Sermon on the Mount Children's Sunday School Lesson -
Do Not Murder – Loving Other People
Use this
children’s Sunday School lesson on Jesus’ command to teach children how to
speak well to others.
Needed: Bibles, various
objects, “Joe” paper doll, tape, writing and drawing paper, crayons or colored
pencils
Intro Game 1: Don’t Say It!
Have the students pair up. They take turns asking each other questions. The person answering, however, can’t use certain letters. For the first round, they might not be able to use words with the letter “s.” If they do, their partner gets a point. Continue for a couple of minutes and then, change the letter they’re not supposed to use. The student with the most points (caught their partner using disallowed letters the most times) wins.
Explain that in the game, students weren’t allowed to say certain
letters but that in life, we shouldn’t say certain things to people.
Intro Game 2: Wrong Purpose
Divide students into groups of three. Hand each group a common object and tell them that they have to come up with a skit that shows them using that object in a different way than it was made for.
Give the groups a
few minutes to think of something and then let each group perform their skit.
As each group finishes, ask them why their object wouldn’t work very well for
the purpose they showed?
Explain that God made our tongues and mouths for a certain purpose. He
made them so that we could use them to say nice things to each other, but we
sometimes use them for the wrong purpose and say mean things to each other.
Lesson
Make and color a paper doll ahead of time. When it’s time for the lesson to start, have students sit in a circle and then, bring out the paper doll and introduce the students to the doll as if the doll were a real person. You can name the doll anything you like, and make it either sex you want, but I usually call him Joe.
Tell students to pass Joe around. When it is their turn to hold Joe,
instruct them to call him a name or say something mean to him. They should then rip a piece off of Joe (such as an
arm or a leg, or if you have a large group, a part of an arm or a leg) and keep
it before passing the rest on.
When Joe has gone around the circle, ask students, How do you think Joe
felt when we were calling him names and being mean to him?
Has anyone ever called you a name or been mean to you?
How did that make you feel?
(Read Matthew 5:21-26.)
Jesus says that people will be punished for murdering people. What else
does Jesus say people will be punished for? (Being angry with other people and
calling them names.)
Jesus even says that calling a person a bad name could get you sent to
Hell.
Why do you think Jesus doesn’t want us to call each other names or
insult each other?
God loves every person, and He doesn’t want us to hurt someone else’s
feelings by calling them a bad name. He wants us to love other people and be
nice to them just as God loves them and is nice to them.
Jesus says that if we are worshiping God and remember that we’ve done
something wrong to someone, we should stop worshiping God and go apologize to the person that we did something
wrong to. Why do you think Jesus says
that apologizing to people is so important that you can interrupt worshiping
God to do it?
God doesn’t want us simply to come to
church and worship Him. He wants us to be nice to other people, and if
we do something wrong, He wants us to apologize for it. God will know that we’re not really being one of His followers if
we’re always mean to other people.
(Pass Joe around the circle again. This time, tell students to say
something nice to Joe or to apologize for what they said before and then, tape
the part that they ripped off back on.)
Remember, being nice to people and not hurting people is part of what
it means to be a real follower of Jesus.
Craft: Lifting Letters
Give students writing and drawing supplies and ask them to write a letter to one or more people saying something nice to them. If they can’t write, they can draw that person a picture.
Remind students that God wants us to say nice things to other people.
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