Description of The Coloring Page: The
WOG coloring pages are from India. These have been dedicated to the
children of the internet by this ministry. The collection was compiled
by Yesudas Solomon in 2020 at www.WordOfGod.in, you may contact them at
wordofgod@wordofgod.in to ask about these particular resources. The
scripture reference is about Noah and his sons building the ark. This took anywhere from 52 - 120 years for them to accomplish according to Biblical scholars. That's a long time to be made fun of; don't you think? "My spirit shall not strive with man forever, since he too is flesh, yet his days shall be one hundred and twenty years." Genesis 6:3
Wednesday, March 9, 2022
Color Noah and his sons as they build the ark...
Color Moses as a boy...
Description of The Coloring Page: "When the child grew older, she took him to Pharaoh's daughter and he became her son. She named him Moses, saying, "I drew him out of the water." Exodus 2:10, Lotus flowers that grew in Egyptian canals among the reeds., Young teen boy dressed as Egyptian.
Tuesday, March 8, 2022
Color Miriam as a young woman...
Description of The Coloring Page: musical instrument, "Sing to the Lord, for he is highly exalted..." Exodus 15:20, tambourine
Monday, March 7, 2022
Basic supplies you will need to make our Bible crafts...
I will keep a listing here of the common craft materials I give in supply lists for Bible craft projects. Most people do not need to read here, however it is a helpful post for those of you who speak an alternative language to English. Here you will read a specific description of materials so that you may acquire similar craft product in your own country that is referred to by alternative words and definitions.
Left, watercolor paints in a tray. Right colored pencils. |
Again, turn on the app (located on right sidebar) for your native language and read here for a detailed description of craft materials.
Construction paper: also known as sugar paper, is colored card stock paper. The texture is slightly rough, and the surface is unfinished. Due to the source material, mainly wood pulp, small particles are visible on the paper's surface. It is used for projects or crafts.
Scissors: are hand-operated shearing tools. A pair of scissors consists of a pair of metal blades pivoted so that the sharpened edges slide against each other when the handles (bows) opposite to the pivot are closed. Scissors are used for cutting various thin materials, such as paper, cardboard, metal foil, cloth, rope, and wire. A large variety of scissors and shears all exist for specialized purposes. (Use blunt end scissors for younger children.)
Stapler: a mechanical device that joins pages of paper or similar material by driving a thin metal staple through the sheets and folding the ends. Staplers are widely used in government, business, offices, work places, homes and schools.
Paint for Young Students:
- Most acrylic paints are water-based, but become water-resistant when dry. Depending on how much the paint is diluted with water, or modified with acrylic gels, mediums, or pastes, the finished acrylic painting can resemble a watercolor, a gouache, or an oil painting, or have its own unique characteristics not attainable with other media.
- Watercolor is a painting method in which the paints are made of pigments suspended in a water-based solution.
- Tempera also known as egg tempera, is a permanent, fast-drying painting medium consisting of colored pigments mixed with a water-soluble binder medium, usually glutinous material such as egg yolk. Tempera also refers to the paintings done in this medium. Tempera paintings are very long-lasting, and examples from the first century AD still exist. Egg tempera was a primary method of painting until after 1500 when it was superseded by oil painting. A paint consisting of pigment and binder commonly used in the United States as poster paint is also often referred to as "tempera paint", although the binders in this paint are different from traditional tempera paint.
Pencils: A pencil is a writing or drawing implement with a solid pigment core encased in a sleeve, barrel, or shaft that prevents breaking the core or marking a user's hand.
- Most pencil cores are made of graphite powder mixed with a clay binder. Graphite pencils (traditionally known as "lead pencils") produce grey or black marks that are easily erased, but otherwise resistant to moisture, most chemicals, ultraviolet radiation and natural aging.
- Unlike graphite and charcoal pencils, colored pencils' cores are wax- or oil-based and contain varying proportions of pigments, additives, and binding agents. Water-soluble (watercolor) pencils and pastel pencils are also manufactured as well as colored cores for mechanical pencils.
Left, fruit cartons made from recycled cardboard. Right, paper bags, the one on top has gusseted bottom. |
Left, corrugated cardboard. Right, ice cube tray for paints. |
Elmer's white school glue: Over the next few decades, Elmer's focused on expansion of adhesive products for school and home, in addition to developing a variety of hardware sealants, compounds, and caulks. In 1968, Elmer's introduced Elmer's School Glue, the first white glue that washed out of clothes. Soon, Elmer's Glue-All and School Glue would contain the same ingredients, but each retained its different packaging.
Mod Podge: is a water-based sealer used to preserve decoupage. It is non-toxic and used often for children's craft projects.
Cardboard: (paper tubes, sheets, boxes) is a generic term for heavy-duty paper-based products having greater thickness and superior durability or other specific mechanical attributes to paper; such as foldability, rigidity and impact resistance. The construction can range from a thick sheet known as paperboard to corrugated fiberboard which is made of multiple corrugated and flat layers.
Paper egg cartons: (also known as an egg box in British English) is a carton designed for carrying and transporting whole eggs. (Alternative for paint palette that is for easy clean-up, just let the left-over paint harden and then throw the whole carton into the trash bin.)
Left, toilet roll tubes. Right, paper tubes that once had wrapping paper, tin foil or plastic wrap spun around them. |
Masking tape: also known as painter's tape, is a type of pressure-sensitive tape made of a thin and easy-to-tear paper, and an easily released pressure-sensitive adhesive. It is available in a variety of widths. It is used mainly in painting, to mask off areas that should not be painted.
Newsprint: is a low-cost, non-archival paper consisting mainly of wood pulp and most commonly used to print newspapers and other publications and advertising material.
Small brown or white gusseted paper bags: These bags are often used in the United States to pack student lunches when these are taken from home. The bags are light weight, not waterproof and often made from recycled materials. Bags are sold in bulk from most all grocery stores.
Disposable paper plates, cups and bowls: are made in molds in a factory using compressed paper pulp.
Wooden tongue depressors or Popsicle sticks: (6 inch) is a tool used in medical practice to depress the tongue to allow for examination of the mouth and throat. The most common modern tongue depressors are flat, thin, wooden blades, smoothed and rounded at both ends, but, historically, tongue depressors have been made of a variety of materials. Since they are inexpensive and difficult to clean because of their porous texture, wooden tongue depressors are labeled for disposal after a single usage.
I will add more supplies and definitions of these, as needed.
Sunday, March 6, 2022
Books of The Bible Bookmarks
Simple, printable bookmarks listing both the Old Testament Books of the Bible and The New Testament Books of the Bible. Plus one blank bookmark for note takers. Basic templates for students and adults to look up scriptures quickly during Bible study. Book listings are in the order these appear in the Holy Scriptures.
Paper Chain Template
This paper chain template is for crafts that I will be posting on this blog in the near future. Print the shapes and sizes of paper chains on any decorative paper you like so that these may be mass produced and cut quickly without using a ruler. Don't eliminate this step for children who are five and older when making countdown calendars. It is very good practice for them and it doesn't really matter if these strips are not perfect.
- Cutting improves fine motor skills.
- Manipulating paper and scissors also helps children to practice patience.
- Small accomplishments give young students a since of achievement and it builds their self confidence.
Click directly on the image to download the largest available size. |
Friday, March 4, 2022
Keep trying and trying...
"Because of the increase of wickedness, the love of most will grow cold, but the one who stands firm to the end will be saved" Matthew 24:12,13
Zacchaeus! Did you ever hear of him? What do you know of him? Let us count up all the things we know about him. He was a Jew, but he was in the employ of the Roman government, and was thought of as a traitor to his country. He was rich, and had a fine house in the city of Jericho. He was a success in life, and was the chief man among the publicans or tax collectors. He was very small, and could not see over the heads of other people when in a crowd. He was anxious to see Jesus, so he pushed his way out of the crowd, climbed up a tree, and there he saw Jesus, and Jesus saw him, and they became friends. You remember the story. Zacchaeus when he found he could not see Jesus because of the great crowd did not turn away and go home. He tried again, and overcame all obstacles and at last found himself with Jesus as his guest in his own house.
The only way to succeed is to try. Even the birds and the cattle fail and try again, until they win. The beautiful salmon that swim in the great rivers and the beautiful trout that dart so quickly from stone to stone leap the rapids and falls of the rivers and go up and up to the head waters where they make their homes. In a great rushing river with its seething currents, its spray and foam, you can see the great salmon again and again jump out of the water and make a flying leap up the rushing, roaring waterfall. Some fail, but others try and try again and when they win they rush far up the stream where they make their homes and lay their eggs. There are just two kinds of fish in the sea, swimmers and drifters, and there are just two kinds of people. There are those who drift with the current and do what every one else does, and there are those who direct their lives according to a purpose.
Did you ever hear the proverb, “God helps those who help themselves,” which means that God gives aid to those who try? There is an interesting story about William Carey, the great missionary to India. You know he was a cobbler, and in his shop he had a map of the world and thought about the world and prayed for it, and at last God called him to go out to India as one of the first missionaries. He was a great man. His motto was:
“Expect great things from God.
Attempt great things for God.”
He overcame many things by trying and he learned this great lesson in his early life.
When he was a boy he was very ambitious and never permitted anything to beat him if he could help it. In his play as well as in his work he always wanted to succeed. There was a tree near his home that none of his friends had been able to climb. He was eager to climb that tree and tried and tried again but always failed. But he said, “It shall not beat me. I mean to climb that tree.''
So every day he tried to climb the tree, but made no progress. One day, however, after tearing his clothes and scratching his legs he got more than half way up, when down he fell, all in a heap, and when he tried to get up he could not. His leg was broken.
He was just a lad and he suffered a great deal. For six long weeks he lay on his little bed unable to get up. Then he began to walk around the house and soon he was out in the yard. What do you think he did? Well, the first thing he did was to go to that very tree and try to climb it again and he did. He went to the top and down again and he was satisfied.
That was the stuff out of which the great missionary hero was made. Little wonder he is still remembered for the great work he did in India. It was the same talent to keep on and to try again that brought Zacchaeus face to face with Jesus. Let nothing keep you from Jesus, your best friend. Take for your motto the words of William Carey:
“Expect great things from God.
Attempt great things for God.”
Phil Wickham sings "Great Things"
Habits
“He went to Nazareth, where he had been brought up, and on the Sabbath day he went into the synagogue, as was his custom. He stood up to read... ”— Luke 4:16
A habit, you know, is something you wear. A riding habit is what you wear when you ride a beautiful horse. It is something that exactly fits you, that belongs to you, and becomes you.
A little girl in trying to tell what habit is said it is your second self. And she was right. You can’t get away from your habits any more than you can get away from yourself. Just think about it. If you take away the first letter you still have “a bit” left. If you take away the second letter there is still a “bit” left. If you take away the third letter you still have “it.” Our habits are ourselves.
A good boy has good habits and a bad boy has bad habits. And our habits are made when we are very young. Our brains when we are little children are just like fluffy snow. You know how soft and smooth new fallen snow is. Then you see a pair of little feet running across the snow and you have footprints in the snow. Then those same little feet travel back over the same tracks and return and by and by there is a path in the snow. Now thoughts and acts and words, repeated again and again make tracks in our brain and in our soul and these paths when they become well beaten are habits. Habits are the paths our thoughts and actions take.
Last summer at a farmhouse near my summer home in Canada I saw an interesting example of habit. My friend Mr. Cotter, whom his good wife calls “Sack,” is the warden in the little church at Port Maitland. That is to say, he is the chief man, next to the minister, and watches over the church, takes up the collection, and keeps his eye on the preacher and his ears open to the preaching. His father had been warden before him and before his father his grandfather had held the same important position. So Mr. Cotter knew all about the church.
One Sunday morning as usual he was getting ready for church and had harnessed up old Dolly and hitched her to the buggy and then gone in to wash his hands, put on his coat and take a last look at himself in the glass. That is the way all good farmers do. They dress the horse first, and then themselves.
When he came out Dolly was gone. She was nowhere to be seen. He looked in the shed, and in the field and behind the barn, but there was no Dolly. Where do you think she was? Yes! She had gone off herself with the empty buggy to church and Mr. Cotter found her looking over the fence, listening to the first hymn. Old Dolly, better than most people, had good old-fashioned habits of church-going, and she had a fine habit of being on time.
If you will take your New Testament you will find that three times we are told about the habits of Jesus. When He was twelve years old we read that according to His habit He went up to the feast at Jerusalem. When He became a full grown man He returned from His work to His own village at Nazareth and there according to His habit He entered into the little synagogue and took part in the service. Then near the close of His life we read that according to His habit He went out into the Mount of Olives to pray. These were Jesus’ habits. He had good home habits, good church habits and good prayer habits. Take your Bible and find the verses where these habits of Jesus are spoken of. You will find them all in the Gospel of Luke. You will not find the word “habit” but the word “custom,” which means the same. And then sit down and count over your habits, and ask yourself if you have good church habits, good prayer habits, good study habits, for your habits are just yourself. Kerr
The Greatest Mill In The World
“They will lick dust like a snake, like creatures that crawl on the ground. They will come trembling out of their dens; they will turn in fear to the LORD our God and will be afraid of you.” —Micah 7:17
There is a riddle. What is the greatest mill in the world? I feel sure you can never guess it. Let us count over all the mills we know. First of all there is the mill where grain is ground into flour. We call it a flour mill or a grist mill, and we have all seen those great flour mills where harvest fields of wheat are ground up to make flour for bread. It was of the miller of such a mill that the old folks used to sing:
“There was a jolly miller once
Lived on the River Dee;
He worked and sang from morn till night,
No lark more blithe than he.
“And this the burden of his song
Forever used to be,
‘I care for nobody, no, not I,
If no one cares for me.’”
He was a rather selfish, independent old miller, I guess. But a flour mill is not the greatest mill in the world.
Then there were the great steel mills of Pittsburgh that roared and flashed and smoked and sometimes made noises like thunder and sent out flames like lightning. They lined the banks of our great rivers for miles, but even they were not the greatest in the world.
The greatest mill in the world is quiet, and very still. It never thunders. It never roars. You could pass over it and never notice it. No, it is not a beehive, although that is a great mill, but it is not quiet and still, for bees buzz and fret and fume a great deal. No, it is not an ant hill, but you are getting nearer, “getting hot,” as we say. An ant hill is a great mill, and it is quiet and silent and so busy that if you put a thermometer right into an ant hill you will find there is a rise in temperature on account of the work done in that little mill. Will you give up? You can never guess. Let me tell you.
Well, the greatest miller in the world is—a worm. Yes, an earthworm, what we call a fish- worm, a common angle-worm. It is the greatest miller in the world and the greatest mill is the soil where the earthworms work and burrow. If the earthworms did not work and keep on ploughing and cultivating the soil this earth of ours would be cold and hard and barren, the soil would become hard and cold as rock. It would be like baked clay, but the earthworms plough and cultivate and make it porous and loose, so that the rain can filter down, and the plants and vegetables can grow and take root. You never thought of that, did you? You never knew these little, insignificant, harmless, horrid worms were so useful. Well, that is just the mistake we often make. We think we must be big, and great to be useful. Not at all. The little things are the most useful.
In an acre of land, a piece about as big as our church lot, a wise man counted 53,000 earthworms, and in a rich garden there would be over half a million. We are told that these worms pass ten tons an acre through their bodies and have been doing this for millions of years, grinding, ploughing, cultivating the soil and making it fit for things to grow in. You see then that the earthworms are our helpers, and though they are so little and so humble, yet they do very useful and necessary work. It is always so. Little things working together do great things.
Jesus said much about the value of little things. He said a cup of cold water given in His name was something done for Him. He said that any one who was faithful about little things would be faithful in great things. He praised the poor widow for giving two mites in the Temple offering. He tried to make us understand that the little things are after all the big things. Do you know that St. Paul’s Cathedral in London, one of the most beautiful churches in the world, was built out of sixpences, little English pieces of money like our dimes? How was that? Well, when they decided to build that great and wonderful cathedral they placed a tax of sixpence on every ton of coal used in the land, and out of this tax the beautiful cathedral was built. Little things grow into big things. You do not need to wait until you can do some great and wonderful thing. Some little word or act of love may grow into what will seem some day to be a miracle. Don’t wait for the big things. Do beautiful little things now. Kerr
“If any little word of mine
May make a life the brighter,
If any little song of mine
May make a heart the lighter,
God help me speak that little word,
And take my bit of singing,
And drop it in some lonely vale,
To set the echoes ringing!
“If any little love of mine
May make a life the sweeter,
If any little care of mine
May make a friend’s the fleeter,
If any lift of mine may ease
The burden of another,
God give me love, and care, and strength
To help my toiling brother!”
Sample Illuminated Letter "E"
Description of Sample Letters: A collection of illuminated letter "E" throughout earlier centuries when it was a common place art form. These letters may be traced and integrated into student illumination of scripture, poems, prayer, etc...
Don't forget to drag the png. or jpg into a Word Document and enlarge the image as much as possible before printing it folks. If you have a question about this coloring page, just type into the comment box located directly below this post and I'll try to get back to you as soon as I can.
Sample Illuminated Letter "D"
Description of Sample Letters: A collection of illuminated letter "D" throughout earlier centuries when it was a common place art form. These letters may be traced and integrated into student illumination of scripture, poems, prayer, etc...
Don't forget to drag the png. or jpg into a Word Document and enlarge the image as much as possible before printing it folks. If you have a question about this coloring page, just type into the comment box located directly below this post and I'll try to get back to you as soon as I can.
Thursday, March 3, 2022
Live for Something
LIVE FOR SOMETHING
Live for something, be not idle,
Look about thee for employ,
Sit not down to useless dreaming, -
Labor is the sweetest joy.
Folded hands are ever weary,
Selfish hearts these never gain,
Life for thee hath many duties, -
Active be, then, whilst thou may.
Scatter blessings in thy pathway!
Gentle words and cheering smiles
Better are than gold and silver,
With their grief-dispelling wiles.
As the pleasant sunshine falleth
Ever on the grateful earth,
So let sympathy and kindness
Gladden well the darkened hearth.
Hearts there are oppressed and weary, -
Drop the tear of sympathy;
"Whisper words of hope and comfort;
Give, and thy reward shall be
Joy unto thy soul returning.
From this perfect fountain-head;
Freely, as thou freely givest.
Shall the grateful light be shed.