Welcome back everyone.
Maria:It's time for the creative side of week 15.
Maria:So I've got three object lessons for you to work with.
Maria:I think, especially on a week like this one, where you've got this really
Maria:big chapter, that's sort of, you know, that kind of flows all together.
Maria:This is a good week to break things up with a few creative ideas.
Maria:So let me walk you through the supplies list first, and then I'll take you
Maria:into each one and help you see how you could maybe teach them or adapt
Maria:them to your kids or your classes.
Maria:Okay, let's break them down.
Maria:First, I wanted to give you a good teaching tool to help you walk through
Maria:the allegory of the olive tree.
Maria:And one of my favorite ways to do that is to actually make a vineyard.
Maria:So if you weren't part of the course, We started this craft.
Maria:It's basically, you're making a paper bag olive tree so that you can help your
Maria:kids understand the love the Lord has for his trees and how he cares for them.
Maria:You can take this in a bunch of different directions, but this teaching
Maria:tool will help you pull it off.
Maria:It's been revamped for this year.
Maria:I've added new things to it and pulled more from.
Maria:the current teachings, especially about covenants to
Maria:tie covenants into this story.
Maria:So for this one, all you really need is the printable itself.
Maria:So it's, um, it includes the base piece and all these leaves, and then
Maria:you need something to make the trunk.
Maria:So to create it, you just need to go and get standard, uh, paper bags.
Maria:You may even already have them in your pantry for your kids lunches.
Maria:If you get the bigger size, you make a bigger tree, but I
Maria:personally like the standard size.
Maria:It works great for me.
Maria:So grab those supplies and I'll teach you how to make an epic tree, and
Maria:hopefully a whole vineyard of trees that you can talk through the allegory with.
Maria:Okay, second one.
Maria:This one is talking about what I call the triangle of truth.
Maria:Often, especially in the last few conferences, I feel like we're hearing
Maria:about how to discern truth from error.
Maria:That we need these key tools of the Holy Ghost and living
Maria:prophets and the scriptures.
Maria:It's the same thing we studied when we talked about the iron rod.
Maria:So I wanted to teach it in a new way and talk about how having that stability of
Maria:that triangle of truth gives me power.
Maria:Because Jacob is able to confront Sherem with power.
Maria:He knows what to say and how to say it.
Maria:And I think our kids want that same blessing.
Maria:So we're going to talk through that object lesson with knives.
Maria:For this one, you just need three butter knives.
Maria:So just pull these out of your drawer.
Maria:If you want to make it easier for your kids to understand, you also want to
Maria:add these little printable sleeves that'll go on top of it and give
Maria:you some links to some scriptures.
Maria:on the back.
Maria:So this is a cool balancing object lesson that will help your kids
Maria:understand why they need all three of these to work together.
Maria:Okay, last one.
Maria:I don't have anything to hold up because you guys, it's the end of
Maria:a quarter, which means it's time for us to have a Kahoot challenge.
Maria:For this week, the reason I want to put a Kahoot challenge in this week is because
Maria:I really liked the way, after Jacob talks about people being confused by Sherem,
Maria:he says they turned to the scriptures.
Maria:After Sherem dies, the people turn to the scriptures and that's how we're going
Maria:to find clarity and avoid confusion.
Maria:the Antichrists that are coming our way down the road.
Maria:And I think that applies for us as well.
Maria:So this week you're going to play a Kahoot game.
Maria:I set up a whole bunch of questions for you so that you could check your
Maria:understanding of the weeks we've done so far and prepare yourself
Maria:for the weeks that are coming next.
Maria:So if you've never done that before, I'll walk you through it in just a second.
Maria:Okay, that's all your supplies.
Maria:Now it's time to get started.
Maria:I
Maria:think the reason Jacob taught so much of Zenos's words by giving us this
Maria:giant allegory is he really wanted his people and us to understand
Maria:the atonement of Jesus Christ and how much the Lord loves his people.
Maria:What he'll, the lengths he'll go to to help them know that they are loved and
Maria:give them many chances to come unto him.
Maria:And the allegory does a beautiful job of this.
Maria:What's hard about it is it's so big that it's really easy for your
Maria:kids to feel like they're swimming.
Maria:in the verses, you know, because they sound similar and it's hard to
Maria:know what the Lord is talking about.
Maria:I found with my kids it helped immensely to let them make something.
Maria:So this craft is basically, we call it a paper bag tree.
Maria:We've done this a couple different ways.
Maria:We did it last year with Zacchaeus.
Maria:If you remember, we made a sycamore tree.
Maria:So this year I've created an olive tree version.
Maria:So the leaves are a little different and you've got Elder Hallett's quote
Maria:about how the allegory teaches us about the atonement of Jesus Christ.
Maria:And then on the bottom, I've actually added.
Maria:Some reference points so that as you teach this throughout the week with
Maria:your kids or in your classes, you can talk to them about the different.
Maria:Symbolic actions.
Maria:Talk to them about pruning and digging and nurturing the soil.
Maria:All those things that the Lord does to care for his trees.
Maria:Then there's another column that talks about all about the symbols.
Maria:Those key symbols that help us understand what they're even talking
Maria:about and why this applies to us.
Maria:Most of those I pulled from, if you haven't seen the Liahona from
Maria:this month, so I think it's in the I think it's in the April Liahona.
Maria:You can go online and find it, but there's this really beautiful
Maria:article that's linked in the creative notes that helps kind of talk.
Maria:I found like it talked more about covenant connections in the allegory of the
Maria:olive tree than I'd ever heard before.
Maria:And so I tried to incorporate that into the printable.
Maria:So the idea is really simple.
Maria:You'll just create this little paper bag tree.
Maria:It does take a little bit of time.
Maria:For an adult, it probably takes 15 minutes or so, for younger kids,
Maria:it might take a little longer.
Maria:I did create a version that has much larger leaves, so that if you're
Maria:working with a primary class, or with younger kids, they could make a
Maria:completed tree a little bit faster.
Maria:But the process is actually really simple.
Maria:If you haven't made one of these trees before, you're just
Maria:going to take the paper bag, and you're going to open it Why?
Maria:And then you're going to scrunch up the middle.
Maria:So you're basically creating the trunk out of the middle of your paper bag.
Maria:And then that box base will become your roots and the top
Maria:will become your branches.
Maria:You can go on the printable.
Maria:It walks you through the steps for how to create that gnarled look.
Maria:But what I like about making these olive trees is they deliberately
Maria:aren't pretty or perfect.
Maria:You're actually, if you look at olive trees in Israel, they have that kind
Maria:of gnarled outer appearance and they grow in kind of weird directions.
Maria:So little kids can make these and they look just as good as what an adult
Maria:might make, but follow the instructions on the printable, make the olive
Maria:trees and then let your kids watch.
Maria:the video.
Maria:My favorite one, especially if you have older primary kids or teenagers, is
Maria:the one that's actually made, I think it was just made this year, because it
Maria:walks through the pictures that are in the new Book of Mormon Stories artwork.
Maria:And I thought it was a beautiful job.
Maria:It's only a few minutes long, but it kind of walks you through all five of those
Maria:time periods and what they apply to.
Maria:So I would watch that as your kids are crafting.
Maria:And then as you go through the week, you might use this as a teaching
Maria:tool in lots of different ways.
Maria:So, for example, if you were trying to help your kids understand how,
Maria:in the vineyard, the servant points out that one of the struggles that
Maria:those trees are having is that they have overgrown their roots.
Maria:They get so big on the top, and what the people can see, the pride that
Maria:is swelling, that their roots get.
Maria:diminished and parched, and so the trees start to die.
Maria:So if you wanted to teach that lesson, you could create these olive trees
Maria:but not attach things to the base.
Maria:And show your kids how hard it is to start attaching the leaves
Maria:when it's not on the base.
Maria:The tree topples over every time.
Maria:It's really hard to get control of it.
Maria:But if you attach the base first and get these roots firmly
Maria:planted, then it's really easy to get all the leaves on the tree.
Maria:Those kind of things you could, you can look at the allegory of the
Maria:olive tree and decide what principles you want to teach and then help
Maria:your kids see it as they craft.
Maria:Another one that resonates a lot with my kids is understanding how
Maria:much the Lord loves his trees.
Maria:Even my boys who, when we first made these, were not
Maria:enthusiastic about making a craft.
Maria:Once they had put the 10 or 20 minutes into creating their little
Maria:tree, they cared about that tree.
Maria:So when I told them it was time to cut off a branch, like I
Maria:asked them to cut off one of the branches, they didn't want to do it.
Maria:They struggled to cut off a branch because they loved their tree.
Maria:And I think even those simple principles will help your kids
Maria:understand how the Lord feels about us.
Maria:That's what the allegory is all about.
Maria:It's about The Lord teaching us how much he loves us and what he will do
Maria:to help nourish us and cultivate us.
Maria:So if you want to talk to your kids about pruning or grafting, you could
Maria:actually have them go through that process by cutting off one of their trees
Maria:and attaching it to the tree of their brother or their sister and then talk
Maria:about how the Lord does that for us.
Maria:So I don't have like a specific way to teach this.
Maria:I'm just hoping that this teaching tool will help you be able to teach
Maria:whatever spirit prompts you to cover with your kids or with your classes.
Maria:I think the interaction between Sherem and Jacob is really powerful,
Maria:especially for our teenagers, because they're going to encounter their own
Maria:version of Sherems in their worlds.
Maria:People who will doubt why they have faith at all, people who will mock them for
Maria:believing, they're going to encounter those who are trying to pull them away
Maria:from their faith constantly sometimes.
Maria:And I think watching how Jacob responds in those situations is really helpful.
Maria:I want to make it to get.
Maria:The tools Jacob uses because Jacob, although he has this really powerful
Maria:testimony, it comes from somewhere.
Maria:It's not something he's just given.
Maria:He, he has to get that over the course of his lifetime.
Maria:And I like that he, in the verses, sort of breaks down where
Maria:his understanding comes from.
Maria:And what he points to is the same thing that Nephi pointed to and Lehi pointed to
Maria:when they talked about the Word of God.
Maria:That if we want to understand truth, Then we need three sources.
Maria:We need living prophets.
Maria:We need the words of the scriptures and we need the confirmation of the Holy Ghost.
Maria:And when those three things work in tandem, we have a base of power.
Maria:So to show that you're going to create basically a tower base, you're going
Maria:to create a structure that seems like it shouldn't be able to stand.
Maria:But it does.
Maria:To do that you're going to take your butter knives.
Maria:I found it was helpful to put the paper sheath on the butter
Maria:knife when you put the sleeve on.
Maria:One, it makes the butter knife a little grippier so it's easier
Maria:for those knives to stay together.
Maria:It's also really nice because it actually has the words on it and
Maria:it has the Words of modern leaders talking about these same principles.
Maria:I just thought it was cool to see how many different conference talks
Maria:in the last one or two conferences have focused on understanding truth.
Maria:And these same principles of these three things working together are taught
Maria:repeatedly by many different people.
Maria:So that's what you find on the back of the printable.
Maria:So to do it, you just are going to invite your kids to spread out some cups.
Maria:So you're going to take three cups, turn them upside down if that's easier, and
Maria:their challenge is to try and use those three knives to create a stable base.
Maria:For us, the easiest way to get our cups spaced out was to actually use the knife
Maria:and lay it between the triangle of cups, so you get basically about the right
Maria:amount of distance, and then you invite your kids to try and figure out how those
Maria:knives can work together to create a base.
Maria:You as a teacher or as a parent will know that on the printable
Maria:there's kind of a white line.
Maria:You're basically going to.
Maria:We've these knives together.
Maria:So as you put a knife down, you're going to let it go over
Maria:one and under one, depending on which direction you're facing.
Maria:And on the printable, there's a guiding line to kind of help you.
Maria:You're going to lay your knife in the dark zone on the printable, and then you'll
Maria:be able to weave those tips together.
Maria:And once you get the three tips.
Maria:It's woven together, it creates this very steady base.
Maria:In fact, you can get something as heavy as like a hydro flask full of
Maria:water and set it on top of these skinny little knives and they hold it steady.
Maria:The reason I like this for this particular teaching is Not only did Jacob know these
Maria:things, that his testimony comes from those three sources, he also has put those
Maria:sources to the test throughout his life.
Maria:That's what he says to Sharon.
Maria:He basically says, I know these things.
Maria:God has manifest himself unto me through the words of the scriptures
Maria:and through the words of prophets and through the gift of the Holy Ghost.
Maria:He has put these things to the test.
Maria:And when he follows the words of the prophet, and he follows the words that
Maria:he finds in scripture, and he follows the promptings of the spirit, he finds.
Maria:stability, and success.
Maria:That's why I think Jacob is unshaken.
Maria:It's not because he's had these marvelous manifestations, although
Maria:I think those certainly help.
Maria:His unshaken state comes from repeatedly throughout his life trusting in these
Maria:three sources and putting them to the test, and seeing the results that
Maria:when he puts those resources to the test, that Water bottle stays up.
Maria:It can keep things afloat.
Maria:And he sees that over and over again in his life and that secures
Maria:his testimony so that he's no longer hoping or having faith.
Maria:He has this certainty that allows him to be unshaken.
Maria:And since that's what we want for our kids, I think knowing these
Maria:three tools is pretty pivotal.
Maria:Jacob taught that one of the ways the people turn away from Sherem's
Maria:teachings and get back on course is by searching the scriptures.
Maria:And I think that's why we search them as well.
Maria:Because this is one of those three parts of our power, right?
Maria:This is where we get truth and we can trust in its stable base.
Maria:In fact, I really loved, there's a talk from Elder Newman from the last, a
Maria:couple conferences ago, and he said this.
Maria:The voice of the covenant people is found in our own words of testimony, and it is
Maria:found in the words of living prophets, and it is preserved powerfully in scriptures.
Maria:It is there that our children will come to know Jesus and
Maria:find answers to their questions.
Maria:It is there that they will learn for themselves the doctrine of Christ.
Maria:It's there that they will find hope.
Maria:They will prepare, this will prepare them for a lifetime of seeking truth
Maria:and living on the covenant path.
Maria:We want our kids rooted in the scriptures.
Maria:That's what the Come Follow Me program is all about.
Maria:But I think it's helpful to take a break now and then and make
Maria:sure your kids are on track.
Maria:If your family is anything like my family, some weeks are great and some weeks are a
Maria:distracted mess and we miss it entirely.
Maria:So I think it's helpful to take a second this week and
Maria:review what they know so far.
Maria:Mostly because I think it's reassuring as a parent and as a teacher to see how much
Maria:your kids really have picked up on things.
Maria:And the way that you do that is to do the Kahoot challenge.
Maria:So this is quarter one.
Maria:So I set up 25 questions that are based from the introductory pages of the Book
Maria:of Mormon all the way through Jacob 7.
Maria:There's a smattering of questions.
Maria:The age range that I set it to is about like, you know, 12, 13, 14, maybe 15.
Maria:Some questions are a little harder, some are a little easier.
Maria:But my hope with the questions is that If you have younger kids that they can
Maria:team up with an older sibling or somebody else in the class, but you can find a way
Maria:to kind of make it a little more even.
Maria:And then you play.
Maria:In fact, if you haven't played Kahoot lately, you don't just have
Maria:to play with the ordinary way of having the questions projected up
Maria:on the TV and answer on your phone.
Maria:You also can play these other fun little games.
Maria:So this time today, we had my kids do a few of the other options.
Maria:Like there's a tower one where they build towers and there's a few different
Maria:options that they can go through.
Maria:What I liked about the new games is.
Maria:It actually, you could set a time limit and it cycled through the questions until
Maria:your kids knew them within the time limit.
Maria:So if they missed one, they would, Kahoot would add that question back into
Maria:the mix and let them answer it again.
Maria:And it tallied up the scores for everybody over the course of time.
Maria:So there were three or four games that we played together as a family
Maria:to review these same questions.
Maria:And by the time we had played it three or four times, They were pretty solid,
Maria:you know, they, I could see where they were lacking a little bit, I
Maria:could see where they were strong, and as a parent, I can adjust and pivot.
Maria:I think that's what Jacob wanted us to understand.
Maria:The scriptures are a tool that's designed to help us come closer to Christ.
Maria:That only works if we really understand them.
Maria:And so this is a good week for you to check in, see how your family's doing,
Maria:catch up where you're lacking, and get ready for going into this next quarter
Maria:as we head into the words of Enoch.
Maria:Thanks for being here, you guys.
Maria:That's it for week 15.
Maria:Remember, if you aren't in the course and you don't have access to the
Maria:notes or the printables, you can often find the printables on my Etsy shop.
Maria:So things like the knives or the olive tree, you can look for that
Maria:on Etsy and you can find the link in the YouTube video description.
Maria:But if you're in the course, I hope you jump into the notes.
Maria:The creative notes, and I'll see you in the next one.
Maria:And the insights notes will help you navigate these chapters and also link you
Maria:out to really recent conference talks so that you can find out what our leaders
Maria:have said about these particular verses.
Maria:So I hope you dive into those.
Maria:Also, if you need more help, you're more than welcome to join us on
Maria:the live that's Monday mornings.
Maria:10 a.
Maria:m.
Maria:You just need to come to gather.
Maria:macmom.
Maria:com.
Maria:That's where the course is housed, so that's where you can find out more
Maria:about how to subscribe to the course, or if you're just interested in being
Maria:a free member, you can be part of the conversation and join us on the live.
Maria:Otherwise, I hope you really enjoy this week of study.
Maria:I know it's big.
Maria:Chapter five is big, but I think seeing it with fresh eyes brought all kinds
Maria:of new insights for me this week, and I hope it does that for you as well.
Maria:Enjoy this week of study and then come on back as we head into Jacob's son Enos
Maria:story, which is powerful all on its own.
Maria:So come on back next week and we'll head into week 16.
Maria:Alright you guys, enjoy your week and I'll see you on Monday.