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Responsibility

Spon-rip-a-dility

Is doing what’s right,

Whether it’s day,

Or even at night.

Ron-span-sa-babbledy

Is doing what’s expected,

Knowing that more,

Than I will be affected.

Span-rap-si-bibly

Is when my parents say “Go,”

And I do what I’m told,

Without saying “No.”

Re-spon-sa-bubblely

Is the good thing to do.

Even when,

No one tells me to.

Re-spend-whatever.

It’s a great thing,

I’ll announce it.

I only wish now,

That I could pronounce it.

Responsibility

People who are responsible correctly take care of tasks that are given to them. For example, if your mom says, “Keep your room clean” and you keep it clean, you’ve shown responsibility. But what about someone who gets a pet and promises to feed it every day but keeps forgetting? Are they being responsible? No. God wants us to be responsible and to do everything as if we are doing it for Him. Listen to what the Bible says in Colossians 3:17, “Whatever you do, in word or in deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God, the Father, through him.”

Cereal Feed

You Will Need: 

  • A bowl of cereal
  • A spoon
  • Something to cover your child’s clothes
  • A Bible marked at 1 Peter 2:2

GET STARTED

Choose one person in your family to be the “eater” and one person to be the “feeder”. Equip your eater with a trash bag to cover his clothes. When you say go, the feeder will spoon-feed the eater to see how much cereal he can eat in 45 second. 

If you have more than one child, you can do this more than one time. Also, be aware that this activity can get a little messy. Choose carefully where you want to do this devotion.

ASK—What would you think about a person in your grade if his mother came to school every day to spoon-feed him? 

SAY—That’s crazy. Only little babies are spoon-fed because as you grow, you begin feeding yourself. The same is true spiritually—There comes a time to quit relying on your church, pastor and other people to keep spoon-feeding you God’s Word. You need to begin feeding yourself. It’s time to “grow up” spiritually and begin spending time with God on your own everyday. 

Read 1 Peter 2:2 from your Bible.

ASK—What are some ways that you can grow with the Lord each day? (Talk to God, read the Bible, etc).

SHARE with your kids things that help you to grow closer to God. (Sometimes, as parents, we spend time with God before or after our children go to bed, so they don’t often get to see how we spend time with the Lord. It is important that they not only know that we do spend time with God but how.)

PRAY—And thank God for making a way for us to know Him and to grow with Him each day.

D.I.V.E. Devotions 

Dig In
Dig in and enjoy God’s Word. What should I read in the Bible today?

• DAY 1 – Luke 8:19-25 – Jesus calms the storm

• DAY 2 – Luke 8:26-39 – The demon possessed man

• DAY 3 – Luke 8:40-56 – Jairus’ daughter

• DAY 4 – Luke 9:1-6 – Sending of the Twelve

• DAY 5 – Luke 9:7-17 – Feeding the five thousand

Answer these questions each day…

Insight
What did you see? What did you hear?

Value
What did you learn? What should you do?

Examine
Examine yourself as you pray. What will you pray?

Relying on God

Read 

Bristol, England. Tuesday, February 8, 1842 

Enough food remained in George Mueller’s orphan houses for that day’s meals, but that was it. There was no money to buy bread or milk for the following morning. And two of the orphan houses needed coal. 

Mueller believed that if God sent nothing before nine o’clock on Wednesday morning, “His name would be dishonored.” Tuesday afternoon nine plum cakes arrived from a kindly sister. But the situation was still grim, as Mueller noted in his diary: “Truly, we are poorer than ever; but, through grace, my eyes look not at empty stores and the empty purse, but to the riches of the Lord only.” 

Any other man responsible for the continual care and feeding of scores of children would have been climbing the walls. But Mueller believed in a God who is eternally faithful. He had, in fact, bet his entire career on the proposition that such a God could be relied upon implicitly and exclusively. 

Mueller would not be disappointed. Wednesday morning just after seven he walked confidently to the orphan house on Wilson Street to find out how his Lord was going to provide food for that day. Mueller discovered that the need had already been met. A Christian businessman walking to work early that morning 

had suddenly wondered whether “Mueller’s children” might need funds. He decided to take something by the homes that evening. But, he later said, “I could not go any further and felt constrained to go back.” The man delivered three sovereigns just in time to make purchases for the orphan’s breakfast. 

Timely provisions like this came in to Mueller’s homes countless times in his more than six decades of work. Never once did the orphans lack for food or clothing. There was always enough, sometimes just enough, but the children never knew a moment’s anxiety. 

Mueller’s work was entirely supported by donations. During his 63-year career nearly 1,500,000 pounds was given, enough to care for some ten thousand children and to build several orphanages. It was quite an undertaking: two thousand children to be fed each day, their clothes washed and repaired, five large buildings to be kept up, matrons, overseers, nurses, and teachers to be paid. 

And, according to Mueller, over these six decades God never missed a step. No child ever went without a meal; no baker or milkman ever settled for an IOU. 

But now we come to the real catch: George Mueller accomplished all this without ever once asking a soul for a penny and without ever making any needs known. This man had embarked on his enterprise as a grand experiment. He wanted “something that would act as a visible proof that our God and Father is the same faithful God as ever he was…to all who put their trust in Him.” So this devout believer decided to demonstrate that the Almighty “had not in the least changed” by the fact that “the orphans under my care are provided, with all they need, only by prayer and faith, without anyone being asked by me or my fellow-labourers, whereby it may be seen, that God is faithful still, and hears prayer still.”1 

Reflect 

For I am confident of this very thing, that He who began a good work in you will perfect it until the day of Christ Jesus. (Philippians 1:6

Respond 

God will never lead you to a task that He will not equip you with all you need to accomplish that task. God always provides what we need to serve Him effectively, but sometimes (like Abraham who was promised an heir) we get impatient and try to work out God’s purposes in our own strength, resources, and timing. How are you relying on God’s strength to accomplish the ministry to which He has called you? How has God provided you with the resources you need to be effective in serving Him? (God built some of these resources into you before you were born!) What are you trusting God to do in and through your life? 

Your thoughts?

Remember 

Many believers expect too little from a God who can do all things. What are you trusting God for in your life and ministry that no man could accomplish apart from the moving of the Holy Spirit? 

I Don’t! I Won’t!

I don’t! I won’t!

I’ll slam the door,

If I don’t get my way,

I’ll fall to the floor!

In Wal-Mart, McDonalds,

And the doctor’s office too.

I’ll even do it,

Inside the zoo.

I’ll have a tantrum.

I’ll have a fit.

I’ll fling my arms and scream,

And I’ll even hit.

People can look.

I don’t really care.

People can point.

People can stare.

I don’t even care,

If they give a big laugh,

Cause I’m throwing a fit,

Underneath a giraffe.

I want it! I want it!

I’ll slam the door,

If I don’t get my way,

I’ll fall to the floor!

Give me what I want,

And give it right now.

I don’t know why,

I can’t have a pet cow.

I don’t care what you say,

And I don’t care your reason.

I’ll throw a tantrum all day,

All the way to the end of the season.

I’ll keep going

Till the leaves turn green,

And when Christmas comes,

You’ll still hear me scream.

I’ll keep going,

Till I’m red in the face,

And I’ll yell so loud,

That I shake this place.

I don’t! I won’t!

I’ll slam the door,

If I don’t get my way,

I’ll fall to the floor!

Ah-h-h-h-h-h-h-h! S-c-r-e-a-m!

Wait a minute! Where did you go?

Aren’t you going to stay,

And watch my little show?

No?

And what’s that you say?

I can no longer go outside?

I can no longer play?

I have to sit in the chair,

For five minutes long.

Because what I did was mean,

And what I did was wrong.

Fits aren’t very fun,

I’ve changed my mind now.

Tantrums are wrong,

And who really needs a pet cow?

I’d talk to you more,

But because of my fit,

I have to go now,

And be quiet and sit.

Obedience

“Pick up your mess.”

“Clean up your closet.”

“It’s time to brush your teeth.”

What do you do when your parents tell you to do something? Do you complain? Do you argue? Do you pretend not to hear them? Or do you obey them without having to be told a second time. Listen to what God says in the Bible in Proverbs 20:11, “Even a child makes himself known by his doings, whether his work is pure, and whether it is right.”

Oh, What a Change!

You Will Need: 

  • Green and Yellow food coloring (Red and blue will work also.) 
  • 2 cups of water 
  • A Bible marked at 2 Corinthians 5:17 

If you don’t have these items: You can do a different activity that is explained in the “Other Option” section below:


STEP 1

Pour two glasses of water. In one put a few drops of green (or blue) food coloring. With each drop say something bad that people do (i.e., tell a lie, take something that belongs to someone else, throw a fit, disobey mom or dad, etc.) This green (or blue) cup stands for all the bad things we do.

STEP 2

In the second cup of water, add a few drops of yellow (or red) food coloring. The yellow stands for the streets of gold in heaven. (If you use red, it stands for the blood Jesus shed when He died to make a way for us to go to heaven.) This cup stands for Jesus and how He died to make a way for us to go to heaven and to take away all the wrong things we’ve done.

STEP 3

Now pour the cup representing Jesus (yellow or red) into the cup that represents our sins (green or blue). There is a big change. When someone gives their life to Jesus, there is a big change that happens because: 

(1) That person is adopted into God’s family

(2) They are given God’s Holy Spirit to guide and direct them

(3) They are given an eternal life that nothing can ever take away

(4) And God gives them a brand new kind of life.

Read and discuss 2 Corinthians 5:17 from your Bible.

PRAY—And thank God for the change He can bring to people’s lives.


OTHER OPTION

Do this activity if you don’t have the items you need for the one above:

Make some cookies or biscuits and point out the change that happens while cooking. You might even want to do a before and after taste-test. Or, pop some popcorn and compare a kernel with the end result—The taste-test on this one is recommended only for the final product! Or, get a little messy by adding water to a nicely folded pile of toilet paper. This is guaranteed to make a change. Then begin with the discussion below.

DISCUSSION

The change you just saw doesn’t even begin to compare with the change that Jesus makes when a person gives his or her life to Him.

Read 2 Corinthians 5:17

SAY—When people are saved, they become brand new. No matter how bad they’ve been, all their sins are gone. They also become a child of God and are given His Holy Spirit. They are saved from a life without Christ as well as an eternity separated from God to a life that lives for Christ and an eternity in heaven. Isn’t God great!

PRAY—And thank God for the change He can bring to people’s lives.


BREAKFAST BITES

ASK—What are three ways that you can show Jesus’ love to others today?

ASK—What is something you would change in the world if you could? (Starvation, war, hate, racism, etc.)

ASK—What do you think the world would be like if everyone knew and followed Jesus?

Read 2 Corinthians 5:17-21

D.I.V.E. Devotions 

Dig In
Dig in and enjoy God’s Word. What should I read in the Bible today?

• DAY 1 – Luke 7:11-17 – The widow’s son

• DAY 2 – Luke 7:18-35 – John and Jesus

• DAY 3 – Luke 7:36-50 – A story of forgiveness

• DAY 4 – Luke 8:1-15 – Parable of the sower

• DAY 5 – Luke 8:16-18 – Faithful listening

Answer these questions each day…

Insight
What did you see? What did you hear?

Value
What did you learn? What should you do?

Examine
Examine yourself as you pray. What will you pray?

An In-Love Relationship

Read 

A missionary on the foreign field employed a native to help him translate the New Testament into the native language. The missionary would read the verses; then the heathen would translate and write them down. Finally they came to the first Epistle of John. The missionary read, “Behold, what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us.” The man translated and wrote down the words. The missionary read on, “that we should be called the sons of God.” Then the native bowed his head and wept. “What’s the matter?” asked the missionary. The man replied, “Teacher, don’t make me put it that way. I know our people. That’s too good for them. Put it this way, ‘Behold what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us, that we may be allowed to kiss His feet!”1 

Reflect 

But as many as received Him, to them he gave the right to become children of God, even to those who believe in His name.
(John 1:12

Respond 

True discipleship is born out of an in-love relationship with a Great God of Love. When people “fall in love” with someone, they want to talk to the person, think about them, talk about them, look at their picture, figure out how they can make them happy, and so forth. When a person falls in love with Jesus Christ, that believer wants to talk to Him (prayer), be with Him (daily devotions), talk about what He’s doing (testimonies), be around others who love Him (church), obey Him and show Him off to the world (witnessing). Then since true discipleship is an overflow of one’s love relationship with the Lord, your desire to grow also becomes a measure of the depth of your love for Him. How much do you desire a deeper walk with Christ? What is the depth of your love for Christ (i.e., Do you want to spend time with Him? Do you want to show Him off to the world? Do you obey Him?) On a scale of 1 to 10, how deeply are you in love with Jesus? Why do you feel this way? 

Your thoughts? 

Remember 

“We become what we are committed to.”2