A wise person truly said, “It ought to be as
impossible to forget that there is a Christian in the house as it is to forget
that there is a ten-year-old boy in it.”
~ Roger J. Squire
Family
Closeness
Game:
Talkomatic
A family member must talk on a topic for one minute
(20-30 seconds for younger ones) without repeating a word (words like “and”
“the” are okay), going off track or pausing. What they say doesn’t have to be
true but it must stay related to the topic chosen. Try to pick topics that
members will know at least something about, but it could be anything at all
like dogs, balloons, Wednesday, being happy, you name it.
Sharing:
Questions for stimulating discussion in your family.
Opposite Sharing
Brooklyn Lindsey in Opposite Day presents the idea
of talking in opposites as a way of helping young people share. In essence this
means answering a question the opposite of what you really think.
Get your family member to tell you in one or two
sentences what they really think and feel about:
- Tests
- Eating vegetables
- Good friends
Story
With
your family read Mark 9.38-41
(for
a way of explaining/talking about this reading with children look at http://www.sermons4kids.com/against_us_or_for_us.htm
Questions
for Discussion:
- Why did John want to stop the person casting out demons?
- What did Jesus have to say about this?
- What does “Whoever is not against us is for us” mean?
Prayer
and Celebration
Pray a Colour
Giving
thanks to God is one of the most basic and important forms of prayer. It
reminds us that all we have is a gift from God. Choose a colour and invite your
family to give thanks to God for everything they can think of that is that
colour. Take turns around the table until you can think of nothing else.
Family
Time
Photograph
Night
Get
a new roll of film and take your family on an adventure. Make a list of photos
they must take at particular places and go out and get them. Eg. photo with a
policeman, a funny photo, a photo with at least two animals.
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