Day 2: Prince of Peace

Today’s Christmas passage was Isaiah 9:2-7. Mara understood more than Micah, but even for her (and me!) this passage was a little complicated.

We focused on the names of Christ and talked through the meanings of each and why He is called that:

  • Wonderful
  • Counselor
  • The Mighty God
  • The Everlasting Father
  • The Prince of Peace

When we got to the “Prince of Peace,” Mara gushed, “Oooooo, maybe I could be his princess?!?!” And. . .in a sense. . . if Christ is King. . . and we are His children . . . in a sense, she can be a princess! (Just probably not exactly in the way that she’s thinking right now.)

Our ornament craft today was a crown–relating to him being the “Prince of Peace.” A simple 2-inch section cut from a paper towel roll, painted and lovingly adorned with jewels.

This craft I did with Mara first, and then with Micah. Poor Carissa, never got a crown . . . oh, well–when she is older!!!! [After Carissa tasted the glue while making the “Light” ornament on Day 1, and Micah squirted glue on his pants and the floor while I was with somebody else, I do not feel so compelled to do the craft with all of them at once. I think a one-on-one setup will be preferable going forward, whenever circumstances allow. Even having the materials prepared for all of them ahead of time, it is still challenging to help all three at the same time within their varied and limited levels of capability.]

I’m never happy with indoor pictures–these more so, because they fail to capture the enthusiasm of Mara and Micah in this painting project. They were SOOO excited!! (I’ve never painted with them other than watercolor, so this really IS a whole new experience for all of us. When the paints came in the mail, and Mara and Micah were thrilled beyond words to pick out their brushes and begin!)

As small as the crowns are, it took longer to get ready than to paint them, and being the self-proclaimed “princess” that she is, Mara insisted on wearing the crown–which in reality all of us do at one time or another, don’t we?

After painting those teeny-tiny crowns, Mara and Micah both wanted to paint pictures. I didn’t have heavy-weight paper, so they just painted on a side of a cardboard box.

Micah was so cute. He leaned his cardboard on a paper towel roll as if he were painting on an easel! Unfortunately, it didn’t work so well, but I’m guessing he must have seen people painting on an easel before.  And Mara loved mixing colors. It was cute to see her face light up when she figured it out: “[GASP!] Re-ed! and Blue! Make–Purple!!!!!”

Micah explained his painting to Daniel–something about “here is where we live. . .” but beyond that, I think he was mostly mixing colors.

Mara told me she painted a picture of giving her purple crown to Jesus. And I was touched.

I thought of the passages in Scripture that indicate that we will receive “crowns”/”rewards” in heaven not for our righteousness (because we have only Christ’s) but for our faithfulness and endurance. And Scripture indicates that we will take those crowns and give them back to Jesus someday in eternity.

That’s what I thought of when I saw this picture.

Then I thought of how she is giving Jesus a paper-towel roll crown.

And it hit me that a paper-towel-roll crown is really about the best any of us has to offer Christ. Our crowns are “earned” as we yield to Him and He works in and through us. . . and it made perfect sense why we would give them back–because they were all His to begin with.

When we give to Him–ourselves, our plans, our possessions, our dreams, even our family; when we yield to His plans for us, to His will and His way, then we find the peace that He came to bring.

 

Truth in the Tinsel – Day 1: Light

My friend Donna (a.k.a. “Beaux’s mom”) introduced me to a little book for young children called Truth in the Tinsel. It’s 24 days of Scripture passages and crafts relating to the biblical account of the Christmas story.

My kids love doing crafts so much that my own time constraints (and serving the needs of the rest of the family) will really be the only thing keeping us from doing all of them.

Day 1 discusses the world’s complete “inside-your-heart darkness”–the darkness of sin–apart from Christ.  We read Isaiah 9:2, “The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light; those who dwelt in a land of deep darkness, on them has light shined. . . ”

I asked if any of the kids knew who “the great light” was, and Mara piped up and said, “Jesus!”

“Yes! It was a land of deep darkness,” I repeated. “But Jesus came–he was the great light that shined on them.”

Then Micah held out his hand in his Star Wars stance and asked, “Did he force them?!”

“What?”

“Did he force them?–with the light?” In his mind, the Star Wars “force” is something like shooting lightning, so I suppose there is a logical connection there somehow between the force and “the great light” here.

Not sure he’s really getting this, but that’s okay! One of these days, things will start coming together for him!

We made a “Candle” (light) ornament with the template provided and glued shreds of brightly-colored tissue paper between the candles. Of course, the craft is the kids’ favorite part.

See if you can guess which child is tasting the glue. . .

Micah hasn’t really used the scissors much and this definitely gives him a chance to develop his fine-motor skills.

Often when I download pictures, I find snapshots the kids have taken randomly. Like this paper towel that Carissa photographed (an integral part of this craft, you know!).

I told the kids that the cool thing about this craft is that the light shines through the tissue paper, and we will see that more once we hang it by the lights on the tree. Of course, my goofy Mara and Micah had to hold their ornaments up next to their faces to “see the light coming through” for themselves.

And as soon as they finished making their ornaments, they wanted to set up the Christmas tree so they could hang their ornaments. . . but Mommy has to do laundry, wash dishes, make dinner this afternoon so . . . not quite sure when that tree is going up. But I think they’re going to enjoy 24 days of Christmas crafts! (Thank you, Donna!)

Just a Dash. . .

Thanksgiving preparations are well underway here. . .

This week I have made 10 lbs of Freezer Mashed Potatoes, 7.5 lbs of sweet potato fluff, pretzel salad (jello w strawberries, cream cheese/cool whip, and candied pretzels), pecan pie, and pumpkin cheesecake. . .

As you might imagine, with four kids four and under, the added challenge is monitoring the “helpers” while I cook!

“Just a dash of cinnamon,” I told him as we combined the ingredients for the sweet potato fluff.

And I suppose when you let your 3-year-old son put in a dash of cinnamon, you really should expect this is how it will turn out. . . yep, see all that brown stuff–it’s cinnamon!

Update: Grandmom said they tasted wonderful!