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Ways to Connect with Students after Class

ways to connect with students seoKrisann Durnford, field editor for Word Aflame curriculum, offers ways to connect with students after class.

What Happens after Sunday School?

Do you know what happens to your students between Sundays? For some it is a week of violence, danger, hunger, and fear. Other students may have days of routine events: school, TV, playing with friends, and little or no spiritual guidance. Or you may teach “church kids” whose parents are faithful in attendance and nurture their children spiritually. Whatever the case, the Sunday school teacher’s responsibility does not end when she turns out the light in the classroom.

Creative classroom décor shows you care. Exciting review games and Bible story presentations cause the children to anticipate Sunday morning. Yet what happens after Sunday school?

Effective children’s ministry cannot be turned on at 9:45 am each Sunday and then turned off two hours later. The one or two-hour Sunday school session is like the tip of the iceberg. Your preparation, prayer, commitment, and involvement in your students’ lives is all below the surface and affects the spiritual climate in your classroom.

Effective children’s ministry cannot be turned on at 9:45 am each Sunday and then turned off two hours later. Share on X

A popular national magazine often highlights secular teachers who have affected entire neighborhoods, schools, or communities. Story after story proves it can be done if the teacher goes beyond the norm—not just in the classroom, but also in the students’ lives.

How can you affect your students after Sunday school?

Getting beyond the Sunday school mindset takes effort. Many of us just breathe a sigh of relief as we close the classroom door. Teaching a Sunday school class is a sacrifice of time and resources, but if we are going to do it, why not really make a difference by going the extra mile? By reaching into the lives of our students, we fulfill the commission Jesus gave: “Go ye into all the world.” He was not speaking of just Sunday mornings for our students. He looked beyond that into their Mondays, Tuesdays, and Wednesdays.

He saw the need to provide love and encouragement when the trials come on Thursday and Friday. Jesus is there for them on Saturdays; He does not leave for a weekend vacation! The Master’s example provides the answer to the question: what happens after Sunday school?

 

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