
Sharing Time
"The Heart of the Children"
Friend,
August 2002
By Vicki F. Matsumori
And he shall turn the heart of the fathers to
the children, and the heart of the children to their fathers (Malachi
4:6).
I wish I were older!
Have you ever thought
that? You have heard the age requirements to go to the temple: you must
be 12 years old to be baptized for the dead, and even older to receive
your own endowment, serve a full-time mission, or be married. It seems
like a long time before you are the right age to help with temple work.
But there are other things
you can do right now, even if you aren't old enough to be baptized for
the dead, serve a mission, or get married.
In 1978, President Spencer
W. Kimball told Church members:
"All members should
write a personal history. . . .
"I urge all of the
people of this church to give serious attention to their family histories . . . and
let no family go into eternity without having left their memoirs (an account
of their family) for their children, their grandchildren, and their posterity. . . . I
urge every person to start the children out writing a personal history
and journal." (Ensign, May 1978, page 4.)
Why is it important to
keep a journal and do family history work? President Gordon B. Hinckley
gave the answer when he said:
"All of our vast
family history endeavor (effort) is directed to temple work. There is
no other purpose for it. The temple ordinances become the crowning blessings
the Church has to offer." (Ensign, May 1998, page 88.)
When you do family history
work or write in your journal, you are helping to "turn the heart
of the fathers to the children, and the heart of the children to their
fathers" (Malachi
4:6). As you learn stories about your grandparents and other progenitors
(ancestors, forefathers), you see into their hearts and you develop an
appreciation for them as real peopleas members of your family. As
you write about your own life in your journal, you will remember the Lord's
blessings to you, and you will provide an opportunity for your future
children and grandchildren to see into your heart.
You can begin doing family
history today by talking to, phoning, writing to, or sending e-mails to
family members. You can find out about the things that are important to
them. You can begin writing your personal history today by starting a
journal. Write down the things that are important to you and that will
help you and your posterity. (See Journal Page on page 39.)
You can live the commandments
and be worthy to go to the temple when you are twelve so that you can
be baptized for the dead. You can choose the right each day so that when
you are older, you can go to the temple to receive your own endowment.
You can continue to live a righteous life and be worthy to return to the
temple and do work to help your entire family, including your progenitors,
receive the "crowning blessings the Church has to offer."
Heart Pendant
1. Mount page 37 on heavy
paper or lightweight cardboard; cut out the three hearts.
2. Fold the hearts in
half, and glue each half to a half of a different heart (see illustration).
(Note: If you want to make more than one pendant, make a pattern from
the hearts before gluing them.)
3. Punch holes where
indicated. Attach a string to each hole, then tie the strings together
over the center of the pendant so that it hangs evenly. Hang the heart
where you can see it every day as a reminder to write in your journal.
Click on the image below to view an enlargement.
When the image appears, click your browser's print button to print the
image.

[illustration] Illustrated
by Gerald Rogers
Sharing Time Ideas
(Note: All songs are
from Children's Songbook unless otherwise indicated; GAK = Gospel
Art Kit; TNGC = Teaching, No Greater Call)
1. To help the children
understand the part they play in helping others receive ordinances in
the temple, give each child a piece of paper and a paper doll (this can
be as simple as an outline of a child). Have him/her write his/her name
on the piece of paper, then the name of an ancestor who has passed away
(or make up a name) on the paper doll. Let them color the paper doll.
On a wall, place a picture
of a child being baptized. Sing "When Jesus Christ Was Baptized"
(p. 102). Invite all those who have been baptized to attach their names
around the picture. Sing "I Like My Birthdays" (p. 104). Have
all those who plan to be baptized add their names to the wall. Explain
that people who have died cannot be baptized, so people who are living
must be baptized in the temple for them. Tell the children that when they
are twelve, if they have a temple recommend, they can be baptized and
confirmed for their ancestors and others who have died. Place a picture
of a temple baptismal font on the wall. Have the children place their
paper dolls around this picture.
Place a picture of a
temple on another wall. Explain that in the temple, people receive their
endowments (see Sharing Time footnote, Friend, Jan. 2002, p. 30,
and Glossary in 2002 Outline for Sharing Time and the CSMP) and also may
be sealed to their families.
Sing "I Love to
See the Temple" (p. 95). Have the children move their names from
the baptism wall to the temple wall as a symbol of their commitment to
be worthy to go to the temple when they are old enough. Sing "Truth
from Elijah" (pp. 9091). Have the children take their paper dolls
and attach them around the temple picture. Explain that the dolls represent
those who have died and cannot go to the temple themselves.
Express gratitude for
being able to do temple work for your own ancestors and others who have
died. Share with them your feelings about the blessing of having families
sealed for eternity.
2. Help the children
see how family records assist others in doing family history work. Using
the scriptures, have the children fill in a pedigree chart for a Book
of Mormon family.
On the chalkboard, draw
a seven-generation family tree, following the fathers' lines. On the child
line, write "4
Nephi 1:21." On the father line, write "4
Nephi 1:19." On the grandfather line, write "3
Nephi 1:2." On succeeding-generation father lines, write "Helaman
3:2021," "Alma
63:11," "Alma
31:1, 7," "Mosiah
27:8." Cover the references with pieces of paper.
On separate pieces of
paper, write "Amos," "Amos," "Nephi," "Helaman,"
"Helaman," "Alma," "Alma." Place the names
in random order on the walls around the room.
Uncover the first (child)
reference. Have the children find the scripture and raise their hands
when they know whose name goes on that line. Ask a child to read the verse
out loud, then locate one of the "Amos" names and place it on
the line over the reference. Sing the first verse of "Book of Mormon
Stories" (pp. 118119). Continue uncovering the references one by
one, then reading the scripture aloud and locating the correct name for
the pedigree chart. Sing different verses of "Book of Mormon Stories"
between each generation. Some of the verses relate directly to the people
mentioned on the chart; other verses deal with the approximate time period:
Amos, v. 2; Nephi, v. 8; Helaman, v. 7; Helaman, v. 6; Alma, v. 3; Alma,
v. 4.
For younger children:
Invite seven priesthood holders to dress in simple costumes and role-play
the seven generations, starting with Alma. Have each tell a story about
the man he represents, if a story is available. (See the scriptures, the
backs of GAK pictures, and Primary 4 manual for ideas.) Have the
man representing the first Alma hold the Book of Mormon while he tells
his story. Upon finishing, he should write his name on the great-great-great-great-grandfather
line, then hand the Book of Mormon to his son (Alma) to continue. Repeat
this process, with the second Amos testifying of the truthfulness of the
Book of Mormon and the knowledge that was passed from father to son. Sing
"Book of Mormon Stories" (p. 118).
3. To help children understand
the importance of keeping records, prepare a reader's-theater script (see
TNGC, p. 177) of Nephi returning to Jerusalem to get the brass
plates from Laban (see 1
Ne. 34).
Using the scriptures as a guide, include parts for a narrator, Lehi, Nephi,
Laman, Lemuel, an angel, and Zoram. You may wish to delete some verses
to help the reader's theater run smoothly. Keep these key verses: 1
Ne. 3:7, 1920, 29; 4:6.
Use simple name tags
or costumes to identify each part. Have all the children except the angel
read from the script; have the angel read 1 Ne. 3:29 directly from the
scripture.
Sing "Nephi's Courage"
(pp. 120121).
Prepare slips of paper
with these references: 1
Nephi 19:heading, 1; Jacob
4:14; Alma
37:13; Abraham
book heading, 1:31; Jeremiah
30:12; Enos
1:12, 13, 16; 3
Nephi 5:1415, 20. Place the slips in a container. On the chalkboard,
write these headings: WHO, WHAT, and WHY. Divide
the children into seven groups. Have each group choose and read one of
the scriptures and report on who kept the record, what was written, and
why that person wrote it. Read Omni
1:17 to explain what happens when records are not kept. Explain that
one of the most important reasons for keeping records in the Book of Mormon
is to testify of Jesus Christ (see 1
Ne. 13:40).
For younger children:
Have children give an appropriate dramatization of Moroni's delivering
the plates to Joseph Smith.
4. Invite ward/branch
members to visit Primary and share an excerpt from their journals. Older
members could read about their childhood; a returned missionary could
share a missionary experience; a young woman could tell about a personal-progress
goal; a parent could tell of his/her joy at the birth of a child. Have
the guests also express their feelings about the value of keeping a journal
for themselves as well as for their posterity.
Draw a time line on the
chalkboard to reflect various events in your life. Draw hills and valleys
to represent good times and bad times, and label them with dates and short
explanations. For example, you might draw a hill for the Christmas of
1985, when your grandparents visited, or a valley for the summer of 1990
when a pet died. Bear testimony of the importance of keeping a personal
history.
Work with the music leader
to sing songs that help the children recall events in their lives. Have
them draw a time line in their "The TempleI'm Going There Someday"
booklets, labeling dates and writing simple statements of what occurred
at that time. Begin by singing "I Am a Child of God" (pp. 23)
and have them write the date of their birth and "I am born"
at the beginning of the line. Sing songs that represent different ages,
such as "Jesus Wants Me for a Sunbeam" (pp. 6061), "Choose
the Right Way" (pp. 160161), "I Will Be Valiant" (p. 162),
and songs that represent different times of the year, such as "Oh,
What Do You Do in the Summertime?" (p. 245), "Popcorn Popping"
(pp. 242243), "Once There Was a Snowman" (p. 249), a Christmas
song, and a birthday song. Invite the children to help their families
make time lines during their family home evenings.
5. Invite a ward family
history specialist to explain the importance of doing family history work.
Have the specialist demonstrate how to fill out a simple family group
sheet. Review the process of filling out a pedigree chart by drawing a
four-generation chart on the chalkboard. Choose a child to fill in his/her
first name on the child line. Sing "I Am a Child of God" (pp.
23). Have the child choose two other children to represent the parents.
Use simple costumes or props for the parents, and have them sign their
names in the appropriate places. Sing "A Happy Family" (p. 198).
Have the children representing parents each choose two children to represent
the grandparents; give them simple props to hold or costumes to wear.
Have them sign their names on the appropriate lines. Sing "The Hearts
of the Children" (pp. 9293) or "Truth from Elijah" (p.
90). Have each of the grandparents also choose their parents and give
them simple props or costumes. Have these great-grandparents sign their
names on the chart. Sing "Family HistoryI Am Doing It" (p.
94).
Give the children family
group sheets to take home and fill out with their families. In their "The
TempleI'm Going There Someday" booklets, have the children begin
a pedigree chart by writing down their own names and as much information
as they know. Express gratitude for the blessings of learning about your
ancestors and your desire to be with them eternally.
6. Song presentation:
Sing "The Hearts of the Children" (pp. 9293) or "Family
HistoryI Am Doing It" (p. 94) line by line and have the children
suggest appropriate hand actions to help them remember the lyrics, the
message, and the feeling of the song. Have them sing the first line and
do an action with you. Repeat, using different suggested actions until
the children are satisfied that they have decided on the best action to
represent the message. Move to the next line and repeat the process until
you have actions for the entire song. Note: Hand actions are appropriate
for Primary singing and practice but not for the sacrament meeting presentation.
Possible actions for
"The Hearts of the Children" might include: place hand over
the heart for "hearts of the children"; point upward for "fathers";
hold hands like a book for "prophecy"; wiggle fingers for "family";
and link arms for "sealed."
Possible actions for
"Family HistoryI Am Doing It" might include: wiggle fingers
for "family"; make writing motion for "I am doing it";
place the hand over the heart for "love"; point to self for
"me"; hold hands like a book for "stories"; point
upward for "progenitors"; make writing motion for "write
their history"; and flip pages of a book for "keep records."
7. Additional Friend
resources: Journal Page, each month this year (see Contents page in each
issue for page numbers); "My
Book of Remembrance," July 2000, pp. 1617; "Family
Togetherness," Feb. 2000, p. 23; "Climbing
the Family Tree," June 1999, p. 35; Exploring: "Family
Treasures," Oct. 1999, p. 35; "The
Story Quilt," Jan. 1999, pp. 1619; Exploring: "A
Century of Genealogy," Mar. 1994, pp. 3435. See also: "Bridges
and Eternal Keepsakes," Ensign, May 1999, pp. 8385.
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