| Sharing Time
I Am Glad for Many Things
Friend,
November 2002
By Vicki F. Matsumori
Let the hearts of all my people rejoice, who
have . . . built this house to my name (Doctrine
and Covenants 110:6).
General conference is a wonderful time. We listen
to the prophet and other General Authorities. They teach us what we should
be doing. They also help us remember the blessings we have.
President Gordon B. Hinckley said, "We have
come to earth in this great season in the long history of mankind. It
is a marvelous age, the best of all" (Ensign, November 2001,
page 4).
What makes this the best of all ages? Can you think
of things that make living today better than living in past years? Computers.
Faster travel. Modern medicine. President Hinckley has reminded us of
two very important things that we should be grateful for. One is the restoration
of the gospel, which includes the blessings of the temple. He said, "The
temple ordinances become the crowning blessings the Church has to offer"
(Ensign, May 1998, page 88).
When a new temple is built, everyone in the surrounding
area is blessed. Members young and old pay their tithing and do other
things to be worthy to have a temple and to attend it. Because they are
obedient, they are able to go to the temple and be sealed together as
families. Others benefit from the temple as well. Many people feel the
peace and joy that comes to the temple grounds as each temple is dedicated.
Another important thing that President Hinckley
has reminded us to be grateful for is our parents. He said, "I hope
that boys and girls will [have] a greater appreciation for their parents
[and] more fervent love in their hearts for those who have brought them
into the world" (Ensign, November 2001, page 90).
When we have more love and appreciation for our
parents, we try harder to obey them. We work harder at being kind to family
members. We try to show our love by having a respectful attitude.
We can also show our gratitude to Heavenly Father
when we say our prayers. We can thank Him for our parents, for the blessings
of the temple, for all the things that make this the "best of all"
ages. We can thank Him especially for sending His Son, Jesus Christ.
And when we follow the prophet's advice and the
Savior's example, our homes become happier and more peaceful.
"Blessings" Finger Scenes
Mount page 12 on heavy paper. Draw a picture of
something special you are thankful for on each blank finger scene. Cut
out each scene with its tabs, then glue the ends of the tabs together
to make a ring. (Be sure to make two thumb rings larger than the other
rings.) Choose the rings you want to use as you sing "I
Am Glad for Many Things" (Children's Songbook, page 151).
Hold up all your fingers with rings when you sing "many things."
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[illustrations] Illustrated by Tom Child
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. Review scripture stories of people who gave thanks
to Heavenly Father. Divide the children into four groups and assign them
one of these stories:
- 1
Ne. 2:17 / Lehi takes his family into the wilderness, then builds
an altar and offers thanks.
- 1
Ne. 16:2132 / Nephi relies on the Liahona to direct him to
find food, then returns and gives thanks.
- Mosiah
24:810, 1625
/ Alma and his people are delivered from bondage and give thanks.
- Ether
6:112 / Jared and his people enter the barges, travel across
the waters, and give thanks.
Have the children read the assigned scripture stories
with adult leaders, then discuss why the people were grateful. Give the
children paper and pencils to make paper stand-up figures (see TNGC,
p. 176) of the characters and scenery for their assigned stories. Have
the groups take turns sharing their stories with the rest of Primary,
using the stand-up figures.
Use the same four groups to sing "For
Thy Bounteous Blessings" (p. 21). Teach each group a different
two measures of the song. Have the first group sing the first two measures
over and over while you add the second group. As these two groups sing
their parts, add the third group, and finally the fourth group. You can
start with any group and add the others in any order. Sing the song as
written and also as a round.
For younger children: Review Alma
37:37 and discuss what it means to "let thy heart be full of
thanks unto God." Read "Counting
Blessings" (Friend, Nov. 2000, p. 5), which tells of a
child who lists blessings in a notebook. Have the children draw a heart
in their "The TempleI'm Going There Someday" booklets.
Inside the hearts, have them write their own list, or draw pictures of
blessings they are grateful for.
2. We should always say thank you to Heavenly Father
in our prayers. Review the steps of prayer by singing "I
Pray in Faith" (p. 14). Help the children understand that an
important step in prayer is to express gratitude.
Discuss the types of prayer they might offerpersonal,
family, invocations and benedictions, and blessings on food. Have them
sit in a circle and pass a beanbag while the pianist plays songs of gratitude,
such as "I
Think the World Is Glorious" (p. 230), "I
Am Glad for Many Things" (p. 151). When the piano music stops,
the child with the beanbag tells something he or she would thank Heavenly
Father for in a prayer. Continue passing the beanbag and listing items
until everyone has a chance to mention something. In larger Primaries,
you may need to make more than one circle. Older children might enjoy
listing their blessings by thinking of words that begin with the letters
that spell gratitude, thankful, or blessings.
Help the children learn to use proper prayer language
by writing the first verse of "Tell
Me, Dear Lord" (p. 176) on the chalkboard. Leave blanks for the
words thine, thou, and thy. Give a piece of chalk to a child
and have him or her listen as the Primary sings the song. Have the child
write the correct word on one of the blanks. Repeat with other children
until all the blanks have the correct words on them.
Invite the children to say one personal prayer during
the week in which they give thanks to the Lord without asking for anything.
3. Help the children understand the importance of
being grateful by reading and discussing D&C
59:21. Ask: "What does it mean to 'confess not his hand in all
things'?" How do we give thanks to Heavenly Father? (See Idea #2.)
Discuss the importance of saying thank you to other
people. We can show our gratitude to others by doing something for them,
by being kind. We can also express our gratitude by saying thank you.
Have the members of each class think of some specific thing they can do
to show their gratitude to someonee.g., make a bed besides their
own, read a story to a sibling, share a game with a friend.
Have each class take turns pantomiming their actions,
and have the other classes try to guess the actions by asking yes-or-no
questions. Have them substitute the words thank you for the action.
For example, a question might be "Do you thank you in the house?"
or "Do you thank you in the kitchen?" or "Do you thank
you with other people?" Continue the questioning until the actions
for each class have been guessed.
Sing songs of gratitude found in the CS Topics
index, such as "Children
All Over the World" (pp. 1617).
Have the children write a thank-you letter to their
Primary teacher, a family member, or a friend. Have them be specific about
what that person has done to bless their lives. Encourage the children
to give their letters to those persons. Challenge the children to express
gratitude by saying thank you to people throughout the week and also by
doing things that show their gratitude, such as being kind or quick to
obey.
4. To emphasize the blessings of being in families,
play a game, the object of which is to find other members of one's "Primary
family." On slips of paper, write a family name such as "Jones"
or "Smith" for each child. Create as many families as you need
for the size of your Primary. For younger children, give family names
that are also colors, such as "Green" or "Brown" and
write the names in that color or on paper of that color.
Explain that families pass on some family traits
through genetics and traditions. Discuss family traits such as height
and hair color. On the chalkboard, list some family traits for each Primary
family you have created. For example, the Joneses tug at their right ears;
the Smiths all cross their legs at the ankles; the Greens smile with their
left eyes closed; the Browns scratch their elbows.
Pass the slips to the children and have them find
the other members of their Primary families without talking or seeing
anyone else's slipbut by observation only. Have the classes sit
in a circle to observe each other while singing songs about families (see
the CS Topics Index). During the songs, the children should exhibit
their Primary family's traits.
After all songs have been sung, choose a child to
represent each Primary family. Have the selected children take turns finding
one other member of his or her family. The new member joins that family
and, when it is his or her family's turn, finds another member of that
family. If the new member cannot remember, the rest of the already-found
family members can help. Continue until all the children are in family
groups.
Have the children return to their seats. Discuss
how it felt to be a part of the Primary family. What are the blessings
of being in a family? How did those who were left until the last feel?
Were they fearful of being left out of a family? How do family-history
and temple work help us as families? Review Mal.
4:6 with the children.
Express gratitude for the many families you belong
to: your immediate family, the ward family, the national family, and Heavenly
Father's family. Help the children understand that we are more alike than
different because of the divine characteristics we have from Heavenly
Father. Sing "I
Am a Child of God" (pp. 2--3).
5. Invite grandparents in the ward or branch to
take part in a panel discussion (see TNGC, pp. 17576). Have
each tell a story about himself or herself as a child and how obedience
to one of the gospel principles blessed his or her life. Have them discuss
what they hope their grandchildren will do so that they can have the blessings
of happiness and peace.
Have the children choose an area they wish to work
on during the upcoming week, such as avoiding contention in their families
or being more helpful. Have them write this commitment in their temple
booklets. Invite the children to report to their grandparents in person
or by phone call or letter the result of their efforts. If the children
do not have a grandparent to report to, have them report to a ward family
membera Primary leader, the bishop (the father of the ward), or
one of the panel members.
As a thank-you to the panel, sing "Grandmother"
(p. 200) and "When
Grandpa Comes" (p. 201) or "Families
Can Be Together Forever" (p. 188).
If the grandparents have been to the temple, invite
them to share their testimonies about the peace and happiness it gives
them.
6. In the temple, we learn about the plan of salvation.
Before Primary, on separate slips of paper, write words that are opposites,
such as hot/cold, light/dark, happy/sad, tall/short, sick/healthy.
Hide the papers under chairs.
Review the plan, emphasizing the gift of agencythe
ability to choose. In order to have agency, there must be opposites. Have
the children find the papers under their chairs and affix them to the
chalkboard or wall, matching the opposite word of each.
Explain that some things are not always preferable
over their oppositeshot and cold, for example. However, at times,
one choice is clearly more desirable than the other. We would rather be
happy than sad. Sing "Smiles"
(p. 267).
The most important decision we need to make is to
choose good over evil. Sing "Choose
the Right Way" (pp. 16061). Help the children memorize
Josh.
24:15, "Choose you this day whom ye will serve; . . . but as
for me and my house, we will serve the Lord." Discuss and list on
the chalkboard how "my house" can choose to serve the Lord (e.g.,
family prayer, family home evening, attending church, family scripture
study). Help older children discover the ways "my house" can
choose to serve the Lord by having them locate scriptures in the Topical
Guide under "Family, Children, Duties of" and "Family,
Love within." Discuss the blessings that come to the family by choosing
to serve the Lord.
Sing "Our
House Becomes a Home" from Friend, July 1996, pp. 1213
or songs from "Choice" in the CS Topics index. Testify
of the blessings your family has had because they have chosen to serve
the Lord.
7. Additional Friend resources: "Blessings
Everywhere," Nov. 2001, pp. 1417; Sharing
Time, Oct. 2001, pp. 4042; "Temple
Blessings," Aug. 2001, pp. 23; "Family
Relationships," Aug. 2001, pp. 89; "The
Important Blessings," July 2001, pp. 89; "A
Happy People," June 2000, pp. 3435. See also: "Gratitude,"
Ensign, Nov. 2001, pp. 4344. |