
Qu
estion or P
arentin
g Tip. A
ll parents w
ill wan
t to see w
hat th
eir children
did in th
eir session so
they can
discuss it w
ith th
em afterw
ards.
Reprodu
ce the pages an
d arrange a system
of distribu
tion so th
at they can
be sent h
ome w
ith
the oldest or you
ngest ch
ild in a fam
ily, the
chu
rch n
ewsletter or an
y regular bu
lletin.
WheretoU
seThisR
esourceT
his resou
rce may be h
elpful in
a variety of settin
gs, and especially for:
• C
hristian
Edu
cation settin
gs wh
ere parent
involvem
ent is cru
cial•
Intergen
erational edu
cational settin
gs•
Schools w
ith den
omin
ational spon
sorship
wh
o wan
t to involve fam
ilies more
Brin
gin
g th
e Sunday R
eadin
gs to
Your Fa
mily
Today’s scriptures focus on the nature of Jesus’ person and ministry, as revealed in his baptism. Isaiah42:1-4,6-7 describes a servant called by God, who will persist until he establishes justice. In Acts10:34-38, Peter
preaches about Jesus of Nazareth, anointed by God and the Holy Spirit. In Luke3:15-16,21-22, Jesus receives the anointing of God’s Spirit and hears the voice of God’s affirming love.
The Preschool/Kindergarten session included
activities that explored not only the long-ago story
of Jesus’ baptism but also God’s gift of grace to
us in this sacrament. They used baptismal mate-
rials at a learning center, played a musical game
based on the story and drew pictures of God’s
children.
Primary(Grades1-3) children began with skits or
free play at learning centers designed to explore
their ideas about water. After hearing today’s gos-
pel, the children made pipe-cleaner story figures
and used them to tell stories about baptism. They
then made a class book about baptism.
Intermediate(Grades4-6) participants also
focused on Jesus’ baptism, the beginning of his
mission to all nations. They talked about coun-
tries they would like to visit, read Isaiah and
illustrated a scripture verse with paper cutouts of
people from many lands.
Baptism of the Lord • Year C
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This is a good time to get out mementos of your children’s baptisms: photos, video recordings, candles, Baptismal garments. Tell stories about the event. Talk about how tiny they were (if baptized as infants), how big they’ve grown, and how Jesus lives in them through the grace of Baptism.
It’s easy to understand John’s protest when Jesus lines up with all the thieves, cheats, liars, unfaithful and unfragrant people who clearly need this rite of purification. Joining them for cleansing isn’t the best way to start a career. We want Jesus to act like God (“C’mon—throw in a little thunder!”) but he casts his lot with humans.
When we let go of our rigid expectations of how God ought to act, when we “give in” as John did, then we see the sky open and the
Spirit descend. To John’s objection, Jesus offers a simple explanation: it is fitting for them to participate in God’s plan. The saving activity is God’s; human justice is our effort to respond, to be true to all we have been given.
What is true for Jesus is true for us: we are baptized, anointed, supported by God’s power and made God’s children. Do we respond to these gifts as Jesus did, by healing and doing good?
Repeat God’s words at Jesus’ baptism to each family member:
• “You are my beloved child, with you I am well pleased.”
Baptism means that you were chosen by God, affirmed as “beloved,”
and sent forth to change the world. Find ways to communicate that empowering
message to your children and explain why baptism is so important to you.
Were our baptisms any different from Jesus’? So what great plans must God have for us?