Who I Am
Children's sermon
Object:
a family photo album
"How long will you keep us in suspense? If you are the Messiah, tell us plainly." Jesus answered, "I have told you, and you do not believe." (vv. 24b-25a)
Good morning, boys and girls! How are you this morning? (allow answers) Today I brought a family photo album with me. How many of you have a family photo album at home? (allow answers) Have you ever looked at the photos in your photo album? (allow answers) Tell me about some of your favorite pictures. (allow answers)
People have family albums so they can keep a record of their lives. In a way, a photo album shows who you are. It shows what you have done in your life, the people you love and who love you, and the places that you have been.
In Jesus' time, they did not have photo albums. Photographs were not invented until hundreds of years later! In Jesus' time, peoples' identities were not kept in photo albums. They were kept by remembering the names of all your ancestors. Do you know what ancestors are? (allow answers) Ancestors are people in your family who have died. Ancestors are your great-great-grandparents, and their parents, and their parents, and so on. In Jesus' time, people kept track of all their great-grandparents, back as far as they could go!
The beginning of the New Testament starts with one of these lists of ancestors. Can you guess whose ancestor list it was? (allow answers) It was the list of Jesus' ancestors! Like other people in his time, Jesus identified himself by the people who came before him.
Even that wasn't the full story. In our photo albums today, there are things that we do and say that can't be captured in a photograph. In Jesus' time, it was the same way. You identified yourself by your ancestors, but that didn't tell people everything about you. Even though Jesus' disciples probably know who his parents are, and probably knew some of his family tree, they also realize that there was more to Jesus than just his family name. In the gospel today, they ask him about it. "If you are the Messiah, tell us plainly," they say to Jesus. They are pretty sure that the thing that really identifies Jesus is that he is the Son of God, not just the son of his ancestors!
We are kind of like Jesus. Even though our family gives us our identity that is not all we are. It is up to each of us to decide who we want to be. The person we are inside can be different from our family. That is kind of scary, but also exciting! We can still be a part of our family while trying new things and finding an individual identity. We will still be the person in our family photo albums, but we will also be the person who lives outside the pictures. Amen.
Good morning, boys and girls! How are you this morning? (allow answers) Today I brought a family photo album with me. How many of you have a family photo album at home? (allow answers) Have you ever looked at the photos in your photo album? (allow answers) Tell me about some of your favorite pictures. (allow answers)
People have family albums so they can keep a record of their lives. In a way, a photo album shows who you are. It shows what you have done in your life, the people you love and who love you, and the places that you have been.
In Jesus' time, they did not have photo albums. Photographs were not invented until hundreds of years later! In Jesus' time, peoples' identities were not kept in photo albums. They were kept by remembering the names of all your ancestors. Do you know what ancestors are? (allow answers) Ancestors are people in your family who have died. Ancestors are your great-great-grandparents, and their parents, and their parents, and so on. In Jesus' time, people kept track of all their great-grandparents, back as far as they could go!
The beginning of the New Testament starts with one of these lists of ancestors. Can you guess whose ancestor list it was? (allow answers) It was the list of Jesus' ancestors! Like other people in his time, Jesus identified himself by the people who came before him.
Even that wasn't the full story. In our photo albums today, there are things that we do and say that can't be captured in a photograph. In Jesus' time, it was the same way. You identified yourself by your ancestors, but that didn't tell people everything about you. Even though Jesus' disciples probably know who his parents are, and probably knew some of his family tree, they also realize that there was more to Jesus than just his family name. In the gospel today, they ask him about it. "If you are the Messiah, tell us plainly," they say to Jesus. They are pretty sure that the thing that really identifies Jesus is that he is the Son of God, not just the son of his ancestors!
We are kind of like Jesus. Even though our family gives us our identity that is not all we are. It is up to each of us to decide who we want to be. The person we are inside can be different from our family. That is kind of scary, but also exciting! We can still be a part of our family while trying new things and finding an individual identity. We will still be the person in our family photo albums, but we will also be the person who lives outside the pictures. Amen.

