Friday, August 21, 2015

First Grade Bible Presentation

Bible Presentation

Bibles will be presented to our rising First Graders during both worship services on Sunday, August 23rd. If you have a child that will be attending first grade this fall, please contact Sharon at sharon@fbchurch.com or call the church office at 252-638-5691. We want to be sure to have a Discoverer's Bible ready for your first grader!

Thursday, August 13, 2015

Back to School Splash

Annual Back to School Splash
Saturday, August 22nd
6:00 - 8:00 pm
YMCA
Pizza, Drinks, Dessert and LOTS of Fun!
Sign up on the Breezeway Bulletin Board or email Sharon at sharon@fbchurch.com
Bring your family and a friend

Wednesday, May 6, 2015

Parents' Night Out

Friday Night - It's Parents' Night Out!

This Friday, May 8th from 5:30-7:30 PM our First Baptist kids are all set for a night of FRIENDS and FUN!

Babies and Toddlers will be cared for in the Fist Baptist Preschool area.

Preschoolers will gather in the Family Life Center for an evening of riding toys, games and snacks.

Kindergarten through Fourth Graders are off for a night of "Destination Unknown".
(We will be traveling by bus to a nearby stables to visit farm animals, including ten baby goats, and ride some friendly horses. This is a surprise for the kids so keep it on the DL :)

Register your child/children on the Breezeway Bulletin Board or text or email me by Thursday afternoon .

Hope to see your kids Friday.

Sharon
252-259-7771
sharon@fbchurch.com

Tuesday, May 5, 2015

Children's Day 2015

May 10th is Children's Day at First Baptist Church.

Orr Preschool and Children's Choirs will sing during the 8:45 Worship Service and our Children's Choir will sing during the 11:00 Worship. Preteens and Older Children will take part in leading in different aspects of the service.

We believe that Children's Day is a meaningful and important day in the life of our church. Children benefit because they sense they are valued. They are excited to have leadership in worship and feel a sense of accomplishment in their contribution. We hope parents are pleased to belong to a church that supports them as parents and believes children are a gift from God. The church family will be blessed to see that God is at work with First Baptist's next generation.

Rev. Templeton will be working with our choirs on Wednesday evening from 6:00 - 7:00 PM. We hope you child will be in attendance as we prepare for this special day.

Blessings,
Sharon

Thursday, March 26, 2015

Palm Sunday

This Sunday, March 28th is Palm Sunday. Our preschoolers and children will meet in the Sanctuary at 8:30 am for a Children's Time and to rehearse for the Palm Processional that will happen at the beginning of the service. Following the processional the Children's Choir will share the song, "Sing, Hosanna."

We will follow the same routine at the second service meeting in the sanctuary at 10:45 am. Children will be dismissed following the processional if they attended the first service.

This is a wonderful tradition for our First Baptist family. We hope you will join us for this exciting event as we teach and prepare our children for Resurrection Sunday.

Easter Egg Hunt

Easter Egg Hunt Rescheduled

Due to the wet weather and cold temperatures we are rescheduling the Annual Easter Egg Hunt to Sunday afternoon at 3:30 pm. The Egg Hunt will be at Creekside Park, Congleton Shelter.

Children are encouraged to bring food items for the Kennedy Home Food Drive. Flyers with suggested items are available at church or online at http://www.bchfamily.org/foodroundup

The Hunt is for preschool through fourth grade. Preteens are invited to help hide the eggs at 2:30 pm and stay for the Egg Hunt and refreshments.

We look forward to seeing your family on Sunday!

Sunday, March 29

Monday, March 16, 2015

Preparing Our Kids for Easter


Last year I shared the following article in our April Newsletter. In preparing our kids for Easter 2015, I thought it was worth repeating. From "Sharing the Easter Faith with Children” by Carolyn C. Brown this article helps parents, grandparents, and children’s leaders better explain Easter to our children.

 A good starting point is to realize that Easter is bigger than any of us ever fully understand so we do not have to know all the answers. (big sigh of relief). NO one ever does. Easter is new life, an empty tomb, forgiveness, resurrection and more. That is not something to understand. It is a reality we have to grow in to. The truth is that we understand different aspects of Easter better at different times of our lives.

 Adults respond enthusiastically to the Easter claim and promise of victory over death because the reality, especially the finality of death. Children however, have a hard time grasping the reality, especially the finality of death. Even after attending Granddad’s funeral a young child will often ask, at unexpected times, when Granddad will be visiting. This natural inability to grasp the finality of death is supported by fairy tale princesses who awake after “sleeping” for years and cartoon characters who, flattened by steamrollers, peel themselves off the road. Given all this, it’s not surprising that children can’t get too excited by victory over death.

 Many books and people, and I’m afraid I must admit that I have tried to get around this by focusing on new life, paying attention to eggs, bulbs, and butterflies as new life symbols. I have found that while children are vaguely interested in these symbols, “New life” strikes few of them (for whom all of life is “New”) as particularly significant or exciting.

 What I have learned this year in preparing for Easter is that for younger children, the empty tomb is the ultimate victory of the good guys (God/Jesus) over  the bad guys (Judas, the priests, Pilate, the soldiers). On Good Friday the bad guys thought they had won. They killed Jesus and sealed His body into a guarded tomb. On Easter morning, God/Jesus blasted right out of that tomb and proved one and for all that God is more powerful than even the worst evil the worst bad guys can inflict. The natural response to such a victory is to yell “hooray for God and Jesus!” and to celebrate belonging to God who is the most powerful power there is in the universe!

 To older elementary children, who are focused on friendships and have clear expectations of “best friends,” the most significant resurrection story is the story of Peter’s breakfast conversation with Jesus (John 21:1-19). Peter had been Jesus’ best friend. He had promised to stick with Jesus no matter what. And he had been caught three times on the same night pretending he did not even know Jesus. As a betrayed “best friend,” Jesus would have been justified in ignoring or punishing Peter of his denials. But Jesus did not. For Peter, the resurrection happened when Jesus forgave him, welcomed him back as a friend, and put him to work building God’s Kingdom. For older children, Easter holds the promise that Jesus will forgive them and welcome them back when and if they betray their friendship with him. Such Easter forgiveness is worth celebrating!

 One final reminder – remember the starting point of this article – Easter is bigger than we can understand. We probably do the most harm when we fail to talk with our children about our Easter faith out of fear that we will not get it right."

 May we use the remaining days of March to prepare ourselves, our hearts, our homes, our church, and our children for the wonderful celebration of Easter.