
Sharing Time
"The Field Is White Already to Harvest"
Friend,
September 2002
By Vicki F. Matsumori
He that hath my commandments, and keepeth them,
he it is that loveth me (John
14:21).
Harvesttime. Every year,
there is at least one harvesttime. In some parts of the world, it is harvesttime
now. Green vegetables, juicy fruits, and healthy grains, which have been
growing for months in good soil and sunlight, are ripe and ready for harvesting.
Farmers and gardeners work hard so that everything can be gathered and
nothing is lost.
Harvesttime. The Lord has said that "the field
is white already to harvest" (Doctrine
and Covenants 4:4). His harvest is humble people who have been searching
for answers to their questions about life and death and who are ready
to hear the gospel of Jesus Christ. Missionaries work hard so that they
can find and teach as many of these people as possible.
President Gordon B. Hinckley has asked all Church
members to help with missionary work. He said, "I wish I could awaken
in the heart of every man, woman, boy, and girl . . . the great consuming
desire to share the gospel with others. If you do that you live better,
you try to make your lives more exemplary [be better examples for others]
because you know that those you teach will not believe unless you back
up what you say by the goodness of your lives."*
When you try to live a better life and keep the
commandments, a number of things happen. You show your willingness to
obey the prophet's counsel. You also show that you love Heavenly Father
and Jesus Christ. The Savior taught, "He that hath my commandments,
and keepeth them, he it is that loveth me" (John
14:21). You prepare to go to the temple and to serve a mission when
you keep the commandments. You are exemplary, a wonderful example to others
who watch you and who want to learn about The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints.
Harvesttime. Like the farmer who has worked in the
field or the missionary who has served a full-time mission, you can see
the fruits of your labor. You have worked hard to choose the right. What
is your harvest? Your friends and family members have noticed your good
example and want to come to church with you. Your bishop is happy because
you qualify for a recommend, if you are a baptized member of the Church,
to go to a temple dedication. And Heavenly Father is pleased because you
have shown your love by keeping His commandments. As you continue to keep
the commandments, you shall continue to have many harvests.
* Teachings of Gordon B. Hinckley, page 374.
"Already to Harvest"
Can you find the bicycle, bucket, button, coveralls,
hoe, journal, needle and thread, packet of seeds, piggy bank, rake, scriptures,
sprinkling can, temple recommend, tractor, and work boot hidden in the
picture on page 29? As you find them, color the objects a farmer or gardener
would use in one color, and, in a different color, the objects you would
use or learn to use to prepare for a full-time mission (some objects might
be colored in both colors).
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 Robert A. Peterson
Sharing Time Ideas
(Note: All songs are from Children's Songbook (CS) unless otherwise
indicated; GAK = Gospel Art Kit; TNGC = Teaching, No Greater
Call)
1. Have older Primary children prepare and demonstrate
an experiment like those described in the Friend: "Floating
Needle" (July 1998, p. 26), "Make
a Cloud" (Oct. 1997, p. 11), "Tube
Mystery" (July 1997, p. 11), or "Color
Trick" (Mar. 1995, p. 23). Explain that such experiments, if
followed correctly, always have the same results because they obey physical
laws. If you drop an item, it will always fall to the ground because of
the law of gravity. Explain that spiritual laws also have predictable
outcomes. We receive blessings when we obey laws. Have the children locate
and read D&C
130:2021 as a choral reading (see TNGC, p. 163).
Some of the rewards that come from obeying the commandments,
such as living now to be worthy to go to the temple, are found in the
songs listed in the Commandments section of the CS. Sing some of
the songs. Write each of the standards in "My Gospel Standards"
on a separate piece of paper. Have the classes choose a standard and discuss
with their teachers the blessings they receive now by living that standard,
then report about these blessings to the rest of the Primary. In their
"The TempleI'm Going There Someday" booklets, have the children
write or draw one of the standards that they wish to work on through the
week.
2. Sing "I Want to Be a Missionary Now"
(p. 168). Discuss with the children things they can do today to be missionaries
and the things they can do now to prepare to serve a full-time mission.
Divide them into four groups. Using stations (see TNGC, p. 179),
have the children learn a missionary skill from each adult leader.
Station A: Full-time missionaries memorize discussions
about the gospel. Have the children memorize an article of faith and repeat
it to the group. They may do this in pairs, with an older child helping
a younger one. Have Gospel in Action cards available to encourage children
to memorize all thirteen articles.
Station B: Missionaries read the Book of Mormon.
Have each child choose a GAK picture representing his or her favorite
story from the Book of Mormon section. Help the children locate the stories
in the scriptures and retell them to the group.
Station C: Missionaries give talks. Help the children
practice giving a talk by using this four-step process: 1) choose a scripture,
2) tell what the scripture means, 3) relate a personal experience or scripture
story that illustrates the point, and 4) bear testimony about it. If necessary,
have the leader give an example, using these steps. Have the group choose
a scripture. Ask someone to tell what it means. Have a second child share
a personal experience or tell a scripture story about it. Have a child
or the leader bear testimony of its principle. (For example: 1
Ne. 3:7 means that whatever the Lord asks me to do, I will do because
I know that He will help me do it. One time I was invited to go to a birthday
party on Sunday, but because I knew that the Lord wanted me to keep the
Sabbath Day holy, I didn't go. I felt good because I knew that I was being
obedient. I know that when we keep His commandments, even when they are
not easy to keep, we will be blessed.) Suggest using these steps to give
talks in Primary now as preparation for speaking as a missionary in the
future.
Station D: Missionaries often lead music. Have the
music leader help the children learn to lead music. See CS, p.
301 for diagrams of the beat patterns. Turn your back to the children
and beat a 3/4 pattern. Have the children copy the motion. Sing "I
Love to See the Temple" (p. 95), and have the children lead the song.
Sing other songs that have a 3/4 pattern. Teach a 4/4 pattern in a similar
manner, and have the children sing and lead "The Lord Gave Me a Temple"
(p. 153) and other songs with a 4/4 pattern. Note that both of the songs
mentioned begin on the upbeat (beat 3 or 4, respectively).
3. Review the importance of keeping the Sabbath
Day holy by having children role-play the gathering of manna (see Ex.
16:1131). Have the children turn to D&C
59:915. Tell them to listen for things they are asked to do on the
Sabbath as you read the scripture out loud and to raise their hands when
they have an answer. Read it, and stop when a child raises his or her
hand. Invite the child to write the answer (or you write it) on the chalkboard.
Continue reading until you have a list of things to do on the Sabbath.
Discuss the list and add things, such as read the scriptures, visit the
sick, and write letters to missionaries.
Ask the children to listen for promised blessings
as you read D&C
59:1619. Write some of them on the chalkboard, such as "food . . . for taste and for smell" and have the children mention foods
they love to taste and to smell. Sing "Remember the Sabbath Day"
(p. 155). Discuss things that children can do during the week, such as
go to school, play outside, shop at the store. Sing "Saturday"
(p. 196).
Play a game to review the good things to do on the
Sabbath. Have the children sit in a circle and establish a rhythm by lightly
tapping their hands on their laps two times, clapping their hands two
times, then snapping their fingers two times. When they are snapping their
fingers, a child says something they could do on the Sabbath. Continue
around the circle, allowing children to add to the list. Stop the game
and insert another day of the week for the children to list things to
do.
4. Use Articles
of Faith 1:5 to talk about the bishop being called of God. Have the
children read Titus
1:79. List the qualities for being a bishop on the chalkboard. Explain
any unfamiliar words. Sing "Our Bishop" (p. 135).
Explain that one way we honor the bishop and other
priesthood leaders is by calling them by their correct title. It is a
sign of respect. Write the offices listed in Articles
of Faith 1:6 on the chalkboard: apostles, prophets, pastors, teachers,
evangelists. Write the following titles on separate pieces of paper: elder,
president, bishop, brother, and patriarch. Place the papers in random
order on the chalkboard. Sing "The Sixth Article of Faith" (p.
126). As you get to each title, stop and have a child match the correct
title to the office until all titles and offices are matched. Apostles
are addressed as "Elder." The prophet is called "President"
because he is the President of the Church. A pastor is now called "bishop."
"Teacher" does not refer to a teacher in an auxiliary but to
someone who holds that office in the priesthood; he should be called "Brother."
The Prophet Joseph Smith explained that evangelists are our patriarchs.
Write a letter from the Primary to the bishop to
thank him for his service. Include a commitment from the children to keep
the commandments and to live worthy to attend the temple. Have each child
sign his or her name or draw a picture of himself or herself.
For younger children: Play a game to illustrate
how we should follow the bishop. Choose a child to be the leader and have
the rest of Primary follow his or her directions. When the leader says,
"Bishop says," the Primary takes one step forward. For example,
the leader says, "Bishop says, 'Pay your tithing.' " Or, "Bishop
says, 'Prepare for a mission.' " However, if the leader gives a direction
without saying "Bishop says" first, the Primary stands still.
For example: "Jump up and down." Or, "Stomp your feet."
Children who move forward without being told "Bishop says" must
return to the starting point. The first child to reach the leader becomes
the next leader.
5. Review temple songs and concepts learned this
year. Have the children sit in a large circle. Place inside the circle,
spaced evenly, pictures that represent the theme for each montha picture
of a nearby temple for January ("I love to see the temple"),
a picture of a family for February ("My family can be together forever
through the blessings of the temple"), etc.
To go with each picture, prepare a list of scriptures
from those suggested each month and a list of songsthe suggested monthly
song and other songs that support the concept taught by the picture. For
example, for May, "My body is a temple," the list could include
"The Lord Gave Me a Temple" (p. 153), "The Word of Wisdom"
(pp. 15455), and "Hum Your Favorite Hymn" (p. 152).
On the chalkboard, draw a simple game board with
a picture of a temple as the final goal. Use a picture of a child as the
marker.
Have a child spin a small bottle with a narrow mouth.
When it stops, the child the bottle points to chooses the number of squares
to move the marker on the board: three squares = locate and read one of
the listed scriptures for the month the bottle most nearly points to;
two squares = sing one of the listed songs for that month; one square
= tell something he or she, his or her class, or the entire Primary learned
about preparing to go to the temple (e.g., be baptized, follow the prophet,
keep the Sabbath Day holy, pay tithing, seek good friends, share the gospel,
honor priesthood leaders). Play until the marker child reaches the temple
goal.
Express your love for all the children and your
desire that they live their lives so that they can receive the blessings
of the temple.
6. Additional Friend resources: "Be
a Standard-Bearer," June 2001, pp. 2425; "Bishop
Larson," Sep. 2000, p. 43; Sharing
Time Ideas, Aug. 2000, p. 14; "Jesus
Wants Me to Be Honest," Feb. 2000, pp. 48IBC; "Sunday
Can," June 1999, p. 23; Sharing
Time Ideas, June 1999, pp. 4546; Sharing
Time Ideas, Oct. 1998, pp. 14, 43.
|