Our shepherd
Children's sermon
Object:
a recording of the voices of several mothers whose children will be
present
When he has brought out all of his own, he goes ahead of them, and the sheep
follow him because they know his voice. (v. 4)
Good morning, boys and girls. Jesus thought of himself as a shepherd. Do you know what a shepherd does? (let them answer) That's right, a shepherd watches and protects sheep. Jesus must have known a lot about shepherds because he taught us that sheep trust the shepherd with their lives. When a shepherd speaks, the sheep listen. The sheep know the shepherd's voice and follow him to safety.
Sheep will not follow a stranger. When a stranger speaks the sheep run away and hide from the stranger. It sounds to me like the sheep are pretty smart.
I brought along a recording of some voices. I want to see if you recognize the voices and can pick out the one voice that you really trust. (play the recording and see if the children can identify their own mother's voice) The voices you heard were some of your mothers' voices, and we can tell that you know your own mother's voice and that you trust it.
What are you supposed to do when a stranger asks you to get in car with them or take a walk with them? (let them answer) That's right, you are supposed to run away from them and if they follow you when you run away then you should yell loudly while you are running. According to Jesus, that is what sheep do when a stranger tries to make sheep follow him.
All of us trust Jesus and the voice of Jesus. If we were sheep we would call him our shepherd. But, because we are people we call him other names of trust. We call Jesus the Christ, the Savior, our Lord, our Master, the Son of God, and other names like this because we trust Jesus with our lives, just like the sheep trust the shepherd.
The next time you are taking a drive in the country and you pass some sheep out in a field munching some good green grass, I hope you think of Jesus and his voice calling you. Jesus is our God and we trust him with everything we have. Amen.
Good morning, boys and girls. Jesus thought of himself as a shepherd. Do you know what a shepherd does? (let them answer) That's right, a shepherd watches and protects sheep. Jesus must have known a lot about shepherds because he taught us that sheep trust the shepherd with their lives. When a shepherd speaks, the sheep listen. The sheep know the shepherd's voice and follow him to safety.
Sheep will not follow a stranger. When a stranger speaks the sheep run away and hide from the stranger. It sounds to me like the sheep are pretty smart.
I brought along a recording of some voices. I want to see if you recognize the voices and can pick out the one voice that you really trust. (play the recording and see if the children can identify their own mother's voice) The voices you heard were some of your mothers' voices, and we can tell that you know your own mother's voice and that you trust it.
What are you supposed to do when a stranger asks you to get in car with them or take a walk with them? (let them answer) That's right, you are supposed to run away from them and if they follow you when you run away then you should yell loudly while you are running. According to Jesus, that is what sheep do when a stranger tries to make sheep follow him.
All of us trust Jesus and the voice of Jesus. If we were sheep we would call him our shepherd. But, because we are people we call him other names of trust. We call Jesus the Christ, the Savior, our Lord, our Master, the Son of God, and other names like this because we trust Jesus with our lives, just like the sheep trust the shepherd.
The next time you are taking a drive in the country and you pass some sheep out in a field munching some good green grass, I hope you think of Jesus and his voice calling you. Jesus is our God and we trust him with everything we have. Amen.
