Luke 3:1-20 · John the Baptist Prepares the Way
Getting Ready
Luke 3:4-5
Children's Sermon
by B. Kathleen Fannin
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Object: A broom.

Lesson: Advent; waiting; preparation; making room for Jesus.

Having invited the children to come to the front of the sanctuary, I turn to the steps leading into the chancel area and begin to sweep, using the broom I have brought for this purpose. As the children arrive, I move to one side so they can take their places on the steps. "What was I doing as you walked up here?" I begin.

"Sweeping," they answer.

"Why was I doing that?" I continue.

"To get the floors clean," comes their response.

"That's right," I affirm. "I was sweeping away some of the straw that has fallen out of the manger, so you wouldn't have to sit on it. I was preparing the steps for your coming." Then, changing my line of thought in order to keep their attention, I ask, "Have any of you ever cleaned a carpet?" I am surprised at the number of hands which go up, indicating which children have done so. "Wow! What a bunch of helpers you must be at home!" I tell them. Then I ask, "Well, when you clean a carpet, do you normally use a broom?"

"No, a vacuum cleaner," comes a virtually unanimous reply.

"Ah, yes, a vacuum cleaner ... that would be a better tool to use on a carpet than a broom."

"We are presently in a season of the church year which we call 'Advent,'" I continue, again with an abrupt change of subject to keep their attention from wandering. "You may be asking yourselves, 'What has Advent got to do with sweeping the floor?' My answer to that would be that both of them have to do with preparation. Who knows what it means to prepare?"

Jason answers, "To get ready."

"Yes," I agree, " 'to prepare' means 'to get ready.' When I was sweeping the floor, I was getting ready for you to come sit here on these steps. And Advent involves getting ready for someone too. For whom are we waiting?"

"For Jesus," several children breathe the name together, with soft reverence.

Impressed by their hushed expectancy, I decrease the volume of my own voice as I respond. "Yes, we are waiting for Jesus. And, as we would for any guest who is important to us, we need to prepare for his coming. This doesn't necessarily involve sweeping the floor, but it could. What are some of the ways in which we get ready for Jesus in our lives? How do we make the way into our lives clear for him?"

"With prayer?" Jimmy questions.

"Yes," I agree. "What else?"

"Doing nice things for other people." "Thinking of others." "Reading the Bible." "Lighting the Advent candles."

Their responses come with increasing speed as the thoughts of one child engender another's. Finally, as their ideas dwindle, I suggest, "I can think of one more. What were we doing just before you came up here?"

"Singing!" they answer.

"Yes, we were singing; music can be a very important part of our getting ready to receive Jesus into our lives, into our hearts. All of the things you have listed are the right 'tools' for the job, just as a vacuum cleaner is the right tool for the job of cleaning the carpet.

"Jesus will not come storming into anyone's life as an uninvited guest; but he will come into the life of everyone who invites him. And if we invite him into our lives, we need to prepare the way for him; we need to open our hearts to receive him.

"You know, it's a funny thing about an open heart. It can't hang onto anger, or hatred, or jealousy, or any of that stuff. Those things just fall right on out of an open heart, and when they do, there is a whole lot more room for us to receive Jesus and his love.

"Will you pray with me before you go?" As the children and I bow our heads, I offer this prayer: "God, we are here together in this Advent time, this waiting time -- and sometimes it's very hard to wait. So help us, God, to use this time to prepare, to get ready for Jesus, to open our hearts, to let go of the stuff that stands in his way. Help us to make room in our hearts, room in our often too-busy lives, room to let the Christ Child in. It is in the name of Jesus, the one for whom we prepare, that we offer our prayer. Amen."

CSS Publishing Company, Inc, Cows In Church, by B. Kathleen Fannin