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Everyone a Child Should Know Memory Cards

Jenny Brake

5.0

5.0

Everyone a Child Should Know Memory Cards

Jenny Brake

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It's never too early to introduce the next generation to some of the heroes of faith. These 52 memory cards will help children learn about Christian men and women from all walks of life who wanted to live for their friend Jesus.

The cards cover the following people: Brother Andrew, Augustine, Gladys Aylward, Johann Sebastian Bach, Thomas Barnardo, Corrie ten Boom, William and Catherine Booth, Anne Bradstreet, John Bunyan, John Calvin, William Carey, Amy Carmichael, George Washington Carver, John Chrysostom, Fanny Crosby, Joni Eareckson Tada, Edward VI, Jim and Elisabeth Elliott, Billy Graham, Argula von Grumbach, Mary Jones, Adoniram Judson, John Knox, C. S. Lewis, Eric Liddell, Katie Luther, Martin Luther, Dwight L. Moody, Hannah More, George Mueller, John Newton, Florence Nightingale, Rosa Parks, Patrick Robert Raikes, Rembrandt, Selina, Countess of Huntingdon, Lord Shaftesbury, Mary Slessor, Charles Spurgeon, C. T. Studd, Hudson Taylor, Lilias Trotter, William Tyndale, Charles Wesley, John Wesley, Susanna Wesley, George Whitefield, William Wilberforce, Richard Wurmbrand, John Wycliffe, Katharina Zell.

  • Title

    Everyone a Child Should Know Memory Cards

  • Author(s)

    Jenny Brake

  • Series

    A child should know

  • ISBN

    9781911272724

  • Publisher

    10Publishing

  • Age Range

    4-7s, 8-11s

  • Audience

    Children

  • Pages

    52

  • Published

    11/01/2017

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Overall rating

5.0 based on 1 review

Done well

For the past couple of years we’ve been using our traditional children’s slot in church to run a series called “50 Christians” giving a very brief bio and point of application for 50 significant Christians down the ages. I found the confidence to tackle church history from the “Through the Bible with Buck Denver” which is not afraid to teach church history to kids. We backed up the series with a set of 50 baseball–type cards each carrying a picture and some biographical detail. We had them printed as a job lot of business cards and encouraged the kids (and adults!) to collect the set. It was slightly amateurish as these things always are, but a really good use of the time in a church service to teach both children and adults the value of church history without getting into dry and dusty detail. I’m glad to see the idea now done well – better in fact than we ever did it – with a superb book by Clare Heath–Whyte and a matching set of cards with fantastic illustrations from Jenny Brake. Why not think about using these to do something similar to us? Clare’s book gives you the script and the teaching points, then the church could invest in enough sets so that kids can collect one each week. They will love it and learn as they go. Even adults might learn a thing or two. We had kids in our church buy albums to keep their collections and ask for missing cards when they were away. You could follow a similar pattern. I’ve long been a little sceptical about kids’ slots in church: if kids are taught well in Sunday School I fail to see what value the talk adds other than giving a church member something else to prepare. Moreover, they often reflect the inability of a service leader to know how to lead a service so that it serves all the congregation, including kids. But that rant aside, here is a very useful way to use that five–minute slot that will do precisely what is needed – it really will make a difference and do something that is not being done elsewhere. It would be ironic indeed if the way for adults to appreciate church history was through the kids’ enthusiasm. But why not?

Adrian Reynolds

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