SIGNS OF OUR FAITH:
BEING UU EVERY DAY
A Tapestry of Faith Program for Children
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH:
BEING UU EVERY DAY
A Tapestry of Faith Program for Children
Grades 2-3
BY JESSICA YORK
© Copyright 2013 Unitarian Universalist Association.
Published to the Web on 11/8/2014 12:18:45 PM PST.
This program and additional resources are available on the UUA.org web site at
www.uua.org/tapestryoffaith.
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
Jessica York began her career in religious education after several years' experience in the theatre, retail bookstore management, and substitute teaching. After six years as the Director of Religious Education at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Birmingham, AL, she joined the UUA as Youth Programs Director. In that role, she has edited several Tapestry of Faith youth programs. She is a co-author of the Tapestry of Faith programs Creating Home (at www.uua.org/re/tapestry/children/home/index.shtml)and Virtue Ethics: An Ethical Development Program for High School Youth (at www.uua.org/re/tapestry/youth/virtueethics/index.shtml), as well as Sharing the Journey: Small Group Ministry with Youth (at www.uua.org/re/tapestry/youth/journey/index.shtml), and an in print book, Bridging: A Handbook for Congregations (at www.uuabookstore.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=1660). Jessica is also the author of the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee's curriculum Beyond the Mountain: A Multigenerational Religious Education Program on Haiti (at www.uusc.org/haiticurriculum).
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
A special acknowledgement to Aisha Hauser, who co-authored two sessions in this program. Thanks to Pat Kahn, UUA Children's and Families' Program Director, for helpful suggestions and feedback. Thanks to Michelle Bishop, Religious Education Assistant at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Atlanta, Georgia, for creative ideas with emblems and stoles.
THE PROGRAM
…if religion is ultimately about what we love, then “faith” is not so much about what we think is true (or hope is true, despite lack of evidence), but about being faithful to what we love.— Peter Morales, President, Unitarian Universalist Association (2009 - )
Rev. Morales asks us to think about religion as the practice of being faithful to what you love. In order to do this, you must decide what you love and do your best to live that love faithfully every day. Signs of Our Faith guides children to do their best to live faithful lives every day. It presents fourteen traits or values that most Unitarian Universalist love, including the quest for knowledge, reverence for life, supporting one another on our faith journeys, and public witness. Children examine how their lives do and can exhibit these traits and values, and come to understand that their faith is a living faith whose histories and teachings are fortifications for living faithfully in a complex world.
Signs of Our Faith engages children to explore ritual practices of our faith that remind us of these traits and values. Some of the rituals are enacted in the congregation. Some we conduct alone, or in our interactions with family, friends, and peers; others are offered to the wider world. This program helps children understand the abstract concept of a ritual by naming rituals as signs of our faith. Rituals are defined broadly, so that naming and dedicating a baby is a ritual, but so too is befriending a new child at school. Through the concept of "ritual," children discover evidence of their faith in everyday actions and are encouraged to ritualize or form into habit such traits as caring, welcoming, and making fair group decisions.
Signs of Our Faith asks young people to see themselves as leaders of their faith. They build experience performing and, at times, creating rituals to share in their families as well as the congregation, and are thereby positioned as co-creators of the faith. Leadership in Action, alternate activities included in every session, invite children to lead the flower ceremony, host an appreciation event for congregational leaders, and write meditations and prayers for congregational use. By sharing their leadership with a wider group, children deepen their connection to our faith and see themselves as needed leaders in the congregation, other UU communities, and the world beyond.
Your leadership of this program is truly a sign of great faith. It is a sign of lived faith. Your leadership will be an example to the participants that will outlive any particular activity. May this program help you nurture the next generation of UU leaders.
GOALS
This program will:
LEADERS
A team of two or more adults should lead the program. Having two leaders present at all times helps assure child safety. While one leader implements an activity, the other can focus on classroom management. Communication between team members is crucial to create a common culture in the sessions. Your leadership should include at least one congregational member who is familiar with the rituals of the congregation.
PARTICIPANTS
Signs of Our Faith is for children in second and third grade or ages seven through nine. You may find it useful to think about the developmental norms for this age group. Not all children arrive at each developmental stage at the same time, but knowing what to expect overall from seven-, eight-, and nine-year-olds can be quite helpful, especially to first-time leaders.
In Nurturing Children and Youth: A Developmental Guidebook (at www.uuabookstore.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=706) (Boston: Unitarian Universalist Association, 2005), Tracey L. Hurd discusses developmental characteristics of school-age children. She notes that by age seven, children's learning disabilities and behavioral or psychological issues may have appeared and been identified. Individual learning styles and strengths may also be apparent. Children who need glasses often get their first pair around this age.
In a section on moral development, Hurd notes that the typical child in this age group is "passionately interested" in moral issues:
She seeks what is fair and right... By developing games with rules, playing sports, or creating or belonging to clubs, the school-age child practices figuring out what is fair... This play is practice for more generalized moral decision making.
In general, children in second or third grade are:
Hurd offers a variety of strategies that speak to these developmental considerations and may help you shape your sessions effectively. You can:
By adapting activities or using alternate activities, you can make every session inclusive of children with a range of physical and cognitive abilities, learning styles, food allergies, and other needs or limitations. As you plan sessions, be aware of activities that might pose difficulties for children who are differently abled. All spaces, indoor and outdoor, need to be accessible to participants and leaders. Check the width of doorways and aisles, the height of tables, and the terrain of outdoor landscapes.
Each session mixes active and quiet, expressive and listening, whole group and individual activities. As you recognize different learning styles among participants, let this information guide your plan of each session. Substitute alternate activities for core activities if you feel they better suit the group.
Including All Participants notes specific concerns and/or suggests adaptations to make an activity fully inclusive. You are encouraged to devise your own adaptations as needed. As the leader, you know best how to provide a fully inclusive learning experience for the group. If you have questions about the accessibility or adaptability of a particular activity, please ask your religious educator for advice. A helpful resource available from the UUA Bookstore is Sally Patton's Welcoming Children with Special Needs (at www.uuabookstore.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=756).
FAMILIES
Families are the primary influences on the faith development of their children. As a program leader, you take on a special role: supporting parents to shape their children's Unitarian Universalist faith and moral development. By involving parents in this program, you can deepen the experience for children and their families.
Each session offers Taking It Home resources including conversation topics and other ways for families to extend the session. These may include a family game or ritual, or links to informative and/or interactive websites. Exploring session topics at home can help children and parents practice the skills, personalize the concepts, and make connections among congregational life, home and family life, and life's daily challenges. Be sure to adapt each session's Taking It Home to reflect the activities you have chosen. If you have an email address for every family, you might provide Taking It Home as a group email, either before or immediately after the session. You can also print and photocopy Taking It Home to distribute at the session's Closing.
Invite families into your sessions. Adult or teen volunteers can be extremely helpful with arts-and-crafts activities. Parents who bring musicianship, storytelling, or artistic skills will foster participants' sense of connection between their family and their religious education. Faith in Action activities offer ideal opportunities to engage parents and other congregants. Find out who can enrich your long-term Faith in Action activities with their personal interests, professional networks, or simply their time.
The leader-parent relationship is very important and must be both welcoming and reassuring. When parents bring their children to Unitarian Universalist religious education, they need to feel confidence not only in the safety and enjoyment you will provide, but also in your faith leadership. Strong partnerships foster parents' commitment to becoming strong faith leaders in their own families. As a leader, you can support and inspire parents to bring intentionality and excitement to their role in their children's Unitarian Universalist faith development.
PROGRAM STRUCTURE
The program includes an Introduction and 16 sessions.
The sessions build as units:
Each session has its own Introduction, followed by a Session Plan.
In each session Introduction, find:
Quotations. The quotations that introduce each session are primarily for leaders, though at times you may wish to read one aloud to the group as an entry point to a session. Exploring a quotation together can help co-leaders feel grounded in the ideas and activities. These quotations are also included in Taking It Home for families to consider.
Goals. Reviewing the goals will help you understand the desired outcomes for the session and connect its content and methodologies with the four strands of the Tapestry of Faith religious education programs: ethical development, spiritual development, Unitarian Universalist identity development and faith development.
Learning Objectives. These show how participants will learn and grow as a result of the experience of the session. As you plan, apply your knowledge of the particular group of children, the time and space you have available, and your own strengths and interests as a leader to determine the most important and achievable learning objectives for the session. Choose activities that will serve them best.
Session-at-a-Glance. This table lists the session activities in a suggested order for a 60-minute session and provides an estimated time for completing each activity. The table includes all the core activities from the Opening through the Closing. The table also shows the Faith in Action activity for the session (though you will need additional time beyond the core 60-minute session to include a Faith in Action activity). The Session-at-a-Glance table also presents Alternate Activities with their estimated times.
Spiritual Preparation. Taking five or ten minutes to center yourself within the session's purpose and content will support and free you to be present with participants and provide the best possible learning experience. Each session offers a short Spiritual Preparation exercise to focus you on your own life and Unitarian Universalist faith. Calling forth your own experiences and beliefs will prepare you to bring the topic to the group in an authentic manner. We believe that teaching is a spiritual practice.
Session Plan
Following the Session Introduction, the Session Plan presents every element of the session in detail in the sequence established in the Session-at-a-Glance table. The materials and preparation needed and a step-by-step description are provided for each core activity, Faith in Action, and alternate activity. Additionally, the Session Plan provides Taking It Home with activities for families; Stories, Handouts, and Leader Resources for all session activities; and Find Out More with resources for leaders and parents to explore session topics further.
Adaptation to include all participants should always be part of your planning process. Under Including All Participants, many activities suggest specific modifications to make the activity manageable and meaningful for children with particular limitations or needs.
If you are reading this program online, you can move among a session's elements: Opening, Closing, Faith in Action, Activity 4, Story, etc. Each element occupies its own web page. You can click on "Print This Page" at any time. If you click on "Download Entire Program" or "Download Workshop" you will have a user-friendly document on your computer that you can customize as you choose, using your own word processing program. Once you decide which activities you will use, format and print only the materials you need.
To distribute Taking It Home and other handouts or letters to parents, you may wish to go green; download and adapt these documents, then use email to distribute to all children's families.
MATERIALS
Few special or unique materials are called for in the sessions, except the stoles (see “Before You Start”).
Because much of the program concerns the rituals of the congregation, it is suggested in several activities that you share with the group photos, videos, and other mementos of congregational rituals and activities. Leaders may need help gathering these materials. Consult the religious educator, congregational historian, administrator or minister for guidance.
LEADER GUIDELINES
Read each session ahead of time and plan with your co-leader. Be organized enough to be flexible. Read stories through at least once so your storytelling has a good flow.
Tapestry of Faith programs are designed for adaptation to your congregational needs. Use Alternate Activities to replace core activities if they seem better suited to your group. Since this program focuses on rituals, pay attention to Opening and Closing rituals. Treat materials used in rituals with respect and encourage children to do the same.
Throughout the program, you will explore ways to live faithfully in the world. Children may realize that they make mistakes or poor choices sometimes, and sometimes do not act in caring or fair ways. Acknowledge that this is true for everyone. None of us are perfect. Label bad choices as mistakes and encourage children to make better choices—more faithful choices—next time.
IMPLEMENTATION
Leadership in Action
Use Alternate Activities to extend session time, add sessions, or replace core activities to better suit the group. Signs of Our Faith includes a special series of Alternate Activities called Leadership in Action (LIA). These are presented as Alternate Activities because they usually cannot be conducted during the session. They frequently engage with the larger congregation and provide opportunities for children to take a leadership role. Activities such as writing and reciting a chalice lighting in congregational worship, nominating an organization to receive a share of the offertory plate, and hosting a welcoming event for families who join the congregation teach children much about the life of the congregation and help them become comfortable interacting with congregants of all ages. Try to include as many LIAs in the program as your schedule will allow.
Guest Speakers
Several sessions include activities that can be enriched by inclusion of a guest speaker. Mark these sessions on your calendar and plan to recruit guests several weeks ahead. Contact each guest a week before the session to confirm their attendance and remind them what you wish them to present. It is particularly important to remind them of the time allowed for their visit and of the age of participants, which calls for short presentations, with time for questions and answers.
BEFORE YOU START
Rituals
In every session, a ritual associated with the session theme is highlighted. Some of the rituals may be alien to your congregation. If a described ritual is conducted in your congregation in a different way, replace the text with an accurate description. For example, different congregations have different methods for sharing Joys and Concerns. Describe the ritual as children would see it conducted in their own congregation. Some rituals may not be part of your congregational culture at all. In this case, explain to participants that some UU congregations conduct rituals around this theme, but your congregation honors this theme in another ways. Each session's theme is general enough that leaders should be able to find evidence of the theme's existence in their congregation's culture. Be willing to adapt sessions to reflect what is true for your congregation.
Some rituals are scheduled to happen during set times in the liturgical year, such as flower, water, and bread communions or child dedications. Consider scheduling Signs sessions that discuss these rituals to coincide with the liturgical calendar. In this way, if the congregation engages in multigenerational worship services, children will learn about them and be able to experience them in the congregation simultaneously. If these rituals have not previously been held during multigenerational services, consider asking the worship team to hold these rituals during times when the Signs group may witness them and even, perhaps, participate in them. In this way, the congregation supports the learnings of the Signs group and witnesses their budding leadership.
Leadership
Signs of Our Faith is also a program on building leadership in children. Consider adding additional opportunities for leadership, whenever possible. One addition could be assigning duties that would rotate amongst participants. See Faith in Action: Sharing Leadership in Session 2 for suggestions. Though Faith in Action activities are not part of the core session plan, it is highly suggested that you find time within the first few sessions to conduct this activity.
Stoles
The program includes the wearing of ceremonial stoles. In Sessions 4, 8, and 12, children add an emblem to their stoles that symbolizes concepts taught in the previous sessions. The first emblem (Session 4) represents living one's faith to oneself. The second emblem (Session 8) represents living one's faith in relations with others. The third emblem (Session 12) represents living their faith in the congregation. The Leader Resources in these sessions provide a template for the emblems. In Session 16, the conclusion of the program, the children add an iron-on chalice patch to their stoles. It represents living their UU faith out in the world.
Work with the religious educator well before the start of the program to make decisions about the stoles, including:
Consider budget as well as congregational resources for design, sewing, and craft skills. There are several options for creating and attaching emblems:
In Session 16, you will help children add a UUA chalice patch along with the fourth emblem. Purchase the patches from the UUA Bookstore; order extra for children who may join the group during the program. These patches are iron-on.
The sessions suggest children wear stoles for Opening, Closing, and occasional worship-like activities, but leaders may wish to help the group in decide how best to use the stoles.
PRINCIPLES AND SOURCES
Unitarian Universalist congregations affirm and promote seven Principles (at www.uua.org/visitors/6798.shtml):
Unitarian Universalism draws from many Sources (at www.uua.org/visitors/6798.shtml):
RESOURCES
Here are few books that might be useful. The first three are available from the UUA Bookstore.
Nurturing Children and Youth: A Developmental Guidebook (at www.uuabookstore.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=706) by Tracey L. Hurd (Boston: Unitarian Universalist Association, 2005)
The Gift of Faith (at www.uuabookstore.org): Tending the Spiritual Lives of Children by Jeanne Harrison Nieuwejaar Second Edition (Boston: Skinner House Books, 2003)
Welcoming Children with Special Needs (at www.uuabookstore.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=756): A Guidebook for Faith Communities by Sally Patton (Boston: Unitarian Universalist Association, 2004)
Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder by Richard Louv (Chapel Hill, NC: Algonquin Books, 2005)
Rituals and Patterns in Children’s Lives, edited by Kathy Merlock Jackson (Madison, WI: Popular Press, 2005)
FACILITATOR FEEDBACK FORM
We welcome your critique of this program, as well as your suggestions. Thank you for your feedback! Your input improves programs for all of our congregations. Please forward your feedback to:
Faith Development Office
Ministries and Faith Development
Unitarian Universalist Association
25 Beacon Street
Boston, MA 02108
religiouseducation@uua.org
Name of Program or Curriculum:
Congregation:
Number of Participants:
Age range:
Did you work with (a) co-facilitator(s)?
Your name:
Overall, what was your experience with this program?
What specifically did you find most helpful or useful about this program?
In what ways could this program be changed or improved (please be specific)?
Did you enrich the program with any resources that you would recommend to others?
What impact, if any, do you think this program will have on your life going forward?
What impact, if any, do you think this program will have on your congregation going forward?
PARTICIPANT FEEDBACK FORM
We welcome your critique of this program, as well as your suggestions. Thank you for your feedback! Your input improves programs for all of our congregations. Please forward your feedback to:
Faith Development Office
Ministries and Faith Development
Unitarian Universalist Association
25 Beacon Street
Boston, MA 02108
religiouseducation@uua.org
Name of Program or Curriculum:
Congregation or group:
Your name:
Overall, what was your experience with this program?
What specifically did you find most helpful or useful about this program?
In what ways could this program be changed or improved (please be specific)?
What impact, if any, do you think this program will have on your life going forward?
What impact, if any, do you think this program will have on your congregation going forward?
SESSION 1: SIGNS, SYMBOLS, AND RITUALS
SESSION OVERVIEW
INTRODUCTION
Ritual is the act of sanctifying action—even ordinary action—so that it has meaning: I can light a candle because I need light or because the candle represents the light I need. — Christina Baldwin, storyteller and author
This first session teaches what we mean when we talk about signs, symbols, and rituals. Children understand the concept of a ritual by reflecting on both secular and religious rituals in their lives. They learn that Unitarian Universalist congregations engage in rituals for events that are universal, such as birth, death, and coming of age, and enact rituals unique to our faith, such as a UU flower communion. The children examine why rituals are important to connect us to each other and our faith. And, they explore how signs can represent abstract ideas. This will help them understand the foundational statement of the program: Our behavior every day is a sign of our faith.
Beginning in Session 2, leaders will invite the children to wear stoles during Opening and Closing rituals. Before the next session, obtain a stole for each child in the group plus extra stoles for newcomers and guests.
GOALS
This session will:
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Participants will:
SESSION-AT-A-GLANCE
Activity | Minutes |
Opening | 15 |
Activity 1: Rituals In Our Lives | 10 |
Activity 2: Story — Abby's Birthday | 10 |
Activity 3: Symbol Game and Drawing | 20 |
Faith in Action: Attending Worship | |
Closing | 5 |
Alternate Activity 1: Leadership in Action — Tour of the Building | 20 |
Alternate Activity 2: Ritual Charades | 10 |
SPIRITUAL PREPARATION
Welcome to the first session of Signs of Our Faith! Thank you for taking the time to journey in faith with children.
Set aside time before each session to engage in the Spiritual Preparation activity, either alone or with your co-leader(s). Consider spiritual preparation as a ritual that can help you center yourself and connect with co-leaders of this program. Design the ritual so it will be meaningful for you. You might conduct it in the session meeting space 15 minutes before the children enter, or find another, quiet space conducive to reflection. You can journal on the reflection questions the night before, and share your thoughts with your co-leader before the session.
Before this first session, think about yourself at ages seven through nine. What kinds of rituals did you experience? Did you have rituals at home, school, a congregation, a club? Did you enjoy the rituals? Were the abstract meanings of rituals clear to you? Did you sometimes want to do things differently, or wish you did not need to do them at all? What role does ritual play in your life now?
SESSION PLAN
OPENING (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Invite children to decorate a name tag to use each time the group meets. Help children get started on their name tags, as needed. While they work, say:
Who knows what a "sign" is? A sign can be a picture or an action that shows an idea. A stop sign shows a driver when to stop their car. A wave of your hand shows you are greeting someone. What other kinds of signs can you think of? [Affirm responses.] Our group is called Signs of Our Faith. It is all about the ways we show that we are Unitarian Universalists.
I have a question for you: Are you UU just on Sundays [or whichever day your group meets]? [Take responses.] You are right: Though we meet at the congregation on Sunday, we are UU all the time—not just on Sunday or just when we are at the congregation. We live our faith every day, in many different ways. In this program, we are going to talk about the signs that we are UU. We will name the ways we show we are Unitarian Universalists in our everyday lives. We will explore ways we mark special occasions as Unitarian Universalists. If you are new to Unitarian Universalism, you will hear many ideas for ways you can grow in your UU faith.
This program will help you build your leadership. You may be young, but you can still be a leader in our congregation, in our faith, and in the world. Leadership means knowing your behavior sets an example to others, and stepping up to be a good example. We will discover UU ways to be leaders.
Have the children put on their name tags and invite them to gather around the chalice. Say:
Lighting our chalice is a sign that we are UUs. It is a UU ritual that you might see in religious education meetings like ours, and in worship. Did you know that the chalice is the most common symbol of our UU faith?
Light the chalice. Then, explain that everyone will introduce themselves by saying their name and something they like to do at the UU congregation or at any other religious home they may have visited, such as a church, a temple, or a mosque. Start by introducing yourself by the name you want the children to call you and sharing something simple you like in your congregation, such as seeing friends on Sunday morning or hearing the choir. Have the children and co-leader(s) introduce themselves.
After introductions, affirm that there are many different ways we live our UU faith. Say, in these words or your own:
Sometimes, we know that what we are doing is a sign of our faith. An example is lighting a chalice as we just did. Sometimes, we may not be aware. For example, if you see a new child in your class or group, and they do not appear to know anyone else, you might sit next to them, talk to them, and introduce them to your friends. You may not think, "I am doing this because I am Unitarian Universalist," but maybe you are. As UUs we think it is important to be welcoming. Acting with kindness toward the new child could be a sign of your faith.
ACTIVITY 1: RITUALS IN OUR LIVES (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants identify rituals in their lives and discover how secular and religious rituals differ.
Say, in your own words:
Some signs of our UU faith are our UU rituals. A ritual is an action that is repeated and always done in the same way. [Indicate the definition on newsprint.] Rituals can be in our congregation, or they can be actions we repeat at home or at school or anyplace we regularly go. Our lives are full of rituals. Some rituals have a lot of meaning, and some are just actions we repeat. Some rituals are such a part of our everyday life that we do not realize they are rituals. Let's see if we can name some rituals.
Post the newsprint sheets titled "School," "Home," and "Holidays" where children will be able to reach them. Lead the group to suggest rituals for each list. Remind children of the definition of a ritual, as needed. Use these prompts:
It is fine if one child suggests a ritual that others do not know. The important thing is to agree that the action is indeed a ritual, according to the definition provided. Make sure the process is respectful and that everyone has an opportunity to participate.
Call attention to the "School" list. Ask:
Say that at school, rituals often change from year to year. There may be a new teacher, new children in the class, a different room, and a new schedule. When a group changes, sometimes the rituals change, too. This is because the group is not exactly the same. It has a new identity and so it may have new rituals.
Point out that when a group has been together for a while, everybody in the group knows the ritual. Sometimes the people in a group have created a ritual themselves, and someone who is new would not have a way of knowing it. Ask:
Give everyone three sticky stars and ask them to place stars on the newsprint sheets next to their favorite rituals. Notice that everyone likes different rituals. Say that, throughout the program, we will see that we also differ in how we like to live out the signs of our faith.
ACTIVITY 2: STORY — ABBY'S BIRTHDAY (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants respond to a story that presents many different types of signs and rituals.
Invite participants to listen to a story. Remind the group that one definition of a ritual is an action that is repeated and always done in the same way. Ask participants to raise their hand or otherwise indicate whenever the story talks about someone performing a ritual.
Tell or read the story.
Process the story with these questions:
Tell the group that some rituals are actions that hold special meanings.
Including All Participants
You may wish to make fidget objects available to children who find it difficult to sit still while listening to a story or can focus better with sensory stimulation. Remind children where the Fidget Basket is before you begin the "centering" part of this activity. (For a full description and guidance, see Leader Resource 2.)
Consider using rug squares in the storytelling area. Place them in a semi-circle with the rule “One person per square.” This can be very helpful for controlling active bodies.
ACTIVITY 3: SYMBOL GAME AND DRAWING (20 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants talk about symbols and their meanings, and draw a symbol to represent themselves. Learning how symbols work helps children understand how religious rituals represent abstract ideas.
Tell the children you want to talk about symbols. Say that a symbol is something you see or touch that represents an idea that cannot be seen or touched. Say that you have examples to demonstrate what you mean.
Hold up the picture of an American flag. After participants identify it, ask the group what the flag is a symbol for. What does it represent? Is it just a piece of cloth? If no one says the flag represents the whole United States of America, give this answer. Say, "You cannot see or touch our whole country, but you can see or touch the American flag."
Next, hold up the peace symbol. Follow the same steps to solicit that it symbolizes "peace." Ask if you can touch peace or see it, as you can see or touch the peace symbol. Hold up the dove. Make sure children identify it as a dove and not just a bird. Solicit responses to what it symbolizes—"peace." Say there can be more than one symbol of the same idea.
Continue with as many symbols as time allows.
Say, in your own words:
Symbols are tangible. They are items you can touch and see. They make us think of ideas we cannot touch or see, and we call those ideas "abstract." Some rituals are like that too. Singing "Happy Birthday" makes us think of the idea of someone's special day. But lots of rituals are not symbols. Brushing your teeth every day is a ritual that cleans your teeth. It doesn't stand for something else. Buckling your seatbelt every time you get in the car is a ritual. Why do you buckle your seatbelt? Right, to keep you safe. It is not a symbol of something that you can't see or touch. Can you remember some of the everyday rituals in the story about Kamal and Abby's birthday? What did Kamal and his mom do before Abby's birthday party? [Remind the children that the story included buckling the seatbelt, and a morning cup of coffee.]
Now let's think about rituals that have more meaning. Rituals like singing "Happy Birthday," show ideas that are too big to touch or see. For example, some people who celebrate Christmas have a ritual of giving presents. What is the meaning of that ritual? Why do some people give Christmas presents? [Take and affirm responses. One answer is that it symbolizes the presents given to the baby Jesus. A participant might say the present is given to show love and that is a good answer, too.] In the story, Kamal gave Abby a gift and a card that she could touch and see, to show his friendship. The gift and card are symbols of friendship.
When we talk about rituals in our Signs group, we will mostly be talking about the kind of rituals that are symbols for something special.
Now invite the children to create an image that symbolizes them. Distribute drawing paper and markers/crayons. Say, in these words or your own:
What would a symbol that represents you look like? A symbol of you is NOT a picture of you. It might be a picture of something very special to you. A soccer ball? A violin? Ballet shoes?
Invite participants to share their symbols with the group.
CLOSING (5 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Distribute Taking It Home. Tell participants that at the end of every session, they will receive these fun activities to share with their family or friends. Read a sample of the activities aloud.
Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice. Indicate the words for chalice extinguishing on newsprint and invite participants to read them together.
We end as we began—together.
May we remember to be UU not just when we are together here, but every day and in every way.
Extinguish the chalice together.
FAITH IN ACTION: ATTENDING WORSHIP
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children observe a worship service.
Tell the children they will observe a worship service to identify rituals.
Coordinate plans for the group's attendance at worship with the children's families and the congregation's worship leaders.
On the day of the service, gather the children 15 minutes beforehand. Brief the children on appropriate behavior in worship. Provide Handout 1, Worship Rituals at My Congregation and crayons or pencils. Ask families or other adults who will sit with the group to be ready to help children fill out the handout quietly during the service or immediately afterward. Suggest the adults use the printed Order of Service to help children remember what they observed.
Discuss the handouts with the group with questions such as:
The purpose of the discussion is to make sure the children have a meaningful understanding of the concepts of signs and rituals. Accept all responses.
When you conclude the discussion, you may wish to collect the completed handouts, so children will have them handy when the Signs group talks about worship in future sessions.
Including All Participants
If the group includes children who have difficulty sitting through a worship service in the sanctuary, consider using an alternate space (such as a Crying Room), or plan to take the children out before the sermon.
LEADER REFLECTION AND PLANNING
What went well in this session? What lessons have we learned, for next time? How did the group interact? Were session themes communicated clearly? Did co-leaders allow adequate time for our own spiritual preparation?
Look over the next session and assign preparation duties as needed.
TAKING IT HOME
Ritual is the act of sanctifying action—even ordinary action—so that it has meaning: I can light a candle because I need light or because the candle represents the light I need. — Christina Baldwin, storyteller and author
IN TODAY'S SESSION... children learned to recognize signs, symbols, and rituals inside and outside our congregation that show we live our Unitarian Universalist faith. This session provided a working vocabulary that children will use to explore a variety of signs of our faith in the sessions to come. We talked about how some rituals, especially religious rituals, are symbols for abstractions—ideas that cannot be touched or seen in their entirety. For example, singing "Happy Birthday" is a symbol for the honor and attention we give someone on their special day. In future sessions, children will be offered their own stole to wear during the Opening and Closing rituals of our sessions, as a symbol that each child is a UU worship leader.
EXPLORE THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Talk about... your favorite family rituals. What do we like about them? Where did they come from?
EXTEND THE TOPIC TOGETHER. As a family, talk about the activities you most like to do together. Could one of these activities become a ritual? For example, if you all enjoy bowling, could you all go bowling on your birthday every year? Another idea, make Friday or Saturday night Family Fun Night and each member takes a turn each week to choose a game or activity for all to share.
Family Discovery. What rituals does your family have? Are any religious? Are any specifically Unitarian Universalist? If you always collect some water from your summertime travels to share at your congregation's Water Communion, that is a UU ritual. Did any member of your family grow up in a non-UU religious tradition? Ask them about religious rituals they recall. Are any of them similar to UU rituals? Do they symbolize similar ideas?
Family Ritual. Does your family gather regularly on vacation or for a holiday meal? Make a group photograph a ritual. Take turns as the photographer so everyone will be seen in the photos. Keep a record of these special times with a special photo album. Purchase an album with a plain cover you can decorate, or make an album out of poster board and yarn. Ask every family member to contribute to the cover decoration. The Book of New Family Traditions (at www.amazon.com/Book-Family-Traditions-Revised-Updated/dp/0762443189/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1354208662&sr=1-1&keywords=the+book+of+new+family+traditions) by Meg Cox, a member of the UU Congregation of Princeton (New Jersey), offers many more family rituals to consider.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 1: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION — TOUR OF THE BUILDING (20 MINUTES)
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants become more familiar with the congregational facilities by taking a guided tour.
Tell the group that as leaders it is important that they are familiar with and comfortable in their surroundings—so, the group will take a tour of the building and grounds.
Make sure the tour includes unglamorous spaces, such as closets and offices. Expect children to tell you they are already familiar with some spaces; ask them to look with new eyes. Invite them to point out places where they know rituals happen. Point out places where rituals are held, such as a pulpit (worship rituals). Point out the chalice (rituals: chalice lightings and extinguishes), the pews or chairs in the sanctuary (rituals: hymn singing, responsive readings), the front door or narthex (rituals: welcoming and greeting), memorial garden or cemetery (rituals: memorial service) and other spaces. At each space, invite children to share about experiences they have had there. After the tour, ask children what they learned that was new.
Communicate that this is space is theirs, as well as the adults'.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 2: RITUAL CHARADES (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Form teams. Explain that a team will act out a ritual without talking and other participants will try to guess what the ritual. Offer a hint: The rituals could be actions from home, from school, or from our congregation. Give each team two or more ritual index cards. Have teams take turns acting them out.
Including All Participants
Children this age vary widely in reading ability. Be prepared to help, as needed.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 1:
STORY: ABBY'S BIRTHDAY
Kamal was excited. His best friend Abby's birthday was today. In the kitchen, Kamal found his mother, Sherry, drinking her morning cup of coffee out of the mug he had given her for Mother's Day. He said, "Good morning, Mom. Are you ready to go shopping for Abby's birthday card?"
Kamal's mother got behind the wheel. Kamal jumped in the back and buckled his seatbelt. He watched his mother look behind her to make sure the road was clear before she backed the car out of the driveway.
Kamal watched the road. Every time he saw a Volkswagen Beetle, he yelled, "Punch buggy!" His mom tried to say it before he did.
At the store, Kamal was amazed at the long rows of cards. There were anniversary cards, sympathy cards, holiday cards, thank you cards, and even cards from one pet to another. Kamal looked through the birthday cards until he found one he thought would make Abby laugh.
Sherry asked, "Should we buy a present for Abby?"
Kamal answered, "No. I made Abby a present."
Sherry said that was thoughtful. This made Kamal feel good.
That afternoon, Kamal and Sherry walked to Abby's house for the birthday party. The house was decorated with balloons and crepe paper streamers. First, the children played games while the parents talked. Then everyone gathered around the table and sang "Happy Birthday" to Abby. She made a wish and blew out the eight candles on her cake.
Abby had said that presents were optional because being at her party was present enough, but some kids brought presents anyway, including Kamal. His gift was wrapped in the comics from Sunday's newspaper. Abby unwrapped it and smiled. Kamal had made a photo frame and inserted two school pictures, side-by-side. One was of him and the other was of Abby.
"Side-by-side," said Abby. "That's the way we'll always be!" She thanked Kamal and gave him a hug. That made Kamal feel good.
That night, at dinner, Kamal and his mother lit the chalice that sits in the middle of their kitchen table. As always, their nightly ritual included Sherry saying, "This is the end of another day that we were blessed to share together. What was your favorite part of today, Kamal?"
"Making Abby happy!" Kamal said.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 1:
HANDOUT 1: WORSHIP RITUALS AT MY CONGREGATION
Draw or write. What rituals do you notice during these parts of the worship service?
GREETING:
BEFORE WORSHIP STARTS:
OPENING THE WORSHIP SERVICE:
SINGING AND MUSIC:
GIVING MONEY TO THE CONGREGATION:
CLOSING THE WORSHIP SERVICE:
AFTER WORSHIP ENDS.
WORDS SAID MORE THAN ONE TIME:
Other rituals I observed:
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 1:
LEADER RESOURCE 1: ILLUSTRATION - ABBY'S BIRTHDAY PARTY
Illustration by Ginger Wyatt.
Download a high-resolution PDF (at www.uua.org/documents/tapestry/signs/karma_gift.pdf) for printing.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 1:
LEADER RESOURCE 2: FIDGET OBJECTS
The idea for a basket of "fidget objects" to provide children during session activities comes from Sally Patton, author, workshop leader, and advocate for children with special needs.
A basket of fidget objects is a simple, inexpensive way to include and welcome children who find it difficult to sit still or who learn better while moving. Provide a basket for fidget objects. Fill it with pipe cleaners, modeling clay, and other objects that can be quietly manipulated. Introduce the fidget object basket to the group by saying that some people learn best when their hands are busy. Give an example such as someone who knits while listening to a radio program or doodles during a meeting or class. Point out the fidget object basket. Tell the children they may quietly help themselves to items they may use to keep their hands busy if this helps them to listen. However, also tell the children the fidget object basket will be put away if the items become a distraction from the story or any other group activity. You can make the fidget object basket available for the duration of the session, or bring it out only during activities, such as hearing a story, which require children to sit still and listen for a significant period of time.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 1:
LEADER RESOURCE 3: SYMBOLS
Download a high-resolution PDF (at www.uua.org/documents/tapestry/signs/symbols.pdf) for printing.
Symbol 1: Flag and Dove
Symbol 2: Fair Trade and Recycle
Symbol 3: Library and Peace
Symbol 4: School Crossing
FIND OUT MORE
Rituals and Patterns in Children's Lives, edited by Kathy Merlock Jackson (Madison, WI: Popular Press 3, 2005), is a book of essays on the evolution of modern rituals and their significance for individuals and families.
The Book of New Family Traditions (at www.amazon.com/Book-Family-Traditions-Revised-Updated/dp/0762443189/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1354208662&sr=1-1&keywords=the+book+of+new+family+traditions) by Meg Cox, a member of the UU Congregation of Princeton (New Jersey), offers more family rituals to consider.
SESSION 2: WE LEAD
SESSION OVERVIEW
INTRODUCTION
Our leadership is just ourself. — Claudette Colvin, civil rights activist
A community is like a ship: everyone ought to be prepared to take the helm. — Henrik Ibsen, playwright
This session sets a stage and expectations for children to grow in Unitarian Universalist leadership. Participants share what they already know about leadership. They discover ways they can become faithful leaders in Unitarian Universalism and in other communities to which they belong.
The Faith in Action activity introduces a chart of revolving, shared leadership duties to use throughout the program. It is highly suggested that you include this Faith in Action in this or another early session.
This session also introduces the stoles children will wear, beginning with this session, to symbolize that they are a Unitarian Universalist worship leader. See the Program Introduction, Before You Start, for guidance on obtaining, decorating, and working with the stoles.
GOALS
This session will:
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Participants will:
SESSION-AT-A-GLANCE
Activity | Minutes |
Opening | 3 |
Activity 1: Follow the Leader | 10 |
Activity 2: Leadership | 15 |
Activity 3: Story — Belling the Cat | 15 |
Activity 4: Receiving Stoles | 15 |
Faith in Action: Sharing Leadership | 20 |
Closing | 2 |
Alternate Activity 1: Leadership in Action — Appreciating Congregational Leaders | |
Alternate Activity 2: Leadership in Action — Leadership Skit | |
Alternate Activity 3: Game — Belling the Cat | 20 |
SPIRITUAL PREPARATION
Who are the leaders that have helped shape your notions about leadership? Have you intentionally developed some of their characteristics? What do you think they were faithful to in their leadership? Some of our most famous models of leaders have been religious women and men. Other leaders might have been faithful to science, the gaining of knowledge, building a just world, or the future of all people. How has the faithful leadership of others affected your life?
SESSION PLAN
OPENING (3 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Welcome all participants. Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Ring the centering chime. Ask a volunteer to light the chalice, and recite together:
We gather together as Unitarian Universalists and members of the Signs of Our Faith community.
Together to learn, together to share faithful leadership, together to celebrate the traditions of our faith.
ACTIVITY 1: FOLLOW THE LEADER (10 MINUTES)
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Play Follow the Leader. Have one co-leader be a poor leader. Poor leading might include moving too slowly or too quickly or making movements that are hard to follow. For example, a tall leader might reach a height the children cannot.
Every participant who wishes to lead should get a turn.
After the game, process with these questions:
Say:
Today we will talk about how leadership can be a sign of our faith.
Including All Participants
Make sure the game stays accessible. If a leader does a movement that any participant cannot safely follow, suggest a different movement.
ACTIVITY 2: LEADERSHIP (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children brainstorm qualities of a good leader.
Part One
Say, in your own words:
When we played Follow the Leader, we took turns being the leader. Unitarian Universalists think it is important that everyone gets a turn at being the leader. Why? [Affirm that it is important because it is more fair, because no one person should have to assume all the responsibility, and because different people bring different talents and skills and different ways of being a leader.]
Because we believe in shared leadership, taking a turn at being a leader is a sign of our faith. Our congregation has many people who provide leadership and service. Here are some of them.
Show the group the poster of congregational leaders. Help the children identify the leaders and what they do in the congregation that is leadership.
Part Two
Ask: "Can children be leaders, too? Invite volunteers to tell about their leadership at home, at school, at the congregation, or in the community. They might be scout leaders. Their classroom at school might designate daily or weekly leaders who help the teacher, collect papers, or lead lines. They might have helped lead a food drive at the congregation, been the lead in a holiday pageant, or sang a solo in the choir. Ask if any are role models for younger siblings or family friends.
Part Three
Post the newsprint of the human outline. Invite children to think of their experiences in leading, other leaders they know, and think about playing Follow the Leader. What qualities make a good leader? If you wish, invite them to consider movies or stories they know that feature a good leader. What qualities does that character have?
Invite children to be quiet for one minute to think.
Then invite them to share "popcorn style," popping up as they name a quality for you to write inside the human figure. Alternately, if any participants wish to, they may write the qualities on newsprint themselves. Tell them not to worry about spelling, but if they have spelling questions, they can ask you and co-leaders.
Read the qualities aloud. Make sure the list includes:
Leaders listen to everyone.
Leaders are fair.
Leaders also know how to follow at times, and to take turns. Add other qualities you think are missing.
Post the newsprint where you can refer to it throughout this session and in future sessions.
ACTIVITY 3: STORY — BELLING THE CAT (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children respond to a fable about failed leadership.
Read or tell the story.
Process the story with as many of these questions as time allows:
Tell the group that every time the Signs of Our Faith group meets, children will discover more ways they can be good leaders: in their family, at school, among their friends, in their congregation, and with sports teams or music groups and other communities to which they belong.
Point out the newsprint with the human figure filled with leadership qualities. Read the qualities aloud again. Say that participants might already hold some of these qualities. Other qualities might be ones they want to develop. Say:
In our Signs of Our Faith group, we will support each other as we each find our own, individual ways to be leaders. Sometimes, the entire group will be leaders together. Everyone will get opportunities to practice leadership skills: not just at the congregation, but in their everyday life. Taking It Home has suggestions for ways to practice faithful leadership at home, school, at play, with friends, and in the world at large.
Variation
After the discussion, if you have time, invite children to act out "Belling the Cat" as a skit. Choose actors, assign parts and let the cast rehearse away from the group for several minutes.
Including All Participants
Support beginning readers who wish to be actors in the play.
If you are telling the story, you may wish to make fidget objects available to children who find it difficult to sit still while listening or can focus better with sensory stimulation. For a full description and guidance, see Session 1, Leader Resource 2.
Consider using rug squares in the storytelling area. Place them in a semi-circle with the rule "One person per square." This can be very helpful for controlling active bodies.
ACTIVITY 4: RECEIVING STOLES (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children make a commitment to be the best congregational leader they can be and receive stoles as a sign of their leadership.
Remind the children that Unitarian Universalists believe in sharing leadership. Say:
We will continue to share leadership when we are together, and you will keep learning ways to share leadership here in our UU congregation and in your everyday life. We have a stole to give each of you. It is a symbol that you are a leader.
Distribute the stoles. If someone from the congregation made the stoles, tell the group and add that person's photos to the poster you introduced in Activity 2.
Tell the group that stoles have been a symbol of religious leadership for a long time. Ask if anyone has seen others in the congregation wearing stoles. If you have examples, provide them.
Indicate the newsprint that shows qualities of a leader, and tell children that when they are wearing their stole, they should practice these qualities because the congregation will look to them for leadership. Say that you know they will take the responsibility seriously.
Let them know that people wear stoles when taking part in rituals and that is how this group will wear them, too. Tell them when, during the sessions, they will wear the stoles. Also let them know that they will wear stoles when they participate in rituals with the wider congregation. Tell the children anything they need to know about taking care of the stoles, including where they will be kept.
Today they will initial their stoles. In some future sessions, they will add decoration and, at the final meeting, they will add a chalice patch to their stoles. That patch will be a symbol of the work they have done together in the Signs of Our Faith group. Show the children a chalice patch.
Help the children apply their initials to their stoles.
CLOSING (2 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Distribute stoles and invite participants to put them on.
Distribute Taking It Home. Tell participants that at the end of every session, they will receive this guide to fun activities they can do with family or friends. Read it aloud to give participants an idea of activities suggested.
Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Lead the group to say:
We end as we began: together.
May we remember to be UU not just when we are together here, but every day and in every way.
Ask all participants to blow out the chalice together. Have them store their stoles in the place you have designated. Stoles should stay at the congregation and not go home with children.
FAITH IN ACTION: SHARING LEADERSHIP
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children adopt shared leadership as a practice for future sessions.
On blank newsprint, brainstorm a list of duties for the time the Signs group is together. This can include lighting the chalice, writing down chalice lighting words or posting the newsprint where they are already written, helping serve a snack, and helping clean up after activities. Engage the children to help you set up a schedule so leadership can be rotated.
Remind the group that following through is an important part of being a leader—a lesson from the story, "Belling the Cat."
LEADER REFLECTION AND PLANNING
Evaluate the effectiveness of today's activities, especially the conversation on leadership and the stole activity. Do children understand the importance of the stole? Do they understand it is a sign that they are leaders? Do you have a good plan in place for using and storing stoles? How did all participants react to the concept of shared leadership? Who do you think will need to step back? Who will need to step forward? How will you and your co-leaders help children recognize and live into their own, distinct leadership abilities?
Assign preparation needed for the next session.
TAKING IT HOME
Our leadership is just ourself. — Claudette Colvin, civil rights activist
A community is like a ship: everyone ought to be prepared to take the helm. — Henrik Ibsen, playwright
IN TODAY'S SESSION... we said that, as Unitarian Universalists, we provide leadership and service to our congregation and other communities to which we belong. We talked about different ways to provide leadership and the qualities of a good leader.
EXPLORE THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Talk about... ways family members provide leadership at your congregation. How have they served in the past? How are they serving now? How would they like to serve in the future? Consider roles, and potential roles, for all ages.
EXTEND THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Chores are an opportunity to share leadership of your family. Do some of chores allow the person who does them to make a unique contribution to the life of your family? You can try this in groups other than your family, too. If you think sharing leadership is important, volunteer to do something you normally do not do. Gather equipment at the end of a sports practice. Help fold laundry at home. Ask for instructions, if needed, to perform the service well. Let the people around you know that you think shared leadership is important and you are doing your part. After all, as the quote says, "Leadership is just ourself."
Family Game. The Laughter Yoga Institute (at www.lyinstitute.org) website includes fun variations for the game Follow the Leader. (at lyinstitute.org/resources/) Play with your family and friends.
Family Discovery. Play Leadership Mix-Up. Let family members change leadership roles. Perhaps the children should make out the grocery list and parents should feed the pets. Invite each person to see how well they can perform services normally d by someone else. Perhaps you will discover new talents.
Family Ritual. Start a leadership check-in. One way is to start or end a weekly dinner by putting out a bowl of grapes. Everyone should share a way they have provided leadership to a community (congregation, school, scouts, dance class, sports team, or other groups) and take a grape. You can substitute other items for grapes, such as little candies, stickers, or pennies.
Family Adventure. Watch the Disney movie, "Finding Nemo," in which creatures of all ages and species have chances to lead—some well, some not so well. What does it have to say about leadership. Is "Just keep swimming?" a mantra leaders might use? What other movies are about leadership? Watch this cartoon (at www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ZfSdhwqPqw&feature=related) about leadership and forgiveness. Who shows good leadership? Is apologizing when you are wrong a good trait for a leader?
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 1: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION — APPRECIATING CONGREGATIONAL LEADERS
Description of Activity
Children show congregational leaders their appreciation. Leadership in Action activities invite children to take the lead in an activity that engages with the congregation and begin to see themselves as leaders of their faith.
Ask the group if they have ever shown a leader appreciation. The leader might have been a teacher, a coach, or scout leader. How did they show appreciation: a gift, a certificate, a thank-you, or a hug?
Appreciating people who provide the service of leadership in your congregation is a way to show that you are a leader, too. Leaders are people who make a special effort to lift up caring, service, and gratitude for the whole group to appreciate.
Brainstorm ways the group could thank congregational leaders. They might bake cookies, create thank-you cards, or add special stickers to the leaders' name tags. Make plans. Notify families, if their help is needed, and the leaders whom you wish to appreciate.
Afterward, ask the children:
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 2: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION — LEADERSHIP SKIT
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children present "Belling the Cat" to the congregation.
Gauge children's interest in performing the play for the congregation. Adapt the script to include more roles to feature more children, if needed.
Leadership in Action activities invite children to take the lead in an activity that engages with the congregation. Through these activities, young people will start to see themselves as leaders of their faith.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 3: GAME — BELLING THE CAT (20 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children play a derivation of Doggie, Doggie, Who's Got the Bone with a cat and bell instead of a dog and bone.
Choose a volunteer to be the cat. The cat sits in a chair, isolated from the group, with their back to the group and eyes closed. A volunteer from the group, (the mouse) is silently picked to sneak up and place a bell beneath the chair of the cat. After they sit back down with the group, everyone sings: "Cat, cat, you've got a bell. Who put it there? Can you tell?" Give the cat one chances to guess the identity of the mouse (or two or three chances, depending on the size of your group).
Give everyone who wishes a turn at being the cat. Let participants take turns choosing the mouse.
Variation
To make the game harder, allow the cat to turn around while the bell is being placed and try to catch the mouse before the mouse returns to its seat.
Including All Participants
Do not play the game if you are not able to make it accessible to all participants.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 2:
STORY: BELLING THE CAT
Adapted from an Aesop fable.
OPTION 1 — Story
Once there was a family of mice living on a farm. They had a pleasant life and all the food they could eat.
Then, one day, the farmer brought a cat to live on the farm. The cat was very good at one thing: chasing mice! The cat could move so quietly, the mice did not know it was there until it pounced on them. The mice became desperate. They were afraid to venture out into the grain because of the cat and they were hungry.
The mice held a meeting. They decide they could not stop the cat, but it would be good to at least know when she was approaching. This would give them enough time to run and hide. Many mice offered suggestions, but none that everyone thought good enough. Then, a mouse said, "I have listened to all your suggestions, but they are no good. I know what to do. This will be successful. We must hang a bell around the cat's neck. When the cat is on the move, we will hear the bell and can run to safety."
The mice became excited. This was indeed a very good idea. In the midst of their excitement, the wisest mouse spoke, "It is indeed a good idea. But tell me: who will bell the cat?"
All the mice became silent.
OPTION 2 — Play
Cast:
Cat
Mouse One
Mouse Two
Mouse Three
Mouse Four
Scene One
The four mice run and play in the fields, stopping to eat grain now and then.
Cat sneaks up on the mice and chases them away.
Scene Two
The four mice huddle together. They are hiding from Cat. Cat prowls around outside where the mice hide.
MOUSE ONE: We have had a good life here on the farm.
MOUSE TWO: We would eat and play and sleep in the lovely field all day.
MOUSE THREE: Now, the farmer has a cat.
CAT: Meow!!
MOUSE FOUR: The cat sneaks up on us all the time.
ALL MICE TOGETHER: This is bad!
MOUSE ONE: We must think of a way to protect ourselves from the cat.
ALL MICE THINK.
MOUSE TWO: Perhaps we should ask the farmer to take the cat away?
MOUSE ONE, THREE, and FOUR: No, no. Fine idea, but it will never work!
CAT: Meow! Meow!
MOUSE THREE: Perhaps we should give the cat some cheese. It will know we want to be friends and will leave us alone.
MOUSE ONE, MOUSE TWO and MOUSE FOUR: No, no. Fine idea, but it will never work!
CAT: Meow! Meow! MEOWWWWWWW!
MOUSE ONE: I do not think we can stop the cat from chasing us. If only we knew when it was coming so we could quickly hide.
MOUSE FOUR: I know! I have the best idea. Your ideas would not work, but mine will! We could put a bell around the cat's neck. Then, it could not sneak up on us because we would hear the bell as it approaches.
MOUSE TWO and MOUSE THREE: Great idea! Hurrah! Hurrah!
MOUSE ONE: A fine idea, but who volunteers to put the bell on the cat?
ALL MICE LOOK SCARED, STAY SILENT, AND HANG THEIR HEADS.
CAT (pouncing on mice): MEOWWWWWW!!!
THE END
FIND OUT MORE
On the Buzzle website, read an article by management guru Peter Drucker on Qualities of Leadership in Children. (at www.buzzle.com/articles/qualities-of-leadership-in-children.html) The article encourages adults to motivate children to develop leadership qualities.
This short article (at www.interpretermagazine.org/interior.asp?ptid=43&mid=8928) in the United Methodist Church's Interpreter Magazine suggests ways to include children in congregational leadership.
The website Teach with Movies (at www.teachwithmovies.org/) offers lessons based on many movies and TV shows. Lesson plans for eight year-olds include the movies "Babe" and "A Bug's Life," both of which feature characters growing into leadership. If you purchase a membership, you can have film-based lesson plans available on short notice.
Growing Field Books (at www.growingfield.com/home/index.php) publishes books to recognize and build leadership skills in children.
For Adults
The Tapestry of Faith program Harvest the Power (at www.uua.org/re/tapestry/adults/harvest/index.shtml) provides a faith-based journey for adults into congregational leadership skill development.
SESSION 3: OUR FAITH IS A JOURNEY
SESSION OVERVIEW
INTRODUCTION
What is religion, you might ask. It's a technology of living. — Toni Cade Bambara, 20th-century African American author and activist
This session invites children into a lifelong process of building a Unitarian Universalist faith. Children learn that a covenant for being together is a sign of our faith. They make a covenant together, look for signs of covenanting in congregational life, and discover additional ways UUs support one another to build a faith that will give their lives meaning and purpose.
Activity 3, Big Questions, invites children to write questions on blank puzzle pieces which form the basis of an activity in Session 4. You will need to obtain a blank jigsaw puzzle in advance. After Activity 3, store the completed puzzle pieces for use in Session 4.
GOALS
This workshop will:
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Participants will:
SESSION-AT-A-GLANCE
Activity | Minutes |
Opening | 2 |
Activity 1: What I Love about Being UU | 20 |
Activity 2: Story — Journey of a Snowflake | 10 |
Activity 3: Big Questions | 10 |
Activity 4: Ritual of Covenanting | 15 |
Faith in Action: Covenant Search | |
Closing | 3 |
Alternate Activity 1: Leadership in Action — Providing an Opportunity to Be in Community | |
Alternate Activity 2: Leadership in Action — Providing a Learning Opportunity | |
SPIRITUAL PREPARATION
What do you love about your Unitarian Universalist faith? What activities or relationships that happen at your congregation embody what you love about being UU? Some love to be active in congregational governance. Others love the relationships formed in a small group ministry, study, or social group. Some will immediately respond that they love the hymns the congregation sings together, or to hear the choir sing. Have you ever thought about the aspects of being UU that you love as ways your faith community supports your personal faith journey? Bring your sense of feeling supported in your UU faith journey to today's session.
SESSION PLAN
OPENING (2 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
If the children wear stoles for Opening and Closing, distribute stoles. Invite the children to put on their stoles. Offer any visitors a stole and explain that they may wear it during the Opening time and the Closing time if they wish. Remind the children their stoles are a sign that everyone in the group is a worship leader.
Welcome all participants. Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Ring the centering chime. Ask a volunteer to light the chalice. Lead the group to say these Opening words:
We gather together as Unitarian Universalists and members of the Signs of Our Faith community.
Together, we celebrate what we love about our UU faith.
ACTIVITY 1: WHAT I LOVE ABOUT BEING UU (20 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants identify something they love or like about being UU or coming to the congregation.
Indicate the newsprint and say, in your own words:
Each of you has your own reasons why you like to be a UU here at our congregation or why you like to visit our UU congregation. You can pick which sentence you want to complete, and think of your own answer.
Read the two phrases aloud. Then say:
Let me give you some ideas. You can finish either phrase with something UUs believe. For example, "I like being Unitarian Universalist at our congregation because... UUs try to respect all people."
You can finish either phrase with an activity UUs do at our congregation. For example, "I like being Unitarian Universalist at our congregation because... we collect food for the hungry."
You can finish a phrase with something you have learned to do in RE or in worship services at our congregation. For example, "I like being Unitarian Universalist at our congregation because... we learn hymns here and singing together makes me feel good."
If you are new or visiting, even if you are only here for today, you can say a reason you like to visit. For example, because you get to see friends here or make new friends, or because you think the building or something about it is pretty. Or maybe you've noticed one thing you really like, such as our chalice for worshipping together, or the recycling bins that mean UUs try to take care of the earth.
Distribute drawing paper and set out markers and crayons. Invite children to write their ending to one of the sentences on their paper, and draw a picture to show what they love or like. Help children think of an answer and write it on their paper, as needed. Use clarifying questions to help participants identify what they love about their UU experiences. For example, if a child says they love coming to RE, ask which parts of RE they love: seeing friends, doing art work, hearing stories? Is there a particular story they especially liked?
Allow 10 minutes for children to draw. Give a two-minute warning, then gather the large group and invite volunteers to share. Say it is okay if they do not want to share and okay if they do want to share.
Affirm that there are many different reasons people come to the congregation. People love different things about Unitarian Universalism and that is okay, too, because everyone is on their own, unique faith journey.
Optional: After the session, you may wish to display the children's drawings. Include the phrase "I love being UU at our congregation because... " in the display.
ACTIVITY 2: STORY — JOURNEY OF A SNOWFLAKE (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Child hear and discuss a story about a journey and relate it to taking a faith journey.
Tell or read the story.
Ask participants, "How are snowflakes like people?" Affirm that people are unique like snowflakes and our lives are journeys, too.
Invite the children to act out the story.
Then, say, in these words or your own:
As Unitarian Universalists, we are on a faith journey. Our journey is similar to the snowflakes in the story. UUs are as diverse as snowflake. No two of us are alike. We have different genders and different skin colors. We know how to speak different languages, and we are different ages. But we are all on a journey. On our journey we figure out what we believe and decide what kind of people we want to be in the world. Snowflakes become different because of their environment. People do, too. Growing up UU, we might end up with many different beliefs. For example, some UUs believe there is a God, some believe there is not, and some believe it is not important to know that answer. However, we share many beliefs, like the importance of loving each other.
Ask: "What other beliefs do UUs share?" Affirm answers. You may wish to make note of our UU Principles. Then say:
When snowflakes fall from the clouds, they are taking a journey. They do not know where the journey will take them. This is like our lifelong faith journey. However, there is a big difference: in our religion, we can support each other's faith journeys. Even when my journey of beliefs takes me in a different direction from where your journey takes you [insert one or more children's names here], we can still journey together. I will stay with you and share being leaders together, and learning together, and worship, and companionship—all the things we do as signs of our UU faith. That's what UUs do in our congregation, and that's what we do here in our Signs of Our Faith group.
Including All Participants
You may wish to make fidget objects available to children who find it difficult to sit still while listening or can focus better with sensory stimulation. For a full description and guidance, see Session 1, Leader Resource 2.
Consider using rug squares in the storytelling area. Place them in a semi-circle with the rule "One person per square." This can be very helpful for controlling active bodies.
ACTIVITY 3: BIG QUESTIONS (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children experience how UUism supports us to articulate big theological questions. They create puzzle pieces which they will work with again in Session 4, Activity 1, Religious Explorers.
Say, in these words or your own:
No one is too young to start a faith journey and everyone here is definitely old enough! Let's support one another to take some steps in our UU faith journeys now.
Along a UU faith journey, we get to ask any question we want about life and what it means. Questions like these are called "theological" questions. Theology means religion. These are questions that our religion—Unitarian Universalism—supports us to try and answer.
Invite the children to think of big, theological questions—questions they wonder about life and what it means. Write their questions on newsprint. Prompt, as needed:
Write the children's questions clearly on newsprint. If two questions are similar, work with the group to combine them. Gather 7 to 12 questions.
Assign participants to write the questions, one question per large puzzle piece. While they write, say that Unitarian Universalism helps us look for answers to big questions like these. Say that as Unitarian Universalists, we help one another look for answers in many different places: Sometimes we find answers in science. Sometimes we find answers in the wisdom of people from all cultures and religions who came before us and who share the Earth with us. Sometimes we find answers inside ourselves.
Collect the puzzle pieces and set them aside for use in Session 4.
ACTIVITY 4: RITUAL OF COVENANTING (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children create a group covenant.
Ask the group to name activities during which they interact with the other age groups in the congregation. These might include worship, Our Whole Lives workshops, parties, potlucks, camps, or retreats.
Say, in your own words:
Unitarian Universalists all over the world come together in community. Part of a UU faith journey is to gather for fun and friendship along the way. In a way, we are like the snow pile when the snowflakes come together. Every time we have fun together, we also have the chance to show signs of our faith—signs that we agree about healthy, respectful, loving ways to be together in a group. One of these signs is called a covenant—a written-down promise.
It's a promise we make each other in a UU group, like our Signs group, and like our congregation. We promise to act in ways that show our UU Principles.
Let's remember some of our UU Principles. They will help us make a covenant for our Signs group—these are promises we will keep when we are together, to show we share our Principles and our UU faith.
Distribute Handout 1. Read the Principles aloud, one at a time—or invite volunteers to read. Ask the children to think of promises they can make to show each Principle. Write their ideas on newsprint.
Say:
This is a good beginning for a covenant of promises.
Ask:
Prompt to ensure the covenant is complete. Children's covenants often include:
Make sure everyone understands and agrees to each promise. If someone disagrees, help the group refine the item to everyone's comfort, or do not add it.
Tell the group that everyone in the Signs community is responsible to hold themselves and one another to the promises of the covenant.
Ask the group what they think should happen if someone breaks the covenant? Who should confront the covenant-breaker? How will the group bring the person back into the covenant?
Point out that keeping the covenant is a sign of UU faith in many different ways. It is a sign that we agree with UU Principles such as respecting one another, working for fairness, and honoring the earth and all the life that shares it. It is a sign that we support each other on the faith journeys we each will take.
Now or after the session, re-write the finished covenant on a fresh sheet of newsprint. Post it where it can remain for the duration of the program.
CLOSING (3 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Distribute stoles and invite participants to put them on.
Distribute Taking It Home. Tell participants that at the end of every session, they will receive this guide to fun activities they can do with family or friends. Read it aloud to give participants an idea of activities suggested.
Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Lead the group to say:
We end as we began: together.
May we remember to be UU not just when we are together here, but every day and in every way.
Invite each child turn to the child to the right of them and say "Thank you for being in covenant with me."
Ask all participants to blow out the chalice together. Have them store their stoles in the place you have designated. Stoles should stay at the congregation and not go home with children.
FAITH IN ACTION: COVENANT SEARCH
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children look for signs of a covenant in the congregation. Or, the children search for signs that people in the congregation have agreed to share the UU Principles as a guide for supporting one another's UU faith journeys.
Ask the children: What do you think it looks like when a group of people follow a covenant—promises they have made to be together in ways that show our UU faith? (Or: What do you think it looks like when a group of people agree on UU Principles as a guide for how to take a faith journey together?) Feed the group phrases from the congregational covenant (or, the UU Principles from Handout 1) and encourage them to think of signs that these promises, or Principles, are being honored.
Now say:
Let's use our congregation's covenant (or, the UU Principles we share) as a map, and take a tour of our congregation. Let's find out what these promises (or Principles) look like when a UU group is keeping them.
Optional: Distribute copies of the congregational covenant (or Handout 1).
Lead the tour. Take care to articulate how each stop on the tour expresses a specific promise (or Principle). Make space for children to come up with their own interpretations of how an item or room shows adherence to a promise (or Principle). Their observations may surprise you.
Sample "tour stops," with language from Handout 1, The UU Principles:
Including All Participants
Plan a tour that is accessible to all participants. Include a child with limited vision by describing spaces or items they cannot see.
LEADER REFLECTION AND PLANNING
What went well in this session? What are some lessons for next time? Did everyone participate in the covenanting process? Make a plan to revisit the covenant in future sessions to remind children of how they agreed to be together.
Does the covenant cover promises you feel you, as leaders, need to make to each other? If RE co-leaders do not already have a covenant, consider creating one.
Assign preparation needed for the next session.
TAKING IT HOME
What is religion, you might ask. It's a technology of living. — Toni Cade Bambara, 20th-century African American author and activist
IN TODAY'S SESSION... we said that, as UUs, we are in a lifelong process of building our faith. We talked about learning together, asking big questions together, and sharing companionship as ways our life in a UU community supports the faith journeys of every member. The children learned that a UU group covenant consists of promises we make each other, based in UU Principles, and that a group covenant is both a tool and a grounding for supporting one another's faith journeys.
EXPLORE THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Talk about... How aware are family members of ways Unitarian Universalism supports their faith-building efforts? Go around the group. Ask each person to name an activity or a relationship they have enjoyed at your congregation or in their Unitarian Universalist practice. Then, help one another articulate how that activity or the relationship has supported the individual to pursue their own journey in UU faith.
EXTEND THE TOPIC TOGETHER: Try... creating a covenant for family meetings or family decision-making. Ask your child to suggest promises that the Signs of Our Faith group included in its covenant. Can these promises be part of your family covenant? Talk about how making a promise to act respectfully toward one another is a step in a UU faith journey.
Family Game. In this session, the children generated a list of big, theological questions. They learned that Unitarian Universalism supports them to keep on asking, to share their questions with others, and to use a variety of Sources including science, the wisdom of the ages, and their own experiences to forge a path toward their own answers. See how many big questions you can generate together about life, its meaning, and how to live it.
Family Discovery. Explore the world of snowflakes by taking this Snowflake Safari (at www.sciencefriday.com/video/12/31/2009/snowflake-safari.html). Don't have enough snow to go looking for snowflake designs? Create your own online at A Kid's Heart (at akidsheart.com/holidays/winter/snowflake.htm), a Christian game site.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 1: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION — PROVIDING AN OPPORTUNITY TO BE IN COMMUNITY
Materials for Activity
Description of Activity
Children host a community opportunity.
Leadership in Action (LIA) activities provide opportunities for children to take the lead in an activity that engages with the congregation. Through these activities, young people begin to see themselves as leaders of their faith.
Does your congregation need more opportunities for children to be in friendship and community? Challenge the group to create one. It can be an ice cream social, pizza party or just a play date in a nearby park. Guide the children to choose an activity, a venue, and the age group(s) they wish to engage—for example, families with children, elders, older youth, or the entire congregation. Work with congregational leaders to choose a date. Engage the children's parents and caregivers to provide food and/or financial support.
Once a plan is made, have the children write and send out paper invitations and/or an E-vite. Assign other host duties. Hold the event and have fun.
After the event, ask the group what they enjoyed most. Ask: How is spending time with other UUs helpful in building each of our faith? How did you feel when you saw everyone enjoying the activity that had been your idea and your responsibility? What does it feel like to be a leader in our faith community who helps bring people together?
Including All Participants
Plan an event that is accessible to everyone. If the event will be off-site, determine accessibility before making a commitment on behalf of the congregation.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 2: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION — PROVIDING A LEARNING OPPORTUNITY
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children provide a multigenerational learning opportunity.
Leadership in Action (LIA) activities provide opportunities for children to take the lead in an activity that engages with the congregation. Through these activities, young people begin to see themselves as leaders of their faith.
Encourage and lead the group to create skits that showcase UU Principles in action. Make skits easy for all ages to understand. Possible plots:
You might enact a skit that first demonstrates a situation where a UU Principle is not applied, then shows what happens when the Principle is applied.
Children might introduce the skits by saying something like:
We are learning different ways Unitarian Universalism supports each of us to go on our UU faith journey. We have learned that when we act on our UU Principles, we are part of UUs supporting one another in our faith journeys.
After the skits, discuss the experience. What did the participants learn from performing the skits?
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 3:
STORY: JOURNEY OF A SNOWFLAKE
The existence of a snowflake is a journey — like your life, which is a journey, too.
It starts in a cloud. Clouds carry drops of water vapor. Clouds also contain tiny particles of dust. Drops of the water vapor cling to the dust particles. When conditions are cold enough, the water freezes into crystals and a snowflake is born. Crystals can attach in many different ways to make infinite patterns — "infinite" means more numbers than anyone could ever count. The temperature, what the cloud is like and other factors influence how the snowflake grows. So it is probably true that no two snowflakes are alike. Each one is unique — like you are unique from everyone else who has ever lived. Each snowflake has a journey ahead of it: some parts of the journey are common to all snowflakes, some parts are unique.
The next part of the journey is the same for every snowflake: it falls to the earth. But where it falls can vary. The snowflake may fall on a warm sidewalk and melt into water right away. It may fall on cooler grass and stick. I like it when a snowflake falls gently on my eyelashes. Do you? The snowflake may even fall on top of other snowflakes, making piles of snow you can use to build snow kids.
Eventually, though, all snowflakes take the same journey of melting into water. Some water is soaked into the ground and nourishes plants, flowers and even vegetables, like tomatoes. Some water runs in gullies to rivers, which meet the oceans, the biggest gatherings of ex-snowflakes on the planet!
Water from the oceans and plants and other sources evaporates when it gets warm and turn into water vapor. Where does the water vapor go? Back up into the clouds! Our snowflake has returned from where it began.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 3:
HANDOUT 1: THE UU PRINCIPLES
1. We believe that each and every person is important.
2. We believe that all people should be treated fairly and kindly.
3. We believe that we should accept one another and keep on learning together.
4. We believe that each person must be free to search for what is true and right in life.
5. We believe that all persons should have a vote about the things that concern them.
6. We believe in working for a peaceful, fair, and free world.
7. We believe in caring for our planet Earth, the home we share with all living things.
FIND OUT MORE
Enlighten (at www.enlightengamesinc.com/spirit-game-1024.html) is a board game that takes the player on a spiritual journey through different religions of the world. Its purpose is to build religious tolerance by teaching about different faiths.
Many have written about their faith journeys. Near the end of his life, the Reverend Forrest Church wrote Love & Death: My Journey through the Valley of the Shadow (at www.uuabookstore.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=1099) (Boston: Beacon Press, 2008). You might read My Spiritual Journey by the Dalai Lama (New York: HarperCollins, 2011). Elizabeth Andrew's Writing the Sacred Journey (at www.uuabookstore.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=629) (Skinner House, 2004) and The Pen and the Bell: Mindful Writing in a Busy World (at www.uuabookstore.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=1618) (2012), by Brenda Miller and Holly Hughes, are available from the UUA Bookstore. Christian writer Dan Phillips offers Spiritual Journaling: God's Whispers in Daily Living (at www.amazon.com/Spiritual-Journaling-Whispers-Daily-Living/dp/1846947049/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1309917193&sr=8-1). In Workshop 1 of the Tapestry of Faith program Spirit of Life, find a handout that guides you to map your own spiritual journey (at www.uua.org/re/tapestry/adults/life/workshop1/workshopplan/handouts/159104.shtml).
Interested to know more about snowflakes and their uniqueness? Read a blog post at GrokEarth (at grokearth.blogspot.com/2012/12/a-snowflakes-journey.html). Or, start on the National Geographic website (at news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/02/070213-snowflake_2.html).
SESSION 4: SEEKING KNOWLEDGE
SESSION OVERVIEW
INTRODUCTION
I am not going to question your opinions. I am not going to meddle with your belief. I am not going to dictate to you mine. All that I say is, examine, inquire. Look into the nature of things. Search out the grounds of your opinions, the for and against. Know why you believe, understand what you believe, and possess a reason for the faith that is in you. — Frances Wright, writer, feminist, abolitionist, and utopian
Children discover there can be multiple answers to big questions. They learn that to seek and evaluate answers to big questions is a sign of UU faith. They experience prayer or mediation, the ritual of this session, as a way of seeking answers within and a way to articulate and feel their own appreciation, gratitude, wishes, and hopes.
For Activity 1, you will need the puzzle pieces children made in Session 3 and blank puzzle pieces from the same set.
If your congregation has a prayer or meditation ritual, add the relevant words to Handout 1, UU Prayers and Meditations and plan to teach the ritual as part of Activity 3.
In Activity 4, children receive their first emblem to add to the stoles they received in Session 2. Decide whether you will use the image provided in Leader Resource 1 or create emblems another way, such as having children use the symbols of themselves they made in Session 1. See the program Introduction for more guidance.
GOALS
This session will:
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Participants will:
SESSION-AT-A-GLANCE
Activity | Minutes |
Opening | 2 |
Activity 1: Religious Explorers | 10 |
Activity 2: Story — Sitting on the Answer | 10 |
Activity 3: Ritual of Prayer or Meditation | 25 |
Activity 4: First Emblem | 10 |
Faith in Action: Collecting Prayers and Meditations | |
Closing | 3 |
Alternate Activity 1: Leadership in Action — Question Board | |
Alternate Activity 2: Personal Spiritual Practice | 10 |
Alternate Activity 3: Question Me an Answer | 15 |
Alternate Activity 4: Story — How Do You Know? | 10 |
SPIRITUAL PREPARATION
What does religious exploration mean to you? How does it occur in the context of your involvement with Unitarian Universalism? Discuss this question and your own journey of religious exploration with your co-leader or another partner. What resources, including people, have helped you on your journey so far? How can you help children recognize resources that support them to seek and evaluate answers to their faith questions?
SESSION PLAN
OPENING (2 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
If the children wear stoles for Opening and Closing rituals, distribute stoles. Invite the children to put on their stoles. Offer any visitors a stole and explain that they may wear it during the Opening time and the Closing time if they wish. Remind the children their stoles are a sign that everyone in the group is a worship leader.
Welcome all participants. Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Ring the centering chime. Ask a volunteer to light the chalice together. Lead the group to say these Opening words:
We gather together as Unitarian Universalists and members of the Signs of Our Faith community.
Together, we take a journey of spiritual exploration. Together, we ask questions and continue our lifelong search for truth and meaning.
ACTIVITY 1: RELIGIOUS EXPLORERS (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants experience a search for answers to big questions, and encounter multiple answers rooted in various theologies.
Show the children the puzzle pieces on which they wrote questions in Session 3. Remind them that the last time the group met they brainstormed big, theological questions—questions about life and how we should live it, the kind of questions religions help people answer. Say, in these words or your own:
Unitarian Universalists believe it is good to ask big questions and seek the answers using many different sources. When we explore our big questions, that is a sign of our UU faith.
We are going to have a chance to search for answers to our own big questions, right now. Some answers from different religions are written on puzzle pieces just like the ones with your questions, and they are hidden. Let's be religious explorers now, and find the hidden answers.
Monitor the search to make sure all children who want to find pieces find them, and that all pieces are eventually found.
Re-gather the children at work tables and invite them to match each question with its answer. The children may quickly discover that each question has more than one answer. If they do not, ask if they think there is only one answer for each question. Give them the hint that they may find more than one answer that could fit each question. Monitor and assist the matching.
Read the questions and answers. Ask:
Affirm people with different beliefs answer big questions differently. People in different times, places, and circumstances have believed different answers. Even one person may change their answer as they get older and their life goes along and they come to believe different things.
Post blank newsprint. Brainstorm ways we look for answers when we have big questions about life and how we should live it: How do Unitarian Universalists do a religious exploration? Prompt for answers such as: read books, listen to wise people, and learn from our own experiences. Say that Unitarian Universalists understand that many Sources can have good answers—like other cultures and religions, wise teachers in the past or in our lives, and even the way we feel inside about things that happen to us. Affirm that asking questions is a sign of UU faith and the first and most important step toward finding answers.
ACTIVITY 2: STORY — SITTING ON THE ANSWER (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children discuss a story about finding answers.
Read or tell the story.
Process the story with these questions:
Including All Participants
You may wish to make fidget objects available to children who find it difficult to sit still while listening or can focus better with sensory stimulation. For a full description and guidance, see Session 1, Leader Resource 2.
Consider using rug squares in the storytelling area. Place them in a semi-circle with the rule "One person per square." This can be very helpful for controlling active bodies.
ACTIVITY 3: RITUAL OF PRAYER OR MEDITATION (25 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants experience the UU ritual of prayer or meditation, and write a prayer or meditation.
Say, in these words or your own:
What could be a good way to look for answers that are already inside you? Some people use prayer or mediation. That is a UU ritual. When UUs gather for worship, we sometimes pray together out loud or listen to the words of a meditation together. We can also pray or meditate without making a sound. Prayers and meditations are a good ritual for looking inside our hearts and spirits and minds.
Ask the children if they have ever said or heard a prayer or meditation. Affirm that a blessing, such as one might say before eating a meal, is a form of prayer or meditation.
Meditation is a way to quiet your body and your thoughts, so you can hear your big questions inside yourself and listen for answers.
Ask the children if they can think of more reasons, besides giving thanks or thinking about big questions, that people might pray or meditate. Prompt children to brainstorm situations where they might like to look inside for their important thoughts and hopes and wishes—for example, when someone they love is sick, when they are scared, when something especially nice has happened and they feel happy, when they feel sad about someone else's suffering, when they have a big decision to make, or at the start or close of the day.
Now invite the children to sit comfortably in a place where they are not touching someone else. Say they may close their eyes or put their head down, if they wish. Say:
I am going to lead you in a UU meditation. Once I sound the chime, keep yourself quiet and still. If you are comfortable doing so, close your eyes. That will help you listen with not just your ears but also your inside self.
Sound the chime. Read to the group the meditation or prayer words you have selected. Sound the chime again to end the meditation.
Now distribute Handout 1, UU Prayers and Meditations. Read a few aloud or have volunteers read.
Point out that some prayers and mediations are addressed to God, and others do not mention God. Explain that UUs have many different beliefs about whether there is a God, or another power larger than humankind, and what to call that power if there is one. Point out the prayers addressed to "spirit of life and love" and "Earth."
Say that we often sit still when we pray or meditate, but at times we may use our bodies as part of a prayer or meditation ritual, if that helps us understand and express what we feel. Lead the group to act out one or more prayers or meditations from Handout 1in the way you have planned.
Now invite participants to write a short meditation on their own. Distribute writing paper and pencils, and assign or suggest a theme you have chosen. Remind the children they can address a meditation or prayer to God, to something else they wish to connect with, such as the Earth, or the whole universe, or to nothing in particular if that feels right to them.
Circulate and help individuals articulate and write their meditations, as needed. Give the group ten minutes. Optional: As children finish writing, invite them to decorate their paper.
Reconvene the large group and let volunteers share their meditations. Tell the group your plan for sharing their meditations with the larger congregation. Say that sharing their meditations is a sign that they are worship leaders in the Unitarian Universalist community. Ask if they can think of other ways to share their meditations with the congregation, and make a commitment to follow up on their suggestions.
ACTIVITY 4: FIRST EMBLEM (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children add an emblem to their stole.
This emblem represents "The way I act is a sign of the faith that is inside me." It is based on the experiences children have had in the first unit of this program (Sessions 1-4).
Remind children that the stole is a symbol that they are growing as leaders in the congregation and in their UU faith. Say, in your own words:
The first few times we have met to study Signs of Our Faith, we have talked about signs of faith that each one of us can do on our own. Each of us can show leadership. Each of us can decide what we love about the Unitarian Universalist religion or about coming to our UU congregation. Each of us has our own big questions about life and looks to our UU faith in our own way to look for answers. Today, you may add an emblem to your leadership stole. This emblem shows that the way you act is a sign of the faith that is inside you.
Lead children to make emblems (optional) and attach the emblems to their stoles.
Have children help put away the craft materials they have used. Invite them to put on their stoles to wear during the Closing ritual.
CLOSING (3 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Optional: If children wear stoles for every Opening and Closing, distribute stoles and invite participants to put them on.
Distribute Taking It Home. Ask participants to share these fun activities with their parents and try them with family or friends.
Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Say:
We end as we began: together.
May we remember to be UU not just when we are together here, but every day and in every way.
Invite each child thank the child to the right of them for being a religious explorer. Ask all participants to blow out the chalice together.
FAITH IN ACTION: COLLECTING PRAYERS AND MEDITATIONS
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants collect the favorite prayers and meditations of members of the congregation and share them with the ministry team.
On collection day, set up a table that is accessible to everyone entering or leaving the building. Provide paper and pens. Ask congregants to share any favorite prayers or meditations. Suggest they share words from their childhood or youth, words that are part of a current spiritual practice, and/or words that address specific occasions, such as a grace for meals or a Jewish prayer for lighting Sabbath candles.
Invite the children to explore the collection. Can they identify common themes or words in the pieces? Are any of the prayers or meditations familiar to the children?
Give the collection to the congregational ministry team. Invite them to use the prayers and meditations in worship, as graces before potlucks, and as readings to open meetings. Meditations can be used to center groups before religious education workshops, at retreats, and myriad congregational activities.
A word of caution: Be aware of copyright issues. Any piece submitted by an original author may be reprinted with their permission. If a prayer or meditation was written by someone else, you may use it in worship, but you may not reprint it or publish it without the author's permission.
Including All Participants
Have at least one adult available on collection day to transcribe any prayer or meditation a congregational member asks to dictate.
LEADER REFLECTION AND PLANNING
What went well in this session? What would you do differently next time? What did the children understand about the use of prayer or meditation as a UU ritual?
Read the next session and assign advance preparation, as needed.
TAKING IT HOME
I am not going to question your opinions. I am not going to meddle with your belief. I am not going to dictate to you mine. All that I say is, examine, inquire. Look into the nature of things. Search out the grounds of your opinions, the for and against. Know why you believe, understand what you believe, and possess a reason for the faith that is in you. —Frances Wright, writer, feminist, abolitionist, and utopian
IN TODAY'S SESSION... we discussed how asking questions and seeking the answers can be a sign of our UU faith. The children learned they can look inside themselves for answers to their big questions. They experienced the UU ritual of prayer or meditation and explored reasons to meditate or pray besides seeking answers. They learned that many UUs engage in prayer or meditation to stay connected to that which is greater than just themselves, and that our faith does not require us to address a prayer or meditation to God.
EXPLORE THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Talk about... the spiritual practices of family members. Who has used prayer or meditation? Why? Have they used it regularly, that is, as a ritual?
Family Ritual. Read Handout 1, UU Prayers and Meditations together. Pick one to recite regularly as a new family ritual.
Family Discovery. How does your family deal with questions? Did adults or older youth in the family ask many questions when they were children? When younger people in the family ask questions, do adults or older youth try to answer them? Is there a family member who is the "go to" person for answers?
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 1: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION — QUESTION BOARD
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants create a forum for collecting congregational questions and wisdom.
Ask:
There are many Unitarian Universalists who come to our congregation, but each one's religious exploration is unique. If you could poll our congregation about religious exploration, what kinds of questions would you ask?
Post blank newsprint. Prompt the group to generate questions to ask the congregation related to faith, spiritual practices, religious questions, and religious beliefs. Questions should be open-ended (not "yes/no") to invite personal answers. Questions might include "What is your personal spiritual practice?" or "What leadership roles have you held at this or another congregation?" or "What is your favorite piece of wisdom to share?" or "What is the biggest religious question you have ever wondered?"
Once you have a few good questions, tell the children you want them to create a bulletin board of questions and invite the congregation to respond by writing their answers. Engage the children in planning. Do they want to put all the questions on the board at once, or post one question at a time and so there will be room for many people to write their answers to each question.
Decorate the board and post one or more questions. Leave an assortment of colored markers by the board. Plan to have children look at the responses on the board in future sessions. Remember to change the question periodically if you have agreed to do so.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 2: PERSONAL SPIRITUAL PRACTICE (10 MINUTES)
Description of Activity
Say in these words, or your own:
A spiritual practice is an activity you do regularly to deepen your spirituality, or connect yourself to something greater than just you. Prayer or meditation are common spiritual practices among Unitarian Universalists. When people perform a spiritual practice regularly, it becomes a ritual.
Many people say their spiritual practice helps them feel centered and connected to their values. It can help you remember what you love and remind you to act every day being faithful to what you love.
Help the children name spiritual practices. These might include yoga, journaling, reading from holy texts, and attending worship. Point out that different spiritual practices suit different people. You might say:
For someone, saying grace at mealtime might help them focus on how thankful they are to be nourished. For someone else, reading the newspaper every morning might remind them how much they wish for fairness and justice and peace all around the world. Gardening or taking a walk can be a spiritual practice if it helps us feel connected to nature and the Spirit of Life.
Ask if the children know anyone who engages in a spiritual practice, or if they themselves do. Encourage them to explore different spiritual practices and find one that fits them.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 3: QUESTION ME AN ANSWER (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children learn a funny song about questions.
Teach children the song, "Question Me an Answer," from the film musical Lost Horizon. Post the lyrics on newsprint and play the song a few times, asking children to join in after the first time.
Though the song is meant for fun, it has one especially wise phrase: "They say knowledge sets you free." After children learn and sing the song, point out this line. Ask the children:
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 4: STORY — HOW DO WE KNOW (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children respond to a story that demonstrates no one has all the answers.
Read or tell the story.
Process the story with these questions:
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 4:
STORY: HOW DO WE KNOW?
An adaptation of a traditional story, retold by Doug Lipman, used with permission.
Some students of the Rabbi Baal Shem Tov came to him one day with a question. "Every year we travel here to learn from you. Nothing could make us stop doing that. But we have learned of a man in our own town who claims to be a tzaddik, a learned and righteous one. If he is genuine, we would love to profit from his wisdom. But how will we know if he is a fake?"
The Baal Shem Tov looked at his earnest students. "You must test him by asking him a question." He paused. "You have had difficulty with stray thoughts during prayer?"
"Yes!" The students answered eagerly. "We try to think only of our holy intentions as we pray, but other thoughts come into our minds. We have tried many methods not to be troubled by them."
"Good," said the Baal Shem Tov. "Ask him the way to stop such thoughts from entering your minds." The Baal Shem Tov smiled. "If he has an answer, he is a fake."
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 4:
STORY: SITTING ON THE ANSWER
By Eckhart Tolle from The Power of Now (Novato: New World Library, 2004).
A beggar had been sitting by the side of a road for over thirty years. One day a stranger walked by.
"Spare some change?" mumbled the beggar, mechanically holding out his old baseball cap.
"I have nothing to give you," said the stranger. Then he asked: "What's that you are sitting on?"
"Nothing," replied the beggar. "Just an old box. I have been sitting on it for as long as I can remember."
"Ever looked inside?" asked the stranger.
"No," said the beggar. "What's the point? There's nothing in there."
"Have a look inside," insisted the stranger.
The beggar managed to pry open the lid. With astonishment, disbelief, and elation, he saw that the box was filled with gold.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 4:
HANDOUT 1: UU PRAYERS AND MEDITATIONS
Prayers
Dear God,
May I be kind,
Strong and brave,
Joyful, useful, loving,
Honest and healthy.
— Meg Barnhouse, used with permission
Thank you for my friend next door
And my friend across the street
And please help me to be a friend
To each and every one I meet.
— Anonymous
Here at the table now we pray;
Keep us together day by day;
May this, our family circle be
Held fast by love and unity.
— John S. Mackey, used with permission
Earth, who gives to us this food,
Sun, who makes it ripe and good;
Dear Earth, dear Sun, by you we live;
To you our loving thanks we give.
— Native American prayer
Help us to be the always hopeful
Gardeners of the spirit
Who know that without darkness
Nothing comes to birth
As without light
Nothing flowers.
— May Sarton, used with permission
Meditations
There is love
Holding me.
There is love
Holding you.
There is love
Holding all.
I rest
In this love.
— Rebecca Ann Parker, used with permission
May I be peaceful.
May I be happy.
May I be well.
May I be safe.
May I be free from suffering.
May all beings be peaceful.
May all beings be happy.
May all beings be well.
May all beings be safe.
May all beings be free from suffering.
— William Collinge, from Subtle Energy: Awakening to the Unseen Forces in Our Lives (Warner Books, Inc., 1998); used with permission.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 4:
LEADER RESOURCE 1: FIRST EMBLEM
Download a high-resolution PDF (at www.uua.org/documents/tapestry/signs/first_emblem.pdf) for printing.
FIND OUT MORE
The UUA WorshipWeb (at www.uua.org/worship/index.php) has guidelines for writing your own prayers, meditations, and blessings. See the activity Writing Family Prayers (at www.uua.org/re/tapestry/youth/families/workshop10/workshopplan/activities/106965.shtml) in Families, a UUA Tapestry of Faith curriculum for youth; participants use Rev. Gary Smith's framework of five elements a prayer can contain.
Two Skinner House books with worship resources, available from the UUA Bookstore, are A Child's Book of Blessings and Prayers (at www.uua.org/publications/skinnerhouse/browseskinner/titles/104049.shtml) by Eliza Blanchard and Rejoice Together: Prayers, Meditations, and Other Readings for Family, Individual, and Small-Group Worship (at www.uua.org/publications/skinnerhouse/browseskinner/titles/18797.shtml) edited by Helen Picket, which provided some of the prayers and meditations in this session.
SESSION 5: WE REVERE LIFE
SESSION OVERVIEW
INTRODUCTION
... each of the three times I have been present at the birth of one of my children, I have been overwhelmed by a sense of reverence... It was quite suddenly, the first day of creation; the Goddess giving birth to a world... Like men since the beginning of time I wondered: What can I ever create that will equal the magnificence of this new life? — Sam Keen, author
As Unitarian Universalists, we believe life is sacred---not only human life, but all life that shares our planet. The ritual of child dedication is one way UUs show we revere life and celebrate its beginning. This session looks at traditions and rituals to welcome new life into families and faith communities. Shape the activities to reflect the traditions and experiences of your congregation and families.
Activity 4, Child Dedication, calls for one or two families to visit and tell about their child dedication ritual. Several weeks ahead, arrange for one or two families to visit; they need not be families with children in this group.
GOALS
This session will:
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Participants will:
SESSION-AT-A-GLANCE
Activity | Minutes |
Opening | 2 |
Activity 1: Birth in Nature | 15 |
Activity 2: Reverence for Life | 10 |
Activity 3: Story — Hannah Dedicates Samuel to the Lord | 15 |
Activity 4: Child Dedication | 15 |
Faith in Action: Baby Cuddlers | |
Closing | 3 |
Alternate Activity 1: Leadership in Action — Dolls for Dedication | |
Alternate Activity 2: Baptisms and Naming Ceremonies | 20 |
Alternate Activity 3: Religious Birth Days | 10 |
SPIRITUAL PREPARATION
Even when a new beginning is welcome, it sometimes involves pain and sacrifice. Think about giving birth—both literally and figuratively. One idea that can keep us going, through pain and sacrifice, is that the new birth holds the promise of making our world a better place.
Have you been part of bringing something or someone new to life? What were your hopes and dreams about how this beginning would make the world a better place? To what did you dedicate your efforts?
SESSION PLAN
OPENING (2 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Welcome all participants. Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Ring the centering chime. Ask a volunteer to light the chalice, and recite together:
We gather together as Unitarian Universalists and members of the Signs of Our Faith community.
Together, we express reverence for all life by celebrating birth and new beginnings. Together, we dedicate ourselves and our community to supporting new members and their families. Together, we dedicate ourselves to making the world a better place for all life.
Ask for a definition of the word "reverence." Then affirm or explain:
Reverence means an attitude that is deeply respectful. We have reverence when we honor, respect, and cherish someone or something. Reverence goes with words like "awe," "sacred," and "holy."
Some people feel reverence for God. They sometimes show this reverence by bowing their head or kneeling in prayer. Some people feel reverence for nature. When we are asked to stand for the national anthem or to say the Pledge of Allegiance, it is to show reverence for symbols of our country. We show reverence for life my not hurting living things and by treating all living things with respect.
Tell the group that they will begin exploring ways to show signs of our faith in relationship to others. Today they will talk about the relationships they have, as Unitarian Universalists, with new life—people who are just born. They will talk about how UUs and people in other religions and communities celebrate a new baby.
Say:
Celebrating new life demonstrates our reverence for it, how much we cherish and respect life. When we celebrate new life, it is a way to show our hope for the future in which this new life will grow.
ACTIVITY 1: BIRTH IN NATURE (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children recognize the importance of new life and how to demonstrate reverence for it.
Visit the nursery or a space with younger children as a place that holds new life. Let the group know that they will observe only and not interact with the babies, to prevent the spread of germs. Ask participants, "Why are babies and children important?"
Lead the group outside and ask participants to look for signs of new life. Look for new leaves unfurling, buds, and spider egg sacs. Remind child to look but not to harm or interfere. Ask the group, "Why are we careful not to harm the plants or animals we find?" Affirm that it is because we revere life: Life is sacred and we cherish it. Because we think life is sacred, we protect life when we can. Do the children think animal and plant life is important to the congregation? To the world? How do they know?
Return indoors. Gather the group, and ask:
Including All Participants
Check the outdoor area ahead of time to ensure it is accessible to all the children. Make sure the area is safe for any children with plant allergies; learn whether and where there may be poisonous plants in the area you will tour.
ACTIVITY 2: REVERENCE FOR LIFE (10 MINUTES)
Description of Activity
Remind the group of how careful they were not to harm the new life forms they found in nature. Say that that action showed reverence for life found in nature. Tell the group that you will now name several actions. Ask participants to indicate if they think the action shows reverence or respect for life by standing on one side of the room. If they think it does not show reverence but disregards or disrespects life, they should move to the other side.
Actions for the continuum:
Ask the children to name more actions they have done or witnessed that are signs of reverence for life. Invite them to consider both human life and animal and plant life. Say they may think of an action that happened in the congregation, in their family, at school, or anywhere else.
Acknowledge that sometimes we do not mean to disrespect life, but we are just careless. We don't put too much food on our plate because we plan to throw it away, but we are not thinking carefully about how much we really need. Showing reverence for life takes practice. The more we think about how we want to honor all life, the less careless we will be in our actions.
ACTIVITY 3: STORY — HANNAH DEDICATES SAMUEL TO THE LORD (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants respond to a story about dedicating a child, through discussion and art work.
Tell the group you know a story about a baby that was important to the life of a congregation. Tell or read the story. Tell the group it comes from the Hebrew Bible, sometimes called the Old Testament.
Read or tell the story. Then, process the story with these questions:
Say:
Hannah felt that by dedicating her son to God, she was dedicating him to a great purpose. She felt that dedication to a great purpose was a way to show reverence for his life. Being dedicated to a positive purpose in life is a way to improve the world, to help make our world a better place for all life. Can you think of a time you, or someone you know or read about, dedicated themselves to improving the world? [If needed, prompt with examples: taking an anti-bullying pledge, dedicating an afternoon to cleaning up a local park, dedicating some time to tutoring a classmate who needs help.]
Point out that Hannah gave her baby the name of Samuel, which means "Because I asked the Lord for him." Ask:
Invite the children to give their name a special meaning by making a name poems. Distribute drawing paper and crayons/markers. Ask children to write their first name vertically along the left-hand side of their paper, like this:
S
A
L
L
Y
Challenge participants to think of a word or phrase that starts with each letter which describes them or is important to them. For example,
Sings
Artsy
Lemon pie
Loves coming to church
Youngest
Give children a few minutes to think, discuss, and write. Help children write, as needed. Invite sharing.
Including All Participants
You may wish to make fidget objects available to children who find it difficult to sit still while listening or can focus better with sensory stimulation. For a full description and guidance, see Session 1, Leader Resource 2.
Consider using rug squares in the storytelling area. Place them in a semi-circle with the rule "One person per square." This can help control active bodies.
ACTIVITY 4: CHILD DEDICATION (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants learn how families in the congregation have honored new life and new beginnings with a child dedication ceremony.
Say, in these words or your own:
Our group has talked about how we use rituals as as signs of our faith. In our UU worship services, we have rituals to symbolize the opening and closings of our special worship time and space, rituals that show we support each other in good times and bad, and rituals that celebrate our common human experiences. Some rituals are associated with holidays. Others mark important changes, like birth, death, and becoming an adult.
Starting a new life is an important transition. As UUs, we sometimes use a ritual to honor new life and new beginnings, such as births and adoptions. A UU child dedication ritual is a sign of our reverence for life, our welcome of a new person, and our hope for the future of the world.
Some of you may have been dedicated in this UU congregation or in another one; some of you may not. It is not required in our faith that children be dedicated. It a choice some families make as a sign of their UU faith. As you already know, one way to show faith is not better than another.
Introduce the guest families. Facilitate five-minute or shorter presentations, which may include passing around or showing the group items you and the families have brought. Before guests speak, let children know they may raise a hand to ask a question during the presentation—or, instruct them to remember their questions for after each speaker has finished.
Facilitate questions and answers and make sure the children have a chance to examine the mementoes families have brought.
Thank the guests and congratulate the children on giving a warm reception.
CLOSING (3 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Optional: If children wear stoles for every Opening and Closing, distribute stoles and invite participants to put them on.
Distribute Taking It Home. Ask participants to share these fun activities with their parents and try them with family or friends.
Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Say:
We end as we began: together.
May we remember to be UU not just when we are together here, but every day and in every way.
Invite each child to name one way they show that they revere life. Ask all participants to blow out the chalice together.
FAITH IN ACTION: BABY CUDDLERS
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants learn about baby cuddling or baby rocking—a way to give service that welcomes a newborn and shows reverence for their new life.
Introduce the guest speaker by saying that one way we show what we believe in is by what we dedicate our time to doing. Some adults (and perhaps youth—check with your guest) dedicate some of their time to helping sick newborn babies by offering them the warmth and love of close cuddling. Explain that these volunteers visit a hospital to cuddle and rock the babies that must stay in the hospital until they are healthy enough to go home with their families.
Invite the speaker to talk for five to ten minutes. Make sure there is time for questions. If the speaker suggested a craft activity the children can do to help, lead the activity. Thank your guest and congratulate the children on how well they welcomed them.
LEADER REFLECTION AND PLANNING
What went well in this session? What have you learned that you can apply in the future? How did the children interact? Did everyone in the group enjoy the outdoor activity? How did time and logistics flow, with regard to the guests?
Read the next session and assign advance preparation to co-leaders.
TAKING IT HOME
... each of the three times I have been present at the birth of one of my children, I have been overwhelmed by a sense of reverence... It was quite suddenly, the first day of creation; the Goddess giving birth to a world... Like men since the beginning of time I wondered: What can I ever create that will equal the magnificence of this new life? — Sam Keen, author
IN TODAY'S SESSION... we said that, as Unitarian Universalists, we hold life sacred, in reverence. We talked about birth and new life. Births are special times in the lives of families and the congregation; child adoptions are also special, because they represent a new beginning in life. We examined how Unitarian Universalists celebrate births and beginnings with the ritual of child dedication, and what "dedication" means. We also talked about other ways people celebrate and honor new life.
EXPLORE THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Talk about... fairy tales where a new baby is received with special reverence, or dedicated. One is the tale of Sleeping Beauty: The mother wishes for a child and her wish comes true. The queen and king do not dedicate the baby as we might in a UU congregation. But the baby is blessed by wise women, with the same kinds of words one might hear in many naming ceremonies. Of course, the story includes a curse and a handsome prince—that part is different. Read the story on If You Love to Read (at www.ifyoulovetoread.com/book/chtwo_storiesfullsleeping.htm) or watch a movie version. Discuss it with family and friends. What part of the story to you like? What parts do you dislike? How are women and men portrayed in the story?
Family Adventure. Talk about your name. Does it hold a special meaning? Were you named after someone in your family, a friend, or a famous person? Why were you given the name you have? Does your name mean your parents hoped to "dedicate" you to something?
Family Game. Ask an older family member to create a name game with you. You will need paper to make a list, and index cards to write clues for the game. List the names of every family member you will be able to contact. Then, privately ask each family member about the origin of their name. They might tell you they are named after someone, or what their name means. They might say something like "My mother just liked the name!" Make this a game bywriting each name on an index card. Write the origin of that name on another index card. Write a number on the backs of both cards so you will be able to match them later. To play, ask family members to match each name with a story. Invite family members to play the game when you are together, such as at a holiday meal. Some family members may have more stories about one another's names. You may even find that people disagree about some of the stories!
Family Ritual. What rituals does your family have for welcoming a new member? Is there a ritual for when a new baby is born? Are there any rituals that were held when your parents or grandparents were born that your family does not use anymore? Talk to the elders in your family—grandparents, aunts, great uncles. Were they dedicated as a newborn or young child? Or did they have another kind of ceremony, perhaps in a church, a synagogue, or a special outdoor place?
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 1: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION — DOLLS FOR DEDICATIONS
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
The children invite the congregation to a doll-making party.
Leadership in Action (LIA) invite children to take the lead in an activity that engages with the congregation. Through these activities, young people will start to see themselves as leaders in their faith.
Open the party by helping the children explain to the larger group why they are making the dolls and the importance of the congregation in a UU child dedication. Explain how to make the dolls and where to put finished dolls. Serve refreshments, play music.
Make dolls that are gender neutral. Make at least enough dolls for every child being dedicated. While making the dolls, invite all ages to discuss what they think a child dedication signifies. What hopes and dreams do they hold for the new lives? How are they willing to dedicate themselves to helping these children become the best they can be?
You might keep the dolls in an attractive basket. Arrange with worship leaders to invite each dedicated child (or a parent/caregiver, for babies) to choose a doll as a gift as part of the dedication ceremony or afterward.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 2: BAPTISMS AND NAMING CEREMONIES (20 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children explore ways different religions celebrate a birth.
Tell the group they will make name poems.
Distribute drawing paper and crayons/markers. Ask children to write their first name vertically along the left-hand side of their paper, like this:
S
A
L
L
Y
Challenge participants to think of a word or phrase that starts with each letter which describes them or is important to them. For example,
Sings
Artsy
Lemon pie
Loves coming to church
Youngest
Give children a few minutes to think, discuss, and write. Help children write, as needed.
Invite sharing. Ask participants what they like or do not like about their name. Affirm that our names are important to us—so important that many cultures have traditions for naming babies.
Share this information with the group, showing Leader Resource 2 if you choose:
Jewish families might have a naming ceremony in a synagogue, where a rabbi gives blessings to the new baby. There is also a special ceremony for boys, held when the baby is eight days old.
A Hindu family might have a naming ceremony, between a baby's 10th day of life and first birthday. The mother or father will whisper the name they have chosen into the baby's ear, before the name is announced to family members and guests.
Many cultures hold naming ceremonies for babies. Sometimes they are religious and sometimes not.
Ask if anyone has ever been to a naming ceremony.
Other religions have different ways of welcoming babies. Some Christian families might have a baby baptized. A minister or priest will touch the baby with water which has been blessed so it is considered holy. Aside from being a blessing, like a child dedication, the ritual welcomes the child into the faith community and provides an opportunity for family and church members to dedicate themselves to helping the child become a good Christian. At a baptism, people who are close to the family might be named a godfather or godmother for the baby. That means they agree to help protect the child and to guide the child to live by their religious faith. Infant baptisms are sometimes called christenings.
Ask, "Do you think other major religions consider life sacred, too?" Affirm that they do, though they sometimes show it in different ways.
Ask if there are any questions about ways different religions celebrate new life.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 3: RELIGIOUS BIRTH DAYS (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
A matching game highlights the importance of births in religions. This game helps Children identify several religious births and leads into a conversation about what Unitarian Universalism has to say about whose birth is important.
Say, in these words or your own:
Many religions have stories about babies—babies who grew up to be holy people, or babies who a religion considers gods. I am going to tell you some birth stories from different religions. Let's see if you can match pictures of the babies with my stories.
Display the images where all the children can see them. Read the descriptions below, in any order you wish. As you finish each one, invite the children to choose which baby has been described:
Baby Jesus (1) — Jesus was known to be special from the moment he was born. Shepherds in their fields saw a message in the stars at night, and traveled to bring rare spices as gifts to welcome the baby. Jesus grew up to be a kind, wise teacher. In Christianity, Jesus is considered both a real person who lived on earth and a Divine being, the son of God.
Baby Moses (2) — To save his life, Moses's mother put him in a basket and sailed him down the river. He was not alone: His sister watched from the bushes. He was discovered by the Egyptian princess, who raised him as her son. When Moses grew up, he discovered he belonged to the Jewish people who were enslaved in Egypt, and heard a call from God to lead his people to another land where they could be free. Moses was an important prophet of Israel who brought the people the Ten Commandments from God.
Baby Krishna (3) — Krishna's parents had to hide him, too, because his uncle was afraid of a prophecy that the child would conquer him and take the throne. Krishna was hidden away until he was safe. In Hindu religion, the baby Krishna was a new, human body to live in for Lord Vishnu, a god who had lived before but not in human form.
Birth of Aphrodite (4) — She had no parents. She was born of the sea. She came riding to shore on the ocean surf, on a shell, fully grown. She is the Greek goddess of love and beauty.
Baby Buddha (5) — This baby's mother was Queen Maya, of India. She dreamed that a white elephant pierced her with its tusks and then disappeared into her. The kings called wise men to interpret the dream. They declared that Maya would give birth to a son. They said if the son became a ruler, he would be great. However, if he ever left the household, he would become a great holy man, the Buddha. The king tried to keep his son inside the royal compound. Yet, he did escape and became a great holy man. Nowadays, to celebrate his birthday, some Buddhist people pour tea over statues of him.
The Birth of Ganesha (6) — Pavarti created a boy from the dirt of her body to protect her house. He was so good at his job, he would not even let her husband, Shiva, in. Shiva sent other gods to defeat the boy. One of them cut off his head. Pavarti was grief-stricken and Shiva felt badly, so he brought the boy back to life but could not find his head. He promised to give the boy the head of the next creature he encountered, which happened to be an elephant. Pavarti assigned the boy to be a new god, Ganesha, remover of obstacles. Ganesha is still prayed to today.
Afterward, invite further questions about these prophets and divine beings, and share what you know.
Then say, in your own words:
As Unitarian Universalists, we draw wisdom from many different religions So we believe is important that Jesus and Buddha were born, and Moses, and Muhammad, the prophet who founded the Muslim religion. We also find wisdom outside of religions—so we also believe it is important that wise, courageous people were born like Harriet Tubman, and Florence Nightingale, and Aung San Suu Kyi And of course, each and every one of us has wisdom and courage to help the world. So it is important that my parents were born, and your parents, and that you were born. We believe all people are important and all their births deserve celebrating.
A famous UU, Sophia Lyon Fahs, wrote a poem about this topic.
Share the poem (Leader Resource 4) as a responsive reading. Invite participants to read the italicized lines, or have co-leaders alternate the parts. If your congregation reads this piece during Christmas Eve services, remind the group of this and that the holiday of Christmas celebrates the birth of a baby who grew up to be an important prophet, Jesus.
Ask the children what words of the poem they remember. Ask what they think the poem means. Remind participants that the First UU Principle is "Each person is important." And so, each of our births is important, too.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 5:
STORY: HANNAH DEDICATES SAMUEL TO THE LORD
From the Hebrew Scriptures, 1 Samuel 1:10-17, 20, New Revised Standard Version of the Bible.
Hannah was a very religious woman. She spent her days praying and trying to serve God by being a good woman and good wife. She wanted to be a good mother, too, but she did not have children. This made her sad.
One day, she went to the temple, her house of worship, to pray to God for a son. She sat outside the temple, crying and praying. She prayed to God, reminding God that she was God's servant and wanted but one thing only. Then she made a promise. She said: "Oh, God Almighty, if you will only see my misery and remember me by giving me a son, then I will give my son to serve you, God, for all the days of his life."
A priest at the temple, Eli, saw her sitting outside. Because she was behaving strangely, he thought she was a vagrant. "Why are you hanging around the temple?" he asked. Hannah replied, "I am a woman who is deeply troubled. I have been praying here out of my great anguish and grief, asking God to grant my prayer." Eli was moved by how earnestly she was praying and said, "Go in peace, and may the God of Israel grant you what you have asked of him."
Several months later, Hannah gave birth to a son. She named him Samuel, saying, "Because I asked the Lord for him."
Baby Samuel lived with his family and they loved him very much. But when Samuel was old enough, Hannah made good on her promise to dedicate him to God. She took Samuel to the temple to live with the priests and Eli promised to take good care of him. Every year, Hannah and Samuel's father visited him at the temple. Samuel did not want his mother to be lonely, so he blessed her and prayed for her. She had more children, and was a good mother to them. Samuel, who had been dedicated to God, became a prophet of his people and a leader of Israel.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 5:
LEADER RESOURCE 1: 1 SAMUEL 1: 10-17, 20
From the Hebrew Scriptures, 1 Samuel 1:10-17, 20, New Revised Standard Version of the Bible.
She was deeply distressed and prayed to the Lord, and wept bitterly. She made this vow: 'OLord of hosts, if only you will look on the misery of your servant, and remember me, and not forget your servant, but will give to your servant a male child, then I will set him before you as a Nazirite until the day of his death. He shall drink neither wine nor intoxicants, and no razor shall touch his head.'
As she continued praying before the Lord, Eli observed her mouth. Hannah was praying silently; only her lips moved, but her voice was not heard; therefore Eli thought she was drunk. So Eli said to her, 'How long will you make a drunken spectacle of yourself? Put away your wine.' But Hannah answered, 'No, my lord, I am a woman deeply troubled; I have drunk neither wine nor strong drink, but I have been pouring out my soul before the Lord. Do not regard your servant as a worthless woman, for I have been speaking out of my great anxiety and vexation all this time.' Then Eli answered, 'Go in peace; the God of Israel grant the petition you have made to him.' And she said, 'Let your servant find favour in your sight.' Then the woman went to her quarters, ate and drank with her husband, and her countenance was sad no longer.
They rose early in the morning and worshipped before the Lord; then they went back to their house at Ramah. Elkanah knew his wife Hannah, and the Lord remembered her. In due time, Hannah conceived and bore a son. She named him Samuel, for she said, 'I have asked him of the Lord.'
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 5:
LEADER RESOURCE 2: RITUALS TO WELCOME A NEW CHILD
Download a high-resolution PDF (at www.uua.org/documents/tapestry/signs/naming_ceremonies.pdf) for printing.
Image 1: Baptism from Wikimedia Commons (at commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Girl_at_catholic_christening.jpg); Little girl at Catholic christening. Taken September, 2005 by Nils Fretwurst.
Image 2: Jewish Naming Ceremony from Wikimedia Commons (at commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:SabatoBirkatKohanimBrit.JPG); Rabbi Haim Sabbato blessing the baby with Birkat Kohanim at a brit mila. Taken January 18, 2011.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 5:
LEADER RESOURCE 3: HOLY BABIES
Download a high-resolution PDF (at www.uua.org/documents/tapestry/signs/holy_babies.pdf) for printing.
Image 1: Baby Jesus
Image 2: Baby Moses
Image 3: Baby Krishna
Image 4: Birth of Aphrodite
Image 5: Baby Buddha, from Fo Guang Shan Hsi Lai Temple (at www.hsilai.org/). Used with permission.
Image 6: Birth of Ganesha
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 5:
LEADER RESOURCE 4: FOR SO THE CHILDREN COME
By Sophia Lyon Fahs.
For so the children come
And so they have been coming.
Always in the same way they come—
Born of the seed of man and woman.
No angels herald their beginnings
No prophets predict their future courses
No wise men see a star to show
where to find the babe that will save humankind
Yet each night a child is born is a holy night.
Fathers and mothers—sitting beside their children's cribs—
feel glory in the sight of a new life beginning.
They ask, "Where and how will this new life end?
Or will it ever end?"
Each night a child is born is a holy night—
A time for singing,
A time for wondering,
A time for worshipping.
FIND OUT MORE
"We Dedicate This Child" (at www.uuabookstore.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=537) is a pamphlet by Unitarian Universalist minister Linda Olsen Peebles, available from the UUA Bookstore, about the UU ritual of child dedication.
Find sample child dedication liturgies online, including one posted by the Unitarian Universalist of Puerto Rico (at www.uupuertorico.org/child%20dedication.html) and one written by minister Dan Harper (at www.danielharper.org/misc3.htm). Bless This Child: A Treasury of Poems, Quotations and Readings to Celebrate Birth (Boston: Skinner House, 2005) has UU resources collected by Edward Searl that can be used in ceremonies to celebrate birth. Another resource is Carl Seaburg's Great Occasions: Readings for the Celebration of Birth, Coming-of-Age, Marriage, and Death (Boston: Skinner House, 1984).
The Harvard Square Library has a short biography of the religious educator Sophia Lyon Fahs (at www.harvardsquarelibrary.org/unitarians/fahs.html).
SESSION 6: SIGNS OF CARING
SESSION OVERVIEW
INTRODUCTION
Too often we underestimate the power of a touch, a smile, a kind word, a listening ear, an honest compliment, or the smallest act of caring, all of which have the potential to turn a life around. — Leo F. Buscaglia
As Unitarian Universalists, we believe members of communities take care of each other. This session identifies ways we care for others in our families, at school, in the congregation, and in the wider world. Children learn about the common Unitarian Universalist ritual of sharing our joys and concerns. Many congregations include Sharing of Joys and Concerns in worship. However, if your congregation call this ritual by a different name or conducts it in a different manner than is described in this session, replace the details with ones that fit your congregation. Feel free to include other rituals around caring that your congregation may practice.
GOALS
This session will:
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Participants will:
SESSION-AT-A-GLANCE
Activity | Minutes |
Opening | 2 |
Activity 1: Joys and Concerns | 15 |
Activity 2: Story — This Morning... | 20 |
Activity 3: Candle Decorating | 20 |
Faith in Action: Celebration Kits | |
Closing | 3 |
Alternate Activity 1: Leadership in Action — Children's Caring Team | |
Alternate Activity 2: Skits | 20 |
SPIRITUAL PREPARATION
Think about your childhood. Can you remember a time when a friend or a family member told you something important that was happening in their life? Did you understand that simply by listening, you showed that you cared? Letting others into our lives is not always easy. For some adults, it is much harder than when we were young. Feelings of vulnerability can sometimes prevent us from connecting heart to heart. If you have not had a recent opportunity to care for someone or receive another's care by sharing a joy or concern, seek such an opportunity. Consider using Activity 1, Joys and Concerns to do it. What joy or concern can you comfortably and appropriately share with the children that will deepen your connection to them?
SESSION PLAN
OPENING (2 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Welcome all participants. Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Ring the centering chime. Ask a volunteer to light the chalice, and recite together:
We gather together as Unitarian Universalists and members of the Signs of Our Faith community.
Together to learn. Together to care for each other in good times and bad. Together to celebrate the traditions of our faith.
ACTIVITY 1: JOYS AND CONCERNS (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
The group participates in Sharing of Joys and Concerns.
Invite the group to share a time for joys and concerns. If this practice is unfamiliar to your congregation or the children, you might say:
As Unitarian Universalists, we believe it is important that we take care of each other. When we care for each other, our connections to each other become stronger. The interconnectedness of us all is part of our seventh Principle. Sharing good times and bad times helps us to be more caring people, and being caring people is one way we are UU every day.
Sometimes we share our good and bad times in a ritual during worship services. Sometimes this is called Joys and Concerns. "Joys" are things that have happened that make us happy; "concerns" are events that make us worried or sad. What are some of the reasons we share good and bad news with each other?
If participants do not suggest these, mention:
Ask participants to think for a moment:
Is there something that has happened to you recently that you would like to share with the group? It can be something you are happy about or something that makes you sad or concerned.
Give each child a battery-operated candle. Invite children to light a candle, place it near the chalice, and share their joy or concern with the group. Explain that each person may come up, one at a time, to light a candle and if they wish to speak aloud, say their joy or concern, and that after each person has shared, the group will sit in silence together for a few moments. Say:
Let's listen to each sharing in silence. Later, it is okay to talk to the person and offer support if you feel you can be helpful or congratulations if you wish.
Tell participants that if they do not want to say their joy or concern, that is fine. They are welcome to take a turn and light a candle in silence.
Go first to model sharing a brief joy or concern. Then encourage children to take turns. After everyone who wants to participate has shared, light one last candle and say:
This is for all the joys and concerns that we hold silently in our hearts.
Sit in silence for a moment. Then, process with these questions:
ACTIVITY 2: STORY — THIS MORNING... (20 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
The group hears a story about many different ways members of the congregation take care of each other.
Tell participants the story they are about to hear is full of different actions people take to care for each other. Then read or tell the story.
Then say that you will share the story again. This time, when someone in the story does a caring action, they may stand up (or raise a hand) and hold up a lighted candle. Pass out the LED, battery-operated candles used in Activity 1. Read the story slowly. Then, process the story with these questions:
Choose an example of a caring action from the story—for example, Kamal sharing his hymnbook with a visitor, or the baby's mother telling Kamal she was sorry his friend Abby was sick—and ask, "How do you think the person being cared for felt? How do you think the person felt who did the caring action?"
Invite the children to think of a time they helped somebody, in a big or small way, either here at the congregation or someplace else. Ask for volunteers to tell the group what they did and how it felt.
Affirm that you are glad that the participants are caring people.
Including All Participants
If standing will be difficult for any participants, ask the group to hold up their candles or shout, "I care!"
ACTIVITY 3: CANDLE DECORATING (20 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children decorate "caring candles."
Say that the group will do something now that will be a sign to others in the congregation that the children care.
Indicate the supplies and invite participants to cut out shapes from the beeswax to decorate the candles, then press the shapes firmly to the candles until they stick.
While children work, ask them to think about how we all experience good times and bad times. Think about times when someone cared enough about them to celebrate good news or to be with them when they were sad or worried. Maybe these decorated care candles will help comfort the people who will light them during joys and concerns. Knowing the children decorated the candles especially to show caring may help people feel loved in the community and better connected to other members.
If you have arranged for children to present the candles during a worship service, help them articulate what they can say.
CLOSING (3 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Distribute stoles and invite participants to put them on.
Distribute Taking It Home. Tell participants that at the end of every session, they will receive this guide to fun activities they can do with family or friends. Read it aloud to give participants an idea of activities suggested.
Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Lead the group to say:
We end as we began: together.
May we remember to be UU not just when we are together here, but every day and in every way.
Ask all participants to blow out the chalice together. Have them store their stoles in the place you have designated. Stoles should stay at the congregation and not go home with children.
FAITH IN ACTION: CELEBRATION KITS
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
The group helps congregants celebrate good times.
Often, after sharing has happened in Joys and Concerns, people focus on supporting congregants going through difficult times. This is good. Yet, it is also nice to know that others join you in celebrating happy events in your life. Children can help members of the congregation recognize one another's joys by creating celebration kits.
Ask the group for reasons why someone might light a candle of joy. These include births, adoptions, birthdays, anniversaries, graduations, recovering from an illness or accident, getting accepted into a school or program, and getting a new job, among other joys.
Brainstorm low cost items the kit could include to help a person celebrate. Consider:
Children can create congratulation cards featuring balloons or smiley faces, with the message "Thanks for sharing your happiness!" inside.
Put together items in small gift bags and tie the bags with ribbon. Tell the children who will receive the kits, and if appropriate, engage their suggestions. Keep in mind that the group cannot make enough for every joy shared every week. Perhaps it is given to children who share a joy at a particular multigenerational worship service or to elders or people sharing during a service with an appropriate theme (caring, community, joy, etc.). If the congregation receives the idea of the kit well, perhaps a committee will undertake producing them regularly.
LEADER REFLECTION AND PLANNING
What went well in this session? What are some lessons to learn for next time? How did the children interact? Was the theme of the lesson communicated clearly? Remember always to spend time with your co-leader reviewing future sessions for activities needing long-term planning.
TAKING IT HOME
Too often we underestimate the power of a touch, a smile, a kind word, a listening ear, an honest compliment, or the smallest act of caring, all of which have the potential to turn a life around. — Leo F. Buscaglia
IN TODAY'S SESSION... we lifted up caring for members of our community as a sign of being UU. We showed that we care about one another by doing a Unitarian Universalist ritual of Sharing Joys and Concerns. In this ritual, we have a chance to speak about how we feel and know we will be heard, and loved, and to listen to one another. The ritual of Sharing Joys and Concerns symbolizes how we take care of each other, in good times and bad. There are many other ways we take care of people in our congregation and in the other communities to which we belong.
EXPLORE THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Talk about... ways your family helps care for others in the congregation.
EXTEND THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Try... caring for your faith even when you are not at our congregation. Share ideas on how you could do this. Do you sing UU songs in the car? Do you say a grace to give thanks at meals? Do you light a chalice at home, or read stories by UU authors?
Family Adventure. One way to show caring for your UU community is to help care for the building where the congregation meets. Be family stewards of the building. Help host a family spruce up day. Think of jobs for people of all ages and abilities to do, so everyone has a chance to help take care of the building and grounds.
Family Discovery. Look for a new way to help take care of a family member. Maybe you can read a bedtime story to a younger sibling, or learn to make a parent's favorite beverage.
Family Ritual. Create a new caring ritual. Perhaps arriving home after religious education, your family lights a chalice and everyone shares at least one new thing they discovered about their faith today. This shows you care about learning about Unitarian Universalism. Or, try a new ritual to help people in your family pay attention to the caring that is already in your lives. Once a week, invite each family member to tell about a kind action they performed, a kind action they received, and a kind action they intend to perform in the coming week.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 1: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION — CHILDREN'S CARING TEAM
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants form a caring team.
Leadership in Action (LIA) activities provide opportunities for children to take the lead in an activity that engages with the congregation, and begin to see themselves as leaders in their faith.
Your congregation probably has a team or committee that cares for individuals and families when help is needed. Tell the children about this team. Ask if they would like to form a Caring Team for Kids. Brainstorm actions they can take to help kids who might need caring attention. For example:
Though they may not be able to prepare dinners, they can make up snack baskets. If some ideas are impractical, help the group adapt them into an idea with the same intent that is more realistic.
Engage some adults aside from parents to help the caring team. Have the group make name tags together or find their congregational name tags before hosting a caring event; team members of all ages can place heart stickers on their name tags to help people identify them.
Publicize the Children's Caring Team. Let the congregation know the ways the team can help care for children experiencing hard times. Assign two or more adults to keep alert for news about children and others who might welcome care from this team.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 2: SKITS (20 MINUTES)
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants perform skits of caring.
Invite the group to think about situations where someone has cared for them or they have cared for someone else. It can involve the congregation or other communities. Tell them they will have the opportunity to act out their examples. Ask them to raise their hand when they have an example. Call on the first child. Guide them to imagine their example as a play or skit. Invite them to choose other participants and assign them roles. Say that the child whose example will be performed is the "director;" the director should not have an acting role, and they must be sure to listen to the ideas of the children in the cast. Cast as many skits as you can. Make sure every child is involved with a skit, even if you have to add a character or two.
Bring each cast to a separate part of your meeting space, or to nearby spaces they can use to rehearse. Indicate where they can find costumes and props, and give them about five minutes for rehearsal.
Monitor rehearsals. Watch that the "directors" treat cast members with respect. You might remind children to show caring while working on a skit about caring. Also watch for stereotypical casting or behavior: Girls should not be the only ones needing help, boys can do more than lift and tote, and smaller, shyer children are not less able to demonstrate caring actions.
Reconvene the large group and let each cast present it skit. After each skit, lead the group to name who was helped and how.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 6:
STORY: THIS MORNING...
At breakfast on Sunday, Kamal's mother reminded him that today it was their turn to be greeters at their congregation. Normally, Kamal loved greeting all the members and visitors who entered the building at his Unitarian Universalist congregation. It was fun to go early, be the first to arrive, and set up the greeter's table. Yet, today, he seemed less enthusiastic.
"What's wrong, Kamal?" his mother, Sherri asked.
"I was thinking about Abby. She won't be at the worship service today because she's still in the hospital. I'm going to miss her. This Sunday just won't be the same."
"I understand. It's hard to look forward to today when someone important to you is having a hard time. Would you like to sit this Sunday out? I can greet by myself, or ask someone else to help."
Kamal said, "No. People expect to see me there, so I better do it."
At the greeter's table, Kamal and his mother met with a smile every single person who came through the door. They answered questions from visitors. Kamal told a new little boy about the things he liked to do best at church. Sherri invited the boy's father to the next week's holiday party.
Dr. Reynolds brought a big vase of flowers she had arranged for the altar. Sherri held the door for her. Kamal picked up a flower that had fallen out and gave it to Dr. Reynolds. She asked him to pick a spot to put it back in the vase. "That's perfect, Kamal. I bet you would make a good flower arranger," she said. This made Kamal smile.
Sherri did not have to hold the door for Mr. Andrews. He waved "hello," then pushed the red button beside the automated door which opened for him to roll through in his wheelchair.
Everyone was busy. In the nursery, volunteers made sure there were diapers and wipes to take care of the babies. In the RE rooms, leaders were setting up supplies and snacks for their groups. In the sanctuary, the music director made sure the piano was in tune and a volunteer set up microphones, so everyone would be able to hear the service. Someone was making fresh coffee; they dumped the used coffee grounds and filters in the garden's compost bin.
When Kamal and Sherri sat down in the service, Kamal noticed that the visitors sitting beside them did not have a hymnbook. He offered to share his, so they could sing, too.
During worship, the service leader introduced the time for Sharing of Joys and Concerns. People lined up to light a candle and share important events in their lives. Kamal did not recognize the two women who went first. "This is our new son. We waited a long time for him to arrive from Russia, and it was worth it!" they said. Kamal whispered to his mother "We light candles for both joys and concerns, right? Could I light a candle for Abby?"
Kamal and Sherri approached the altar. Kamal said, into the microphone, "This candle is for my friend, Abby. She is sick and in the hospital, so she couldn't come today. Please keep her in your thoughts and prayers." And then he added, "And her family, too, so they don't worry too much." After the last candle, the minister calls for a moment of silence.
After worship, Kamal went to see the new baby. One of the baby's mothers let Kamal hold him, but then the baby began to cry and Kamal handed him back. The mother sang softly to quiet the baby. Then she said, "Kamal, we are sorry to hear about your friend. We hope she can come home from the hospital soon."
"Thanks," Kamal said. "I hope so too!" He realized that other people knew how it feels to have a friend who is sick, and he was glad he had shared. He thought to himself, "Next time, maybe I will have a 'joy' to share, and that will feel nice, too."
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 6:
LEADER RESOURCE 1: ILLUSTRATION - GREETING
Illustration by Ginger Wyatt.
Download a high-resolution PDF (at www.uua.org/documents/tapestry/signs/greeting.pdf) for printing.
FIND OUT MORE
Generation On, an affiliate of the multi-city Hands On Network, has a Kids Care Club website (at www.kidscare.org/) that lists service projects appropriate for young people to expand their circle of caring out into the world.
To help children becoming caring individuals, we need to develop their compassion and empathy. Hear a TED (Technology, Entertainment, and Design) by Buddhist teacher Joan Halifax (at www.ted.com/talks/joan_halifax.html) on the nature of compassion and why we must cultivate it in our children.
The UUA's Tapestry of Faith curricula offer many activities and reflections to develop caring, compassion, and empathy. Look in Moral Tales (Session 8, Do Unto Others (at www.uua.org/re/tapestry/children/tales/session8/index.shtml)), Toolbox of Faith (Session 13, Love (at www.uua.org/re/tapestry/children/toolbox/session13/index.shtml)), and the three children's curricula whose themes are love: Love Surrounds Us (at www.uua.org/re/tapestry/children/lovesurrounds/index.shtml), Love Will Guide Us (at www.uua.org/re/tapestry/children/loveguide/index.shtml), and Love Connects Us (at www.uua.org/re/tapestry/children/loveconnects/index.shtml).
SESSION 7: WE SHARE
SESSION OVERVIEW
INTRODUCTION
We are here that we might have life
and have it more abundantly,
so that we might share it with others.
Come, let us join together
as a generous people. — John. C. Morgan
Children explore contexts in which they can practice sharing as sign of Unitarian Universalist faith. They discuss ways they share with family, friends, neighbors, the congregation, and the world. They understand that they are better at sharing now than when they were younger, and that this is a sign of maturity.
Children learn about the flower, water, and bread rituals of Unitarian Universalist congregations and discover how these rituals highlight sharing as a UU value. Use the Alternate Activities to tie this session into any ceremonies of your congregation.
GOALS
This session will:
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Participants will:
SESSION-AT-A-GLANCE
Activity | Minutes |
Opening | 2 |
Activity 1: Mine! | 15 |
Activity 2: The Ritual of Communion | 15 |
Activity 3: Story — Jesus Feeds the Multitude | 15 |
Activity 4: Saying Grace | 10 |
Faith in Action: Sharing Fun Times | |
Closing | 3 |
Alternate Activity 1: Leadership in Action — Helping with a Communion | |
Alternate Activity 2: Leadership in Action — Planting Flowers for Flower Ceremony | |
Alternate Activity 3: Shared Space | 30 |
Alternate Activity 4: Communion Display | 30 |
Alternate Activity 5: Clothing to Share | |
SPIRITUAL PREPARATION
Generation after generation, adults make commitments to help shape the characters of young people. What a gift to the world! As a leader of this program, you share of yourself with children in your congregation. What does this sharing mean to you? Why do you share yourself in this way? Who were important teachers in your life? What did they share that you still carry today?
Discuss these questions with a co-leader. Does teaching have the same meaning for them?
SESSION PLAN
OPENING (2 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Welcome all participants. Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Ring the centering chime. Ask a volunteer to light the chalice, and recite together:
We gather together as Unitarian Universalists and members of the Signs of Our Faith community.
Together to learn, together to share faithful leadership, together to celebrate the traditions of our faith.
Tell the group that today you will talk about sharing as a sign of our UU faith.
ACTIVITY 1: MINE! (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Description of Activity
Children role play sharing and not sharing. They discuss the value in sharing and sharing as a sign of their UU faith.
Ask participants if they have ever seen little children struggle over a toy or something else they will not share. Say that this is natural: When very young children want something someone else has, they do not understand why they cannot have it and they are focused only on themselves. Brainstorm scenarios where this might happen. You might suggest siblings arguing over sitting on a parent's lap, two children trying to play with the same toy, fighting over whose turn it is to play a game, or a child with candy who gives some to one friend, but not to everyone. Let a few volunteers role-play scenarios of not sharing.
Now say, in these words or your own:
You are all getting older. You have learned to think not only about making yourself happy, but about making other people happy, too. You have had to learn to share. It is not always easy. Everyone has to learn to share, and keep relearning it, too—even adults sometimes have a hard time sharing.
Invite the group to demonstrate how they have learned, now that they are older, to share. Ask for volunteers to re-enact scenarios, this time with sharing instead of without. Then, ask for examples of what sharing looks like now, in their own lives as older children. Prompt:
Now say:
The older you get, the more ways there are to share. When you are a grown-up, you might share an apartment with someone. You might share a car that you can drive when it is your turn. You might have money of your own that you sometimes share with others. You will have jobs to do with other people, where you will share the work, and also the credit when you get it done.
Invite the children to role play sharing, as adults.
Ask:
Affirm:
We share because sharing is one way we can make our world more fair, so everyone has something, as opposed to some people having a lot and others having nothing. We share because it usually more fun to share than to be alone. We share because sharing is one way we can take care of each other.
ACTIVITY 2: THE RITUAL OF COMMUNION (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants learn a hymn and learn about UU rituals of sharing.
Teach Hymn 402, "From You I Receive."
Say, in your own words:
Why do people share? Because the world works better when we do. It would be very hard for every person to make and grow everything they need in life. Someone grows onions and carrots, and someone else makes bowls and spoons, and a third person works at the electrical plant that brings energy to your house to heat up your stove. Together, they can make a bowl of hot soup.
Another example of sharing happens at our congregational potlucks. Someone brings dessert, someone else brings vegetables, and another person might set up the tables and chairs. Have you ever been to a shared meal at our congregation? Did your family share by bringing a dish or setting up or eating?
There is another kind of sharing which is harder to see. Did you ever teach someone how to do something, or have someone else teach you? Have you ever told someone one of your special wishes, or one of your fears? Have you listened when someone else told you about something special to them? That is a kind of sharing too, when you share of yourself. In our families and at our congregation, we share more than just material things like food and furniture. We also share our hopes and dreams, our fears, our laughter, and our tears. We share what we have learned in school and what we have learned just from living. We share stories about ourselves, about people we know, and stories from all around the world. When we gather together in worship, we might share our joys or concerns, or feelings and ideas we think are important.
Today we will talk about rituals Unitarian Universalists can do in our worship services to symbolize sharing and how important it is to us. These are called rituals of communion.
Some Christian religions have a Holy Communion ritual. In Holy Communion, each person receives a wafer and either wine or juice, with a blessing from a worship leader, as a symbol for the connection they share with Jesus. UU congregations do not have a Holy Communion, but many celebrate other types of communions. The most common ones are flower ceremony, water communion, and bread communion. Like the Christian Holy Communion, UU ceremonies are about sharing connections.
Share these descriptions of flower ceremony, water communion, and bread communion with the group. Ask your co-leader to write important words on the appropriate newsprint sheets as you talk.
Flower Ceremony
For flower ceremony, everyone brings a flower. Some people bring extra. All the flowers are gathered together and blessed. The flowers are a symbol for the congregation: Each one is unique, and all have a place in one big beautiful bouquet.
The flowers are different, but also have things in common. Some might come from a garden, some from a store. But every flower is a sign that the person who brought it loves their congregation and the people in it. They think the people of the congregation are as special and beautiful as flowers.
In the Flower Ceremony, everyone takes home a different flower than the one they brought. This action is a symbol for how we share with each other our beauty, our uniqueness, our very lives.
Flower ceremony was started in 1923 by Norbert Capek, a Unitarian minister from Czechoslovakia and has been celebrated in this country since the 1940s.
Ask:
Water Communion
For water communion, people bring small amounts of water they have collected. One at a time, everyone pours their water into one huge bowl which is placed in the front of the sanctuary. Sometimes waters are poured in silently; sometimes people tell where their water came from. Many congregations hold water communion at an Ingathering service after the summer, when it is the start of a new church year. Some people have traveled over the summer and they bring water from someplace far away. Other people bring rainwater from outside their home, or water from their kitchen faucet. Sharing our waters is a symbol that even though we are all different, unique people who have been all sorts of places doing many different activities, we come back together to share who we are and where we have been. Sharing our waters is a sign that we plan to nourish and refresh one another, as water has nourished and refreshed each of us. After a water communion, some congregations water the gardens with the water, or boil it and use it in another ritual to bless new babies.
Ask:
Bread Communion
In bread communion, people bring different kinds of bread to share. Some bring breads that are part of their cultural heritage, like pita bread from the Middle East, or Irish soda bread. Sometimes people share stories about the bread during the worship service. People volunteer in the kitchen before the service, cutting and tearing the loaves into bite-sized pieces. The kitchen volunteers are lucky because they get to see all the different yummy breads brought in. The bread is blessed and baskets are passed around for everyone to take a piece. Breads around the world are very different, but, every civilization that has ever lived on the earth has made some type of bread. This communion reminds us that we all need food to live, that we must share our one earth which feeds us all. It also reminds us to share our unique gifts with one another, so all can be fed.
Ask:
ACTIVITY 3: STORY — JESUS FEEDS THE MULTITUDE (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants respond to wisdom from Christian tradition about sharing.
Read the story "Jesus Feeds the Multitude."
Ask:
Then say:
One of our Unitarian Universalist teachers, Sophia Lyon Fahs, had a different way of telling this story.
Read the story "Jesus and the Loaves and Fishes — A UU Telling."
Then, ask:
Explain:
The first story comes from the Bible. In Christian scripture, there are many stories where Jesus performs a miracle. He does something that people cannot explain, like making food appear. Miracles are like magic. Some people believe these stories are literally true. But most Unitarian Universalists do not believe Jesus performed supernatural miracles. Whether or not you believe that Jesus performed miracles, we can still believe the stories told about Jesus have wisdom for us. Either way, this story about Jesus has good wisdom about sharing.
Conclude in these words, or your own:
There are many stories in the Bible where people share meals. Another famous story about Jesus is the Last Supper. This is a meal he shared with the disciples before he died. The Last Supper is the meal that Christian churches associate with the Holy Communion we mentioned earlier. During Holy Communion, participants eat a wafer and drink wine or juice. These are symbols of Jesus' body and blood, which Christians believe he sacrificed to save humankind. Our UU flower, water, and bread ceremonies are not about remembering Jesus, but are about the things that are important to us as UUs: community, diversity, appreciating nature, remembering our families and honoring our different cultures. Our Unitarian and Universalist ancestors were Christian and some UUs today are Christian. We have Christianity to thank for the tradition of a communion, but we have created ceremonies that reflect what we love and hold dear today.
Who do you share food with? Family members? Kids at school during lunch? People you don't even know, by donating or serving food at a food pantry? How does our congregation share food?
Including All Participants
You may wish to make fidget objects available to children who find it difficult to sit still while listening or can focus better with sensory stimulation. For a full description and guidance, see Session 1, Leader Resource 2.
Consider using rug squares in the storytelling area. Place them in a semi-circle with the rule "One person per square." This can be very helpful for controlling active bodies.
ACTIVITY 4: SAYING GRACE (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
We are here that we might have life
and have it more abundantly,
so that we might share it with others.
Come, let us join together
as a generous people. — John. C. Morgan
We lift our hearts in thanks today for all the gifts of life. — Percival Chubb, Unitarian minister
May we have grateful hearts, and may we be mindful of the needs of others. — Source unknown
May we hold hands quietly for a moment...
Feeling love flow around us and through us,
Knowing that as we give love away
There is always more within. — Source unknown
Description of Activity
Participants learn a UU reading to use as a grace.
Read the quote with participants. John C. Morgan is a Unitarian Universalist minister. Ask children what they think the quotation means. Ask, "Are you a generous person? In what ways? Say that being a generous person and sharing are ways to be UU every day."
Ask: "Why would we say a grace or a blessing before meals?" Explain that grace is another ritual. It is a special time to acknowledge how blessed we are to have food to eat. Some people say grace to thank God, Goddess, or the Spirit of Life. Some people remember and thank all the people who grew, processed, and prepared the food on our table. Some people say grace to express gratitude for the earth and how it feeds us, and to renew a promise to take care of our planet.
If participants have special graces they say, invite them to share them with the group.
Point out the grace you have prepared on newsprint and invite participants to read it aloud. Help participants serve the snack and say grace before they begin to eat.
CLOSING (3 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Distribute stoles and invite participants to put them on.
Distribute Taking It Home. Tell participants that after each session, they will receive this guide to fun activities they can do with family or friends. Read aloud some of the activities suggested.
Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Lead the group to say:
We end as we began: together.
May we remember to be UU not just when we are together here, but every day and in every way.
Sing "From You I Receive," Hymn 402 in Singing the Living Tradition. Ask all participants to blow out the chalice together. Have them store their stoles in the place you have designated. Stoles should stay at the congregation and not go home with children.
FAITH IN ACTION: SHARING FUN TIMES
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children share games with the congregation.
Has your congregation ever designated a Sunday morning as Game Day? Sometimes religious educators will choose a Sunday on which they expect low attendance (like a holiday weekend or summer Sunday) and declare a Game Day, when children and youth can play games during RE. The Signs of Our Faith community could ask the worship staff if one Sunday could be declared Game Day for the entire congregation. After the service, children invite everyone to stay for games. Stations can be set up outside and inside. Children and youth from other RE classes, as well as adults, can cover each station, leading a different game. Pick a balanced assortment of games: Some games that involve movement are fine, as long as not all the games require movement. Twenty Questions and Red Light/Green Light are good choices.
LEADER REFLECTION AND PLANNING
What went well in this session? What have you learned that can help you plan and lead next time? Do participants appear to understand how symbols, signs, and rituals represent abstract ideas? If not, how can you be more explicit in future sessions? Did co-leaders allow adequate time for your own spiritual preparation?
TAKING IT HOME
We are here that we might have life
and have it more abundantly,
so that we might share it with others.
Come, let us join together
as a generous people. — John. C. Morgan
IN TODAY'S SESSION... we explored sharing as a way to be UU every day. We talked about UU flower, water, and bread communion rituals. We heard a story from Christian scripture about Jesus helping a crowd share loaves and fishes. We role-played good ways to share and learned hymns and a grace about sharing.
EXPLORE THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Talk about... how does your UU faith calls you to share? Does it affect decisions about whom you share with? Does it affect decisions about what and how much you share?
EXTEND THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Take the time to notice and name sharing when you see family members doing it. Young children especially need praise and encouragement to continue sharing.
Family Discovery. How does your family share with the wider community and the world? Perhaps the adults write checks to various organizations they support. Do the children know about this? Who in the family volunteers to do community service? Is any student a reading buddy who shares their knowledge of reading and their time with other students? Keep track of the ways all family members share and what they share. Remind yourselves that your family shares and is generous as part of your UU faith.
Family Game. We practice sharing at home when we take turns playing a game, enjoying a privilege, or doing a chore. Find ways to make everyday activities more fun by sharing. Think about chores. Is it possible to share chores and have more fun? Instead of one person doing the dishes, share the job: One person washes, one dries, and one puts away. If sweeping, one person handles the broom and another the dustpan. Sing or play music while working and take turns choosing the songs.
Family Ritual. Some families start their Thanksgiving meal by sharing what they are thankful for. Try this kind of sharing at meal times. What if, once a week, everyone shared about a new topic? One week you share your favorite food. Another week you share your favorite fairy tale. A different week you share your favorite family vacation memory.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 1: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION — HELPING WITH A COMMUNION
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants assume positions of leadership in a communion service.
Leadership in Action (LIA) activities provide opportunities for children to take the lead in an activity that engages with the congregation. Through these activities, young people start to see themselves as leaders of their faith.
Tell the group about the scheduled service and invite them to help. Some participants may know how they would like to help. Others might need your suggestions. Present options to please both the more extroverted children (helping to tell a story, passing bread baskets) and the more introverted (setting up, cleaning up).
After the ceremony, talk with participants about their favorite parts of the service. What was being shared during the ceremony? Why did people share it? Was the sharing symbolic? If so, what did the flowers/water/bread/other object represent or symbolize? Ask them how it felt to take a leadership role and if they would like to help with worship again in the future.
Including All Participants
Pay particular attention to any children with special needs who might need roles modified in order to participate fully. Consider assigning roles to pairs or triads to share responsibility and provide back-up if a child misses the service.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 2: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION — PLANTING FLOWERS FOR FLOWER CEREMONY
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children prepare offerings for flower ceremony for the entire congregation.
Leadership in Action (LIA) activities provide opportunities for children to take the lead in an activity that engages with the congregation. Through these activities, young people will start to see themselves as leaders of their faith.
Invite children to prepare seedlings to offer during flower ceremony. Demonstrate how they will plant seeds and offer help, as needed. Optional: Offer children smocks to protect their clothing.
After planting, water seeds and set them in a place where they will not be disturbed. Help the group remember to water and check on them regularly.
During the flower ceremony, as a group, tell the congregation about your work and why the group wanted to give every family a flowering plant. Make sure all plants are taken home by someone, planted on congregational grounds, or given to an organization that can use them.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 3: SHARED SPACE (30 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Is the space where Signs of Our Faith sessions are held shared with other groups? You might share space with an adult religious education program, yoga or meditation class, a preschool, or a civic organization. Children acknowledge shared space by creating a sign of welcome.
Tell the children about a group that shares the space. Invite children to create decorations to welcome the other group. Make sure the children's artwork or card mentions how nice it is to share space with the other group. Help the children think of specific comments such as "Thanks for putting the furniture back the way we like it" or "Thank you for adding the pretty rug."
Bring the creation to the attention of the leaders of the other group to make sure they see it. If the other group responds, share the response with the Signs of Our Faith community.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 4: COMMUNION DISPLAY (30 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
If your congregation has a communion scheduled soon, invite participants to create a display to advertise the event and demonstrate what the communion means to them. Decorate the display with photographs from the congregation's past ceremonies, photographs cut of magazines, and artwork from participants.
For example, a flower ceremony display might include "Multigenerational Flower Ceremony" and the day, date, and time of the event in the center of a piece of poster board. Beneath, you might add short instructions, such as, "Bring a flower from your garden or a store. Take a flower home. All are welcome to participate." Around the sides, children can draw or write about their favorite flowers, why they like flower ceremony, how they helped plant a garden at home, what we share when we share symbolic flowers in our congregational worship, or why they think we exchange flowers during the ceremony. Decorate with photographs of flowers from seed catalogs and drawings by the children. Post it in a high traffic area at least two weeks before the service.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 5: CLOTHING TO SHARE
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants lead the congregation to recycle families' unused or gently used clothing to share with neighbors.
Say, in these words or your own:
Sometimes, in a family, younger children wear clothing that their older siblings have outgrown. Sometimes we call these items "hand-me-downs." To some, that might sound like a bad thing, but actually, it is a good practice: reusing clothing helps our environment. It does not make sense to throw away perfectly good clothes.
You can share clothing with people who are not in your family, people in need of more or better clothing. Our congregation could hold a clothing drive and we can help. Are you interested?
Introduce the guest speaker. Invite them to explain the need for donated clothing and what types of clothes to collect.
Allow the children to ask questions.
Point out that the group has learned what kind of clothing other people need. Ask:
Has someone ever shared something with you that you did not want or need? How did that feel? Should we donate items that we want to get rid of or should we find out first what is needed and then see if we have it to give?
Engage the children to help with these tasks:
After the speaker's presentation, or later, such as while sorting donations, process the activity with these questions:
Thank the children for sharing and for living their UU values every day!
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 7:
STORY: JESUS AND THE LOAVES AND FISHES — A UU TELLING
From Jesus, The Carpenter's Son by Sophia Lyon Fahs (Boston: Beacon Press, 1945).
Jesus had not been speaking long—at least so it had seemed with all who were there, yet the day was now almost wholly spent. As the afternoon shadows crept over the hillside the air had begun to chill.
Two of his disciples stepped quietly up to Jesus and said: "Send the crowd away so that they can go into town before it is too late and buy food for themselves."
But Jesus answered: "Is there need for them to go away? Can we not give them food?"
Philip answered in amazement: "Shall we go and buy two hundred shillings' worth of bread and give them to eat?"
"How many loaves are there here among us?" asked Jesus.
A lad, overhearing Jesus' question, stepped forward. "I have five loaves and two fishes. You may divide them."
Jesus smiled and, beckoning the boy to come nearer, he stood with uplifted arms and in a strong voice spoke a prayer of thankfulness to God.
For a few moments afterwards, there was complete silence. Men and women looked wonderingly at each other as if to say: "What are these few loaves and fishes among so many people?"
But presently others in the crowd brought out baskets and bags. All who had shared generously with those who had not. Before long, everyone had eaten heartily and still there was bread untouched. The crowd seemed refreshed and lighter in spirits as their friendliness grew.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 7:
STORY: JESUS FEEDS THE MULTITUDE
Mark 6: 34-44 from the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible.
As he went ashore, he saw a great crowd; and he had compassion for them, because they were like sheep without a shepherd; and he began to teach them many things. When it grew late, his disciples came to him and said, "This is a deserted place, and the hour is now very late; send them away so that they may go into the surrounding country and villages and buy something for themselves to eat." But he answered them, "You give them something to eat." They said to him, "Are we to go and buy two hundred denarii worth of bread, and give it to them to eat?" And he said to them, "How many loaves have you? Go and see." When they had found out, they said, "Five, and two fish." Then he ordered them to get all the people to sit down in groups on the green grass. So they sat down in groups of hundreds and of fifties. Taking the five loaves and the two fish, he looked up to heaven, and blessed and broke the loaves, and gave them to his disciples to set before the people; and he divided the two fish among them all. And all ate and were filled; and they took up twelve baskets full of broken pieces and of the fish. Those who had eaten the loaves numbered five thousand men.
FIND OUT MORE
Jesus and the Loaves and Fishes
The popularity of this story is evident by the number of organizations named Loaves and Fishes, including a food pantry (at www.loavesandfishes.org/) in Charlotte, NC and a Meals on Wheels for seniors (at feedseniors.org/) in Portland, OR. This session includes the version of this story from the Book of Mark in Christian scripture. Read other versions in Matthew 14:13-21 (at bibref.hebtools.com/?book=%20Matthew&verse=14:13-21&src=%21), Luke 9:10-17 (at bibref.hebtools.com/?book=%20Luke&verse=9:10-17&src=%21) and John 6:5-15 (at bibref.hebtools.com/?book=%20John&verse=6:5-15&src=%21).
This session also provides a version from Jesus, The Carpenter's Son (Boston: Beacon Press, 1945), Sophia Lyon Fahs' retelling of the life of Jesus, through a Unitarian lens. Read the entire book (at books.google.com/books?id=8H0hqUJovnoC&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false) on the Google Books website.
Sharing
This Psychology Today blogpost, Sharing Among Children (at www.psychologytoday.com/blog/evolved-primate/201002/sharing-among-children), by Daniel R. Hawes analyzes results from a small experiment with children on sharing. Hawes describes two distinct steps in the sharing process—deciding whether or not to share and then deciding how much to share—and affirms that children share more as they age or, as the article states, learn more "prosocial behavior" as they get older.
Communions
Search the UUA's WorshipWeb (at www.uua.org/worship/index.php) for chalice lightings, readings, and sermons for flower, water, and bread communions.
Norbert Capek, a Unitarian minister in Czechoslovakia, created the Flower Communion, and his wife, Maya, introduced it to the United States. Read about flower ceremony (at www.uua.org/worship/holidays/174534.shtml) on the UUA website or a short biography of Norbert Capek (at uudb.org/articles/norbertcapek.html) in the online Dictionary of Unitarian Universalist Biography. A Tapestry of Faith workshop in the curriculum for youth A Place of Wholeness, (at www.uua.org/re/tapestry/youth/wholeness/index.shtml) also explores the flower ceremony and its theme of hope.
Graces
A Child's Book of Blessings and Prayers, by Eliza Blanchard (Boston: Skinner House, 2008) includes graces for meals, as does the UUA pamphlet, Family Prayers (at www.uuabookstore.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=576), by Irene Praeger.
SESSION 8: MEMORIAL RITUALS
SESSION OVERVIEW
INTRODUCTION
I would like to believe when I die that I have given myself away like a tree that sows seed every spring and never counts the loss, because it is not loss, it is adding to the future life. It is the tree's way of being. Strongly rooted perhaps, but spilling out its treasure on the wind. — May Sarton, American poet and novelist, in Recovering: A Journal
The children learn that religions and cultures honor a death in different ways which are shaped by different beliefs about death and what comes after it. They learn that a Unitarian Universalist memorial ritual is created by family, friends, and a minister to show our reverence for life; our intention to remember our loved one so that something of them will live on; and our feelings about the loss of the loved one's physical presence.
Unitarian Universalism holds that how we live our lives is a more important question than what happens to us once we die. This session encourages children's questions about an afterlife, while teaching that our faith does not give us a specific answer. If children express beliefs about a heaven, simply say that people have different beliefs about an afterlife and we do not need to agree on this. We do agree that it matters how you live your life. We agree that the people who knew and loved you and whose lives you touched will remember you long after you die.
Be prepared for a participant who has recently experienced the death of a loved one. Ask your religious educator and the children's parents or caregivers about any particular issues or reactions you should anticipate. You might have a minister or chaplain join the group for this session.
The session tells the Christian story of Jesus' death and resurrection from the perspective of the seminal Unitarian Universalist religious educator Sophia Lyon Fahs. The story affirms that when someone important to us dies, their spirit lives on, inside and among us. Be ready to clarify, as needed, that Unitarian Universalism draws on Christian teachings for wisdom, but does not espouse a literal resurrection of Jesus.
In Activity 4, Remembering Our Loved Ones, participants share pictures of loved ones who have died. A week before the session, ask parents to talk with their children about their remembrances of a loved one who has died and to give children a photo to share. Some children may want to remember a pet that has died; that is fine. As an alternative, parents can give their child a picture of a well known person whose memory is important to the family.
GOALS
This session will:
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Participants will:
SESSION-AT-A-GLANCE
Activity | Minutes |
Opening | 5 |
Activity 1: The Story of Easter | 10 |
Activity 2: Ritual Matching Game | 15 |
Activity 3: Second Emblem | 10 |
Activity 4: Remembering Our Loved Ones | 15 |
Faith in Action: Memorial Photo Frames | 25 |
Closing | 5 |
Alternate Activity 1: Leadership in Action — Memorial Garden | |
SPIRITUAL PREPARATION
Take a moment to recall memorial rituals you have attended or planned. Think about why you felt it was important to participate in a funeral and/or memorial service. Did you find comfort in sharing the ritual with others? If these memories cause you pain, acknowledge it, and release it for the time you are leading this session. Take a deep breath and think of times and ways memorial rituals have been positive affirmations of your faith and sources of comfort.
SESSION PLAN
OPENING (5 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
If the children wear stoles for Opening and Closing rituals, distribute stoles. Invite the children to put on their stoles. Offer any visitors a stole and explain that they may wear it during the Opening time and the Closing time if they wish. Remind the children their stoles are a sign that everyone in the group is a worship leader.
Welcome all participants. Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Ring the centering chime. Ask a volunteer to light the chalice together. Lead the group to say these Opening words:
We gather together as Unitarian Universalists and members of the Signs of Our Faith community.
Together, we celebrate reverence for all life by honoring the dead. Together, we celebrate their lives and comfort one another for our loss.
Remind participants that as Unitarian Universalists, we revere life; if the group has done Session 5, remind them of an activity they did together which made this point. Then say:
Because life is sacred, the end of life is an important event. Today we will talk about the end of life, death.
Ask children to think of words or phrases that describe death. Prompt if needed: passed, gone to heaven, no longer with us.
Say, in your own words:
Some religions give people an answer about what will happen after they die. Our Unitarian Universalist religion does have an answer about that. Unitarian Universalists come to our own beliefs about what happens after we die, and we may each believe different things. One thing all Unitarian Universalists DO believe is this: How you spend your life—your time here on earth—is important.
After someone dies, we remember what they were like, and how we loved them, and the good things they did. We use our memories to keep our connection with someone, even though they have died.
ACTIVITY 1: THE STORY OF EASTER (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Invite the children to sit comfortably. Let them know that they will hear a story about Jesus, an important teacher from two thousand years ago, and what happened after he died.
Optional: If it is Easter time, and especially if your congregation offers an Easter service that celebrates the life of Jesus, offer some context for the story. Say:
Jesus is very important in Christian religions. Many Christians believe that Jesus was different from other humans, that he was the son of God. Many Christians believe that after Jesus died, he was resurrected, that is, he came back to life. Unitarian Universalists believe that Jesus was an important teacher, but, we do not believe he was different from other humans and we do not believe his body came back to life after he died. At Easter time, we celebrate the life of Jesus long ago, and the way his spirit is still with us, in our memory of his kindness and wisdom.
Read or tell the story.
Process with these questions:
Affirm that when someone dies, it is part of our Unitarian Universalist faith to have a memorial service that celebrates the person's life.
If your congregation honors Jesus as part of marking the Easter holiday, you might say:
Many Unitarian Universalist congregations remember Jesus. Because he was an important, wise teacher, we celebrate his life when it is Easter time. At other times, our congregation may celebrate other famous people whose wisdom helped make the world better.
INCLUDING ALL PARTICIPANTS
You may wish to make fidget objects available to children who find it difficult to sit still while listening to a story or can focus better with sensory stimulation. For a full description and guidance, see Session 1, Leader Resource 2.
Consider using rug squares in the storytelling area. Place them in a semi-circle with the rule "One person per square." This can be very helpful for controlling active bodies.
ACTIVITY 2: RITUAL MATCHING GAME (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Say, in these words or your own:
Different religions have different beliefs about death. And so, different religions have different rituals and signs they use when someone dies.
Read aloud the names of the religions listed on the newsprint. Tell the group you will describe some religious rituals for a death, and they are invited to match the ritual with the faith that practices that ritual. Point out that our Unitarian Universalist faith is included. Ask the children to listen to the whole ritual before calling out their guess.
Read the ritual descriptions from Leader Resource 1, except the UU description. After each description, allow answers and then give the correct answer. Point out that while these rituals are common in the religion, not all people of the religion practice the same rituals the same exact way.
Explain terms as needed. For example, "cremation" is a ritual where the body of the one who has died is burned in a special fireplace until it is just ashes; some families will scatter the ashes in a place that was important to the person who died. Or, they might keep the ashes in a special jar (an urn) in a religious place or a place very special to the person who died.
Along the way, allow volunteers to share their personal experiences with the rituals or religions you mention.
Once you have described all the rituals except UU, ask:
Now say:
UUs do not have a rule about a ritual for a death. Most UUs, but not all, want a memorial service to be held after they die. Sometimes UUs make plans before they die about how they want their memorial service to be. We believe there are many ways we can gather to celebrate a life that has ended and to share our feelings of sadness and loss.
Read the description of a UU ritual from Leader Resource 1, and/or share in your own words:
UUs may share photos of the person who died, and mementos from their life. Relatives and friends may take turns telling stories. The service might include favorite music and hymns of the person who died. The people who come to the memorial service might be given a printed Order of Service that includes an obituary, which tells some of the highlights of a person's life.
Sometimes people are sad because they miss their loved one. Sometimes people laugh while remembering fun times. It is natural to have all kinds of feelings after someone we cared for dies.
After the service, refreshments are often served. People eat and drink and socialize, keeping the loved one's memory alive by sharing stories about that person.
If these topics have not come up, prompt:
If your congregation has specific memorial rituals, mention them. Explain that every religion has traditions about funerals and memorials. Ask the group why they think this is so.
Conclude:
Unitarian Universalists come together when someone has died to comfort each other and also to celebrate and remember their life. Each faith tradition has a ritual that helps to comfort those who survive and and helps them share their prayers for the memory of the one who has died.
ACTIVITY 3: SECOND EMBLEM (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children add an emblem to their stole.
This emblem represents "looking for signs in my relationships." It is based on the experiences children have had in the second unit of this program (Sessions 5-8).
Lead children to make emblems (optional) and attach the emblems to their stoles.
Have children help put away the craft materials they have used. Invite them to set their stoles nearby to wear during the memorial service—the next activity.
ACTIVITY 4: REMEMBERING OUR LOVED ONES (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Tell the group they will design and take part in their own Unitarian Universalist memorial ritual. Children will have an opportunity to share a memory of the person, or pet, they will remember. Invite children who did not bring a picture or an item to use pencil and paper to write the name of a person or pet they loved who has died. If any children need a suggestion, invite them to memorialize a well-known person whose legacy is known to them—for example, Abraham Lincoln, Martin Luther King, Jr., Helen Keller, or Amelia Earhart—and help them write the name on a slip of paper.
Distribute Handout 1, How Do We Remember? Review it with participants. If you have a copy of the Order of Service from a UU memorial service, pass it around and point out different components of the service.
Post the Order of Service you have prepared on newsprint. Explain the different elements. Remind the children that they are all worship leaders and ask for volunteers to help lead various elements. Explain to the volunteer worship leaders what their roles will be.
Invite children to put on their stoles. Lead the memorial ritual.
CLOSING (5 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Optional: If children wear stoles for every Opening and Closing, distribute stoles and invite participants to put them on.
Distribute Taking It Home. Ask participants to share these fun activities with their parents and try them with family or friends.
Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Say:
We end as we began: together.
May we remember to be UU not just when we are together here, but every day and in every way.
Invite the group to pass a blessing around the circle. Say you will each, in turn, address the person next to you by name and say "It is a blessing to remember together." Model by addressing the person on your left: "Patricia, it is a blessing to remember together."
When everyone has blessed a person next to them, extinguish the chalice together.
FAITH IN ACTION: MEMORIAL PHOTO FRAMES (25 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants create frames for pictures of beloved pets that have passed away.
Ask participants if they have ever experienced the death of a pet. If any have, invite volunteers to name anything that made them feel better when they were grieving over their loss. Ask if looking at photographs of their pet felt comforting. What about times when other people expressed their sympathy? Invite the children to give both of these kinds of comfort to people in the congregation, by making them a frame to hold a photo of the pet that has died.
Lead the group to decorate photo frames. Work with the group to craft an expression of sympathy for children to write on the back of the frames, and post the message on newsprint for children to copy. Ask the children to sign their names or initials on the back of frames they decorate.
Give the frames to the congregational representative who can offer one to any member who has lost a pet. Ask them to say the frame is a gift from the children in the Signs of Our Faith community, to anyone who wishes to keep the memory of a beloved pet that has died.
LEADER REFLECTION AND PLANNING
What went well in this session? What have you learned that you can apply in the future? How did the children interact? Did everyone in the group display compassion, caring, and awareness of the sensitivity of this topic? If any issues or activities seemed especially difficult for any of the group, alert the religious educator. Assign co-leaders any advance preparation needed for the next session.
TAKING IT HOME
I would like to believe when I die that I have given myself away like a tree that sows seed every spring and never counts the loss, because it is not loss, it is adding to the future life. It is the tree's way of being. Strongly rooted perhaps, but spilling out its treasure on the wind. — May Sarton, American poet and novelist, in Recovering; A Journal
IN TODAY'S SESSION... children learned that our reverence for life shapes the rituals we, as Unitarian Universalists, use to honor people who die. We talked about memorial rituals and enacted one. The children heard a story of the death of Jesus and what happened afterward, adapted from a story by the late UU religious educator, Reverend Sophia Lyon Fahs. The story emphasized that by remembering those we love who die, we ensure that their spirit lives on although they are physically gone. The group learned about memorial rituals in different faith traditions and explored some ways Unitarian Universalists have memorials.
EXPLORE THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Talk about... the congregational contributions of deceased members. Did a departed member plant a garden? Were some late members involved in the Civil Rights movement or another justice cause? Did a member who has died begin a tradition the congregation continues today? Help keep their memories alive by sharing stories with the next generation.
Family Discovery. How has your family memorialized loved ones who have died? Discuss a memorial service or funeral the family attended, and talk about the ways that engaging in the ritual with others was a source of comfort. Or, did someone in the family feel they wanted to be alone to remember and mourn in their own way? Talk about making space for all kinds of memorials.
Family Ritual. Has your family owned pets that have died? If you can, visit a beloved pets burial place or gather around a container that holds its ashes, and sharing stories about the pet. Do you have new pets? Point out that we can honor the pets we have loved in the past by taking good care of the pets we have now. Passing along the love you learned from the past pets is a good way to honor their lives.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 1: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION — MEMORIAL GARDEN
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants create or help maintain a congregational memorial garden.
Leadership in Action (LIA) activities provide opportunities for children to take the lead in an activity that engages with the congregation. Through these activities, young people begin to see themselves as leaders of their faith.
With the children, create a multigenerational activity that will either start something new in the congregation, or help maintain and enhance an existing memorial garden or cemetery. Lead a discussion about the importance of remembering and honoring those who came before us, and your congregation's traditions for doing so. You might use these questions:
Introduce the memorial garden project with these words or your own:
The people in our Unitarian Universalist congregation take care of our place which has been taken care of by others before us. As a way of thanking them and honoring them, we will contribute to the memorial garden.
Lead the children to talk about how to prepare for this activity. What are the steps needed? Ask for volunteers to help with each aspect of the planning. Who would like to speak to the congregation's staff or committee in charge of buildings and grounds? Who would like to help make flyers? Who would like to ask the minister for time during the service to make an announcement?
Encourage participants to choose a way to show leadership. Invite them to do as much of the announcements and engagement with congregational leadership as is comfortable for them. Have participants make signs to post in the congregation to advertise the project and ask for help gathering supplies and plants. Children can ask congregational leaders to announce, print, or post online a request for supplies such as plants, flowers, dirt, and garden tools. Make sure an adult leader partners with participants who volunteer to approach or work with congregational adults.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 8:
STORY: THE STORY OF EASTER
Adapted from Jesus, The Carpenter's Son by Sophia Lyon Fahs (Boston: Beacon Press, 1945).
Jesus was a great teacher long, long ago who preached God's love. Jesus taught that we should care for the poor and forgive people who hurt us. In is lifetime, Jesus influenced many people to love one another as they loved God. Twelve of those people were called the disciples of Jesus. They travelled with Jesus and listened to him preach day after day.
In Jesus' time, the Roman leaders and the Jewish leaders did not like him. They were afraid he would lead a rebellion and upset the way things were. As Jesus became more popular, the leaders planned to kill him. One of Jesus' disciples, named Judas, betrayed Jesus and helped the leaders with their plan.
The night before Jesus died, he was celebrating the Jewish holiday of Passover. He celebrated at a Seder with the twelve disciples. The next day, Jesus was arrested, and then he was killed.
What happened after Jesus died began the religion we know as Christianity. Many Christians believe that after Jesus was killed, he rose from the dead to go to heaven.
Unitarian Universalists see this story differently. Many years ago, a religious educator named Sophia Fahs, explains in a UU way what happened after Jesus died. Here is how Reverend Fahs told it:
The people who followed Jesus were brokenhearted after he died. They struggled to understand why God had allowed their teacher to be killed. Surely someone so connected to God, so overflowing in goodness, did not deserve the punishment of a criminal or rebel. As these men and women gathered day after day in each other's homes, they began to recall the wonderful experiences they had had with Jesus. They told one another of times when Jesus was wise, and times when Jesus was kind. The very tone of Jesus' voice and the look on his face would come back to them so vividly that it seemed, sometimes, as though Jesus were again right there with them.
Some of the people had dreams in which Jesus seemed so real that the dreamers could not tell whether they had been asleep or awake when they saw him. Some declared positively that they had seen Jesus again. He had talked with them! The rumor spread that Jesus had actually come out of his coffin, that two of his disciples had seen him, and that several of the women had talked with him; they would see him only for a few moments, and then he would mysteriously disappear again.
Finally, several of them dreamed they saw Jesus rise up from the earth—higher and higher—until he disappeared entirely. They believed he had gone to heaven to be with God. And after that, their dreams of seeing him and talking with him stopped.
People who had these experiences believed that Jesus was different from other people. Some believed that Jesus was so holy and great that he would come back to earth and save the world. That is one reason Christians call Jesus "the Savior."
The years passed by. The people who knew Jesus died. Their children and their children's children also died. But Jesus did not come back. It has been over two thousand years and Jesus has still not come back. There are those who still hope he will come back to life again.
Others, including Unitarian Universalists, believe that this Jesus will never again live on earth. His body is not coming back. But, his spirit never needs to die. His spirit is in his words and deeds which still give us wisdom today. For example, when he was alive, Jesus taught The Golden Rule: Treat others the way you want to be treated. Jesus gave the Sermon on the Mount, where he said that people who are poor, hurt, and struggling are loved by God and therefore, we must love them, too.
When someone's physical body dies, the people around them who loved and valued them will keep their memory alive—just like the followers of Jesus have remembered his teachings and his spirit, long after his death.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 8:
HANDOUT 1: HOW DO WE REMEMBER?
A Unitarian Universalist memorial service might include:
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 8:
LEADER RESOURCE 1: RITUAL MATCHING GAME
Muslim
Loved ones observe a three-day mourning period.
Body is buried within 24 hours and with only a white sheet.
Catholic
Funerals involve three parts: vigil, mass, and burial. Sometimes, but not always, mourners view the body in an open casket. In some cultures, the vigil is called a wake and involves food, drinks, and sharing photos and stories of the person who has died.
Body is buried.
Hindu
Scriptures are read from the Vedas or Bhagavad Gita.
The chief mourner, usually the eldest son or male relative, will light some kindling and circle the body, praying for the wellbeing of the departing soul.
Body is cremated.
Jewish
Body is buried within 24 hours.
After the funeral, mourners observe a seven-day period called "shiva." Observers cover the mirrors in their homes. They make a rip in their clothing or pin to their clothes a black ribbon with a tear in it, to symbolize their loss.
Unitarian Universalist
A memorial service or funeral is developed by family, friends, and a minister to honor the memory of that individual. The ritual may include music the person liked. People will take turns speaking about their memories of the person.
Family chooses if a body is buried or cremated.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 8:
LEADER RESOURCE 2: MEMORIAL RITUAL — LETTER TO PARENTS
Dear Parents,
When we meet on [DATE], the Signs of Our Faith group will talk about Unitarian Universalist memorial rituals and enact a ritual together. Our ritual will emphasize that after death, deceased people and pets live on in our hearts and memories and through the love they have shared.
To be part of creating our memorial ritual together, your child is invited to bring a picture or other item to place on our table that helps them remember a loved one (human or animal) who has died. They will have an opportunity share the name of and, if they wish, a few words about the deceased person. In lieu of a family member, friend, or pet, you are welcome to prepare your child with a photo and information about a well-known person whose life and death affected your family.
If you have any questions about how this topic will be handled, or what else we will do during this upcoming session, we encourage you to contact one of us.
Yours in Faith,
[Co-leaders]
[Co-leaders' contact information]
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 8:
LEADER RESOURCE 3: SECOND EMBLEM
Download a high-resolution PDF (at www.uua.org/documents/tapestry/signs/second_emblem.pdf) for printing.
FIND OUT MORE
Bereaved Children and Teens: A Support Guide for Parents and Professionals, by Earl A. Grollman (Boston: Beacon Press, 1996), compiles the wisdom of 14 experts in a comprehensive guide to helping children and adolescents cope with the emotional, religious, social, and physical consequences of a loved one's death. Talking about Death: A Dialogue between Parent and Child, by the same author, is a compassionate guide for adults and children to read together which features a read-along story. It answers children's questions about death and provides a list of resources and organizations that can help.
The Grieving Child by Helen Fitzgerald (New York: Fireside, 1992) offers guidance on how to explain death to children and includes sections on visiting the dying and attending a funeral.
For help in guiding children to find their own answers to a variety of topics, including death, read Small Wonder by Jean Grasso Fitzpatrick (New York: Penguin, 1995).
The Tenth Good Thing about Barney by Judith Viorst (New York: Atheneum, 1987). This classic book for school-age children tells how a little boy copes and finds meaning when his cat dies.
A good source for readings for memorial services is Carl Seaburg's Great Occasions: Readings for the Celebration of Birth, Coming-of-Age, Marriage, and Death (at www.uuabookstore.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=607) (Boston: Skinner House, 1984).
SESSION 9: LOOKING FOR SIGNS OF COMMUNITY
SESSION OVERVIEW
INTRODUCTION
What should young people do with their lives today? Many things, obviously. But the most daring thing is to create stable communities in which the terrible disease of loneliness can be cured. — Kurt Vonnegut
In this session, participants consider the importance of the communities to which they belong, especially their congregation. They discuss ways to support the congregation and other communities, and learn about the ritual for accepting new members into the congregation.
Activity 3, Find the Simorgh, is a game that is better in large spaces. If there is a space — outdoors or inside — you could use, reserve it and plan to include time to move into and out of the space.
GOALS
This session will:
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Participants will:
SESSION-AT-A-GLANCE
Activity | Minutes |
Opening | 3 |
Activity 1: Story — Journey of the Birds | 10 |
Activity 2: Bird Art | 20 |
Activity 3: Find the Simorgh | 10 |
Activity 4: Community Rituals | 15 |
Faith in Action: Children As Part of the Congregational Community | |
Closing | 2 |
Alternate Activity 1: Leadership in Action: Welcoming Children of New Members | |
Alternate Activity 2: Leadership in Action: Performing the Story | |
SPIRITUAL PREPARATION
Think back to your first experience with the congregation, even if you have been here since birth. What was your impression of this community? What made you feel you would like to join it? What gifts have you brought to enrich the community? Your leadership in this program is a gift, and it signifies that you are a congregational leader. What does the opportunity to be a leader in this congregation mean to you?
SESSION PLAN
OPENING (3 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Welcome all participants. Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Ring the centering chime. Ask a volunteer to light the chalice, and recite together:
We gather together as Unitarian Universalists and members of the Signs of Our Faith community.
Together we join in a community where we may bring our whole, divine self. Together, we nurture and support this community so it can be a home for us and for others.
Remind participants that in other meetings they have learned about signs of our faith an individual might show by the choices they make and by how they interact with other people. Say that now the group will begin to look for signs of faith that communities of people can show—starting today with the community that is the congregation.
ACTIVITY 1: STORY — THE JOURNEY OF THE BIRDS (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Tell or read the story. Then, process with these questions:
ACTIVITY 2: BIRD ART (20 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children recreate the story "Journey of the Birds" using an artistic medium.
Introduce the project. Explain what the children will do and where their art work will be displayed (or that they may take it home).
Encourage the children to choose a specific bird from the story to represent. Guide them to give their birds the qualities they demonstrated in the story: "How can you show that your owl is smart? That your hoopoe is a hopeful?" Point out that all of the children are making birds, yet each bird is unique.
If you have time after children complete their art work, invite them to retell the story using the items they created.
ACTIVITY 3: FIND THE SIMORGH (10 MINUTES)
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children play a game where they move from being alone to finding community.
Invite participants into the open space to play Find the Simorgh. Ask everyone to sit (or stand) in one spot where they are not touching anyone else, and close their eyes. Say:
I am going to whisper in one person's ear, Simorgh. That person is the Simorgh and may open their eyes. Then I will invite everyone to begin moving around, in search of fellow travelers. I ask you to move slowly, and carefully, because your eyes will still be closed.
When you meet (or bump into) someone else, ask "Simorgh?" If they are not the Simorgh, they should reply by asking you "Simorgh?" Since neither of you have found the Simorgh, you must both keep traveling on your search.
If you ask "Simorgh?" and you have found the Simorgh, they will not reply. Then you know you have found the Simorgh. The Simorgh will take the traveler's hand and the traveler who has found the Simorgh can open their eyes. Now both of you are the Simorgh.
Keep playing until everyone has found the Simorgh. When everyone has become the Simorgh, you may all yell "Simorgh!" and raise your hands high in the air.
If there is time and interest, play again.
After the game, ask:
Including All Participants
To fully include children with limited mobility or vision, use a smaller space and have everyone sit closer than arm's length to one another. Have children reach out to find the Simorgh, instead of traveling.
ACTIVITY 4: COMMUNITY RITUALS (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children create a ritual to use in future sessions.
Say:
Our Signs of Our Faith group is a community within the larger community of our congregation. The congregation has many rituals. What rituals does our Signs of Our Faith community have?
Affirm rituals, including your Opening and Closing rituals and the telling of a story at every gathering. Do children have a snack each time they meet? Do they receive a Taking It Home handout? If the children spend time in the congregational worship service each time they meet, perhaps for a Time For All Ages, mention this.
Now say, in these words or your own:
A ritual is an action done the same way every time. However, it is fine for a group to make changes to a ritual. Sometimes a change can help us connect with why we do the ritual in the first place. Sometimes new people in a group have ideas that can make a ritual more meaningful for them as well as for others in the group. Changing a ritual together can make everyone in the group feel even more like they belong.
Lead the group to create a ritual. Solicit suggestions, adding yours if needed. Use newsprint to record ideas. Guide a consensus process. Write the new ritual on paper to share with all co-leaders and the religious educator; make a note of any new materials that will be needed and assign a co-leader to obtain them before the next session. Lead the children to practice the new ritual.
Option 1: Ritual for New Participants in the Signs of Our Faith Group
Children create a simple ritual for new members. It could be signing a scroll and receiving a stole, followed by everyone present introducing themselves and saying, "Welcome." Practice the new ritual by "inducting" all the children who are present. Make sure you tell your fellow session leaders about the new ritual so it will be included in future sessions.
Option 2: New Opening and Closing Rituals
Invite the group to change the Opening and Closing rituals. Remind children that the Opening signals the community coming together and the Closing signals the temporary breaking apart of the community until the next meeting. New rituals need to honor this coming together and going apart. Encourage the children to include their stoles in a new ritual.
Option 3: Ritualizing Snack Time
If the group has a regular snack, brainstorm ritual elements to add. Could they say a grace? Sing a clean-up song? How is the snack usually served? Does one person serve the entire community with participants taking turns? Does everyone serve the person on their right? Would the group like to decorate special plates to hold snack?
CLOSING (2 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Distribute stoles and invite participants to put them on.
Distribute Taking It Home. Tell participants that at the end of every session, they will receive this guide to fun activities they can do with family or friends. Read it aloud to give participants an idea of activities suggested.
Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Lead the group to say:
We end as we began: together.
May we remember to be UU not just when we are together here, but every day and in every way.
Ask all participants to blow out the chalice together. Have them store their stoles in the place you have designated. Stoles should stay at the congregation and not go home with children.
FAITH IN ACTION: CHILDREN AS PART OF THE CONGREGATIONAL COMMUNITY
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants identify ways children participate in the congregational community. They understand pillars as a metaphor for the many, different, individual acts of involvement and engagement that support a faith community and strengthen the faith and connection experienced by the individuals.
Say, in these words or your own:
There are many ways young people can be involved in their faith community—their congregation. Some UUs say there are six ways, and they are sometimes called the Six Pillars. On a building, the pillars are thick posts that help hold the building up. In a faith community, pillars are different kinds of actions individual people do that can help support that community. I think children your age can be involved in some of the pillars in our congregation. Let's see which ones we are already involved with.
Show the children the papers with the names of the pillars (from the Leader Resource) or indicate the newsprint sheets you have posted. Tell the group you want them to find examples of the six pillars in the activities children do with the congregation. Explain the pillars if needed, but try not to give examples! Form teams. Give each team the same number of sheets from Leader Resource 1. Distribute writing implements.
Help all teams finish by making suggestions or playing charades for answers. When all teams have finished—or if you are doing a large group brainstorm—use the newsprint sheets to briefly document the examples they have generated. Note that many activities can represent more than one pillar.
The ways children participate will be unique to your congregation, but may include:
Variation
Collect, or take, photos of children doing a few activities for each pillar in the congregation. Post six newsprint pillars on the wall and invite children to match the photos to the pillars.
LEADER REFLECTION AND PLANNING
Think back to the first meetings of the Signs our Faith group. How has the group changed? Has it coalesced into a community, as you may have hoped it would? Does the group welcome visitors and new members? At this point in the program, how can you help the group feel more like a community? Review the next session for advance preparation. If the children designed a new ritual in Activity 4, decide who will share necessary information with the religious educator and any other co-leaders.
TAKING IT HOME
What should young people do with their lives today? Many things, obviously. But the most daring thing is to create stable communities in which the terrible disease of loneliness can be cured. — Kurt Vonnegut
IN TODAY'S SESSION... we discussed communities. We identified the communities to which we belong, including our UU congregation, and thought about what makes a community strong. We heard a story, based on an ancient Sufi poem, about a group of birds that discovered that sharing their own individual gifts held them together as a strong community. We played a game called Find the Simorgh and planned a ritual for our Signs of Our Faith community to use.
EXPLORE THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Talk about... the story, "The Journey of the Birds." Online, you can listen to author Peter Sis (at www.npr.org/2011/11/16/142396491/in-birds-sis-makes-a-dream-world-for-grown-ups) speak with National Public Radio about his emigration from Czechoslovakia and his illustrated book, The Conference of the Birds (New York: Penguin, 2011), which tells a more detailed version of our story. Compare the two versions. How are they different? How are they the same?
EXTEND THE TOPIC TOGETHER. As a family, choose an intentional action to welcome new congregational members. Invite them to a meal or an outing. Ask if you may sit with them during a worship service. Remember that the congregation is not the building—it is the people who come there to be together.
Family Adventure. How is your family involved in your neighborhood or city? What new ways could your family support and engage in the community where you live? The American Planning Association website for children about communities (at www.planning.org/kidsandcommunity/) includes Crazy City Stories and a scavenger hunt that guides children to explore the place where they live. Find local projects through your congregation or a civic institution such as your city/town hall, community center, or public school district.
Family Ritual. Have you ever meditated on or prayed for world peace? How about peace in your neighborhood? If your family prays, meditates, or says grace, include your local community in meditations or prayers.
Teach your family and friends to play Find the Simorgh (Activity 3).
Leadership Suggestion. It is important for leaders to be well informed. Find out more about Sufism, an aspect of Islam. Start with an article on the History for Kids (at www.historyforkids.org/learn/islam/religion/sufi.htm) website, or with a book of poetry by Rumi (at www.uuabookstore.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=1727).
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 1: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION — WELCOMING CHILDREN OF NEW MEMBERS
Description of Activity
Work with the group to plan a reception for the children (or families) of new members. Children in the Signs of Our Faith group can show new children around the congregation, share memories of their favorite experiences, and pair with new children as worship buddies.
Schedule the welcoming for as soon after families join the congregation as possible. Serve refreshments.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 2: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION — PERFORMING THE STORY
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Invite the group to perform the story. Explain the presentation date/time, venue, and audience you have planned—or, present the group with options and lead them to choose.
Share the script you have prepared, and any costumes and props. Cast the parts, and rehearse. Offer "backstage" roles to children who do not want to act.
After the performance, engage the audience in a short discussion with these questions:
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 3: WE ARE THE ONES
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children relate to the story "The Journey of the Birds," through dance.
After children have heard the story, say, in these words, or your own:
The birds realized they had all the qualities they needed to build a strong community. Because of all their different, individual gifts and their willingness to help one another, they were enough—they did not need a leader from outside their community. A song "We Are the Ones" expresses this sentiment.
Invite children to move to the music, by:
Encourage them to dance their own, individual gifts and how they can share their gifts to help others in the group.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 9:
STORY: THE JOURNEY OF THE BIRDS
Inspired by the ancient epic poem, "The Conference of the Birds," by the Persian Sufi Muslim writer Fariduddin Attar.
Once upon a time, all the birds in the land decided they needed a leader for their community. A leader, they thought, would make their community stronger. Representatives of all the bird species gathered to discuss finding a leader.
"A leader will tell us the right things to do," said the robin.
"Our leader must be wise," said the owl.
"A leader must believe we each are important, big and small," said the sparrow.
"I want the leader to be caring, like a friend," said the dove.
"Yes, the leader help us share and get along better," said the jay.
"The leader must make us feel safe," said the hawk.
"I know where you can find such a leader," said the hoopoe bird. "It is the Simorgh and it lives far from here."
The birds were very excited. They said they were willing to go anywhere to find such a leader. "It might be dangerous," said the hoopoe. A few birds looked troubled, but all the birds voted to go find the Simorgh.
The hoopoe took off and all the birds followed.
They flew at night. They flew in sunshine. Days and days passed. Some birds got tired and left the group. Other birds were filled with doubt. How did they know the Simorgh really existed? Only the hoopoe had ever heard of this bird. Some of the doubters dropped out, but others kept flying.
One valley was filled with fiery mountains. All the birds were afraid.
"I'm too small to make it over that mountain," lamented the sparrow.
"No, keep flying. We can make it together. We will help you." And they did.
The strong flyers helped the weaker flyers. The birds with good vision helped find food for the group. Along the journey, the birds learned how to better respect, share and care for each other. It seemed that every bird had something special and unique to offer that made the journey easier.
Finally, the hoopoe announced, "We are here!"
The other birds look around in anticipation. "Where is the Simorgh? We don't see it!' they cried.
"Come. It is over here," said the hoopoe.
The birds stood beside hoopoe and realized they were on the edge of a lake. They looked in... and saw their own reflections. Then, they understood.
The Simorgh was not another bird. The Simorgh was all of them, and all of them were the Simorgh. They remembered that each of them had something good and strong and special inside of them and that each bird had gifts to bring to the community. They were all that was needed to keep the community strong. They knew now that together they could do anything.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 9:
LEADER RESOURCE 1: SIX PILLARS
Download a high-resolution PDF (at www.uua.org/documents/tapestry/signs/pillars.pdf) for printing.
FIND OUT MORE
On YouTube, watch this cartoon version (at www.youtube.com/watch?v=HJgNrGoRwT4) of "The Conference of the Birds." The Persian Sufi Muslim Fariduddin Attar's original poem is long, complex, and more spiritual than the story in this session. Read about the poem and the poet at the blog (at wahiduddin.net/mv2/X/X_3_4.htm) of contemporary Sufi author Hazrat Inayat Khan.
An article about the basic beliefs, history, and practices of Sufism, an aspect of Islam, can be found on the BBC Religions webpage (at www.bbc.co.uk/religion/religions/islam/subdivisions/sufism_1.shtml).
The UUA Bookstore offers Ayat Jamilah: Beautiful Signs (at www.uuabookstore.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=1274): A Treasury of Islamic Wisdom for Children and Parents by Sarah Conover (2010).
SESSION 10: SIGNS OF WELCOME
SESSION OVERVIEW
INTRODUCTION
Those of us who have come through the great doors, who have made of this place the soul of Sunday on our spiritual journey, share a commitment... to radical hospitality. This is the heart of our faith: love, service, justice, peace. — Rev. Kim K. Crawford Harvie, Unitarian Universalist minister
Welcoming others is a sign of our Unitarian Universalist faith. In this session, the children hear a story based on a Hawaiian tale in which Pele, the goddess of fire, visits two families in disguise to teach a lesson of welcoming. They sing and discuss "Come, Come, Whoever, You Are," a popular Unitarian Universalist hymn based on words of the Sufi mystic, Rumi. Participants share personal experiences and brainstorm ways to make the group welcoming and accessible to everyone.
GOALS
This session will:
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Participants will:
SESSION-AT-A-GLANCE
Activity | Minutes |
Opening | 2 |
Activity 1: Story — A Calabash of Poi | 5 |
Activity 2: Shut Out | 10 |
Activity 3: Song — "Come, Come, Whoever You Are" | 15 |
Activity 4: The Welcome Challenge | 15 |
Activity 5: Creating a Ritual of Welcome | 10 |
Faith in Action: Welcome Flags | |
Closing | 3 |
Alternate Activity 1: Learning in Action - Making Name Tags for Members | 30 |
Alternate Activity 2: Learning in Action — Leading a Round in Congregational Worship | |
SPIRITUAL PREPARATION
Reflect on the times you felt welcomed, particularly when you were a child. When did you feel truly wanted? When did it feel false, or overdone? If you have a short, appropriate story to share about being shut out or welcomed, prepare to share it with the group.
SESSION PLAN
OPENING (2 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
As participants enter, greet each child in the same manner.
Lead the Opening ritual designed in Session 9, Activity 4. Or, use this Opening ritual:
If the children wear stoles for Opening and Closing, distribute stoles. Invite the children to put on their stoles. Offer any visitors a stole and explain that they may wear it during the Opening time and the Closing time if they wish. Remind the children their stoles are a sign that everyone in the group is a worship leader.
Welcome all participants. Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Ring the centering chime. Ask a volunteer to light the chalice. Lead the group to say these Opening words:
We gather together as Unitarian Universalists and members of the Signs of Our Faith community.
Together, we demonstrate our open hearts by welcoming new people into our community.
ACTIVITY 1: STORY — A CALABASH OF POI (5 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Gather the children to hear the story "A Calabash of Poi." Read or tell the story.
Then, process with these questions:
Including All Participants
You may wish to make fidget objects available to children who find it difficult to sit still while listening to a story or can focus better with sensory stimulation. For a full description and guidance, see Session 1, Leader Resource 2.
Consider using rug squares in the storytelling area. Place them in a semi-circle with the rule "One person per square." This can be very helpful for controlling active bodies.
ACTIVITY 2: SHUT OUT (10 MINUTES)
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Tell the children that now you would like them to talk about their own experiences. Have they ever felt like Pele when she asked the first family for food, and they said "no?" Say:
Just about everyone has had a time when they felt shut out of a group. I know it has happened to me. Can you think of a time when it happened to you? When did you feel left out, or unwelcomed?
Invite children to share stories about times they felt shut out, left out of groups, or unwelcomed. Some examples might include not being picked for a team, feeling left out when a younger sibling is born, or not being invited to a party or to play a game with others. If the group is slow to share, offer your anecdote.
Encourage each storyteller to say how they felt. Acknowledge that being excluded can be painful. Assure them that everyone is left out sometimes, and many times people do not mean to be unwelcoming to each other. Sometimes, we are busy with our friends or a project we are doing, and we do not notice someone new. You might say:
Sometimes when we feel very comfortable someplace, we don't think about how a new person might feel coming into that same place for the first time. But, as Unitarian Universalists, we want to try to remember to welcome others whenever we have a chance to.
Now ask for stories of times the children were welcomed into a group or a situation. Ask what someone did or said to welcome them. Ask how they felt. Acknowledge that it makes us feel good when we are welcomed. You might say:
How does it feel when we welcome others? We feel friendly and loving, and that is a good way to feel.
ACTIVITY 3: SONG — "COME, COME, WHOEVER YOU ARE" (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants learn "Come, Come, Whoever You Are," Hymn 188 in Singing the Living Tradition, and identify ways the lyrics express Unitarian Universalist values related to welcoming.
Ask:
Invite the group to sit comfortably. Sing "Come, Come, Whoever You Are," Hymn 188 in Singing the Living Tradition softly, one time through. Ask if any children know the song. Invite those who do to sing it with you a second time. Tell the group that the words in this song were written by Rumi, a Sufi mystic who lived hundreds of years ago. The tune is by a UU minister, Reverend Lynn Ungar. Say:
Think of this song as an invitation asking people to come into this space. Does it sound inviting to you?
Talk through the words of the song, using the newsprint you have posted:
Come, come, whoever, you are. Say:
These words tell us who is welcome when we sing this song. Who is welcome? [Affirm that everyone is welcome.]
Wanderer, worshipper... Say:
These words say more about who we are going to welcome. It could be someone just wandering by. It could be someone who wants to join us in worshipping together, like we do at our congregation, It could even be someone who might only want to visit one time, or stay just a little while and then leave That person is welcome, too.
Lover of leaving. Say:
This part can be confusing. What do you think the author of these words meant? If someone loves to "leave" then is it important that they always have a place to return to? Is our congregation and faith that place? [Affirm "yes."]
Ours is no caravan of despair. Say:
Do you all know what a caravan is? A caravan is a procession of people, animals, or wagons or cars traveling together in a line. "Despair" is feeling sad or unsure of what to do. Our UU faith is not a caravan of despair, but a caravan of joy and love.
Come, yet again come. Say:
These words say we want people to come not just one time, but any time they want to join us. We will welcome them each time.
Tell the group that many UU groups like to sing this song together. Ask: Why do you think Unitarian Universalists like us think it is important to welcome people? Affirm that our first Principle says everyone has value and deserves to be treated with respect. When we act in a welcoming way to someone new, that is a sign that we respect that person, and we are living our first UU Principle.
Now lead the children to sing the song again, this time using their bodies to act out how the song welcomes others to feel like a part of our group. Say:
Let's sing the song again, as a real sign of welcoming. This time, let's use our bodies to show signs of welcoming, too.
Encourage children to use gestures that are signs of welcome, such as waving "hello" and using arms to motion someone closer.
ACTIVITY 4: THE WELCOME CHALLENGE (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Gather children in a circle, leaving one empty chair. Ask, "Who is this chair for?" Take responses. Affirm that it could be for anyone who might wish to join our group.
Ask if anyone has attended a Passover Seder. Explain:
A Seder is a meal shared at the Jewish holiday of Passover. Often, families set an empty chair at the table for the prophet Elijah. A chair for Elijah means a chair for anyone, as Elijah is known to come in disguise—like the Hawaiian goddess of fire, Pele—to see if people will welcome him. Some groups set up an empty chair to represent people who are not yet part of the group, but may join them someday. The chair reminds the group to be always welcoming.
Tell the children they will have a chance to imagine who might sit in our empty chair, and how they could welcome that person. Give an example: What if the person did not speak English? Could they make that person feel welcome? What signs would they use to welcome that person?
Now ask, "What if the person could not see very well?" Would they need to welcome them in a different way? How?
Tell them that the congregation spends a lot of time trying to make all the programs at the congregation welcoming and accessible. Ask if anyone can tell you what "accessible" means. Help children understand that accessibility is about making sure everybody can participate—children, youth, elders, people who have different abilities and maybe use a wheelchair or a hearing aid, people who speak different languages, people who have never been to a UU congregation before and might not know what we do here.
Variation
Place a welcome mat in the circle. Tell the group you will describe a child who might sit in the chair. Ask children to raise their hand as they think of a sign of welcome they might offer that child. As you call on a child, have them state their idea and ask the group what they think. When the group affirms the idea, invite that child to come to the welcome mat. Help children contribute so different participants generate a few ideas for welcoming each child you describe. It is okay to repeat ideas for welcoming different children—for example, "Greet them" fits any situation. You can also ask children to name things NOT to do—actions and words that would not be welcoming. Aim to have each participant come to the welcome mat at least once.
Use these examples, plus your own. You might invite children to describe different children, too:
To conclude, say, in your own words:
Some of the children we described are said to have "special needs," but sometimes we all have special needs: If I am in a new place and feeling scared or lonely, I need to be welcomed in a different way than if I am familiar with this place and all of you. We are welcoming when we do not make assumptions about what a person can do, likes to do, or what they need. If an activity called for cutting out shapes from paper, what would be the best thing to do to be welcoming to a child who does not see well: Cut it out for them, or ask if they need any help? [Take responses. Affirm that it is best to ask if help is needed and what that help might be, instead of assuming help is needed and/or doing something a person might not want us to do.]
Making our congregation accessible and knowing respectful ways to welcome different people here are two important ways to be welcoming. These are ways we can be UU every day.
Including All Participants
If the group includes a child with a disability or one who belongs to a minority or historically marginalized group, do not describe their attributes or limitations as part of the game or call the child out in any way during the activity.
ACTIVITY 5: CREATING A RITUAL OF WELCOME (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants design a ritual for the Signs of Our Faith community.
Say:
Now that we have talked about some reasons and some ways to be welcoming, let's think of some ways we can we welcome children who are new to our group. What are some simple things we can do here, when we meet together, to make a visitor or new member of the Signs of Our Faith community feel welcome? What actions are welcoming?
Encourage contributions and list ideas on newsprint. As needed, offer these suggestions:
Once some ideas are listed, engage the group to shape one or more welcoming rituals and commit to using them when someone new comes to the group. If there is time, have one or more children role-play being new so others can practice the ritual.
After this session, write down the ritual. Make sure all co-leaders have these notes, so you will be able to remind participants to enact the ritual when a new person visits or joins the group.
CLOSING (3 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Distribute stoles and invite participants to put them on.
Distribute Taking It Home. Tell participants that at the end of every session, they will receive this guide to fun activities they can do with family or friends. Read it aloud to give participants an idea of activities suggested.
Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Lead the group to say:
We end as we began: together.
May we remember to be UU not just when we are together here, but every day and in every way.
Invite the group to pass a blessing around the circle. Say you will each, in turn, address the person next to you by name and say "Thank you for being here today." Model by addressing the person on your left: "Howard, thank you for being here today."
When everyone has blessed a person next to them, extinguish the chalice together.
FAITH IN ACTION: WELCOME FLAGS
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants make "welcome" flags to display in a congregational entryway.
Create a multigenerational experience by using this activity on a Saturday morning or Sunday afternoon.
Gather the group and ask:
Invite participants to each decorate a square of cloth with "welcoming" words, to make a collective display to help welcome visitors to the congregation. You might suggest (and write on newsprint) these phrases:
Encourage participants to use symbols of welcome, too. You might prompt, and sketch on newsprint:
As participants finish, have volunteers share their flags with the group.
Hang the flags on string. Decide as a group where to display the string so the most people can see the flags as they enter the building or enter the sanctuary for worship.
Once the flags are displayed ask the group:
Collect suggestions. Invite volunteers to take responsibility for any first steps to advance some of the ideas, listing the steps and the volunteers on newsprint. Ask: How will we keep track, and make sure we do these welcoming actions? Should the list be posted? If the group agrees, lead everyone to show commitment to these promises by signing the list.
LEADER REFLECTION AND PLANNING
What went well in this session? What have you learned that you can apply in the future? How did the children interact? Did everyone in the group demonstrate an understanding of welcoming behavior? How did the group make visitors or new participants feel welcomed?
Did each co-leader give themselves adequate time for their own spiritual preparation? Assign co-leaders any advance preparation needed for the next session.
TAKING IT HOME
Those of us who have come through the great doors, who have made of this place the soul of Sunday on our spiritual journey, share a commitment... to radical hospitality. This is the heart of our faith: love, service, justice, peace. — Rev. Kim K. Crawford Harvie, Unitarian Universalist minister
IN TODAY'S SESSION... we talked affirmed that being welcoming to others is a sign of our Unitarian Universalist faith. We identified ways our congregation welcomes visitors, members, new members, friends, and people of all ages and life stages. We shared stories of when we felt welcomed and when we felt shut out or not welcomed. We created a welcoming ritual for our Signs of Our Faith community so everyone will feel welcomed. We sang "Come, Come, Whoever You Are," Hymn 188 in Singing the Living Tradition, a song of inclusion and welcome sung in many UU congregations.
EXPLORE THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Talk about... times one or another family member may have felt shut out of family activities. Affirm that in a family, people do not always do everything together. Sometimes when someone is excluded, there is a good reason, although you might not know what it is. Make sure children know that if other family members participate in an activity they want to try, they can ask to accompany.
EXTEND THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Try... volunteering as "family greeters" at your congregation. Your role will be to greet everyone, while paying particular attention to a new or visiting family. Make a family feel at home by showing them the nursery and RE rooms and explaining routines involving children and youth.
Family Discovery. Share stories about friendship. Ask each family member: Who is your best friend? How did you meet? How were you welcoming to them, or they to you?
Family Game. Play a version of the Welcome Challenge game we played today. Gather in a circle, leaving one empty seat. Take turns imagining a new person who might like to join your circle. Examples: a neighbor who has never been to your home before, the new girlfriend or boyfriend of an aunt or uncle, someone from another country who is just learning the English language and American customs. How would you welcome that person? What signs—words or actions—would you use? Take care that your welcome does not make assumptions about what the new person wants or needs, but invites them to tell you how you can help.
Family Ritual. Does your family have a special treat you like to offer visitors? If Dad is known for his banana bread or your stepmother makes a great fruit salad, children can help that person make the special dish for visitors. You might even create your own special welcome food. The treat need not be food What about inviting every guest to leave a handprint on a special wall in your home?
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 1: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION — MAKING NAME TAGS FOR MEMBERS (30 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Every session offers one or more Leadership in Action (LIA) activities. In this activity, the children practice leadership skills by helping members of the congregation make and decorate name tags.
This activity is meant to be multigenerational. Encourage young children, youth, and elders to participate.
Since some congregations only have permanent name tags for adult members, this is an opportunity for the children in the congregation to have name tags for themselves. If adults already have name tags, invite them to decorate them with stickers or pictures. Make sure the children leading this activity have created and are wearing their own name tags at the start.
Beforehand, tell the children how they can offer special assistance to anyone who has visual, auditory, or physical impairment.
Before or following the activity, help the children process with the following questions:
Affirm that name tags are welcoming because they help us address each other by name, which feels more personal. They also help create a sense of community if everyone wears similar nametags. They can be like a uniform of the congregation.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 2: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION — LEADING A ROUND IN CONGREGATIONAL WORSHIP
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Every session offers one or more Leadership in Action (LIA) activities. In this activity, the children lead a musical round in a worship service.
Tell the children you will teach the group to sing "Come, Come, Whoever You Are" as a round. Explain: In a round, different groups start the song at different times and continue singing it. Name a familiar song often sung in rounds, such as "Row, Row, Row Your Boat." Now, divide the group in half or thirds. Lead one section of the group to begin singing "Come, Come, Whoever You Are." After the first line, have the second group start singing. Have each section sing the entire song several times.
Now tell the children they will have a chance to lead the congregation in singing this song in a round. Suggest this will be a challenge worth trying!
Have the group choose one or two participants to announce the name of the song and explain that singing a song of welcome is a sign of our UU faith.
On the day the children will lead the singing, ask families to bring children a half hour before worship so they can practice. Have small groups of children stand in different sections of the sanctuary to help lead.
Afterward, use these questions to process the activity:
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 10:
STORY: A CALABASH OF POI
Based on "A Calabash of Poi," originally published in In the Path of the Trade Winds by Coral Wells Thorpe (New York/London: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1924).
It was a sizable house, as Hawaiian houses go, perhaps fifty feet long, its side thatched with ti-leaves—a sign of rank. Its only window, about a foot square, looked out on a carefully planted taro patch, while rows of coconut palms and fruit-laden banana plants made a pretty background.
Pele, the goddess of fire, was walking down the mountainside. Today she had disguised herself especially as an old, feeble woman with a hard face, and bitterness in her eyes. She grasped her cane, and hobbled up to the big house.
"Aloha," she said to the small group of people sitting in the doorway.
"Aloha," was the reply, in a not-too-friendly voice.
Pele waited. Apparently there was to be no invitation to enter or to refresh herself.
"I have walked many miles," she said finally, using a weak voice. "I am very hungry. Perhaps you have a calabash of poi for me."
"We are very sorry, but we have no poi," said the Hawaiian chief, the master of the house. "Besides our evening meal is pau."
"Then, perhaps, a small piece of salted fish?"
"No, nor fish," was the short rejoinder.
"Then, at least, some ripe berries? I am parched with thirst?'
"Our berries are all green, as you can see for yourself, providing your eyes are not too dimmed by age."
Pele's eyes were far from dim! At other times, flashes of fire blazed in her eyes at a moment's provocation. But this time, bowing low, she made her way in silence to the gate. A few steps further down the hard road, she entered a smaller garden and paused at a small hut. The work of the day and the evening meal were over. The children played. A man and woman sat watching the last golden rays of the sun sinking behind the gentle slopes of Mauna Loa.
"Ah, I see your evening meal is past;" sighed Pele. "I am sorry for I am tired and hungry, and had hoped for a little refreshment after a day's walk down the steep mountain."
"Neither fish nor awa have we," said the poor fisherman, "but to such as we have, you are most welcome."
Even as he spoke, his wife had risen, motioned Pele to a place on the mat, and set before her a large calabash of poi.
Pele ate happily. Dipping her finger in the calabash, she raised it dripping with poi, and placed it in her mouth. She finished the entire contents in no time and, looking up, remarked:
"I am still hungry. Would it be too much to ask for another calabash?"
The woman arose and placed before her a second calabash of poi, not perhaps as large as the first, but filled to the brim.
Again Pele emptied the calabash eagerly. She sighed as she finished the last mouthful, calling attention to the empty calabash in her lap.
This time, a third calabash—smaller than the second, but quite full—was placed before her. Pele finished half of it, arose to her feet, and, uttered these words:
"When your neighbors plant taro, it shall wither on its stem. Their bananas shall die on the stalk, and their coconuts shall fall on their favorite pig. But when you plant taro at night, you may pull it in the morning. Your cane shall mature overnight and your bananas ripen in one day's sunshine. You shall have as many crops as there are days in the year!"
Then Pele trudged out of the gate and was seen to disappear toward Ha-le-mau-mau in a cloud of flame.
When the astonished fisherman walked outside his hut the next morning, yellow bananas hung on new plants, the full grown taro stood ready to be pulled, and the cane-cuttings reached to the eaves of his house. Looking across to his rich neighbors land, he saw that, indeed, the curse of Pele had already come. In place of prosperous acres stood only sun-parched remnants of yesterday's proud crop.
In modern times, they say: "Whether you believe in the old lady Pele or not, don't ever forget to be nice to the old folks. It just might be Pele. You can't always tell."
FIND OUT MORE
Welcoming in UU Congregations
In a 2006 sermon, "Setting a Place for Elijah (at www.uucpa.org/sermons_06/sermon060409.html)" Rev. Amy Zucker Morgenstern, encourages us to value and practice welcoming.
The UUA website provides the manual "Accessibility Information for Unitarian Universalist Churches (at www.uua.org/accessibility/index.shtml)" by Devorah Greenstein and Charlotte Hawkins. A short essay by Ken Hurto (at www.uua.org/interconnections/interconnections/56233.shtml) on the UUA website discusses seeing visitors as guests.
Welcoming Children with Special Needs (at www.uuabookstore.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=756) (at www.uuabookstore.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=756)by Sally Patton (Boston: UUA, 2004) is a good addition for every congregation's religious education library.
Music
Making Music Live (at www.uua.org/re/tapestry/resources/music/index.shtml)is a Tapestry of Faith resource by musician Nick Page to help leaders working with children and music. Chapter 6 has information on teaching songs, including how to teach a round.
SESSION 11: WORSHIPPING TOGETHER
SESSION OVERVIEW
INTRODUCTION
A person will worship something, have no doubt about that. We may think our tribute is paid in secret in the dark recesses of our hearts, but it will out. That which dominates our imaginations and our thoughts will determine our lives, and our character. Therefore, it behooves us to be careful what we worship, for what we are worshipping we are becoming. — Ralph Waldo Emerson
This session introduces worship with our UU faith communities as a sign of our faith. Children learn some components of a Unitarian Universalist worship service and create a mini-worship together.
Activity 4, Worship Planning Stations will work best with additional adult or older youth volunteers to help small teams of children choose readings and actions to contribute to a mini-worship service. For this activity, you may wish to provide worship resources the children explored or created in previous sessions. Read the activity carefully and give yourself time to collect these materials.
GOALS
This session will:
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Participants will:
SESSION-AT-A-GLANCE
Activity | Minutes |
Opening | 2 |
Activity 1: UU Worship | 10 |
Activity 2: Story — Worship at Camp Taylor | 5 |
Activity 3: Worship Components | 10 |
Activity 4: Worship Planning Stations | 20 |
Activity 5: Mini-Worship | 15 |
Faith in Action: Multigenerational Worship | |
Closing | 3 |
Alternate Activity 1: Leadership in Action — Group Chalice Lighting | 35 |
Alternate Activity 2: Leadership in Action — Children's Chapel | 60 |
Alternate Activity 3: Leadership in Action — Hymnbook Drive | |
SPIRITUAL PREPARATION
Think of a worship service you attended or helped plan that was particularly moving. Why was it so? What worthy matters were addressed in the service? Which elements of the worship particularly touched you? What worship rituals mean the most to you?
Perhaps worship is not one of your favorite activities in the congregation. Have you experienced meaningful worship in another setting? Reflect on that experience instead.
SESSION PLAN
OPENING (2 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Lead the Opening ritual designed in Session 9. Or, use this Opening ritual:
Welcome all participants. Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Ring the centering chime. Ask a volunteer to light the chalice, and recite together:
We gather together as Unitarian Universalists and members of the Signs of Our Faith community.
We come together in worship to rejoice and renew. We come together to remind ourselves what is worthy of our time, attention, and devotion.
ACTIVITY 1: UU WORSHIP (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children explore why UUs worship together.
Ask: "What sorts of things do you do with groups like your families, your classmates, your scout group, or your friends?" Allow them to call out response. Then, gather children around newsprint, distribute crayons or markers, and invite them to draw one or more of the group activities they have mentioned.
While they draw, ask the children to describe their drawings. Who is in the group? What is the activity? Ask about activities they do in a group with the UU congregation. Point out the activities they are talking about or drawing which happen at times in your congregation.
Then ask: "Who can think of a unique activity we do as a group in our congregation, which we might only do with this group? What is an activity that happens here, for which we gather together?" Take suggestions. Tell them you are thinking about "worship." Use reference points they recognize to describe a worship gathering in your congregation. Now ask: "Why do you think Unitarian Universalists worship together?" Affirm all answers.
Say, in these words or your own:
In UU congregations all over the world, thousands of people come together for worship. Many groups worship together on Sunday morning. Some worship Saturday night. Some worship at other times.
Some congregations worship in a building they call a church. Some do not use the word "church" and instead call the place they gather a "meeting house," a "fellowship hall," or just say things like "I'm going to worship." Sometimes UUs worship outside.
Sometimes a minister leads UU worship services. But a worship leader can also be a religious educator like [name of your religious educator], a music director [name of your music director], or a lay leader—someone who is a volunteer.
What all UU worship has in common is why we come together. Worship is a time for us to share with others what we find worthy. Creating time for our thoughts, discussions, and celebrations of what we find truly important that helps us lead lives that reflect our values, lives full of meaning and purpose. It is fine to worship by yourself, but UUs also like to worship as a community. Worship is a time for giving and receiving and we show this with worship rituals that are signs of our faith. We might say some words together as a pledge to be a loving, supportive community. We might sing a song that inspires us to work for justice in the world. We might hear a sermon—words from the worship leader or minister—about one of our UU ancestors, or about how we can help some of the world's problems. Someone might tell a story from the Hebrew or Christian scriptures or a story of their own, such as during a time of Sharing Joys and Concerns. During worship, a basket is passed to collect money to contribute to the congregation because we find the work of the congregation worthy. Worship is full of rituals that are signs of our faith.
ACTIVITY 2: STORY — WORSHIP AT CAMP TAYLOR (5 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Ask if the children remember Kamal and Abby. Say that you are going to share a story about a new friend of theirs, Ricardo, who helps plan a worship service.
Tell or read the story.
Mention that, in the story, worship took place in the woods. Ask if worship has to happen inside a special building. Ask if worship only happens in a group or may an individual worship alone. Affirm that you may worship at any time, with or without anyone, and at any place. Yet, for the rest of the session, the group will mostly talk about weekly worship at and with the congregation.
Including All Participants
You may wish to make fidget objects available to children who find it difficult to sit still while listening or can focus better with sensory stimulation. For a full description and guidance, see Session 1, Leader Resource 2.
Consider using rug squares in the storytelling area. Place them in a semi-circle with the rule "One person per square." This can be very helpful for controlling active bodies.
ACTIVITY 3: WORSHIP COMPONENTS (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children discuss common parts of a worship service and the rituals associated with these parts.
Distribute the handout. Tell the group it is a list of parts of a worship service. Ask the children to name parts of a worship service they can recall, or imagine. As they respond, explain how their suggestions correspond with items on the list. For example, "singing when we come in/go out" could be gathering, or closing. "Hearing a story" could be receiving. "Passing a basket for money" is giving.
Once you have noted all or most of the items on the list, invite the children to think about the story about Ricardo's worship in the woods. Guide them to identify components of worship from the story, and discover how your congregation includes the same components. For example, Ricardo's worship service included a gathering: singing "Come, Come, Whoever You Are." How does your congregation gather for worship? By ringing chimes or playing a prelude? Note: If participants have little experience of worship in the congregational setting, it is sufficient to highlight one or two components of worship. Aim to give them a taste.
Point out that lighting the chalice to open worship is the most common ritual of Unitarian Universalist communities all over the world.
Tell the group they will now have the chance to craft their own short worship service.
ACTIVITY 4: WORSHIP PLANNING STATIONS (20 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children craft a worship service under 15 minutes long based on one of the UU Principles.
Invite the group to create a short worship service about the seven Principles. Say that a team of children is needed at each station to create a specific part or component of a worship service. Introduce the volunteers who will help the teams, and indicate the stations:
Form teams. The teams should be fairly equal in size, except for "Receiving" which can have a larger group.
Explain that each team will find instructions on an index card at their station, along with materials for planning their component of the worship service. Tell them the teams will have 15 minutes to plan and practice leading their component.
Assist teams as they work. Remind them to write down any words not in hymnbooks or handouts so they will remember them when it is their turn to lead a component of the worship service. Make sure all roles are assigned and that all every child has a role in planning or leading. Help teams listen to each member of their group, reach consensus, gather needed materials, and rehearse.
Including All Participants
Be prepared to help children explore written materials and implement their ideas for art or performance.
ACTIVITY 5: MINI-WORSHIP (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants conduct the short worship service they designed.
Conduct the worship service designed in Activity 4, Worship Planning Stations. One suggested order is: Gathering, Opening, Centering, Receiving, Acknowledging, and Closing.
Afterward, express appreciation to the participants for their work.
CLOSING (3 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Distribute stoles and invite participants to put them on.
Distribute Taking It Home. Tell participants that at the end of every session, they will receive this guide to fun activities they can do with family or friends. Read it aloud to give participants an idea of activities suggested.
Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Lead the group to say:
We end as we began: together.
May we remember to be UU not just when we are together here, but every day and in every way.
Extinguish the chalice together.
FAITH IN ACTION: MULTIGENERATIONAL WORSHIP
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants take an active role in creating a congregational worship service.
Invite children to help plan and lead a worship service for all ages in the congregation. Use Handout 1, Common Worship Components for Children, and their experience in this session to identify the purpose of worship components. Lead the children to name UU rituals and talk about the purpose of the rituals. Invite the children to suggest rituals, songs, readings, and other ideas for each component and find a role for children in leading part of the worship service.
Be sure to include children in the actual worship service. Children who do not wish to be in the service may still enjoy working on the planning and being ushers or greeters. Make it clear that all of these roles are ways to be a worship leader.
LEADER REFLECTION AND PLANNING
What went well in this session? What would you do differently next time? Did children understand what different parts of the worship are for and how they work together?
How is the group functioning? Do all members participate? Is attendance steady? If not, could you contact any families to let the children know that they are missed? What else does the Signs community need to be as strong as it can be?
TAKING IT HOME
A person will worship something, have no doubt about that. We may think our tribute is paid in secret in the dark recesses of our hearts, but it will out. That which dominates our imaginations and our thoughts will determine our lives, and our character. Therefore, it behooves us to be careful what we worship, for what we are worshipping we are becoming. — Ralph Waldo Emerson
IN TODAY'S SESSION... we talked about worship. Worship is dedicated time for people to evaluate what is really of worth in their lives and remind themselves to live their life accordingly. We said that worship can happen anywhere and at any time, but when we worship in community we support each other. We learned about some common components of worship and rituals associated with them. We created a short worship service ourselves. Worshipping together is a sign of our faith.
EXPLORE THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Talk about ... what are family members' favorite components of a UU worship service? Attend worship together at the congregation. Bring enough copies of the handout from this session for every family member to have one and a supply of stickers. Every time you identify a part of the worship that corresponds to one of the components in the handout, place a sticker next to the component on the handout. Compare handouts after the service.
EXTEND THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Try... worshipping together at home. Choose a special occasion such as a birthday or holiday or anniversary. Work together to create a 15-minute worship service. Use the service to discuss, celebrate, and reflect on why this occasion and sharing it together are important..
Family Discovery. The Church of the Larger Fellowship (CLF) has worship resources online for families and children (at clf.uua.org/re/) and streams worship services weekly.
Leadership Suggestion. As a family, volunteer to be a part of worship services at your congregation. Families often light the chalice, tell stories, and usher or carry the offertory. Perhaps a family member would like to join the congregation's Worship Committee.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 1: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION — GROUP CHALICE LIGHTING (35 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children demonstrate leadership by writing a chalice lighting together, and leading the congregation by lighting the chalice during a worship service.
Work with the group to write a chalice lighting to be offered during an upcoming service. One way to start is "We light this chalice for... " Post newsprint and invite the children to complete the sentence. Then, use their ideas to shape a short chalice lighting. Write the chalice lighting on a fresh sheet of newsprint. Work with the group to memorize it. Find ways for everyone to participate in the chalice lighting. Perhaps each line is read or recited by a different child. Perhaps the group recites it in unison or the chalice is lit by assembly line.
Practice before the service. Have the newsprint on hand, in case it is needed. Afterward, thank the chalice lighters for participating in the worship service. Remind them that taking part in worship is one way to be a leader in the congregation and demonstrate their UU faith.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 2: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION — CHILDREN'S CHAPEL (60 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants coordinate and present a chapel service.
If your congregation offers children's chapel, invite the group to refine the worship service designed in the session and offer it as children's chapel.
Afterward, thank the group for participating in the chapel. Remind them that taking part in worship is one way to be a leader in the congregation and demonstrate their UU faith.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 3: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION — HYMNBOOK DRIVE
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children raise funds to purchase the Unitarian Universalist hymnbook supplement, Singing the Journey.
Show the group a copy of Singing the Journey. Invite them to share about any of the hymns they already know. Point out the diversity sources and styles of music included in the supplement and tell why it would be a service to the congregation and a sign of leadership to help the congregation purchase more hymnbooks so everyone could learn new songs.
Brainstorm fundraising ideas. For example, the children might sing a hymn from Singing the Journey at a music service or choir service, with proceeds from that service's offertory to help purchase Singing the Journey. The children could sing the song the music director teaches them or lead the congregation in singing "Come, Come Whoever You," learned in Session 10, as a round.
Another option is hosting a coffeehouse: Invite congregational and community members to perform, charge a small admission, and sell refreshments.
After the fundraiser, engage the children in ordering Singing the Journey from the UUA Bookstore and unpacking/distributing hymnbooks when they arrive. Arrange for five minutes of an upcoming worship service for children to explain why this supplement is important, and how they coordinated the fundraiser. Help the group articulate why it is important to have the supplement in addition to the regular hymnbook. Perhaps the children can be part of leading the congregation to learn a new hymn from Singing the Journey.
Tell the children what a special service they have given the congregation. Remind them that taking part in worship is a way to be a leader in the congregation and demonstrate their UU faith.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 11:
STORY: WORSHIP AT CAMP TAYLOR
Ricardo and his grandparents arrived at Camp Taylor for the congregation's weekend retreat. This was Ricardo's third year at the retreat and he had been looking forward to this weekend for months. He helped bring the bags to their cabin. Then, he looked all over for his friends Abby and Kamal, but they had not yet arrived.
Instead he found his grandfather in the large, group kitchen. "Time will pass faster if you keep busy," his grandfather said, and he asked Ricardo to help him place bread in baskets for Friday night's dinner.
Grandfather was right: Time did move faster when you kept busy. In fact, Ricardo was busy all weekend. When he wasn't playing with his friends, he helped prepare meals and clean up after activities. At Saturday's lunch, the minister, Rev. Hendrix, sat by Ricardo. "Ricardo, you are really being helpful this weekend. I like to see such leadership in the children of the congregation."
"Leadership?" asked Ricardo.
"Sure. Leadership doesn't only mean being the person in charge. Pitching in where help is needed is leadership, too. I need a young person to help with tomorrow's worship service. Would you like to help?"
"Sure," said Ricardo, though he wasn't sure how he could help. What did he know about creating worship?
That night, the worship planning team met. Rev. Hendrix explained that they would keep the planned components short to leave plenty of room for people to share. The theme for the service was "All Together Now." She used newsprint to list the parts of the worship service.
"When we gather at the pond, people will come from all over. Let's gather people with a song, a song some people know and others can learn quickly," she said.
"How about, 'Come, Come Whoever You Are?" asked Ricardo. "We learned that in RE and we sing it a lot on Sunday mornings."
Everyone liked that idea. Someone wrote the title of the song on the newsprint. Another member of the team suggested they open with a chalice lighting. Ricardo was surprised to see that someone had brought a chalice to the retreat. They knew it would be needed because all the worship services at the congregation started with a chalice lighting.
More ideas for the worship service were added to the newsprint, including two more hymns and a meditation led by one of the congregation's elders.
"Will you give a sermon?" Ricardo asked Rev. Hendrix.
"Not this time," said Rev. Hendrix. "Alex has prepared a short sermon," Alex was a college student, who was new to the congregation. Ricardo was surprised that someone besides a minister could give a sermon—especially someone almost as young as himself.
"At the end of my sermon, I will invite anyone who wishes to do so to say a few words about what coming together for this retreat means to them. Instead of our usual Joys and Concerns, this is what we will ask participants to give during the service," said Alex. Ricardo liked that. He thought everyone would be able to participate in this way.
The next morning, Ricardo went to the pond in time to start singing "Come, Come Whoever You Are" exactly at ten o'clock with the other worship planners. As more people arrived, they quickly joined in. Some brought chairs or blankets, and others just sat on the grass. Rev. Hendrix placed the chalice on a large stone. Different people led the group through the parts of the worship service. The songs were easy—no hymnbooks were needed.
Then Alex stood up to give a sermon. Ricardo was surprised to realize that Alex was talking about him! "Because we all took time to be together here," Alex said, "I have received some amazing gifts this weekend. One of these gifts was the special time I got to spend with my young friend Ricardo this morning, planning this worship gathering together."
After Alex finished speaking, it was time for people to share what the retreat meant for them. One person said, "Taking time away from the busyness of our everyday lives allowed me to just be right here, in the moment, without thinking about what I have to go and do next. I feel refreshed and renewed."
A parent said, "I got to spend more time with my children this weekend than I have for months."
An elder said, "I almost didn't come. I thought the retreat was really only for families with kids. But some of you encouraged me to come, and I'm so glad I did. I got to know people better. We shared many stories. Young and old people should talk together more often."
Ricardo had thought worshipping in the woods would be strange, and complicated. But it was easy. It turned out they didn't need hymnbooks, or an altar—just people, willing to share what was important to them with each other in a spirit of love and togetherness. After the closing words, Ricardo extinguished the chalice. It was time to go home.
"See you at Camp Taylor next year," Ricardo called out to Rev. Hendrix.
Rev. Hendrix laughed and called back, "See you at the congregation next Sunday."
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 11:
HANDOUT 1: COMMON WORSHIP COMPONENTS FOR CHILDREN
Adapted from "Components of Worship" by Rev. Barbara Pescan, in the UUA's Spirituality Development Conference manual (Boston: UUA, 2005). After serving churches in Oak Park, IL, West Redding, CT, and Evanston, IL, Barbara Pescan has retired and is living in Wisconsin.
Gathering — Asks us to come together as a religious community. Common rituals: Playing music (called a "prelude"), or ringing a bell or chime.
Opening — Signals the beginning of our sacred time together in worship. Most common ritual: Lighting a chalice and sharing inspiring words.
Acknowledging — We greet or acknowledge each other. This helps us recognize that we are a community. The leader may welcome everyone, encourage participants to greet one another, or lead a ritual where people greet participants in a special way, or singing a hymn together.
Giving — Everyone is invited to participate in the community. Rituals of giving include contributing joys and concerns and collecting an offertory of money. Community announcements of events in which we are invited to participate are also a way of giving.
Centering — Wakes up our inner thoughts and feelings. Common rituals: Prayer, meditation, or reflection.
Receiving - We share our values and thoughts with stories, sermons, dance, poetry, or artwork to teach, inspire, comfort, and encourage each other.
Acknowledging — We affirm that it has been good to have worship time together as a faith community. Common rituals: A hymn or responsive reading about why it has been good to be together.
Closing — Signals the end of our sacred time together in worship. The most common ritual involves saying closing words while extinguishing the chalice.
Dispersal — "ungathering", "leaving" sometimes accompanied by musical ritual, called a postlude.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 11:
LEADER RESOURCE 1: ILLUSTRATION — WORSHIP AT CAMP TAYLOR
Illustration by Ginger Wyatt.
Download a high-resolution PDF (at www.uua.org/documents/tapestry/signs/camp_taylor.pdf) for printing.
FIND OUT MORE
Unitarian Universalist worship varies from community to community. Visit the UUA's website to read about common practices (at www.uua.org/beliefs/congregationallife/worship/index.shtml) and worship theory (at www.uua.org/worship/theory/index.shtml). Read "Some Helpful Thoughts" (at www.uua.org/documents/lfd/reader_worship.pdf) by religious educator Barbara Marshman.
The UUA website also has information on planning and leading multigenerational worship. (at www.uua.org/worship/multigenerational/index.shtml) The UUA WorshipWeb (at www.uua.org/worship/index.php)is a vast resource, searchable by keyword, with many readings and ideas for worship.
Small Power: A Drive Time Essay on Worship with Children (at www.uua.org/growth/small/182777.shtml) by Connie Goodbread advocates for children's presence in worship and offers practical suggestions.
The UUA Bookstore's resources for children's worship include Come Sing a Song with Me: A Songbook for All Ages (at www.uuabookstore.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=894) by the UU Musicians Network, as well as and posters and other items with the children's Principles.
SESSION 12: STEWARDSHIP IS A SIGN
SESSION OVERVIEW
INTRODUCTION
In the end we will conserve only what we love. We will love only what we understand. We will understand only what we are taught. — Baba Dioum, conservationist
Children understand themselves as "stewards"—that is, people with ability and responsibility to contribute to the care of people and places they love, such as family, friends, their school, the congregation, and the earth we share. Activities encourage participants to see themselves as generous people, with time, talent, and possibly financial resources (treasure) they can share to help take care of the congregation. The ritual for this session is the offertory, and the story is a wisdom tale from Islam about generosity.
In advance, ask children and their families to bring a new or gently used book or toy to donate to the congregation.
Activity 4, The Ritual of Offertory, can be expanded into a multigenerational worship experience. Read Alternate Activity 1, Leadership in Action — Collecting the Offertory and Alternate Activity 2, Leadership in Action — Sharing the Plate. Consider how you might weave one, or both, into Activity 4.
GOALS
This session will:
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Participants will:
SESSION-AT-A-GLANCE
Activity | Minutes |
Opening | 3 |
Activity 1: Story — Know Yourself | 15 |
Activity 2: "The Magic Penny Song" | 5 |
Activity 3: Time, Talent, and Treasure | 15 |
Activity 4: The Ritual of Offertory | 5 |
Activity 5: Where Does the Money Go? | 10 |
Activity 6: Third Emblem | 5 |
Faith in Action: Canvass | |
Closing | 2 |
Alternate Activity 1: Leadership in Action — Collecting the Offertory | |
Alternate Activity 2: Leadership in Action — Sharing the Plate | |
Alternate Activity 3: Conservation Is Stewardship | |
Alternate Activity 4: Signing The Magic Penny Song | 20 |
SPIRITUAL PREPARATION
Think about a time you gave generously of your time, talent, or finances. How did you feel? What does your generosity dance feel like?
Do you sometimes feel you have given too much? Burnout can happen to us all, especially when we give generously of our time. You are no less a steward when you also take care of yourself. One way is to remind yourself of the love and hope that led you to take on your commitment. Another way is to set limits. Yet another is to share the work and its rewards with family and friends.
SESSION PLAN
OPENING (3 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Lead the Opening ritual designed in Session 9. Or, use this Opening ritual:
If the children wear stoles for Opening and Closing rituals, distribute stoles. Invite the children to put on their stoles. Offer any visitors a stole and explain that they may wear it during the Opening time and the Closing time if they wish. Remind the children their stoles are a sign that everyone in the group is a worship leader.
Welcome all participants. Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Ring the centering chime. Ask a volunteer to light the chalice together. Lead the group to say these Opening words:
We gather together as Unitarian Universalists and members of the Signs of Our Faith community.
Together and individually, we practice good stewardship by taking care of our family, friends, congregation, community, and the world.
Point out the donation box. Invite children to place in it the toys or books they brought to donate to the congregation. Say that anyone who forgot a donation can bring their gift of "treasure" next time they come.
ACTIVITY 1: STORY — KNOW YOURSELF (5 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants hear a story about generosity, from the Middle East.
Invite the children to sit comfortably. Read or tell the story. Use coins as props to help you tell the story.
Process with these questions:
Including All Participants
You may wish to make fidget objects available to children who find it difficult to sit still while listening to a story or can focus better with sensory stimulation. For a full description and guidance, see Session 1, Leader Resource 2.
Consider using rug squares in the storytelling area. Place them in a semi-circle with the rule "One person per square." This can be very helpful for controlling active bodies.
ACTIVITY 2: "THE MAGIC PENNY SONG" (5 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Say, in these words or your own:
There is a song about giving something away and ending up with more of it. Let's learn "The Magic Penny Song."
Teach the song, using the lyrics from Handout 1 and playing a recording. Say that the songwriter, Malvina Reynolds, was a Unitarian Universalist.
Including All Participants
In Alternate Activity 4, children learn to sing the song, or its chorus, using sign language.
ACTIVITY 3: TIME, TALENT AND TREASURE (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants learn that "time, talent, and treasure" are three kinds of gifts good stewards can offer their family, friends, or congregation. Children make up their own dances to express how it feels to be generous.
Say, in these words or your own:
When you love someone, you take care of and protect them. When you love something, you take care of and protect it. Taking good care of something you value is called stewardship. We can be good stewards of our families, our friends, our schools, the earth we live on, and our congregation.
Ask:
Point out any of the children's examples that involve (1) devoting time to taking care of family and friends, (2) using their abilities to do something special or helpful for them, or (3) sharing resources, like food or toys.
Say, in these words or your own:
You could say you give the gifts of time, talent, and treasure to your family members and your friends.
Make sure children understand talent and treasure. Say that treasure can be a precious toy or book, like the donations children brought today, but it can also be money. For example, what if their friend wanted to buy ice cream after school, but did not have the money for it? If they were to give their friend the money, that would be a gift of "treasure."
Say:
Now let's talk about ways to give time, talent, and treasure to our congregation. When we want to be good stewards of our congregation, we might give in some of these ways.
Say you will name some actions people take at the congregation, and the children can decide if the action involves giving time, giving talent, or giving treasure. Everyone should decide for themselves, and move to the appropriate sign. Indicate the three sheets of newsprint. Say they will probably have different opinions sometimes, because some of the actions you will name could involve two, or all three, kinds of giving.
Read an item from the leader resource. Allow children to move to newsprint signs. If children disagree, discuss their choices. Use as many items as time and the group's interest allow.
Ask for a show of hands or other indicator if they have ever done any of the actions you named. Thank them for being good stewards of the congregation and for giving generously of their time, talent, and treasure.
Affirm that giving generously to the congregation can make you feel very good. Ask the children to think about a time they gave time, talent, or treasure and felt very good about it.
Play "The Magic Penny Song," and invite the children to make up a generosity dance. Tell them they may move any way they wish that is safe, does not touch anyone else without being asked to, and shows how they feel when they give generously of themselves.
Including All Participants
If there are differently-abled children in the group, you may wish to have children point to the time, talent, or treasure signs, rather than move from sign to sign. When you suggest the generosity dance, ask a child how they like to dance, and dance with them.
ACTIVITY 4: THE RITUAL OF OFFERTORY (5 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
The ritual of offertory is explained.
Ask if anyone has ever seen people sharing money during a worship service, at your congregation or someplace else. If children do not, explain how offertory is collected in your congregation. Use any visual aids you have collected. Does the congregation always say the same words, either before or after? Is music played or a hymn sung? What happens after the collection?
Point out that offertory is a ritual for giving "treasure" to the congregation. Ask:
Offertory is not the only way to give, but it must be an important way, since we have a ritual for it. Why is it important to collect money for the congregation? How is giving money—or time, or talent—a sign of our faith?
If you will facilitate Alternate Activity 1, Leadership in Action — Collecting the Offertory and/or Alternate Activity 2, Leadership in Action -- Sharing the Plate, tell the group about the plan you have made and (optional) distribute the letter to parents you have prepared.
If the group will not do either alternate activity, invite the children to notice the offertory ritual next time they attend a worship service.
ACTIVITY 5: WHERE DOES THE MONEY GO? (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Tell participants you have slips of paper that each say something the congregation spends money on. Indicate the buckets and explain that each bucket represents a different category of expenses—a different kind of thing that the congregation has to pay for. Engage the children to help you explain each of the categories. Work with the group to read aloud (or, have volunteers read) the slips and place each slip in the correct bucket.
Next, give the group the basket with the twelve one dollar bills in play money. Say you want them to pretend this money was collected in the offertory today. Ask them to decide, as a group, how to spend the twelve dollars. Each dollar can purchase one item in a bucket. Say they have two minutes to discuss what they will do.
Stop the group after two minutes. What have they decided to spend the money on? Why? Does everyone agree?
Say:
Every year, leaders at the congregation create a budget. A budget is a plan for how much money to spend on the different things the congregation's needs. [Indicate the buckets.] It is hard work because there are many needs and people have different opinions about which needs are most urgent. Sometimes everyone does not get everything they want. Yet, we have enough and we have a lot to be thankful for. Congregational leaders listen to all members of the community to make their decision. Giving money to the congregation is a way to be a good steward. It is a sharing of treasure.
Speaking up for how we think the congregation should spend its money, and using your voice in the decision-making, as you just did, are other ways to be good stewards. Those are ways to give a gift of time and talent.
ACTIVITY 6: THIRD EMBLEM (5 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children add an emblem to their stole.
This emblem represents "Being a leader in our congregation is a sign of my faith." It is based on the experiences children have had in the third unit of this program (Sessions 9-12).
Remind children that the stole is a symbol that they are growing as leaders in the congregation and in their UU faith. Say, in your own words:
The last few times we have met, we have learned about signs of our faith that we show as leaders here in our congregation.
Prompt the children to recall activities and stories from Session 9 (Community), Session 10 (Welcoming), and Session 11 (Worship). Affirm their recollections. Then, say:
Today, you may add an emblem to your leadership stole. This emblem shows that you show your faith by being a leader in our congregation. The emblem stands for your actions of welcoming others, of taking part in worship together, and being a good steward of our community and the place we share.
Lead children to make emblems (optional) and attach the emblems to their stoles.
If any of the children have recently become regular attendees, help them add their initials to a stole.
Have children help put away the craft materials. Invite them to put on their stoles to wear during the Closing ritual.
CLOSING (2 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Distribute stoles and invite participants to put them on.
Distribute Taking It Home. Tell participants that at the end of every session, they will receive this guide to fun activities they can do with family or friends. Read it aloud to give participants an idea of activities suggested.
Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Lead the group to say:
We end as we began: together.
May we remember to be UU not just when we are together here, but every day and in every way.
Invite each child to thank the person to their right for being a good steward of the congregation. Extinguish the chalice together.
FAITH IN ACTION: CANVASS
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants help with the canvass.
Explain the canvass, or introduce the guest you have invited to do so.
Present the options for helping with the canvass to the group. Help them decide how they will help and make an action plan. Communicate roles and responsibilities, dates, times, and places to families. After this meeting, remind families by email and in person of the commitment the children have made. Be sure to note that the children and families' contributions to promoting the canvass are a form of stewardship.
After the canvass, ask the children what they learned about the congregation. Did they meet new people? How do they feel about their contribution? In what other ways might they contribute to the canvass in the future? Thank participants for being good stewards of the congregation and our faith.
LEADER REFLECTION AND PLANNING
With your co-leaders, reflect on the session. What went well? What would you do differently next time? Were you able to find ways that every child could practice stewardship? Did children seem to understand why members' stewardship matters to the congregation? Did they give freely? If participants made commitments to acts of stewardships, how will you gently remind them to follow through?
TAKING IT HOME
In the end we will conserve only what we love. We will love only what we understand. We will understand only what we are taught. — Baba Dioum, conservationist
IN TODAY'S SESSION... we said that, as Unitarian Universalists, we believe in being good stewards. This means we look for ways to help take care of people and places we value and love, including our families, friends, and the congregation. We learned about the ritual of offertory and shared our feelings about being generous, after hearing a story. We added an emblem to our leadership stoles that represents ways we have begun to be faithful leaders in the congregation.
EXPLORE THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Talk about... how do you know when you have been generous enough? What does that feel like?
EXTEND THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Try... paying more attention to how you use money. You can get a Classic Money Box from Moonjar (at www.amazon.com/Moonjar-Classic-Moneybox-Spend-Share/dp/0972428216) or set up your own containers to help you divide any money you receive: some for yourself, some to save, and some to share with the world community. Online, read "Teaching Children about Money Management" (at www.essortment.com/teaching-children-money-management-18009.html) to learn how to use the three containers and find more suggestions for helping children learn fiscal responsibility. The website Learning to Give (at www.learningtogive.org/parents/raising/?idioma=) has tips for parents to encourage philanthropy in young people of all ages.
Family Discovery. Ask family members what time, talent, and resources they give to the congregation as good stewards.
Family Ritual. The next time you attend worship services as a family, allow all ages to make a financial contribution to the congregation. A quarter, fifty cents, two dollars, or more—any amount is appreciated. Give as much as you feel you can and should.
Family Adventure. Demonstrate the generosity dance you invented in the Signs group. Tell your family about the experience you thought of when you created the dance. Invite family members and friends to choreograph their own generosity dances.
Leadership Suggestion. Pick a place or community that matters to you that would welcome your stewardship. For example, if you pick your school, you might start a campaign to encourage paper recycling, or offer to help a teacher decorate a bulletin board or to sharpen pencils for the whole class. If you pick your home, look for a clean-up chore you can do regularly, such as vacuuming a carpet, putting away clean laundry or dishes, or brushing or bathing your dog. Share your new stewardship activities with members of the Signs of our Faith group at the next meeting.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 1: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION — COLLECTING THE OFFERTORY
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children conduct the ritual of the offertory.
Remind children of the ways the congregation spends money, using examples from Activity 4, The Ritual of Offertory. Explain the logistics of collecting money and let them walk through the process in the worship space before congregants arrive. Introduce adults who will assist. Make sure the children know what to do with the money after it is collected. Sit together during the service.
Gather the children after the worship service. Ask how they felt about the experience. Thank children for being good stewards and faithful leaders.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 2: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION — SHARING THE PLATE
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children support donating the plate to an organization that does good.
Many congregations donate a portion of their plates to non-profit organizations providing a service to the community or working for justice. Children can support this in different ways.
One way is to engage children in choosing recipients of the offertory. Can the children nominate an organization to receive the plate, perhaps one that helps children or is partially staffed by young people? If the children's nomination is chosen, arrange for participants to make a short presentation in the worship service that features this collection. Help participants craft short statements about why they chose the organization and what good works the donations might help to fund. Thank the congregation for being generous.
Children can also promote the plate-sharing. For example, engage them to create a large collage of all the organizations the congregation has helped in this way. Obtain photos online or from brochures and magazines. Write the names of the organizations and the amount of money donated to them, and display the collage in a public congregational space. Point out the children that the collage acknowledges the congregation's generosity and its stewardship of the local (or global) community, and encourages people to feel good about their giving to others.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 3: CONSERVATION IS STEWARDSHIP
Description of Activity
Children help conserve the congregation's resources.
Ask the group if their family has ways to save money. Do they use cloth to wipe up spills instead of using paper towels? Are they careful to not waste food? Do they walk to places when they can, instead of using a car? Affirm that saving money and other resources is a way to be a good steward.
Lead a tour of the congregation and help children think of ways conserving resources could save money. Make sure the children know that the congregation pays for water for lavatories, cooking, and cleaning; electricity for lights, computers, and other appliances; and gas, oil, or an alternate fuel source for heating and cooling so people will be comfortable indoors. Shutting off lights when you leave a room and closing outside doors left open unnecessarily are ways to conserve electricity and fuel. Are there drippy faucets or running toilets that need repairing? Maybe the congregation pays to throw away trash, or could earn money by returning bottles for deposit money. Look for opportunities to re-use or recycle.
If ways to conserve resources are found, help the group follow through on taking action. You might post a list of the conservation ideas in your meeting space. Send the ideas to the Building Committee, too.
Thank children for being good stewards.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 4: SIGNING THE MAGIC PENNY SONG (20 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children learn a song about generosity, in sign language.
Teach the children to sign the chorus of "The Magic Penny Song." Lead the group to practice many times, first slowly and using only words; later, to the music. Then, sign and sing together.
If children will perform the song, have them sign the chorus.
Ask:
Learning sign language or learning any other language helps you to communicate with more people. How is this being a good steward of the congregation? How is learning to communicate with people who are hearing impaired a sign of our faith?
If children enjoy learning some signs and the guest teacher can visit again, include sign language in more activities.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 12:
STORY: KNOW YOURSELF
From Ayat Jamilah: Beautiful Signs, A Treasury of Islamic Wisdom for Children and Parents by Sarah Conover and Freda Crane (Boston: Skinner House, 2010). All rights reserved. Available through the UUA Bookstore.
Kan ya ma kan, [Once upon a time]: there was and there was not a man known far and wide for his generosity. One day, sitting with his friends sipping coffee in the village square, a poor woman approached him with a small request for money to feed her child.
"Of course!" he replied, and without hesitation plucked coin after coin out of his pocket, piling them into the woman's hand until they spilled on the ground.
Overwhelmed with this show of kindness, the woman began to weep. She bowed her head in gratitude. "May Allah bless you, Sir. You have saved my child's life." She carefully placed the coins in a small cloth sack. Glancing up a last time, she thanked him with a frail half-smile.
When she was out of earshot, the man's friends probed him with questions: "Why did you give her so much money?" asked one.
"That was foolish. Don't you think she will tell all her friends?" asked another.
"A line of beggars will be at your door tomorrow morning!" warned a third.
"Just yesterday, you gave your zakaat, your yearly donation to charity," said a fourth. "You weren't obligated to give her any. Why did you do it?"
The generous man kept silent until their indignation ran its course. At last they quieted down.
"While such a poor woman may be pleased with just a little money from me," said the generous man, "I could not be." He looked from friend to friend. "Unless I give her what I am able to, I won't be happy. She may not know me, but I know myself."
And the group of men, thoughtful and contrite, said no more about it.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 12:
HANDOUT 1: "THE MAGIC PENNY SONG" LYRICS
Malvina Reynolds, copyright 1955 and 1958 by Northern Music Corporation, renewed 1986; permission pending.
Love is something if you give it away,
Give it away, give it away.
Love is something if you give it away,
You end up having more.
It's just like a magic penny,
Hold it tight and you won't have any.
Lend it, spend it, and you'll have so many
They'll roll all over the floor.
For love is something if you give it away,
Give it away, give it away.
Love is something if you give it away,
You end up having more.
Money doesn't have magic in it,
Things we buy might break in a minute,
Love's a circle, so let's begin it
And bring it to every door
For love is something if you give it away,
Give it away, give it away.
Love is something if you give it away,
You end up having more.
So let's go dancing till the break of day,
And if there's a piper, we can pay.
For love is something if you give it away,
You end up having more.
For love is something if you give it away,
Give it away, give it away.
Love is something if you give it away,
You end up having more.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 12:
LEADER RESOURCE 1: STEWARDSHIP ACTIONS — TIME, TALENT, OR TREASURE?
Picking up trash outside the congregation
Buying muffins at the congregational bake sale fundraiser
Bringing muffins for a snack to share in RE
Attending Signs sessions
Visiting a member of the congregation who is in the hospital
Helping to tell a Story for All Ages in worship
Singing in the choir (or children's choir)
Babysitting children in the nursery
Donating toys to nursery
Attending worship
Putting money in the offertory basket during worship
Collecting money by passing the offertory basket during worship
Playing a musical instrument in worship service
Decorating bulletin boards or rooms
Helping in the garden
Being a greeter on Sunday morning
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 12:
LEADER RESOURCE 2: LETTER TO PARENTS
Dear Parents and Caregivers,
The children in the Signs of Our Faith program are learning about stewardship. Today we discussed ways to share our "time, talent, and treasure" with the people and places we love. As part of this study, our group has been invited to help collect the offertory during the [insert date and time] worship service at our congregation. [If applicable, insert name of the organization or project that will receive a portion of this offertory and describe how the recipient was chosen.]
Please bring your child 15 minutes early for the service, so the Signs group can sit together in worship.
[Insert other information about rehearsal or items needed from home.]
Thank you,
[Insert co-leaders' names and contact information.]
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 12:
LEADER RESOURCE 3: CONGREGATIONAL NEEDS
Pay rent or mortgage on building
Pay electric bill
Fix broken window
Pay minister's salary
Buy crayons
Give to community groups helping people who are homeless
Pay pianist for worship services
Buy sheet music for choir
Pay water bill
Give to money community soup kitchen to purchase paper plates
Buy paper plates
Pay cleaning service
Buy new flowers for in front of the building
Pay phone bill
Help a family with a sick child buy medicine
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 12:
LEADER RESOURCE 4: THIRD EMBLEM
This is the official chalice of the Unitarian Universalist Association.
Download a high-resolution PDF (at www.uua.org/documents/tapestry/signs/third_emblem.pdf) for printing.
FIND OUT MORE
The UUA publication Stewardship: The Joy of Giving (at www.uua.org/documents/scheyerfia/stewardshipjoygiving.pdf) has resources for all ages. Find more stewardship resources (at www.uua.org/giving/apf/119273.shtml) from the UUA's Annual Program Fund on the UUA's website.
Read more about the Muslim spiritual practice of Zakaat (at www.inter-islam.org/Actions/Part12.html).
Learn more about singer/songwriter Malvina Reynolds from a biography (at www.harvardsquarelibrary.org/unitarians/reynolds.html) on the Harvard Square Library website. On YouTube, hear her perform (at www.youtube.com/watch?v=FB5Z_30xSe8).
Sign language performed to music is often not literal, but more poetic and visually appealing. To explore sign language, look for dictionaries online (at www.aslpro.com/cgi-bin/aslpro/aslpro.cgi/). There is also a smart phone app (at www.asl-dictionary.com/asl-dictionary.html) for American Sign Language.
SESSION 13: FINDING BEAUTY IN UNIQUENESS
SESSION OVERVIEW
INTRODUCTION
While we have the gift of life, it seems to me the only tragedy is to allow part of us to die - whether it is our spirit, our creativity or our glorious uniqueness. — Gilda Radner
Children learn that to recognize the beauty of each person's uniqueness is a sign of Unitarian Universalist faith. A story from Santeria/Yoruba tradition leads into a discussion about stereotyping where children are encouraged to share their experiences. Activity 3 engages children in cultural sharing, a respectful alternative to cultural appropriation. Though this topic might seem above the heads of young children, introducing it now opens a door for future, deeper understanding.
For Alternate Activity 3, Different Beliefs, invite guests a few weeks ahead of time.
GOALS
This session will:
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Participants will:
SESSION-AT-A-GLANCE
Activity | Minutes |
Opening | 2 |
Activity 1: Story — Oshun Loses Her Beauty | 15 |
Activity 2: Uniqueness Game | 20 |
Activity 3: Cultural Sharing | 10 |
Activity 4: Problem Solving | 10 |
Faith in Action: Recognizing New Members | 60 |
Closing | 3 |
Alternate Activity 1: Leadership in Action — Telling a Story in Worship | |
Alternate Activity 2: Unique Name Tags | 10 |
Alternate Activity 3: Different Beliefs | 30 |
SPIRITUAL PREPARATION
Unitarian Universalism values diversity. We believe each of us should be welcome to bring our whole selves to our community. Yet there are times that, even with the best intentions, we fail to appreciate all the facets of each individual. Do you feel you have been able to bring your whole self to the congregation and this faith, or have there been times your uniqueness has been unrecognized, unappreciated, or even rejected? How do you think others in your congregation would answer that question? If your congregation could use a reminder to appreciate our uniqueness, how can you help?
SESSION PLAN
OPENING (2 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Distribute stoles, if the children wear them for Opening and Closing rituals. Invite the children to put on their stoles. Offer any visitors a stole and explain that they may wear it during the Opening time and the Closing time if they wish. Remind the children their stoles are a sign that everyone in the group is a worship leader.
Welcome all participants. Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Ring the centering chime. Ask a volunteer to light the chalice together. Lead the group to say these Opening words:
We gather together as Unitarian Universalists and members of the Signs of Our Faith community.
Together we make our UU community and the world stronger and more beautiful with our uniqueness.
ACTIVITY 1: STORY — OSHUN LOSES HER BEAUTY (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Child respond to a story about recognizing what makes us unique.
If you wish, distribute the coloring page (Handout 1) and crayons. Invite children to color during (or after) the story.
Tell or read the story, starting with the introduction that gives background about the Santeria religion:
The Orisha are gods that came originally from Nigeria, in West Africa, as part of the Yoruba religion. The gods travelled with African people who were stolen as slaves from Africa and brought to North and Central America. Today, a religion named Santeria is based on these gods and is practiced In Cuba, Brazil, and parts of Central America. We also have practitioners here in the United States. Though stories about the Orisha may not mean the same to us as they do to Santerians, we can find great wisdom in them and we are thankful for being allowed to share them.
Process the story with these questions:
Affirm that each of us is a complicated human being, made up of many different abilities, thoughts, and identities. Like Oshun, we are all beautiful souls with unique gifts to share in our community.
If participants are coloring handouts, point out the various unique ways they have chosen to color the birds.
ACTIVITY 2: UNIQUENESS GAME (20 MINUTES)
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Group the participants in triads and have children stand together with their teams. If there are fewer than nine participants, form pairs; one participant can be a team with a co-leader.
Give each team member a number: 1, 2, or 3. Tell the teams they will play a game called You and Me. Each team needs to come up with three (or two, if in pairs) ways they are all alike. The members should take turns asking one another questions until each member has discovered something all three (or both) have in common. They will need to remember the commonality, because they will each have to share it with people from other teams. Once they find the commonality, they may sit down to signal they are ready for the next part of the game. The first team to sit down wins.
Explain how you wish the participants to ask questions to find commonalities: For example, Person 1 might ask if everyone on the team is a child. Person 2 might ask if everyone goes to the UU congregation. Person 3 might ask if everyone likes playing video games. If one person does not like playing video games, Person 3 might ask if everyone is homeschooled. If all three team members are homeschooled, this team has completed the game and can sit down.
After all teams are done, invite each team to share their commonalities. Have the winning team go first.
Now, invite the teams to play another game: Me, Not You. In this game, each team member tries to identify a way they are different from other team members. Again, after every team member identifies a difference, the entire team should sit down to signal completion. Have each teams share their differences.
Process the game with these questions:
Help children understand that noticing differences does not need to lead to fear, hate, or any form of oppression. You might say:
Noticing a difference is not the same thing as rejecting or criticizing someone because they are different. We often notice or discover differences between ourselves and other people, and not a bad thing to respectfully talk about them. On the other hand, if we do not talk about our differences, it is easy to get into misunderstandings. We may start to think that everyone has the same experiences, beliefs, thoughts, and values that we do, and that is not true. As Unitarian Universalists, we believe that our differences make us unique and uniqueness is not only beautiful, but needed. Appreciating our uniqueness can be a sign of our UU faith.
Including All Participants
If any children's mobility limitations make standing and sitting problematic, have the children signal their team is finished in another way, such as by raising their hands.
ACTIVITY 3: CULTURAL SHARING (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Tell the group that the ritual to discuss today is storytelling. Ask when they have heard stories in the congregation. Your congregation might tell stories in worship and in religious education sessions. Point out that the Signs of Our Faith group hears a story every time they meet.
Say, in these words or your own:
Unitarian Universalists often tell stories. Sometimes we tell true stories about events in the life of the storyteller or events in the life of someone else. Sometimes we tell stories we call wisdom tales or folk tales. Sometimes they are stories from holy texts, like the Hebrew Scriptures (Old Testament).
Ask:
Say that, as UUs, we believe there is truth in stories from all over the world and all throughout time. We like to share these stories in ways that honor the original storytellers. One way we do this is by acknowledging where the story comes from. Ask, "Did I tell you where today's story came from, when I told the story to you earlier?"
Another way we show respect for the original storytellers is by trying to not make a lot of changes in the story.
It is also respectful to recognize that the story's meaning for us might be different than it is for the people who originally told the story. For example, we may not pray to the goddess Oshun, but people who belong to the religion of Santeria do.
When we share stories from other people or cultures, we do it respectfully. This is called cultural sharing. If we do it disrespectfully, it is cultural appropriation, which is like stealing.
Use the book as an example. Ask children to role play one child asking to borrow the book and them treating it disrespectfully. They might tell friends it is their book. They might pretend to rip out pages or color in it.
Then ask two different children to role play respectful borrowing of the book.
Say that stories are not the only things we share respectfully from other cultures. We share rituals from other cultures sometimes, too. Again, we always do this respectfully, acknowledging that the ritual comes from another tradition, naming that tradition, and knowing that it does not mean exactly the same to us as it does to people from the culture of origin. In this way, we gain wisdom from other traditions, such as Buddhism, without "playing at" being Buddhists.
Ask participants if they have any questions, and answer any you can.
ACTIVITY 4: PROBLEM SOLVING (10 MINUTES)
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Say, in these words or your own:
Diversity is important to us as UUs because we recognize that often there is not just one right way to do something. When it comes to solving problems, people who approach the problem in different ways have a better chance of coming up with a solution together than a group in which everyone thinks the same way. When we share our unique gifts to solve problems, that makes our UU community nice and strong.
Invite children to role play examples of different solutions to a problem. One possible problem: You have planted sunflower seeds, but they are not growing. What are possible solutions? Engage everyone who is willing to role play different problems, including ones contributed by the children.
CLOSING (3 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Distribute stoles and invite participants to put them on.
Distribute Taking It Home. Remind participants that at the end of every session, they receive this guide to fun activities they can do with family or friends. Read it aloud to give participants an idea of activities suggested.
Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Lead the group to say:
We end as we began: together.
May we remember to be UU not just when we are together here, but every day and in every way.
Invite each child to turn to the person on the right and say, "I'm glad you are you!" Ask all participants to blow out the chalice together.
FAITH IN ACTION: RECOGNIZING NEW MEMBERS (60 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants meet new members of the congregation and learn what makes them unique.
Invite new members to a meet-and-greet with the children and their families immediately after a congregational New Member Ceremony. Take a photo of each member. Ask each new member their name, who else is in their family, and one unique thing about them. Obtain the new members' permission to include their photo and information in display.
While working, discuss the ways the new members are unique. Comment on how they add beauty and diversity to the congregation. Post the display for the congregation to enjoy.
LEADER REFLECTION AND PLANNING
What went well in this session? What would you do differently next time? Did the children understand respectful cultural sharing? Even if they did not grasp the entire concept, raising the topic with them sets a foundation for future learning.
There are only three sessions left. If you will hold a celebration in the final session, start planning now. Review the next session and assign any preparation that is needed.
TAKING IT HOME
While we have the gift of life, it seems to me the only tragedy is to allow part of us to die - whether it is our spirit, our creativity or our glorious uniqueness. — Gilda Radner
IN TODAY'S SESSION... we said that, as Unitarian Universalists, we believe that we are all unique individuals and that is beautiful. We think our community is stronger when everyone is welcomed the way they are. We found out unique traits about each other. We discussed how our love of diversity leads us to tell stories and explore rituals from other cultures, but we always do that in respectful ways. This is called cultural sharing.
EXPLORE THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Talk about... being stereotyped. Ask your parents and/or siblings and friends: When have you felt judged by your appearance instead of your true abilities?
EXTEND THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Try...
Family Game. Give everyone a slip of paper for each family member. Write their name on the paper. Include a slip of paper with your own name. Now give everyone the same number of slips of a different colored paper. Write on each slip one unique trait of a family member. Mix up the second slips. Match them to the first. See who gets the most correct.
Family Ritual. Start a family story night. Once a month, share a story from a different culture or religion. Find popular stories from Hinduism. Hear tales of the Australian Dreamtime. Start with the book Accept and Value Each Person (at www.uuabookstore.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=463) by Cheri J. Meiners (Minneapolis: Free Spirit, 2006).
Leadership Suggestion. Start recognizing others for the unique gifts they possess. At school, instead of choosing your best friend to be your partner for a science project, pick a student who you know loves science more than you. If you are very outgoing, have a play date with quiet friends. If you are quiet, spend time with friends who are more social. We can all learn new things from each other's unique ways!
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 1: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION — TELLING A STORY IN WORSHIP
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants demonstrate respectful cultural sharing of stories during worship.
Invite the children to tell a story from a cultural different from that of most congregants. If possible, allow the children to choose a story from several you have selected.
Help children write an introduction that includes these elements of cultural sharing:
For example, if you were to share "Oshun Loses Her Beauty," you might say:
This story comes to us from West Africa. The gods in the story are called Orisha. They are part of the Santeria religion. Though this religion is different from our UU religion and it may mean something different to the people of West Africa or other practitioners of Santeria, it has wisdom to share with us. We thank them for sharing the story with us.
Rehearse the introduction and the storytelling. Include as many props, costumes, and sound effects as you can to make the story interesting. If there are ways to make it interactive and include congregants, do so.
After the worship service, ask participants what they enjoyed about the experience of sharing the story. Ask:
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 2: UNIQUE NAME TAGS (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants individualize name tags.
Invite children to artistically represent the uniqueness they shared in Activity 2, Unique Game. You might say, "Add the art to your name tag and wear your uniqueness with pride!
Suggest that, in the future, when the children introduce themselves at the congregation, they might want to add their uniqueness. For example, "I'm Tabitha, and I have two pet frogs."
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 3: DIFFERENT BELIEFS (30 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children recognize the theological diversity in the congregation.
Tell the group that they will hear from guest speakers who are all UU, but who have different theologies. Explain that Unitarian Universalism can be embraced by people who have unique beliefs about God, heaven, and other religious questions. This is another way recognizing each person's uniqueness is a sign of our Unitarian Universalist faith.
Introduce guests and facilitate their presentations. After each presentation, lead a question-and-answer time. Thank the guests for visiting.
Afterward, ask the group some of the ways their beliefs are unique to each other.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 13:
STORY: OSHUN LOSES HER BEAUTY
Based on a Santerian story. Special thanks to Lesley Murdoch for her insights to Afro-Caribbean religions.
The Orisha are gods that came originally from Nigeria, in West Africa, as part of the Yoruba religion. The gods travelled with African people who were stolen as slaves from Africa and brought to North and Central America. Today, a religion named Santeria is based on these gods and is practiced In Cuba, Brazil, and parts of Central America. We also have practitioners here in the United States. Though stories about the Orisha may not mean the same to us as they do to Santerians, we can find great wisdom in them and we are thankful for being allowed to share them.
Olodumare, the Creator God, sits far up in the heavens. Other gods, Orishas, like to leave the sky and walk amongst the people on earth. All the Orishas have things they are in charge of:
Yemaya rules over the seas and lakes. She is called the Mother of All and protects pregnant women.
Shango rules over thunder, lightning, fire, and the dance. He loves the drums and having fun.
Eleggua is the god of doors and roads. He carries messages between humans and Orisha.
Oshun is the youngest goddess. She is found in the sweet waters of the world, such as streams and rivers. She is also the goddess of fertility.
Once, some of the Orisha decided they were tired of obeying Olodumare. He sat so far away. What did he know about running the universe? They had control over all things on earth. They thought he was no longer needed.
Olodumare knew the other Orisha were rebelling. He could have struck them down, but he decided to withhold the rains instead. Without the rain, the earth dried up. The rivers, lakes, and streams ran dry. No crops grew; animals were dying. Humans, too. The people cried out to the Orisha, "Save us! What have we done to anger you?"
The Orisha heard their cries. They knew that it was they, not the humans that had angered Oloddumare. They pleaded with him to bring the rain. But Olodumare was too far away and did not hear.
They asked for forgiveness and promised to obey him again. But Olodumare was too far away and did not hear.
Several of the Orisha tried to ascend into the heavens, but they could not reach Olodumare.
Oshun asked if she could try. The other Orisha laughed at her. "How can someone so small and young do what her elders could not? Just go back to sitting there, looking pretty." Oshun persisted. Finally, out of sheer desperation, the other Orisha agreed that she could try. They did not expect her to succeed.
Oshun turned herself in a beautiful peacock. She flew off towards the heaven. It was so far away, that her feathers begin to fall off. As she reached the sun, her colorful feathers were scorched and all the delicate feathers burned off her head. Yet she was determined to reach Olodumare and she flew on.
When Oshun thought she could not fly another mile, she reached the home of the Creator god, Olodumare. She collapsed in his arms and he saw that the beautiful peacock had been transformed into a vulture. Olodumare took Oshun and nursed her back to health.
"Your bravery and determination has softened my heart. I will bring the rains," said Olodumare. And he did. "From now on, you, dear vulture, will be the Messenger of the house of Olodumare and I will communicate only through you."
Oshun, as a vulture, returned to earth to honor and praise. Her gifts of determination and inner strength had saved the world.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 13:
HANDOUT 1: COLORING PAGE OF OSHUN
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 13:
LEADER RESOURCE 1: SANTERIAN GODS AND GODDESSES
Download a high-resolution PDF (at www.uua.org/documents/tapestry/signs/santerian.pdf) for printing.
FIND OUT MORE
Santeria
Read versions of the story "Oshun Loses Her Beauty" on the Voices from Venus (at www.voicesfromvenus.com/OrishaOshun.html) website, the Angel Fire (at www.angelfire.com/journal/ofapoet/oshun.html) website, and the Orishanet (at www.orishanet.org/oshun.html) website, which also has more about the Orisha in Santeria. A related book is Teachings of the Santeria Gods: The Spirit of Odu by Ocha'ni Lele (Rochester, VT: Destiny Books, 2010).
Cultural Appropriation
As a religious community that draws truth from many Sources, we need to acknowledge that we do not always borrow respectfully. For guidance, see the article "Cultural (Mis)Appropriation" (at www.uua.org/multiculturalism/introduction/misappropriation/index.shtml) in the UUA's online Introduction to Multiculturalism.
Uniqueness
The Liberal Religious Educators Association pamphlet Moving Toward an Inclusive Vision (at www25.uua.org/lreda/content/BestPracticesIT.pdf) provides tips to welcome and embrace diversity in religious education programs and the congregation at large.
SESSION 14: FAIR GROUP DECISIONS
SESSION OVERVIEW
INTRODUCTION
I believe that decision making should not be the exclusive right of the privileged. That those who are affected by policy—not those who by default often stand above it—should be heard in the debate. — Winona LaDuke, Native American activist
This session is about the fifth Principle and use of the democratic process. Children examine different methods of making group decisions, practice making group decisions in a hypothetical situation, and learn about the congregation's governance systems.
GOALS
This session will:
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Participants will:
SESSION-AT-A-GLANCE
Activity | Minutes |
Opening | 2 |
Activity 1: Story — Game Day | 10 |
Activity 2: Authority, Majority, and Consensus | 10 |
Activity 3: Role Plays | 20 |
Activity 4: Making a Group Decision | 15 |
Faith in Action: Enacting the Group Decision | |
Closing | 3 |
Alternate Activity 1: Leadership in Action — Our Congregation's Governance | 20 |
SPIRITUAL PREPARATION
Today's session is about our fifth Unitarian Universalist Principle, the right of conscience and the use of the democratic process in our congregations and in society at large. Read the session's quotation from Winona LaDuke. The quote and our fifth Principle are really about power: who has it and who shares it. Think about your relationship with power when you were young. When did you feel empowered? When did you feel marginalized? Was there a time when participating in a family decision made you feel empowered?
As a leader in this program, how have you helped to empower the children—not just to act with power, but to share power with others, and to help build communities where everyone is ready to take the helm? Good leaders know not only how to lead, but when to lead and when to follow.
SESSION PLAN
OPENING (2 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Lead an Opening ritual the children designed (Session 9, Activity 4). Or, use this Opening ritual:
Distribute stoles, if the children wear them for Opening and Closing rituals. Invite the children to put on their stoles. Offer any visitors a stole and explain that they may wear it during the Opening time and the Closing time if they wish. Remind the children their stoles are a sign that everyone in the group is a worship leader.
Welcome all participants. Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Ring the centering chime. Ask a volunteer to light the chalice together. Lead the group to say these Opening words:
We gather together as Unitarian Universalists and members of the Signs of Our Faith community.
Together our group makes decisions about what is important to us.
ACTIVITY 1: STORY—GAME DAY (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Tell or read the story. Process the story with these questions:
Including All Participants
You may wish to make fidget objects available to children who find it difficult to sit still while listening to a story or can focus better with sensory stimulation. For a full description and guidance, see Session 1, Leader Resource 2.
Consider using rug squares in the storytelling area. Place them in a semi-circle with the rule "One person per square." This can be very helpful for controlling active bodies.
ACTIVITY 2: AUTHORITY, MAJORITY, AND CONSENSUS (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children explore pros and cons of different ways to make group decisions.
Remind the children of the fifth Unitarian Universalist Principle: We believe everyone deserves a say about the things that concern them. Say that the adult version of the Principles talks about using the democratic process.
Invite volunteers to define the democratic process or explain how people make decisions in a democracy. Say that the democratic process means making sure everyone can have a say in the decisions that affect them. Sometimes it is summarized by saying "one citizen equals one vote."
Say, in your own words:
This sounds fair and, in a perfect world, it would be fair. It is, however, hard to achieve. Sometimes people who should have a say are excluded from the process. We often say these people are marginalized.
In the U.S., women could not vote before 1920 and in many countries, women still cannot vote. Other groups have had their access to the democratic process denied in the history of our country, too, such as African Americans, who can now vote, and people who live in Washington, D.C., whose elected representative cannot vote in Congress. So even systems based on voting are not always fair.
In our country, children cannot vote. But most adult citizens can vote for people to represent them in local and national government where decisions that affect everyone are made. So, too, in most UU congregations, members elect other members to represent them on a governing board. The board makes many, but not all, of the decisions for the congregation. Decisions may be made by staff or committees. Some decisions are made by the whole membership. At congregational meetings, all the members of the congregation can vote on important issues. Using different methods of making decisions gives more opportunity for congregational leaders to hear the opinions of everyone in the congregation. Using the democratic process as a fair way to make group decisions is a sign of our UU faith.
Using the newsprint you have prepared, explain three different ways groups make decisions: authority, majority, and consensus. Ask which method sounds the most fair. Ask which method sounds the easiest and fastest and which the hardest and longest. Say that consensus can be hard to reach and time consuming, but, if the group is small enough and has enough time for everyone to hear one another's opinions, it can be the most fair way for a group do make a decision.
Say:
Sometimes one method might be best; sometimes, another. For example, cars at an intersection cannot use consensus as to whose turn it is to go. Traffic lights, stop signs, and the rules of the road are a form of authority that makes that decision. When you receive your driver's license, you agree to obey the rules of the road, which is a form of consensus.
ACTIVITY 3: ROLE PLAYS (20 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children role play making decisions as leaders.
Invite participants to role play the use of authority, majority, and consensus in a situation where a decision needs to be made. Present a scenario—your own idea, or one of these:
Act out "authority" first. Designate one child as the authority and explain that their decision is the one the group must follow.
Then, act out "majority." Help the children clarify the choices, and hold a vote. Have children move physically to show their vote. Count heads to find the majority, and announce the decision.
Finally, act out consensus. Encourage the children to arrange themselves in a circle, and guide them to take turns sharing their opinions. Facilitate only as much as needed, with comments such as "It sounds as if you have decided... " or "Many people seem to think [X] is the best idea."
Once you have enacted all three approaches to one scenario, ask:
Enact and process another scenario, if time allows.
ACTIVITY 4: MAKING A GROUP DECISION (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants practice reaching a group decision.
Tell the group you will guide them to use consensus to make a decision. Explain the decision they will make together now and when they (and, if applicable, others) will carry out the decision.
Optional: Use the sticker voting method mentioned in the Game Day story.
Here are some tips you may share with the group to help the process:
CLOSING (3 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Distribute stoles and invite participants to put them on.
Distribute Taking It Home. Remind participants that at the end of every session, they receive this guide to fun activities they can do with family or friends. Read it aloud to give participants an idea of activities suggested.
Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Lead the group to say:
We end as we began: together.
May we remember to be UU not just when we are together here, but every day and in every way.
Ask all participants to blow out the chalice the same way they made decisions: together.
FAITH IN ACTION: ENACTING THE GROUP DECISION
Description of Activity
Participants follow through on the Faith in Action idea created in Activity 4, Making a Group Decision.
Be sure to gather the group after the activity or event they had decided on together. Ask if they feel they made a good decision. If not, how would they do it differently next time? Revisit the consensus process they experienced and reinforce the actions individuals or the group took that embody the fifth Unitarian Universalist Principle—that is, remind them of actions they took that ensured the decision-making was fair or encouraged every person to participate in the process.
LEADER REFLECTION AND PLANNING
With your co-leaders, reflect on the session. What went well? What would you do differently next time? Ask yourselves: How have you made decisions together? Is there anything from this session you will apply to your personal life?
Review the next sessions and assign any advance preparation. If the last session will include a celebration, start planning now.
TAKING IT HOME
I believe that decision making should not be the exclusive right of the privileged. That those who are affected by policy—not those who by default often stand above it—should be heard in the debate. — Winona LaDuke, Native American activist
IN TODAY'S SESSION... we talked about ways to make fair decisions. Our fifth Unitarian Universalist Principle says we believe that everyone should have a vote on matters that affect them, but sometimes simply voting is not fair enough. In our congregation, many people are involved in decision making. Some decisions are made by the board of trustees. Others are made by the whole congregation. Trying to make group decision making as fair as it can be is a sign of our UU faith.
EXPLORE THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Talk about ... family decisions. Which decisions are made using authority, majority, and consensus methods? Why is it necessary for parents and caregivers to sometimes make authority decisions?
Family Game. Try playing a board game with teams instead of as individuals. Every decision must be made as a team. How will you reach agreement?
Family Ritual. When a public election or referendum is held, go to the polls as a family. Talk about the people and issues on the ballot. Do not forget to get an "I voted" sticker.
Family Discovery. Go to a meeting of a neighborhood or civic association. How is decision making done there? Is it an informal discussion to reach consensus, or, more like ballot voting... or something else? If decisions are made according to the vote a majority, is there at least some opportunity for everyone to voice their opinion?
Leadership Suggestion. The next time you find yourself in a group that has to make a decision, suggest the group try reaching consensus.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 1: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION—OUR CONGREGATION'S GOVERNANCE (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children talk to board members about congregational governance.
Say that any group of people will find itself having to make decisions if they want to do anything. Ask the group what they know about how the congregation makes decisions. Affirm that different groups within the congregation might have decisions to make, and they might make them in different ways. If your congregation has staff, tell the group what kind of decisions the staff makes and how—for example, who chooses the hymns that will be sung in worship? Who decides what will be posted on congregational bulletin boards? Who decides what the snacks will be at coffee hour?
Introduce the guests and explain that they are members of the board of trustees or directors (use your congregation's language), which makes decisions for the entire congregation. Invite the guests to give their presentation, using any visuals you or they brought. Encourage the children to ask questions.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 14:
STORY: GAME DAY
Abby always liked school, but she was especially excited about today. Her class had earned a reward: a game day! Their teacher, Dr. Liu, promised they could spend most of the day playing games. Abby's best friend, Kamal, hoped they would play his favorite board game. Abby hoped they would play basketball.
Before everyone had taken a seat, Kamal was showing everyone the board game he had brought from home. "Can we play my favorite game?" he asked Dr. Liu.
"Who has a game in mind that they would like to play today?" asked Dr. Liu. Almost everyone raised their hands.
"How will we decide which games to play?" Dr. Liu asked.
"Since you are the teacher, you could decide," said Corey.
"Well, I could," said Dr. Liu, "But I would rather the group decide, because the decision affects everyone. I think that would be more fair. What do you think?"
"Why don't we play everyone's game?'" asked Ty.
"Let's do the math," said Dr. Liu. Everyone groaned. "We've just started learning division. Let's see who can find out how much time we would have to play each game." The children added up all the time they would need for lunch in the cafeteria, their visit to the school library, and their music class. Not even three hours were left to play games. The class had twenty students. That meant if they played each student's game, they could only play each game for about ten minutes. No one thought this was a good idea: Some games take almost that long to set up!
"We could vote on which games to play," suggested Abby. "In my congregation, we say that everyone deserves a say about the things that concern them."
Everyone thought this would be fair. Dr. Liu invited everyone to suggest games and wrote all their suggestions on the board. Some games needed special equipment which they did not have; Dr. Liu asked the children who suggested them if he could cross these off the list and they agreed. Dr. Liu suggested a game, too. It was a game he used to play as a child in China.
"If we take a simple vote, most of you will vote for the game you suggested," said Dr. Liu, "and that won't get us very far. So I will give everyone three star stickers. Put your star stickers by three games you would enjoy playing. After everyone has voted, we'll see which games have the most stickers." Everyone talked excitedly while placing their stickers.
Dr. Liu tallied the votes. He listed all the games in order of most votes. Dr. Liu said he wanted to make sure everybody got to play at least one game for which they had voted. He pointed to the top three games and said "If you did not vote for any of these games, raise your hand." Two people raised their hands. Dr. Liu pointed to the top four games and asked the same question. No one raised their hands. "We will play these four games today."
So the Game Day started. Dr. Liu's game had the most votes because everyone wanted to learn a new game. Kamal was happy that his board game was third on the list. He enjoyed playing it, even though he did not win.
When Abby went home, her sister teased her. "I thought school was for learning, not playing games."
"We did learn something today," Abby countered. "We learned a new game from China and we learned about making fair decisions."
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 14:
LEADER RESOURCE 1: ILLUSTRATION – GAME DAY IN ABBY'S CLASSROOM
Illustration by Ginger Wyatt.
Download a high-resolution PDF (at www.uua.org/documents/tapestry/signs/game_day.pdf) for printing.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 14:
LEADER RESOURCE 2: WAYS TO MAKE GROUP DECISIONS
Download a high-resolution PDF (at www.uua.org/documents/tapestry/signs/decisions.pdf) for printing.
Authority
"I will make the decision."
One or more leaders decide what is best for the group as a whole at this time. Leaders may consult with other members before making a decision, but the decision belongs to the leader(s) alone.
Majority
"We will make the decision because most of us agree."
The majority of members (51% or more) agree that the decision is the best one for the whole group at this time. Often achieved through voting.
Consensus
"We will make the decision only when everyone can agree."
All members of the group agree on one decision all believe is the best one for the whole group at this time.
FIND OUT MORE
The Tools for Change (at toolsforchange.org/resources/org-handouts/consensus-process.pdf) website has helpful material on consensus.
A Quaker blogger, Robin Mohr, writes about teaching Quaker methods of decision making (at robinmsf.blogspot.com/2007/05/voting-vs-quaker-decision-making-in.html) to an elementary school class.
SESSION 15: WITNESS FOR JUSTICE: PUBLIC SIGNS OF OUR UU VALUES
SESSION OVERVIEW
INTRODUCTION
Our lives begin to end the day that we become silent about the things that matter. — Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King
This session introduces public witness as a way to show one's faith by working for a just world.
The Faith in Action and Alternate Activities provide options for engaging children in direct public witness experiences. It is strongly recommended that you plan one or more events outside the sessions—if possible, the same day or week—where the children can support a congregational justice campaign through witnessing. Work with your Justice or Social Action Committee, and tailor the Faith in Action and/or one of the three Alternate Activities to provide this experience.
GOALS
This session will:
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Participants will:
SESSION-AT-A-GLANCE
Activity | Minutes |
Opening | 2 |
Activity 1: Muhammad's Prayer | 10 |
Activity 2: Story — John L. Cashin, Witness for Justice | 10 |
Activity 3: Gallery Tour | 10 |
Activity 4: Ritual of Public Witness | 25 |
Faith in Action: Public Witness Event | |
Closing | 3 |
Alternate Activity 1: Leadership in Action — Guest at Your Table | |
Alternate Activity 2: Leadership in Action — Justice Sunday | |
Alternate Activity 3: Meeting the Justice Committee | |
Alternate Activity 4: Public Witness Online | 10 |
SPIRITUAL PREPARATION
What were you taught as a child about witnessing for justice? If you were included in public protests or other justice work, do you remember the first time you took part? What was the cause? Who was with you? How clearly did you understand the issues and purpose of your public witness?
Including children in public witness can help to deepen their justice-loving souls. Prepare to engage them in issues and guide them to form their own opinions. Get ready to lead them to come to their own understanding of how a public witness action is a sign of faith.
SESSION PLAN
OPENING (2 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Lead the Opening ritual designed in Session 9. Or, use this Opening ritual:
If the children wear stoles for Opening and Closing, distribute stoles. Invite the children to put on their stoles. Offer any visitors a stole and explain that they may wear it during the Opening time and the Closing time if they wish. Remind the children their stoles are a sign that everyone in the group is a worship leader.
Welcome all participants. Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Ring the centering chime. Ask a volunteer to light the chalice. Lead the group to say these Opening words:
We gather together as Unitarian Universalists and members of the Signs of Our Faith community.
Together we live our values not just in private, but publicly.
ACTIVITY 1: MUHAMMAD'S PRAYER (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
What actions are most excellent?
To gladden the heart of a human being.
To feed the hungry.
To help the afflicted.
To lighten the sorrow of the sorrowful.
To remove the wrongs of the injured.
That person is the most beloved of God who does most good to God's creatures. — The Prophet Muhammed
Description of Activity
Children learn a prayer calling for people to do justice and connect its words with UU Principles that support our justice work.
Tell the group that you want to share a prayer with them. Say the prayer was written by the prophet Muhammad, of the founder of the religion of Islam. Tell them that Islam is the world's second largest religion and that people who practice Islam are called Muslims. Ask what the children know about Islam or Muslims. Affirm:
Tell the children that Unitarian Universalists often look to other religions of the world for wisdom such as these words of Muhammad, to inspire us to be the best person we can be.
Share the prayer with the children. If the group includes strong readers, you might ask a volunteer to read each line aloud and then have the group repeat it. Define words you are not sure the children understand.
Point out that Muhammad suggests actions a person can take to show what they believe in. Help the children to name some of the actions. You can prompt: helping at a food pantry, speaking up when something is unfair, giving clothes or toys you do not need to a child who needs them more, participating in a justice rally; marching in an annual Martin Luther King Day parade. Now ask: Do Unitarian Universalist show our beliefs with any of the same actions? Point out that while our UU religion is different from Islam, our religion shares some of the same ways to show our beliefs.
Indicate your poster of the UU Principles or distribute the handout. Read the Principles aloud or invite volunteers to read. Ask:
Tell the group that people who believe in justice can show their belief in many ways. Say:
Today we are going to talk about the kind of action called public witness.
ACTIVITY 2: STORY — JOHN L. CASHIN, WITNESS FOR JUSTICE (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants respond to a true story of a UU ancestor who witnessed for justice.
Introduce the story with this background information, in these words or your own:
We are going to hear about John L. Cashin, an African American Unitarian Universalist. His story will help us understand how public witness is a sign of our faith.
John Cashin was born in Hunstville, Alabama in 1928. His mother was the principal of a school. His father was a dentist, and when John Cashin grew up, he became a dentist, too. Way before John Cashin was born, his grandfather had been a representative in the Alabama State Legislature. So, you see, his family cared very much about health, and education, and citizens taking part in government. You will see how John Cashin cared about those things, too, and how he showed it.
Tell or read the story.
Process the story with these questions:
Including All Participants
You may wish to make fidget objects available to children who find it difficult to sit still while listening or can focus better with sensory stimulation. For a full description and guidance, see Session 1, Leader Resource 2.
Consider using rug squares in the storytelling area. Place them in a semi-circle with the rule "One person per square." This can help control active bodies.
ACTIVITY 3: GALLERY TOUR (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children view posters/videos that witness for justice and (optional) choose a cause for which to do public witness.
Say, in these words or your own:
When we speak out in public about righting a wrong or urging people to do good acts, that is called public witness. Sometimes we can speak with our voices in public. Sometimes we witness by going to a march or a rally and hold posters or signs in public.
Public witness is a way of working for a better world. For example, many people are working on the problem that many children do not have enough to eat. Some people donate food to food pantries. Others serve food at shelters to families who need a healthy meal. Still other people work to pass laws to make sure families have enough money for food.
And some people do public witness about hunger. They write books and articles. They create plays, TV shows, music, and art to tell everyone about the problem of child hunger and suggest ways to solve it. They speak to Congress and hold public meetings to talk about solutions.
Show the group the No Kid Hungry (at nokidhungry.org/) website. Play the video (:49). Under "Ways to Get Involved," point out the link to Spread the Word and the ways it invites us to witness for ending childhood hunger in the United States by sharing information online. Watch actor Jeff Bridges' public service announcement (at nokidhungry.org/featured-pledge-takers/Jeff%20Bridges). Ask:
Tell the children that going to a rally or making a poster can also be a form of public witness. Invite children to visit the gallery of public witness. Give them several minutes to visit all the posters and/or see the slide show.
Re-gather the group.
Invite the children to play a game. Tell them you will call out a justice cause and children should quickly move to a poster that witnesses for that cause. If the group is large, ease congestion by calling out "If your name begins with letters A through M, stand by the recycling poster. If your first name begins with N through Z, stand by the peace poster."
If any of the posters have been displayed before in the congregation, ask children if they can identify which ones.
Say:
Unitarian Universalists have a long and proud history of public witness. We believe we should speak up and speak out when we see a wrong that needs righting, people afflicted, hungry, or injured by immoral laws or practices. Public witness for a justice cause is a sign of our UU faith. Public witness is one way to show we want to help to create a world where everyone is treated equally and fairly.
Variation
If the group needs to choose a cause for which to witness, take at least five minutes to lead a consensus-finding activity. Post newsprint and ask children to generate ideas. List all suggestions on newsprint, including yours. Lead the group to eliminate ideas that are impractical or impossible. Then, give each child three stickers and invite them to vote by placing stickers on the ideas they like the best. Engage the group to identify the three most popular ideas by calculating the number of votes each idea received. Then, you may announce the idea that had the most votes as the winner. Or, ask if any children did not vote for any of the top three, and allow them to say which of the top three they prefer. Their votes may change the results.
Including All Participants
If any children in the group have mobility limitations, do not use a game that requires children to move quickly from place to place.
ACTIVITY 4: RITUAL OF PUBLIC WITNESS (25 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children explore items used by the congregation in public witness and create their own materials to support a public witness event.
Show the children the items you have gathered from congregational public witness. Explain the context and purpose of the witness events. Engage children to identify familiar people and places in photos and to share their experiences with the issue or cause being witnessed.
Now invite the children to help prepare for a new public witness event—one you have already selected for them to do, or one that will support a cause the children chose by consensus in the previous activity.
Suggestions:
While the children work, talk about multiple ways to witness: speaking in public, making and holding signs, creating and passing out flyers, sharing or making a video, music, speaking up when you see a wrong, siding with someone who needs help. If children did not have enough time in Activity 1 to talk about their experience with public witness, continue that conversation.
CLOSING (3 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Distribute stoles and invite participants to put them on.
Distribute Taking It Home. Tell participants that at the end of every session, they will receive this guide to fun activities they can do with family or friends. Read it aloud to give participants an idea of activities suggested.
Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Lead the group to say:
We end as we began: together.
May we remember to be UU not just when we are together here, but every day and in every way.
Invite each child turn to the child to the right of them and say "Thank you for being a public witness for justice."
Ask all participants to blow out the chalice together. Have them store their stoles in the place you have designated. Stoles should stay at the congregation and not go home with children.
FAITH IN ACTION: PUBLIC WITNESS EVENT
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children witness for a justice issue of their choice.
Ask children what local justice issues concern them. These questions might help identify issues:
List the issues on newsprint. Help the group pick an issue they would like to advocate for or protest against. Possible issues include environmental (recycling, protecting land), hunger and homelessness (supporting shelters), bullying, and animal welfare (spaying and neutering pets, boycotting a circus that uses animals).
Keep the focus of the activity on public witness. Here is an example of the form the activity could take if children wish to advocate for spaying/neutering/adopting pets:
1. Identify a local organization to invite into partnership. It could be a clinic offering reduced rates for neutering pets or part of a campaign by a humane organization or a local shelter.
2. Identify a specific event the partner is hosting that all the children can attend.
3. Before the event, talk about reasons to spay/neuter pets and reasons why adopting pets from shelter is a good practice. Include an explanation of what spay and neuter mean.
4. Design and create posters and/or flyers to share at the public witness event that illustrate the problem and possible solutions.
5. Help children write and practice short statements in defense of spaying/neutering pets. Also, write and practice two or three short chants, such as "Spay, neuter, pet adoption/ help prevent overpopulation."
6. If the group will be on land not owned by your congregation or the partner organization, make sure it is legal for you to congregate and witness on the space.
7. If the event may be covered by news media, find out your congregation's policy around children and the media. Talk to your religious educator and the children's parents/caregivers about whether they are comfortable with their children being filmed and/or interviewed. Ask parents/caregivers to sign any releases that might be needed.
8. On the day of the event, gather with signs at a highly visible spot. Spend at least 30 minutes at the event, holding up signs, chanting, and delivering sound bites to whoever will listen.
9. Afterward, discuss the event. Would children do anything different next time? What did they like the best? Was the experience what they expected? What effect do they think their witnessing had on bystanders? How can they tell? How did affect them?
LEADER REFLECTION AND PLANNING
What went well in this session? What would you do differently next time? Look over the next session and assign any preparation duties as needed. Note that Session 16 includes a ceremony to celebrate the culmination of the program, to which you are encouraged to invite a few congregational elders and younger children. You might invite the participants' families, the religious educator, and/or your minister.
TAKING IT HOME
Our lives begin to end the day that we become silent about the things that matter. — Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King
IN TODAY'S SESSION... we talked about public witness as a sign of our Unitarian Universalist faith. We said that we should speak up when we witness a wrong and speak out to support those who need help. We viewed posters that witness for justice. We heard about John Cashin, an African American leader in Huntsville, Alabama who was a member of the UU congregation there. Cashin witnessed for the rights of black Americans to participate in the political process. He is one of our UU ancestors.
EXPLORE THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Talk about... public witness events family members have experienced. Where did they go, what did they do, and why? Did they believe their presence made a difference? How?
EXTEND THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Try... witnessing together. Attend a rally, march or public forum to support a cause your family believes in. Ask other families to join you and make a banner that says "UU Families For... " to further your witnessing presence.
Family Adventure. Explore the world of public witness art, online. If you use Pinterest (at www.pinterest.com), create a board devoted to your favorite social justice and public witness graphics. Start by pinning images from these sources:
Family Discovery. The University of Wisconsin's School of Education produced a list of 50 books for children on peace and social justice (at www.education.wisc.edu/ccbc/books/detailListBooks.asp?idBookLists=77). How many have you read? See how many more you can read together.
Family Ritual. Do you know about Standing on the Side of Love (at www.standingonthesideoflove.org/), the Unitarian Universalist Association's campaign for justice? Research a variety of justice causes, learn how to support them with your family or congregation, and purchase tee-shirts from the campaign. When you attend social justice events, wear your shirts as a sign that you are a UU family working for justice.
Leadership Suggestion. Public witness can be about all kinds of issues and topics. Children may be inspired to think of their own witnessing ideas by watching Clara Huff's series of Kids Witness News (at www.youtube.com/watch?v=fZ8gDAnB1Lw) videos on YouTube. She witnesses about many different topics, from favorite books (at www.youtube.com/watch?v=fZ8gDAnB1Lw) to turning twelve.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 1: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION: GUEST AT YOUR TABLE
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children lead the congregation in participation in Guest at Your Table.
Invite the group to lead the congregation in participation of Guest at Your Table, an annual program of the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee. Explain what the UUSC does and why the congregation participates in Guest at Your Table (GAYT). Share only as much of the GAYT information as needed to help the children understand how it works, why it is important, and how it is a form of public witness.
Present your plan for how the children will work with the congregation. For example, they could introduce the program during a worship service, then distribute GAYT boxes. They can collect the boxes, count the donations, and send thank you cards to contributors.
To ensure a public witness component, you might plan a presentation to the congregation that incorporates a GAYT "story of hope" from the UUSC. You might have the children build a display for the narthex. Do not be afraid to do something different from usual. Follow the interests and ideas of participants and solicit additional help, if needed.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 2: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION: JUSTICE SUNDAY
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children assume leadership for Justice Sunday.
If the congregation participates in Justice Sunday, have a coordinator explain to the children what it is, why it is important, and how the events your congregation has planned are examples of public witness. Work with coordinators and children to gather ideas on ways the children can help lead Justice Sunday activities. For example, children can tell a Story for Ages in worship or help host a lunch for a guest speaker. Do not be afraid to plan a contribution by the children that will be different, joyful, or fun.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 3: MEETING THE JUSTICE COMMITTEE
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants meet with congregants involved in justice work.
Spend a few minutes brainstorming questions to ask the guests. Introduce the guests and ask them to give their short (ten minutes or less) presentations. Leave a few minutes for questions.
Afterwards, ask what commonalities exist in the issues of the Justice Committee. Where did they hear public witness as one of the ways the committee works for justice?
Alternately, if your congregation holds a social justice or community service fair, attend as a group. Gather information. Sit together and review the information, asking the same processing questions.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 4: PUBLIC WITNESS ONLINE (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Use the No Kid Hungry (at www.nokidhungry.org/) website, or another cause-oriented, age-appropriate website, to help you explain different modes of public witness to the group.
Tell the children:
Public witness is a way of working for a better world. For example, many people are working on the problem that many children do not have enough to eat. Some people donate food to food pantries. Others serve food at shelters to families who need a healthy meal. Still other people work to pass laws to make sure families have enough money for food.
And some people do public witness about hunger. They write books and articles. They create plays, TV shows, music, and art to tell everyone about the problem of child hunger and suggest ways to solve it. They speak to Congress and hold public meetings to talk about solutions.
Show the group the No Kid Hungry (at nokidhungry.org/) website. Play the video (:49). Under "Ways to Get Involved," point out the link to Spread the Word and the ways it invites us to witness for ending childhood hunger in the United States by sharing information online. Watch actor Jeff Bridges' public service announcement. Ask:
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 15:
STORY: JOHN L. CASHIN, WITNESS FOR JUSTICE
One day in Alabama, in 1968, as farmers worked in their fields, a small airplane swooped into view. The farmers looked up wonderingly as papers fluttered out of the plane, into the sky and came swirling down to earth all around them. The papers were flyers about the upcoming elections—flyers with a picture of an eagle and the names of the candidates the pilot of the airplane liked the best.
That pilot was John L. Cashin. He hoped those farmers would vote for the candidates of the National Democratic Party, a political party he founded to help African Americans run in Alabama's elections. He wanted the farmers, and everyone else, to know that these candidates, if elected, would use their positions in government to make life better and more fair for the farmers, their families, and all their neighbors.
John Cashin was not only a pilot, he was a dentist, too, and a husband, and a father of three children. He himself had run for mayor in his town, Hunstville, Alabama. He did not win. Later in his life, he would run for governor of the state of Alabama. He didn't win that election, either, but then again, he had not expected to win.
In those days in Alabama, African Americans had little chance of winning public office. Even though about one third of Alabama's people were Black, the Alabama state government had no elected officials who were African American. Very few Blacks ran for election. Very few Blacks could even vote in elections. They were kept away by unfair laws—sometimes called "Jim Crow" laws—and by threats of violence by white people who did not want their black neighbors to vote.
So, with so little chance to win, why did John L. Cashin run for mayor, and then for governor? Well, John was an activist who understood the power of public witness. And he had made a promise when he was 11 years old, to do whatever he could to get Blacks involved in the political process and to speak out against the injustices that kept them away. Every time John Cashin put his name on a ballot and his picture on election posters and flyers, he caught the dreams of other African Americans in Alabama. Campaign speeches gave him a chance to make some noise for justice, and speak out against laws that were not fair to African Americans.
When John Cashin formed the National Democratic Party, he chose as its symbol, an eagle—the well-known symbol of American freedom. With eagles printed all over their flyers and signs and posters, the National Democratic Party made sure even blacks who could not read could vote for justice-loving candidates, the ones with the eagles by their names. Soon, African Americans in Alabama were running for sheriff, city councils, and judgeships—and the National Democratic Party helped get many get elected.
Cashin did not have to witness alone. His family, his Unitarian Universalist congregation in Huntsville, Alabama, and many other UUs and friends joined him. They came to his rallies, made their own speeches to support him, and helped him raise money to run for elections. Like John, they believed that to witness against the wrongs committed against African Americans was an important way to show their faith.
Over time in Alabama, more African Americans voted. More African Americans ran for public office, and won. As more African Americans became part of the Democratic and Republican parties, John Cashin's National Democratic Party was less important for public witness, and it was dissolved.
John Cashin died in 2011. We can be a new generation witnessing for justice. Every time we speak up against a wrong or support people to speak up for themselves, we are part of John Cashin's legacy. He witnessed for the justice he wanted to see in his community and in our nation—an America where everyone's vote is counted.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 15:
HANDOUT 1: UU PRINCIPLES, CHILDREN'S VERSION
We believe each and every person is important.
We believe all people should be treated fairly.
In our congregations, all people are accepted and we learn together.
We believe each person is free to search for what is true and right in life.
Everyone deserves a vote about the things that concern them.
We believe in working for a peaceful, fair, and free world.
We believe in caring for our planet Earth and every living thing that shares it with us.
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 15:
LEADER RESOURCE 1: JOHN L. CASHIN PHOTO
Photo taken by Wesley Swift; used with permission.
Download a high-resolution PDF (at www.uua.org/documents/tapestry/signs/john_cashin.pdf) for printing.
FIND OUT MORE
Aisha's Moonlit Walk by Anika Stafford (Skinner House Books, 2005) has a story about a young girl who moves past her shyness to stand up and speak at a public gathering.
Read The Agitator's Daughter by Sheryll Cashin, or watch a CNN cablecast (at www.sheryllcashin.com/videos) of a her 2008 talk at the Politics & Prose Bookstore in Washington, DC. John Cashin, her father, is present in the audience.
Reach & Teach (at www.reachandteach.com/content/index.php) carries many products useful in teaching children about justice.
Parents as Social Justice Educators, by Roberta and Christopher Nelson, is a useful curriculum for parent groups. It can be purchased as part of The Parent Trilogy (at www.uuabookstore.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=747) from the UUA Bookstore.
SESSION 16: SIGNS OF FAITHFUL LEADERSHIP
SESSION OVERVIEW
INTRODUCTION
Humankind has not woven the web of life.
We are but one thread within it.
Whatever we do to the web, we do to ourselves.
All things are bound together.
All things connect. — Chief Seattle, 19th-century Native American leader
This session concludes the program by affirming children's connection to our Unitarian Universalist history and future. They are invited to see themselves as carriers of a UU legacy: of faith in the power of humans to make the world a better place, of hope, and of support for one another on our faith journeys. The story of Antoinette Brown and Olympia Brown reinforces a sense of UU history and encourages children to help one another find the courage to follow one's calling.
Activity 5, Closing Celebration provides an opportunity to involve families of participants. Decide if you will invite parents/caregivers to attend the entire session or only from the closing ceremony through the end. If they will only attend the Closing, you might invite participants' entire families and/or schedule the Closing celebration so it will not conflict with worship or other congregational activities.
GOALS
This session will:
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Participants will:
SESSION-AT-A-GLANCE
Activity | Minutes |
Opening | 2 |
Activity 1: Six Degrees of Connection Game | 15 |
Activity 2: Story — Antoinette Brown and Olympia Brown | 10 |
Activity 3: Fourth Emblem | 15 |
Activity 4: Closing Celebration | 15 |
Faith in Action: Stoles for the Future | |
Closing | 3 |
Alternate Activity 1: Leadership in Action — Sustenance for the Journey | |
SPIRITUAL PREPARATION
Has someone supported you on your faith journey, even when it was difficult? Who encouraged you to accept a role of leadership in Unitarian Universalism? If you have not shown these people your gratitude, now might be a good time to do so.
Your leadership of this program contributes to the future of Unitarian Universalism. Thank you! Remember that your support of these children's leadership does not need to stop with this program. How will you continue to support these children on their faith journey?
SESSION PLAN
OPENING (2 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Perform the Opening ritual designed by the group.
If a new Opening ritual was not designed, gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table, ask a volunteer to light the chalice, and recite together:
We gather together as Unitarian Universalists and members of the Signs of Our Faith community.
Together, we acknowledge our role as keepers of a UU legacy. We will continue to support each other in our faith journeys. As faithful leaders, we have the courage to live our faith every day.
ACTIVITY 1: SIX DEGREES OF CONNECTIONS GAME (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Description of Activity
Children play a game that demonstrates how much we have in common. The game is adapted with permission from a game copyrighted by Business Trainings Work, Inc (at www.businesstrainingworks.com/Train-the-Trainer/Icebreakers-Free.html).
Tell the group you want to play a game about the connections we share. Form pairs, or ask the children to find a partner.
Give each pair a sheet of writing paper and a pencil or pen.
Ask each pair to write a list of six things they have in common—for example, the school they go to, the year they were born, pets, favorite books, food likes, sports likes. One word for each thing is enough.
Ask the children to tell you when they have listed six things. As pairs finish, bring them a new sheet of writing paper and invite them to find someone else in the room who has one of their six things in common with them, too. Tell them that when they find that person, they can use the new sheet of paper to make a new list. The new list should have also have six things, but they must be things all three people have in common, without repeating any of the things on the first list.
Depending on the size of the group and the time you have allotted, you might challenge the children to continue until everyone is included in six different lists, or call "time."
Talk about the process. Was it easy or hard? Did participants discover similarities they did not know existed? Point out that they found connections with others in the group. Do they think they could find some connection to everyone in the room? Do they think they could find some connection to everyone on the planet? What does it mean to you to realize that we are all connected?
Including All Participants
Set up the room and plan the activity so all participants will be able to become part of new groups. If any participants have mobility limitations, you can adapt the game so one partner brings their first list to a new partner and adds six different commonalities with the new partner to the list, then moves to a third partner, and so on.
ACTIVITY 2: STORY — ANTOINETTE BROWN AND OLYMPIA BROWN (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Say that to recognize our deep connections to and dependence on one another is a sign of our UU faith. Remind the group that our seventh Principle says we respect the interdependent web of life to which we each belong—all life, which means all people. Say in these words, or your own:
As UUs, we believe we must support each other in our faithful journeys through life. We are going to hear a story about two UUs doing just that.
Read or tell the story. Process the story with these questions:
Ask participants to name some signs of one's UU faith you have discussed in previous sessions [being a leader, supporting one another on our faith journeys, seeking answers to big questions, cherishing life, honoring our lives at death, sharing, caring, supporting community, being welcoming, worshipping together, taking care of our faith home, embracing uniqueness, making decisions as a group, doing public witness].
Ask them which signs of faith take courage. Prompt with examples: It can take courage...
Invite participants to share a time when they ran into an obstacle—when it was hard to live out a sign of their faith.
Say:
It takes courage to live your faith every day. When you have that kind of courage, that is a sign that you are a faithful leader. We honor Olympia Brown and Antoinette Brown as our UU ancestors because their courage to live their faith helped to make the world better. Today, our religion has more women ministers than men ministers. With most religions in the United States, it is the opposite.
Including All Participants
You may wish to make fidget objects available to children who find it difficult to sit still while listening or can focus better with sensory stimulation. For a full description and guidance, see Session 1, Leader Resource 2.
Consider using rug squares in the storytelling area. Place them in a semi-circle with the rule "One person per square." This can be very helpful for controlling active bodies.
ACTIVITY 3: FOURTH EMBLEM (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants receive an iron-on chalice patch, the last of four emblems for their stole.
Tell children that this is the last session of the program. As a sign of their faith and to show their dedication to being faithful leaders, every child will receive an iron-on patch for their stole.
Invite children, one at a time, to come have a patch pinned or ironed onto their stole. Place each patch at the center of a stole, at the neck.
Check stoles for missing emblems from previous sessions and help children attach these to their stoles. If they did not get a chance to finish making an emblem, help them do so.
While one or two adults attach the patches, have a co-leader lead a discussion with the other children, using these questions:
Collect the stoles to distribute to children in Activity 5, Closing Celebration.
ACTIVITY 4: CLOSING CELEBRATION (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Participants and guests celebrate the end of the program. Participants are recognized as UU leaders.
Gather the group.
Welcome everyone. Thank visitors for joining in a closing ceremony that celebrates the participants' work in the Signs of Our Faith program.
Conduct the ceremony:
LEADER 1:
We have shared many stories together—stories about different Unitarian Universalists and the signs of their faith. Our participants discovered there are many ways to show our UU faith—as many ways as there are UUs.
LEADER 2:
Today's story was about Antoinette Brown, one of our first Unitarian women ministers, and Olympia Brown, the first Universalist woman minister. They are part of our UU legacy, They are our two of our UU ancestors. But we have many more: people of all genders, all ethnicities and races, all cultures, all affectional orientations, and all economic classes. Because our UU ancestors kept the faith alive, we have inherited it to keep alive, too. The children have learned to recognize the signs that we are living our faith, and keeping it alive. Signs like the activities we do and the ways we act in our congregation, the ways we relate to one another and the world as we live our daily lives, and how we treat ourselves.
LEADER 1:
The children wear stoles in our group as a sign that they are UU worship leaders. The stoles show our dedication to being faithful leaders not just in our UU faith community, but at home, at school, with friends, with newcomers we must welcome, and in the world community.
LEADER 2:
Signs group, do you remember the story about the birds that were looking for a leader, the Simorgh? At the end, the birds discovered that they were the leaders. [Session 9 story, "The Journey of the Birds"] It's possible something like that has happened in our very group.
[LEADER 2 uncovers the mirror.]
LEADER 1:
As we call your name, please come forward, accept your stole, and look into the mirror. Envision yourself as part of a long line of UUs: a line that extends into the past and into the future. It is the signs of our faith that hold us together.
As each child looks into the mirror, I will lead us all to say together: "Thank you for being a faithful UU leader."
[LEADER 1: Call each child by name, place their stole around their neck, and turn the child to face the mirror. As each child faces the mirror, lead the group to say "Thank you for being a faithful UU leader." LEADER 2 may assist by handing stoles to LEADER 1 and, as the last child receives a stole, distributing Handout 1, A Faithful Leader Is... ]
LEADER 1:
Please join in reading together from the handout: A Faithful UU Leader Is...
[Alternately, direct volunteers to each read a line from the handout.]
LEADER 2:
We have one last item to add to everyone's stoles. White ribbons. In the story today, we heard how Antoinette Brown wore a white ribbon to remind her to be strong and courageous in her faith journey. May the white ribbons we give you today remind you to be strong, courageous faithful leaders in Unitarian Universalism.
[Play the recording of Sweet Honey in the Rock's "We Are the Ones We've Been Waiting For." Invite the gathering to sing along. You might invite or lead participants to dance once they have received their white ribbon. Pin a white ribbon on the stole of each participant.]
CLOSING (3 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Distribute stoles and invite participants to put them on.
Distribute Taking It Home. Tell participants that at the end of every session, they will receive this guide to fun activities they can do with family or friends. Read it aloud to give participants an idea of activities suggested.
Gather everyone in a circle around the chalice table. Lead the group to say:
We end as we began: together.
May we remember to be UU not just when we are together here, but every day and in every way.
Ask all participants to blow out the chalice together.
Have them store their stoles in a place you have designated, or invite them to take home their stoles.
FAITH IN ACTION: STOLES FOR THE FUTURE
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children help prepare stoles for future RE participants and process their experiences in the Signs of Our Faith program.
Tell the group that one way they can connect to future generations of UU leaders is to help make stoles for the children who will be in the next Signs of Our Faith group.
Indicate materials and explain/demonstrate the tasks you wish the children to do. While children work, lead a conversation with questions like these:
Take notes to document participant feedback. You might share feedback with co-leaders and your religious educator. Also, the Unitarian Universalist Association welcomes feedback. Please contact religiouseducation@uua.org (at mailto:religiouseducation@uua.org) to share feedback, or submit using the form(s) in this program's Introduction.
Thank participants for their support of future UU leaders.
LEADER REFLECTION AND PLANNING
What went well in this session? Did you plan and lead a successful celebration activity? Do the program participants feel like young leaders? How can you tell?
Consider publicizing the leadership work of participants, perhaps by acknowledging their accomplishments in a worship service, a newsletter article, or a display at the congregation. What plans are in place for these children to continue to grow as faithful leaders? How has leading this program changed you as a faithful leader? How has it affected your relationship with the congregation and the faith?
TAKING IT HOME
Humankind has not woven the web of life.
We are but one thread within it.
Whatever we do to the web, we do to ourselves.
All things are bound together.
All things connect. — Chief Seattle, 19th-century Native American leader
IN TODAY'S SESSION... we acknowledged our deep connections to each other, to all other people, and to our Unitarian Universalist faith. We discussed ways our connections call us as faithful leaders to honor the UUs who came before us and to support those who will join and follow us. We concluded the Signs of Our Faith program by celebrating the UU legacy we carry.
EXPLORE THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Talk about... your stole. What does the stole symbolize to you? On a more practical note: Where will you keep your stole? When will you use it as a sign of faithful leadership, after this program ends? Talk to the religious educator at the congregation about upcoming leadership opportunities—times when the children in the Signs of Our Faith group might wear a stole.
EXTEND THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Find out about leaders who came before you in other groups or communities to which you belong. If you are part of a dance troupe, who started the troupe? Why was it important to them? Is your school named after someone? Who was this person? What did they do that deserved the honor of having a school named after them?
Family Discovery. Talk to the elders in your family. What dreams did they have when they were your age? Ask adults for stories about how they made one of their dreams come true. Who supported them? Who told them "I believe in you" and encouraged them not to give up?
Family Ritual. We can use a mirror to look at ourselves honestly. We can also use a mirror to help us dream of how we would like to be seen. For example, look in the mirror and see yourself as a brave person. You might make a morning glance into the mirror your new ritual. You will see that you that you look fine and are ready to start the day, and that you are a good person and ready to live and show your faith today.
Family Game. Once a month, hold a UU history moment before dinner. Take turns giving a short presentation on one of our UU ancestors, whom you can learn about from sources such as the Dictionary of Unitarian and Universalist Biography (at www25.uua.org/uuhs/duub/), Tapestry of Faith stories (search the Tapestry of Faith curriculum database (at www.uua.org/re/tapestry/index.shtml) on the UUA website), and books from the UUA Bookstore, like Black Pioneers in a White Denomination (at www.uuabookstore.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=553) or This Day in Unitarian Universalist History (at www.uuabookstore.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=644).
Leadership Suggestion. What can someone your age do in your congregation to show you are a faithful young leader? Does the congregation need greeters, ushers, or people to shelve and straighten items in a library or supply room? Invite friends from the Signs of Our Faith group to join you. Find ways to welcome new young leaders into your circle, too.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 1: LEADERSHIP IN ACTION — SUSTENANCE FOR THE JOURNEY
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Children stuff snack-size bags with snack mix and words of inspiration.
Gather children at work tables. Ask them what they would take with them to sustain themselves on a long journey. Affirm their answers. Then, ask what they think people could use to sustain themselves on a spiritual journey. What sorts of things might be like food or water for their spirits? Remind them about the story of Antoinette Brown and Olympia Brown. What did each of them give the other to sustain them on the long road toward living out their faith? Affirm answers such as "support," "encouragement," "being an example/role model," "showing it is possible to succeed at a hard goal."
Invite children to help sustain congregants on their faith journey. Say, in these words or your own:
All of us are on a faith journey. We will all find our own ways to live our faith. It is a long journey. What can we do to sustain the people in our congregation on each of their long faith journeys? Let's mix a snack mix to sustain the body, and we'll add some words of inspiration to sustain the spirit.
Ask the children to help you think of some words they could write on ribbon (or paper) to tie around (or put inside) a packet of snack mix. You might prompt with single words, such as "love," or short phrases, such as "Your spirit is beautiful;" "You are a faith leader." Write the words on newsprint.
Have children write words or phrases on ribbon to tie around bags or on paper to insert into bags.
Set out bowls of snack mix ingredients. Make sure you have enough for everyone.
If each child is making more than one or two snack mix bags, collect all the finished bags in baskets.
Lead the children to put on their stoles and walk together to the location where you will distribute bags.
Afterward, talk as a group about the experience. How did people react to being offered a bag of snacks? Was any child asked to explain the gift? How did it feel to give them out?
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 16:
STORY: ANTOINETTE BROWN AND OLYMPIA BROWN
Today we will hear about two girls from long ago, who both had the last name of Brown. As you hear the story, see if you can notice other things they had in common, besides a name.
Let's go back in time together, about 200 years, to meet Antoinette Brown. When Antoinette was a young girl, her faith was important to her. The way she wanted to show her faith was to share it with other people and encourage them to live their faith, in their own way. She decided to become a minister. But she was told, "No, that is impossible." Because in those days in this country, there were no women ministers.
People laughed at Antoinette. They discouraged her. They told her she was being foolish and should give up this idea. But her mother supported her. Antoinette's mother pinned a white ribbon on her dress and said, "You can do it. I believe in you." When Antoinette Brown felt discouraged, she would touch the ribbon and remember that she had support.
There were many obstacles. Antoinette's family could not afford to send her to college. Antoinette touched the white ribbon. She found a job, and worked for three years until she could pay for college herself. She attended Oberlin College, the first U.S. college to admit women and blacks. Oberlin was proud to support people who others thought not worthy of college. But when Antoinette asked to enter a program to become a minister, Oberlin College said, "No. That's impossible." I bet Antoinette Brown touched her white ribbon then. She did not back down. Eventually, she entered the program, but once her studies were done, Oberlin College refused to grant her a degree. Do you think she touched her ribbon?
Antoinette found other people who supported her. Friends invited her to speak in public and in churches. She gave speeches for women's rights and other social justice causes and she inspired and supported many people even without being in a church. Seventeen years after her mother had pinned the white ribbon on her, in 1853, Antoinette was ordained. It is believed that she was the first woman ordained as a minister in our nation. She was a minister of a Congregationalist church, but she left it and became a Unitarian minister. She is one of our faith ancestors.
Reverend Antoinette Brown liked to give speeches to women in college. She remembered the obstacles she had faced to become a minister. She wanted to support young women with their goals, even when others might have said to them, "No. That's impossible." Becoming a minister had been one sign of Antoinette Brown's faith. Now, encouraging other young women who came after her was another.
One time, a young student invited Reverend Antoinette Brown to speak at Antioch College. The student's name was Olympia Brown. They shared the same last name, but they were not related to each other. Olympia Brown had never heard a woman minister before. Olympia told Antoinette that she wanted to be a minister, too. Like Antoinette, she wanted to live her faith by working to make the world a better place for all people. But, Olympia Brown had not been sure a woman could become a minister. People had said to her, "No. That's impossible."
Antoinette Brown gave Olympia Brown a white ribbon. Maybe she told her, "You can do it. I believe in you."
Olympia was ordained as a Universalist minister in 1863.
These two women were some of the first women ministers in our country. They are our faith ancestors. Like us, they had great hopes for the future. Like us, they accepted the mantle of faithful leadership. When we show these and other signs of our faith, we honor their memory and strengthen our connection to our UU legacy.
It takes courage to live your faith, day in and day out. It takes extra courage when people keep telling you the way you want to live your faith is wrong or impossible. How much courage did Antoinette Brown and Olympia Brown have?
SIGNS OF OUR FAITH: SESSION 16:
HANDOUT 1: A FAITHFUL UU LEADER IS...
Someone who...
... cares for others.
... understands the importance of being in beloved community.
... tries to make fair group decisions.
... recognizes the value of each person's uniqueness.
... is not afraid to ask questions.
... realizes they are on a faith journey and supports others on their faith journey.
... reveres life.
... shares willingly with others.
... tries to live a good life, where their good deeds will outlive them.
... welcomes new members to the community.
... is a good steward of their congregation or UU community.
... witnesses for justice.
... treasures their connections to our UU past and UU future.
... accepts the mantle of leadership when their faith community needs them.
FIND OUT MORE
Science is interested in the theory of six degrees of separation. Cnet.com's article, Proof of Six Degrees of Separation (at news.cnet.com/8301-13953_3-9894881-80.html), analyzes data from Microsoft Messenger to look at connections in the virtual world. A BBC documentary, Six Degrees of Separation (at www.documentary-log.com/six-degrees-of-separation/), is about Network Theory, a new branch of science that stemmed from research on six degrees.
UU camps and conference centers offer programs for young people that strengthen their connections to one another and to Unitarian Universalism while building leadership skills. Find programs by age group and location by visiting The Council of Unitarian Universalist Camps and Conferences (at www.cu2c2.org/).
Read online about many Unitarians, Universalists, and Unitarian Universalists who demonstrated faithful leadership, in the Dictionary of Unitarian and Universalist Biography (at www25.uua.org/uuhs/duub/) or the Harvard Square Library (at www.harvardsquarelibrary.org). The Harvard Square Library has posted an article on Antoinette Brown Blackwell (at www.harvardsquarelibrary.org/UIA%20Online/95blackwellab.html) and an illustrated autobiography of Olympia Brown (at www.harvardsquarelibrary.org/olympiabrown/home.html).