Promises to keep
Children's sermon
Object:
a broken necklace
And remember, I am with you always, to the end of the age. (v. 20b)
Good morning, boys and girls! How are you this morning? (allow answers) Today we are going to talk about promises. How many of you have made a promise before? (allow answers) Probably all of us have made promises! Now… how many of you have broken a promise before? (allow answers) It's not fun to remember promises we have broken. Broken promises are like this broken necklace: It was once something beautiful, but now it is useless. It can't be worn as a necklace. It's not very good for anything now.
We have probably all broken a promise before -- broken a link in our chain of trust with another person. We probably didn't do it on purpose. Maybe we forgot. Maybe something else happened and we couldn't keep it. Maybe there was another reason that we couldn't keep it.
When we break promises, we feel bad. When other people break promises to us, we feel hurt. We feel unimportant. We feel sad. But unfortunately, promises are often broken. Sometimes people break them on purpose, but usually people break them on accident or because they simply couldn't make it work.
Or maybe they promised something impossible. Should you promise someone that you will live for 100 years? (allow answers) Of course not! We don't know how long we are going to live. That is out of our control. In fact, many things in our lives are out of our control. Do you know whose control they are in? (allow answers) The answer is God! God is the one who is in control of our lives. So no matter how much other people may want and try to keep their promises, sometimes things out of their control get in the way.
But there is someone whose promise we can always trust. God is in control of the universe -- so nothing can "accidentally" make him break a promise. No matter what, God will be there for us, as Jesus says in our gospel today: "I am with you always, until the end of the age." Jesus is in heaven. He will not die. He will not pass away. He will be there for us. Always. And that's a promise we can count on. Amen.
Good morning, boys and girls! How are you this morning? (allow answers) Today we are going to talk about promises. How many of you have made a promise before? (allow answers) Probably all of us have made promises! Now… how many of you have broken a promise before? (allow answers) It's not fun to remember promises we have broken. Broken promises are like this broken necklace: It was once something beautiful, but now it is useless. It can't be worn as a necklace. It's not very good for anything now.
We have probably all broken a promise before -- broken a link in our chain of trust with another person. We probably didn't do it on purpose. Maybe we forgot. Maybe something else happened and we couldn't keep it. Maybe there was another reason that we couldn't keep it.
When we break promises, we feel bad. When other people break promises to us, we feel hurt. We feel unimportant. We feel sad. But unfortunately, promises are often broken. Sometimes people break them on purpose, but usually people break them on accident or because they simply couldn't make it work.
Or maybe they promised something impossible. Should you promise someone that you will live for 100 years? (allow answers) Of course not! We don't know how long we are going to live. That is out of our control. In fact, many things in our lives are out of our control. Do you know whose control they are in? (allow answers) The answer is God! God is the one who is in control of our lives. So no matter how much other people may want and try to keep their promises, sometimes things out of their control get in the way.
But there is someone whose promise we can always trust. God is in control of the universe -- so nothing can "accidentally" make him break a promise. No matter what, God will be there for us, as Jesus says in our gospel today: "I am with you always, until the end of the age." Jesus is in heaven. He will not die. He will not pass away. He will be there for us. Always. And that's a promise we can count on. Amen.

