Teaching Children about Spiritual Hunger
49
Teaching Children about Spiritual Hunger
I shook the milk jug with my fake milk--cornstarch in water--toward the
kids at children's church last Sunday. "The Bible is like milk," I
declared. "It nourishes you--it feeds you--so you can grow." The
children stared at me waiting for more. They're such sweet children and
want to know the truth. They were expecting me to explain this mystery
of how the Bible feeds us. "It's like food for the spirit," I
expounded. I picked up my big Bible and held it up to add clarity to
the concept. They continued to stare. Some had heard this concept
before and relaxed at the familiarity of it. Others continued to stare
blankly. Wonder what they were really thinking. I just can't guess.
Then
the idea came to me. "How many have ever been hungry. How many know
that feeling in your stomach called hunger pangs." Surprisingly, a few
didn't raise their hands. (Ah, America. We're well-fed.) "Well," I
continued, "when you were a baby you learned what it feels like to be
hungry. You felt that pain in your stomach, you cried, you were fed
some milk and felt all full and good inside. You found out that when
you had that pain in your stomach that you were hungry and you wanted
milk. You don't even remember it, because it was when you were a tiny
baby." They like this. Kids like hearing about when they were babies
because they can't remember it.
"Well, we don't seem to learn
so easily what it feels like when our spirits are hungry and we have to
teach ourselves to know. Sometimes you will feel lonely or kind of
empty inside. You might feel like something isn't quite right or that
something is missing. THAT means your spirit is hungry. You need to
spend time reading or hearing the Word of God--the Bible. Or you can
remember verses you have learned. You need to spend time with
God--praying or worshiping and listening." OH! I could see the look of
understanding spreading across many of their tiny faces. Because at
five or six or seven or eight years old, most have already felt this
spiritual hunger. They didn't know what it was. I hope that they have
learned what it is and learn to feed their spirits before they get used
to the feeling of being hungry all the time--and think it's normal or
inevitable.
PrintShare it! — Rate it: up down flag this hub









Dottie1 says:
5 months ago
I love how you painted the picture so the children understood what spiritual hunger is.