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Free Sunday School Curriculum |
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How to use the Free Sunday School Curriculum How to use the Free Sunday School Curriculum This free Sunday School Curriculum is designed the Sunday School Student will be taught an overall view of God's ways and dealings with men of all dispensations (ages).
Here, you can dowload the Free Sunday School Cirriculum in the File Downloads section. It's purpose of providing a free Sunday School Curriculum is not to disregard the personal exercise of the teacher but to complement it. It should serve as a guideline for covering the Scriptures and God's dealings with men of every nation and from every walk of life. You will note that there are more lessons itemized than could be utilized in a Sunday School year. The typical school year for the Sunday School Cirriculum is 52 weeks, but some assemblies have special events for their Sunday School such as a picnic or some Sundays could be reserved for Open Sunday school teaching. Undoubtedly too, since the student ages at which these lessons would be taught will differ, so the subject matter of some lessons will not be directly applicable and thus passed over to a more appropriate time.
Primary Teachers of Kindergarten & Pre - School Age
Teachers using the Sunday School Cirriculum guide who teach younger students should spend all their time revealing God's Character and Person, His Power and Greatness, and through it all point out and emphasize His Personal Interest in each of us. The early years are times when we form our first impressions of God.
Teachers of Teens
Those teachers who are using the cirriculum guide for older studentss may wish to spend their time on charts that tie God's dealings of the past and present and relevant subjects of future events. At this crucial stage of life, it is important that the student be able to see how to relate Bible truth to personal living and needs. Teach a Truth Your lesson must revolve around a central truth, and be founded upon a clear verse of Scripture. Even though the cirriculum guide is based on the consecutive order of Bible stories, one should use the Bible story to draw conclusions of Biblical truth. For example, the story of Noah contains truth about God's righteous wrath against sin and his grace at the same time. It is not a story about cute animals but teaches us something about God. The truth carefully taught and laid hold of, will lead the way to progress in an orderly way to set forth truth that develops upon the first, thus "line upon line and precept upon precept" is the principle.
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