I love Vacation Bible Scho
ol. I look forward to it every year. I’ve served in VBS where the kids totaled 400. I’ve served in VBS where the kids totaled 35. Each year takes on new space in my head and heart. This year is no different. These are a few of my favorite things about VBS 2014, and in no particular order:
1. Watching my rising 6th graders take on leadership roles they’ve been chomping at the bit to do since last year. If I’ve done my job well over the last sever
al years, they know where everything is in the storage closets because I’ve sent them there often enough to help gather supplies.
2. Listening to the storytellers, our most energetic teachers, share the intensity of each day’s ‘moments.’
3. Watching our youth make sure that even the smallest of kids gets to hit the big ball in beach ball volleyball.
4. Meeting a young Mama who is dropping off her preschooler while holding an infant on her hip…fearful of leaving her little man for the first time, but knowing he is safe with us.
5. Watching two youth guys lead a group of ten 3rd grade boys with grace, kindness, and joy.
6. The beach party at the end of the week with hot dogs (halved hot dogs for the
kids so to avoid waste) and an inflatable, dual water slide AFTER the kids sang the VBS songs with motions and fun. Bumping elbows with old friends and watching old friends meet new ones to welcome new families into the mix.
7. Sharing resources with other area Atlanta churches.
8. A gifted dad who built two, huge wooden lifeguard stands that were shared with another church.
9. Lunch at the local Mexican restaurant with all our youth volunteers on Wednesday after VBS.
10. Hearing the squeals of delight as Daddies played with their kids on the waterslide at the Friday night beach party.
11. Four young boys who publicly decided to follow Jesus. Sharing Jesus is why we offer Vacation Bible School….and it’s why our team does what it does every year.
12. We chose a VBS that shared Jesus every single day of the week…Jesus came as a baby on day one and is coming back on day five. You’d think this would be a given, yet it is not. Sharing Jesus is why we offer VBS…he can’t be talked about only on decision day. I look for a curriculum that will equip our volunteers to share Jesus. If we can learn to do it at VBS, we’ll be more likely to do it in our daily lives.
13. Watching
the multiple sets of grandparents who not only volunteered in very visible areas, but they brought their grandkids every single day. These were the Christian Soldiers of the week for me. By the end of the week, I could tell they were exhausted, but their faithfulness to serving the Lord AND having their grandchildren see it, were legacies of faith that could only be accomplished with being sold out Jesus and what was being shared every single day.
14. The donation fish cut outs that were put out and all taken on one Sunday tells me of the commitment my church makes to being sure we do our part well….I think it’s because almost everyone in my church can share that VBS is a part of their faith journey. They get it!
A colleague’s husband used the phrase, “VBS is like revival for
kids.” I love that perspective. Everyone needs a revival every now and then: the kids
and the volunteers. Revival brings new messages and we do things differently for a short period of time than what we usually do on Sundays: snack, the best storytelling, turn on the water hose, decorate like crazy, and dress the part.
Vacation Bible School is revival, and not just for kids…it’s revival for me a
nd all the others, youth and adults. We are reminded in song, experience, energy, and every learning style of how God loves us and how loving Him binds the body of Christ in energy, service, and gifts.
I will be getting together with my colleagues from other local churches at our monthly networking group to discuss what we will do next year in just a few short weeks. It’s a time when we share celebrations and hilarious memories. It’s revival and we’re better doing it together.
God is love. 1 John 4:8


le darlin’ is 6 years old. Commissions are paid weekly.
s across the county the Wednesday of Holy Week. After previewing the movie, I knew it’d make a great ‘late night’ event for our CLUB345 (3-5th graders) and our youth. And I wanted the ‘late night’ to be on Good Friday. And I wanted to share it with another local church, because we are better together.
ally have private parties on Sundays and during the week, but I was set on Good Friday. I set up a free EventBrite registration event that closed the week before and then waited until the Movie Tavern set up their online registration for our night. We registered 46 for the movie in the maximum blocks of 6. We registered for every seat except the front 2 rows for the 6:30pm showing and met in the parking lot at 5:45pm.
up with the rest of our students and families.
ting the students into pairs and threes, we answered the following questions with the scripture references and they answered by preparing a poster of what they discovered. We then had a poster party to answer our questions after 30 minutes.
1:25/22:5 day?night?
21:19-20 …jewelry?
d in worship art with a door-sized painting (purchased uncut wooden door from Home Dept for $24 and it was primed before the evening activities.)
are some things God has kept secret. But there are some things He has let us know. These things belong to us and our children forever.” Deuteronomy 29:29
t when we come to church with our bibles, ready to hear AND to see what is being read, we plan to walk away with so much more.
ious preschool, children were invited to bring a canned good as an ‘offering’ to our weekly chapel time which we donated to a local food pantry. In others, children made cards for the local nursing home, brought items for hygiene kits, sponsored a Compassion International Child, and collected items for Thanksgiving boxes and Operation Christmas Child Shoeboxes.
ties. And if we can offer many opportunities to our little people to go with their hearts and respond in a tangible way, we and the world will be the better for it.
he Executive Board of the Georgia Preschool Association as the Service Project Coordinator. For the last two Annual Conferences, we’ve invited the membership to bring to the conference new or slightly used preschool-level books to be donated to ForeverFed, Inc. ForeverFed has been helping to break the cycle of illiteracy in specific communities in Cherokee County, Georgia, by establishing mobile reading clubs for preschoolers and their non-English-speaking/reading mothers. We know that illiteracy is passed along from parents who can not read or write and a mother’s level of literacy directly affects the literacy of their children. Tell one child that another has no books, and that child wants to do something about it. 






















