| Sharing Time
A House or a Home?
Friend, June
2004
By Sheila E. Wilson
And ye will not have a mind to injure
one another, but to live peaceably (Mosiah
4:13).
Picture a house. Are you imagining a building with windows and a door?
A house is where families eat, sleep, and live. A house becomes a home
when family members learn together, help each other, and do fun things.
Many years ago a fire destroyed a family's
house. A neighbor tried to comfort the family's seven-year-old boy
by saying, "Johnny, it's
too bad your home burned down." Johnny thought for a moment and
said, "Oh, that was not our home; that was just our house. We still
have our home; we just don't have any place to put it right now." Johnny
knew that the fire had not destroyed his family and their kind feelings
for one another.
What are you doing to make your house a home? You invite the Spirit
into your home when you show love and care for family members. You can
make a difference in your family and in your home as you live the teachings
of the gospel.
When Weldon was five years old, his mother asked how he would act if
Jesus came to their home. Would he change the way he treated family members?
His mom gave him a picture of a house and some paper flowers. Each time
he shared with his brothers or did not quarrel, he could paste a flower
on the house. The picture reminded him to make his house a home.
Making Your House a Home
Remove page 12 from the magazine, then cut out the flowers. Write your
family's name on the nameplate on the house. When you serve your family
or live gospel teachings, glue a flower on the house. As you add flowers,
your house will become a home. Place it where it will remind you to make
your own house a home!
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 Thomas S. Child.
My house becomes a home when I live in harmony and give joy, love, and
peace to those in my family.
Sharing Time Ideas
(Note: All songs are from Children's Songbook unless otherwise
indicated; GAK = Gospel Art Kit, TNGC = Teaching, No Greater
Call .)
1. Show a picture of Jesus Christ visiting the
Nephites and commanding them to pray. Read the story together (see 3
Nephi 18:1721). On the chalkboard write Family prayer strengthens
my family. Write
scripture references about prayer (see below) on pieces of paper, and
tie each paper to a stick or twig. Have each class read a scripture and
discuss the blessings of prayer (for example, Alma
37:37; 3 Nephi
18:15; 3
Nephi 18:20; 3
Nephi 18:21; Moroni
10:45; D&C 68:28; D&C 88:63; D&C 112:10). To report, have each class read the scripture, tell
the blessing from the scripture, and add the stick to the others. Once
all of the sticks have been collected, tie them together in a bundle.
Ask a child to try to bend the bundle of sticks. When the sticks are
bundled together, they become stronger. Similarly, the blessings of prayer
can strengthen our families. Share an experience of a time when your
family was strengthened through family prayer. Sing a song or hymn about
prayer, and have children stand in a circle and hold a string or rope
with large buttons or small spools threaded on it to pass along as they
sing. When the music stops, those holding buttons or spools could share
a blessing of family prayer. To conclude, have the children color a picture
illustrating 3 Nephi
18:21 to display in their homes.
2. Draw a large outline of a house on the
board. Draw a table and chairs inside the house. Give five or six children
pieces of chalk, and whisper to them to draw a family member at the
table reading the scriptures. Have the pianist play a song or hymn
about the scriptures, and have the Primary guess what the family in
the picture is doing. Point out that just as the children were told
what to draw, the Lord speaks to His children through the scriptures.
The scriptures can help us and bless our lives if we read them regularly,
pray about them, and follow their teachings. Help the children memorize
D&C 19:23 (see TNGC, 17172).
Have each class learn and act out a verse from "Book
of Mormon Stories" (pp.
11819) (excluding verse 8) with simple props and then sing it to the
Primary. Challenge the children to be prepared to recite D&C 19:23 next Sunday, and follow up on this challenge.
3. Song Presentation: "Home
Can Be a Heaven on Earth" ( Hymns, no.
298). Before Primary, place the following four clues and seven wordstrips
under the children's chairs. (Clues: 1. When people think of me, they
think of love. 2. I am a place where you find kindness and charity. 3.
I am a place where you feel safety, security, happiness, and joy. 4.
I am a place where we want to be. Wordstrips: LOVE, KINDNESS, CHARITY,
SAFETY, SECURITY, HAPPINESS, and JOY.) Prepare one wordstrip with the
words HOME and HEAVEN to use later.
Invite the children to look under their chairs for clues to the message
of the song. As they read their clues, place the keywords in random order
on the board. Sing the first line of the song; then have a child place
the keyword(s) for that line in the order you sang them. Sing the line
together, and listen to see if the order is correct. Repeat with the
other three lines of the first verse until you have all the keywords
in the correct order.
Hold the HOME and HEAVEN wordstrip so it
does not face the children and give them the last clue: "I start
with the letter 'H.' How many think the answer to this clue is HEAVEN?
How many think it is HOME? [Show wordstrip.] It is both HOME and HEAVEN!"
Sing the song, and ask the children to sing the answers HOME and HEAVEN
more loudly than the other words of the song. Repeat until the children
have learned the song. Bear testimony that when we show kindness, charity,
and love to our family, we make our home like heaven here on earth.
4. A Primary presidency member and the music leader can work together
to help the children review ways we can strengthen our families. Using
pictures from the Primary manuals and GAK, select two matching pictures
of six different subjects relating to family (for example, family prayer,
family scripture reading, family home evening, caring for others, family
togetherness, and family kindness). Number the backs of the pictures
1 through 12. Post the pictures on the board or the floor with the numbered
sides showing. Use the Topics section of the Children's Songbook (pp.
30612) to choose songs to go along with the picture topics.
Have a child turn over two of the pictures to try
to find a match. If they don't match, another child takes a turn. If
the pictures match, sing a song that goes with the picture's theme. Children
could be given the opportunity to lead the song or to think of hand actions
to go with it.
Show GAK 616 and tell the children of President
Hinckley's "Four
Simple Things to Help Our Families and Our Nations" (see back of
picture or Ensign, Sept. 1996, 7). Encourage the children to
share these four things with their families.
5. Friend references: "Strengthen
the Family," May
2000, 45; "Friend
to Friend," Nov. 2000, 6; "Kimchi,
Brownies, and Family Home Evening," Aug. 1996, 8; "Ezra
Taft Benson," May
2001, inside front cover; "Our
Family," Sept. 1995, 46; "The
Scriptures Can Lead Me to Jesus," May 1999, 1415; "Read
the Scriptures Daily," Mar. 1991, 12. Other references: "The
Extra Blessings of Family Prayer," Ensign, Jan. 1976, 37; "Teaching
Children about Prayer," Ensign, Jan. 1989, 60; "The
Blessings of Family Prayer," Ensign, Feb. 1991, 2; "Unity
through Family Prayer," Family Home Evening Resource Book, 8083.
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