Sunday, February 16, 2020

Teaching Nephi's Courage - Let the Kids Make Up the Motions - KIDS LOVE THIS AND LEARN IT FAST!!!

Hi Friends, 

I first published a post about teaching Nephi's Courage in 2012 and noticed a LOT of traffic to it this weekend (thousands of visitors) so I wanted to share a little more about the BEST WAY TO TEACH THIS SONG.

Since 2012, I've served as Primary President for almost six years, and have seen this song taught more than once. Of all the songs I taught, and all the ways I taught it and saw it taught, this one was my favorite song to teach and my favorite way to teach a song.The kids LOVED it and learned it SO FAST, even the Sunbeams. 

I had three different choristers during my years as Primary President that were and are all seriously AMAZING music teachers, and surprisingly, this was the one teaching method that I used that I never saw repeated! So I want to make sure it's in your teaching tools. And, there's NO PREP WORK except to KNOW YOUR SONG, which is a given.

All I did was asked the children to help me make up motions for each part of the song rather than teaching them a motion. They loved being able to participate in this way and they learned it VERY fast. The only trick was that you have to remember if you are teaching this song in Junior and then again in Senior, that you may need to remember and use different motions for the different classes. I jotted down a few notes after I sat down to help me remember but if you teach the song again the following Sunday, the kids can help you remember the motion, too, especially the kid that came up with the motion that you are using.


How it works:

Chorister: [Assuming you have already discussed the first line of the song. If not, introduce it as described here.] "I want you to help me teach this song. I'm going to sing the first line of this song with the chorister, and I want you to listen carefully so you can help me think about a motion we can make with our hands to remember that line. For example, if the song was about a tree, I might go like [this] with my hands. Or if the song was about a heart, I might go like [this]." 

Chorister and Pianist: [Sing the first line with the pianist.] Okay, what motion do you think we should use for "The Lord commanded Nephi to go and get the plates?" 

Involving Kids: At this point, you can either call on a kid, or encourage kids to show the motion they suggest and pick the best one, or encourage children to raise their hands, and show you their motion. If the motion is really weird, ask them why they chose it. Sometimes the reason is really good, even if it's not intuitive, and you should use it! Sometimes, the motion makes no sense, and then you can gently prod them - "That's a great idea but let's do something that will remind us of a book, because plates are like a book. Do you have a motion for a book?" If they are still struggling, ask them to choose between three good options. Try to be flexible here though. If the motion isn't inappropriate, try to use it though. You want to encourage your children, and by asking why they chose that motion, you can usually find that their reasons were good behind their creative young minds. They get so excited to be able to help here. Also, try to focus on kids that don't get called on a lot. I remember I had a weird motion for "said it would not float" but the little kid explained that he was turning is hand over to show the boat tipping over, so I went with it. 

Okay, you now have one line, with one or two motions to represent that line.

Chorister: "Great, let's sing just that line with that motion." (For example, it could be pointing at the sky for "Lord commanded" and then putting hands in front of you like your hands are book for "to go and get the plates.")

Chorister and kids: Sing that line with that motion.

Chorister: Okay, let's talk about the next line of the song. [Sing the line with the pianist:] "From the wicked Laban behind the city gates."

Chorister: "What motion can we use to show the wicked Laban behind the city gates?" 

Kids come up with a new motion for the new line.

Chorister: "Okay, let's sing the first line and the second line."

Keep going, starting over from the very beginning after you add each line. This gives you repetition, which is one of the greatest tools in memorizing when you can do it in a FUN way. They learn it SO fast, but they're having fun because they're participating!

Chorus:
Keep the chorus simple, I pump my arms back and forth for "I will go, I will do, the things the Lord commands, ... He helps me to obey."

When the kids were reverent enough, we marched back and forth in their rows for this part, too. They were good about sitting down when we got to the first line of each new verse, then standing back up to march when we got to the fun end part. Everyone loved this, Sunbeams through 11.








2 Nephi 1-10: Mercy, Obedience, and the Atonement

I taught adult Sunday School today. This is a portion of the slides I created for class - not all of the slides were used in class, and not all of the slides that were used in class are in this post, either, but these are the ones that I felt translated the best without as much discussion. You can click on any of the images to see a bigger version of them. I also re-typed some of the quotes directly above or below some of these slide images.

This first slide shows who was speaking in each of the first ten chapters of Nephi and to whom they were speaking. It's helpful to understand that context to understand where Lehi or another individual focused their conversation, same as it is in the New Testament with understanding the difference audiences they were speaking to, especially Paul, as he traveled throughout the region and talked to folks with different religious backgrounds. It's also important to remember that they had a precious amount of space on these metal plates, and Jacob felt it was important to use that space to quote Isaiah, which he goes on to do past chapter 10, but this post only covers 2 Nephi 1-10.


These slides show what they were talking about in each chapter:




Some of the themes that really jumped out for me were:
  • The Lord is merciful.
  • We will be blessed IF we keep the commandments.
  • Overcoming afflictions - and sometimes that means fleeing them.
  • Happiness and prosperity means working at something.
  • We should not fear man more than God.
  • Parallels to the teachings and experiences of Christ, Paul, Peter, and other leaders in the New Testament.
  • The atonement.
Examples:


Here's some background I gave on where Lehi traveled and what that land looked like:

There are a number of maps here: 

from a 1976 trip to discover the path that Lehi's family took, traveled and researched by Lynn M. and Hope A. Hilton (go to the link to see the full pictures):


From “Was Lehi Here?” by David A. Edwards – January 2008
Be sure to read the above link for full details as these pictures just give a high level view.
There are also additional photographs at that above link.



Some of the scriptures that we talked about:


There was an excellent comment about how clearly these scriptures lay out the opposites, that even a child can quickly grasp that we can't understand happiness without sorrow, that there is opposition in all things. (There were many excellent comments, but since I was teaching I unfortunately did not have the opportunity to jot them all down.)






I'm re-typing this since the font is so small below. This is from "Our Campfire of Faith" from Elder Gerrit W. Gong in October 2018 conference:

"When we have felt, or feel, uncertain, alone, frustrated, angry, let down, disappointed, or estranged from God and His restored Church, it may take an extra measure of effort and faith to enter again on His covenant path. But it is worth it! Please come, or come again, unto the Lord Jesus Christ! God’s love is stronger than the cords of death—temporal or spiritual.10 Our Savior’s Atonement is infinite and eternal. Each of us strays and falls short. We may, for a time, lose our way. God lovingly assures us, no matter where we are or what we have done, there is no point of no return. He waits ready to embrace us."



In Nephi, we saw the Lord repeatedly giving his people guidance when they were obedient. In some cases, when the burdens became too great, and after multiple chances, the Lord directed them to flee. I thought this was interesting because I've experienced this with making the decision to leave a job, after many attempts to try to resolve a bad situation. The key here is not being a quitter, but knowing when to try to live through the afflication and when to flee. 


Sources for images:
Pioneer Handcarts:
Moses parts the red sea:
Lehi and his people:
The brother of Jared:


In Nephi's case, there came a point when the Lord told him to flee. For example, see 2 Nephi 5:4-5:


I found and read this wonderful talk in the course for preparing this lesson:  "Our Strengths Can Become Our Downfall," by Elder Dallin H. Oaks given in October 1994 at a Brigham Young University Fireside.

He gives a number of specific examples of how if we are not comfortable, something that could be a strength in our life could become a chink in our armor against the adversary. 

He says:

"How, then, do we prevent our strengths from becoming our downfall? The quality we must cultivate is humility. Humility is the great protector. Humility is the antidote against pride. Humility is the catalyst for all learning, especially spiritual things. Through the prophet Moroni, the Lord gave us this great insight into the role of humility: 'I give unto men weakness that they may be humble; and my grace is sufficient for all men that humble themselves before me; for if they humble themselves before me, and have faith in me, then will I make weak things become strong unto them.'" 

I loved this entire talk, and because it was given at a BYU address, it didn't reach the greater audience at General Conference, so I want to encourage everyone to read "Our Strengths Can Become Our Downfall!"



Some of these slides are not saving over well so to re-quote from the slide above, from the talk "Taking Upon Ourselves the Name of Jesus Christ,":

"Finally, I believe that to take upon ourselves His name, we must trust Him. At a meeting I attended one Sunday, a young woman asked something like the following: “My boyfriend and I recently broke up, and he chose to leave the Church. He tells me he has never been happier. How can this be?”
The Savior answered this question when He said to the Nephites, “But if [your life is] not built upon my gospel, and is built upon the works of men, or upon the works of the devil, verily I say unto you [you will] have joy in [your] works for a season, and by and by the end cometh.”22 There simply is no enduring joy outside the gospel of Jesus Christ."



I created this timeline because the powerful thing about what Jacob shares here is that every moment shows the Lord's mercy. 


The Lord showed mercy in:

1. Sending prophets to warn Jerusalem to repent.
2. Warning Lehi that since nobody was repenting, they needed to go into the wilderness.
3. Guiding Lehi's family into the wilderness.
4. Sending the Savior to give the people that rejected the prophets another chance.


We are blessed because we learn from our trials and afflictions, and because for whatever else we cannot overcome, the Lord blesses with our obedience through the plan of atonement. Says Elder Jeffrey R. Holland, in "Where Justice, Love, and Mercy Meet:"

"What a plight! The entire human race in free fall—every man, woman, and child in it physically tumbling toward permanent death, spiritually plunging toward eternal anguish. Is that what life was meant to be? ...
"The answer to those questions is an unequivocal and eternal no! With prophets ancient and modern, I testify that 'all things have been done in the wisdom of him who knoweth all things.'4 Thus, from the moment those first parents stepped out of the Garden of Eden, the God and Father of us all, anticipating Adam and Eve’s decision, dispatched the very angels of heaven to declare to them—and down through time to us—that this entire sequence was designed for our eternal happiness."


2 Nephi 9


50 Come, my brethren, every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters; and he that hath no money, come buy and eat; yea, come buy wine and milk without money and without price.
51 Wherefore, do not spend money for that which is of no worth, nor your labor for that which cannot satisfy. Hearken diligently unto me, and remember the words which I have spoken; and come unto the Holy One of Israel, and feast upon that which perisheth not, neither can be corrupted, and let your soul delight in fatness.