A Convention Meeting For The Children
I do hope everyone that can, will find time to read this...when its to children, that's you and me as well as the little ones.
Brett Hammett: A Convention Meeting for the Children – 2 Maroota, Australia Convention, Jan. 7, 2007
(A meeting for the children) Matthew 10:11 - "Into whatsoever city
or town ye shall enter, enquire who in it is worthy; and there abide . .
And if the house be worthy, let your peace come upon it: but if it be
not worthy, let your peace return to you." At the last convention we
heard that willingness and worthiness are directly related. I wonder if
you can read into these verses, "inquire who is willing . . and if the
house be willing?" It makes good sense. Not only are willingness and
worthiness directly related, but peace is part of it, too. Peace comes
when you are willing to invite God's servants into your home. It makes
the dwelling worthy and I think you all experience that continually. It
is a great privilege for us to preach the gospel and see this result.
In this meeting I am going to speak directly to the young ones and
children. You have done very well in the convention, just listening, and
I know that sometimes what is being said is a little difficult for a
child to understand. Maybe after the meetings you ask your parents,
"What was that worker talking about?" and they explain it to you. Well,
this meeting is going to be the other way around and your parents might
ask you, "What was that worker talking about?"
Where I labor in South America, there are a lot of little children in the
meetings. Some of the places we visit are in the jungle. You know what a
jungle is like. We get to walk through mud, and you children will
understand how much we enjoy that! It is quite a ways to walk and we
carry a little backpack with our things so we can spend the night with a
family that is waiting for us. We don't have to wear a tie and meeting
clothes really. We get to wear our "play" clothes and we can get them
dirty. When we get to the home, we need a bath, so we go to the river,
and you will understand how much we enjoy that, too. Another thing we
like is that sometimes we get to sleep on the floor, like when you go to
your grandparents' house and there aren't enough beds, so you sleep on
the floor, and you like that. At one place, there is a little monkey
and this monkey and I have a really good friendship. I pat him and give
him a biscuit, and sometimes when I am asleep on the floor, the monkey
is right there next to me. So, we get to preach the gospel in places
like that and we love it. Sometimes when we get to a home, it is
probably like when the workers come to your home. Those children don't
go anywhere because they don't have a car. They can't just go to town.
The highlight of the month is when the workers come, and they are
waiting for us. All month long they have been thinking about what they
will show us and tell us about. Maybe they have some new puppies or
chicks or guinea pigs, and we get to hold them. Or maybe we have to see
how big the rooster has grown in the last month.
But that
isn't all. After dinner is finished at night, we have a little meeting
and we don't use lights like these because there aren't any. All they
have is some little oil lamps, so we read our Bibles by oil lamp with
the children. Some of their parents have never gone to school and can't
read very well, so the children - just like you - help us out. They can
pronounce better than I can because I am a foreigner there. We get them
to very simply read some verses that apply and then we speak about
them, and even the children understand. Sometimes we want to tell them a
little bit about how we are responsible for our actions. I think you
are learning from your parents that you are responsible for your
actions. It is the same with God. When we do something good, there is a
reward and when we are bad, God isn't so pleased. These people don't
even understand that concept, so the children help us out.
Do you still use a regular pencil at school? In Malachi 3:16 we read
that God has a book of remembrance and in Revelation 21:27 it tells us
that God has another book - the book of life. We like to tell people
about these, and to explain it we use something very simple. I don't
know what is in the book of remembrance, but the point is that we are
responsible to God for the things we do. Maybe God is writing down the
things that are good, but then when we do something wrong, He takes that
pencil and writes down that we didn't do so well. Then we explain what
forgiveness is. What are the two parts of a pencil? One part is what
you write with and the other part is the eraser. God has made
provision in the eraser and if we are sorry for the sins we do, like
when you children say you are sorry and that you didn't mean it, then
God uses the other side of the pencil to erase what we have done wrong.
I think you can understand that, but maybe it is too simple for your
parents? That is the way we have to begin speaking to the people there.
We also tell them that God, with that same pencil, wants to write
something on our hearts. Maybe we also tell them that we really don't
want to continue in sin because, when you are using the eraser part, are
you able to write at the same time? No, because it is on the opposite
end of the pencil. You can't erase and write at the same time. So,
when God is erasing all our mistakes it is pretty hard for Him to be
writing on our hearts until it is all clean. Right after that is when
He can write the best on our hearts. We also ask the children, "What
part of a pencil wears out the quickest? Is it the part you write with
or the eraser?" Every one of them says, "It is the eraser." I don't
know why they don't make pencils with erasers that long!
So we
speak to these families like that and the children help us. The best
part of those visits is not because we get to hold the new little chicks
or take a bath in the river, or even the meetings. There is one part
that is even better. When God's servants leave homes like that, it is
three weeks or so before we get back there. Do you know what Mum and
Dad start to do in that time? Little by little they start reading their
Bible together. The one that is the best reader probably reads to the
other, and they mark where we have spoken from so they can read it over
again. And here is the best part - before the workers visited those
homes, Mum and Dad used to argue and that is not very comfortable.
Nobody likes it, but their lives are in turmoil. They are used to
arguing and the children suffer. But when the workers start visiting
and they read their Bibles together, instead of focusing on each other's
faults they start focusing on what they are reading in the Bible and
they don't have any interest in fighting. That is the process and
little by little people receive life. It doesn't need to be complicated
and this gospel of Christ works in every part.
I'll tell you
a little story. To get to one home we hiked through the jungle and the
mud. It was a poor little home where the family had two girls, one
about three and the other still a baby. The whole house was only a bit
more than twice the size of this platform I am standing on, but we love
going to that home. The little girl had a doll and it was the only
thing she owned. She didn't have any other toys, only this doll. The
doll was in such bad shape that it was almost unrecognizable as a doll,
but she loved it. When she went outside, she had her doll. When she
came back in, she had her doll. When she sat to eat, she had her doll
and when she went to bed, she had her doll. You children can understand
that, can't you? If you had nothing else to play with, you would
treasure it. Well, the time came when the little girl got a brand new
doll, and you would think, "That's great!" But that is when a time of
conflict started. Why? She had become so accustomed to her old doll
that she didn't want to put it down, but she also wanted her new doll.
She wasn't really big enough to handle both dolls, but she wanted them
all the time. Going downstairs was awkward when she was carrying two
dolls and coming back up was even more awkward! She just couldn't let
go of the old one yet. But finally, she put away her old doll and just
played with her new doll.
That little story taught me a bit
about what her parents were going through at the same time. When the
workers first started coming there, all they had was their own will and
their own life, and they treasured them. But during the process of the
visits, they were presented with a new life and it was presented to them
like a new doll. They accepted it and received it, just like their
little girl did with her new doll. At the same time, they were trying
to manage both "dolls" and it was very awkward. Finally, just like the
little girl, their old "doll" was put away. I think that has happened
to every one of us. Maybe those of you who stood for baptism today felt
that way up to this time. You had made your choice but were still
hanging on to the old "doll". Maybe that is what has brought you to the
decision to be baptized because now all you want is the will of God.
Now I would like to teach you a little bit about the brothers and
sisters of Jesus. I have met some of you children already and asked
your name, and how many brothers and sisters you have, and their names.
If I ask you how many brothers and sisters Jesus had, what would you
tell me? If I ask you what their names were, could anybody tell me? If
you ask your parents, could they tell me? You ask them after the
meeting! For your parents, I will tell you where they are written,
because sometimes us older ones don't have such good memories. Jesus
had four brothers and we don't know how many sisters, likely three or
more. We have the names of His brothers but we don't know the names of
His sisters. The brothers' names are James, Joses, Simon and Judas.
Matthew 13:54 tells us that when Jesus went to His own home area, the
people started to say, "Isn't this man from here? Don't we know His
father and mother, and His brothers and sisters?" Vs 55: "Is not this
the carpenter's son? Is not his mother called Mary? And his brethren
James and Joses and Simon and Judas? And his sisters, are they not all
with us?" It mentions all His sisters, so I think there would be at
least three. Maybe you would like to know a little bit about the
brothers and sisters of Jesus? First of all, when Jesus began to be a
worker, they weren't professing. If your Mum and Dad want to read it
later in John 7, it tells us that they weren't believers. Jesus went up
to the feast and His brothers heard about the miracles He did. They
said, "Why don't you go up and show people all these things you can do?"
John 7:4 - "If thou do these things, show thyself to the world. For
neither did his brethren believe in him." They weren't professing then.
Maybe some of your brothers and sisters are not professing? He just
said, "You go ahead, the world cannot hate you but it hates me. You are
of the world and it won't hate you." Later, He went up to the feast.
Matthew 12:47 - One day, Jesus was preaching in a meeting like this and
His mother and brothers came there. If His brothers were professing I
don't think anything would be recorded here, but when people don't
understand about the things of God, they don't mind interrupting. It
seems like the brothers said, "Tell Jesus we are here to see Him," and
He was speaking! When they sent somebody in, Jesus just looked over the
crowd and said, "You are my brothers and sisters." In other words, "My
brothers and sisters don't believe in the things of God yet and you
mean more to me than they do." He wasn't despising His mother in any
way, and I think Mary would agree and think, "Maybe this is the best
thing for my other sons to hear." That wasn't the end of the story of
Jesus' brothers and that is the nice part about it. Sometime, we don't
know when, at least two of His brothers professed. They were met
together in a meeting. For your parents, it is written in Acts 1:13 -
"They went into an upper room, where abode both Peter, and James, and
John, and Andrew,
Philip, and Thomas, Bartholomew, and Matthew, James the son of Alphaeus, and Simon Zelotes, and Judas the brother of James."
1 Corinthians 9:5 is where you read about two of His brothers not just
professing, but two became workers. Galatians 1:19 - "But other of the
apostles saw I none, save James, the Lord's brother." One of them
became an elder worker, and his name was James.
If there is
something your parents don't understand in this meeting, you can help
then tonight. When we preach the gospel, we love to have the children
attentive like you have been in this meeting. You are the hope of the
kingdom and we appreciate you, and if you have learned the names of the
four brothers of Jesus, I will be very, very happy!
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