Thursday, 6 March 2008

Eggciting


The following is an Easter idea I was given by a schools worker years ago. It works well with children, but could also be easily adpated for use with teens. You need an eggbox with six Kinder eggs in it (the plastic clip-together inserts – you can eat the chocolate!). The eggs are hidden around the room. You ask the children to find one egg at a time, at which point you open it and find what’s hidden inside it – then put the egg in the eggbox. I no longer have the original list of contents, so here’s one I’ve made up (I’ve suggested more than six, so that you can choose the ones you prefer):

• Nails (Jesus was nailed to a cross of wood and left there to die)
• Strip of cloth (The cloth that was wrapped round His body)
• Empty (A reminder of the empty tomb)
• 'Happy Easter’ sticker (The resurrection and why we celebrate it)
• Sad face (How Jesus’ friends and families felt on Good Friday)
• Crown (Jesus was God’s promised King, but He wore a crown of thorns)
• Dice (The soldiers played dice to get the cloth Jesus wore)
• Mini Scroll (These things happened exactly as God has said they would)

You don’t know which order the eggs will be found in, so you adlib accordingly. Then show all the eggs again at the end, in a helpful order, to summarise what you’ve been teaching. The eggs and contents will be quite small of course – if you have a large group, maybe you could use an OHP to throw up the silhouettes of what you’ve found so that the children can see/guess what they are.

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