Elijah Unit Study

March 27th, 2014

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Elijah Unit Study Overview

In our Elijah Unit Study, we perform skits, do crafts, and create hands-on activities to understand the life of Elijah, the greatest prophet who ever lived. You can do these activities with your own children, or teach a Sunday School lesson to a group of kids at church. They will never forget the life of Elijah!

Elijah is wearing a simple cloak with a hood, but you can easily just wrap a white sheet around yourself. A stick from outside is your staff. If you have a wig, wear it. If you have another wig, tie a string around it so that it can become a beard. Or just buy a beard at a costume shop.

ElijahNo Rain: Ravens Feed Elijah

We first see Elijah in I Kings 17, where he said that there would be no rain, and God answered his prayer by sending no rain on the land for three years. He ran to a blue blanket brook, where God fed him with ravens. If you have a small stuffed animal that is a bird, you can break off a piece of bread and hold it in the stuffed bird’s beak as it flies to Elijah. Elijah should eat the bread. God miraculously fed Elijah in this way until the river dried up. Pull the blue river blanket off the scene.

Miracle: Oil and Flour Not Running Out

Elijah finds a widow preparing her last meal for her son, and she fixes something for Elijah first. As a result, Elijah says that her oil and flour would not run out until after the famine. You can use the hands-on activity of pouring flour into a bowl and pouring oil from an olive oil jar.

Raising Widow’s Son from the Dead

Later the widow’s son dies, and Elijah prays that God would raise him from the dead, and He did! (One child lies down, and Elijah prays. The child sits up.)

Altar Show-Down: Fire from Heaven

Meanwhile Obadiah hid some prophets of the Lord, because wicked Jezebel was killing all the prophets of the Lord. Obadiah found Elijah and told him that King Ahab was looking for him. So Elijah appeared before King Ahab and told him there would be a show-down between the prophets of Baal and the Lord. Whoever had fire come down to consume their sacrifice would be the real God.

Place two chairs on the stage. One had the prophets of Baal going around it. They shouted and cut themselves, and Elijah mocked them and said, “Maybe your god is sleeping. Yell louder to wake him up.”

Then Elijah builds an altar (the second chair), and people pour lots of water on it. Elijah prays, and a cardboard lightning bolt strikes the chair altar. Elijah commands the priests of Baal to be put to death. Then he escapes before Jezebel hears about it.

Here are some activities for Elijah and the altar:

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Your kids can also draw a picture about this powerful event. Here are some examples from my children’s drawings:

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Elijah Encounters God

Elijah sits under a tree and wants to die because he is the only one who loves the Lord. God encourages him that there are thousands who have not bowed down to Baal. An angel prepares a meal for Elijah, and after the meal, he fasts for 40 days and 40 nights on Mount Horeb.

On Mount Horeb, Elijah encounters God. He is not in the fire. He is not in the earthquake. He is not in wind. But He is in a gentle breeze that has a quiet voice. Here is a lift-the-flaps printable that illustrates this event:

where-is-god-elijah

Rebuking King Ahab: Naboth’s Vinyard

Jezebel had Naboth murdered so that her husband Ahab could take possession of the vinyard. Elijah met Ahab in the vinyard and told him that God would punish him. Ahab repented, and God said He wouldn’t punish his family until after his death. (The vinyard can be represented by house plants.)

50 Men Struck with Fire: Elijah’s Prayer

King Ahaziah sent 50 soldiers to capture Elijah, but Elijah called fire down from heaven to consume them.Throw a cardboard lightning bolt onto the soldiers. Do it again for a second group of 50 men. The third group’s commander asked Elijah for mercy, and Elijah went with him to see King Ahaziah. He told the king that he would die of his sickness because he had not consulted God.

Chariot of Fire: Elijah Never Dies

Elijah never had to die. He was taken up into heaven in a chariot of fire. Elisha saw him go, and he was granted a double portion of the Spirit which was on Elijah.

To illustrate the chariot of fire, here is a printable:

chariot-of-fire

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If you enjoyed this Elijah Unit Study, you will love the Unit Study Treasure Vault, which has a huge Bible section full of ways to bring Scripture to life for kids. I’m filming all of these activities and putting them into the Vault!

Atmosphere Unit Study

March 24th, 2014

atmosphere-unit-studyThis post contains affiliate links. I was compensated for my work in writing this post.

This week we are doing a fun Atmosphere Unit Study with four chapters from Earth and Space by Bright Ideas Press. Who knew there were so many fun activities to do with the air that surrounds us all the time? The first fabulous idea from the book was to make a huge mural on the wall. The book recommends putting up construction paper on the wall, in different shades of blue. This is easier than what I did, which was to paint the wall. I’m kidding. I didn’t paint the actual wall. We painted rolled-out butcher paper that we stapled to the wall. You can play music and dance around while you paint the butcher paper with your kids, adding more and more white to your blue paint, the higher up you go.

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Oh, yes, I almost forgot to mention this gorgeous coloring page from the book. It reminds me of the hot air balloon ride I took over England, back when I was a teacher there. Ah, yes… I landed on top of my soon-to-be-husband, and the rest is history. Some day I would love to take my kids up in a hot air balloon, maybe in the autumn when the leaves are changing colors. What an awesome homeschool field trip that would be! The sky is the limit with what you can do in your homeschool! (pun intended)

Let me try to get my head out of the clouds to tell you more about the atmosphere mural. It looked gorgeous, and we labeled the different sections of the atmosphere. Then we glued on a skyline of a city on the bottom, and we added some clouds and airplanes and whatnot throughout the sky. The children wanted to have a meteor coming out of the sky and hitting the city, destroying it to smithereens. They laughed hysterically, and I had to calm them down before the entire city was demolished by their hysteria, since they had made tiny paper airplanes, which they were crashing against the city. Sigh. We don’t have enough fun in our family.

barometer-psychrometerWe made a homemade barometer and psychrometer, using the instructions in the book. You can see us putting those together in the video. We filled out the chart, keeping track of the atmospheric pressure and humidity each day for a week. It was fun to measure the atmosphere in different rooms in the house from day to day.

Finally, we drew a pie chart on a pie plate, I mean a paper plate, to represent the composition of the atmosphere. I’m sure that the writer of the book assumed we would have large paper plates. We had tiny ones, which saved us on marker ink, which is what the kids used to fill in the pie charts. Mmmm… Pie….

composition-of-the-atmosphere

Loss and Grief for MK’s

March 21st, 2014

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The hardest part of being a missionary kid for me was saying good-bye to people that I loved. When my best friend left to the United States after having known her my whole life, I felt disoriented and lost. She knew me. I didn’t have to explain myself. She believed the best in me. I assumed that she would always be there, but her family moved back to the U.S., and I was left in Guatemala without her.

I slumped into a depression that I was unable to recover from for years. I suddenly had no sense of belonging. Of course I never belonged in Guatemala. But I belonged with my best friend.

I made other friends, and I was forced to say good-bye to them and never to see them again. It’s like going to a funeral every few years. Either MK’s learn to harden up and not let people close, or they continue to let people in and feel the stinging pain of loss every time we say good-bye.

Here is a video where many MK’s share a similar story to mine, where their loss is captured in words:

Here are some of their comments:

  • Because I’m an MK, I will always have somewhere or somebody to miss.
  • I think losses have just become something very normal and expected in life.
  • The weird thing about saying good-bye so often is that, at least for me, you don’t actually get used to it. You can either get used to it and become hardened against it and not want to attach to anyone, or you can remain loving just as hard, and it’s still hurting as much every single time.
  • Because I’ve said good-bye so many times, I expect to say good-bye to people when I meet them.
  • Because I’ve said so many good-byes, it’s a little bit harder for me at first to open up.
  • You always have a sense of longing for what could have been, but of course, there is nothing you can do about it, so you just live with the reality that you’ve lost it. It’s gone. It’s never coming back.
  • I used to not want to meet new people because I was going to say good-bye to them.
  • I often distance myself from people because I realize that I might leave them at some point.
  • So I go into a relationship, thinking that I’m going to lose it. But I do get close to them. It’s not that I draw back. It’s just know that I’m going to lose it.
  • Having to say good-bye all the time doesn’t mean it gets easier.
  • Even though I get attached to people, I still feel that I hold them at arm’s length. I don’t expect them to really care enough to stick around.
  • My mind set now is to enjoy every moment of life.

How can missionaries help their children to overcome this loss and grief for Mk’s that is a normal part of their lives? They can help their kids prepare for good-byes and understand the process of grief. They can encourage their kids to continue to value relationships while knowing that some of them will not last. They can encourage their kids to love others regardless of the pain of an eventual separation.

And the truth is that if those relationships are real, they can last a lifetime. My best friend is still my best friend, even though we live thousands of miles away from each other. We call each other once a week and talk for over an hour. We visit each other every few years. And she still knows and loves me more than anyone, except for maybe my husband!

Keep up with missionary kid posts by liking my Missionary Kid Page.

Miniature Cherry Pies

March 19th, 2014

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My children made these miniature cherry pies, and don’t they look just fabulous? They tasted delicious, and they were easy for my children to make. They are perfect for a tea party, a delicious dessert, or a snack for any time of day.

You need a muffin tin, pie crust dough, and a can of cherry pie filling. It’s really that simple. Roll out the pie crust dough on a floured counter with a rolling pin. Then use a circular shape to cut out crusts for each muffin tin.
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Place the pie crusts into each slot in the muffin tin. You can press it in to go up the sides higher, so that the cherry pie filling doesn’t spill over too much.
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Spoon the cherry pie filling into each slot in the muffin tin.
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With the left-over pie crust, cut strips, and place them like a tic-tac-toe on the top of each miniature cherry pie.
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Bake in the oven at 425 degrees for 30 minutes or until golden brown. Serve warm. Enjoy your miniature cherry pies with your children!