The idea of hiding things inside containers and the light shining through is a beautiful visual this craft plays on. It’s partly a craft and partly a memory game. If you have a very young group, make the whole thing in advance and just search inside. An older group can play a speed game where someone calls out a symbol, and they race to find it in their containers.

To make this craft, you will need the 1-page template printout, scissors, some paper glue and a torch.

Cut out the two big rectangles along the solid lines.

Glue the rectangle with the containers over the top of the other rectangle.
(Add glue over the entire surface!)

Divide into six pieces along the dotted lines.

Your craft is almost complete, now we require the torch!

Place your container over a torch and switch it on.

The light passes through the paper, revealing the hidden object within.

the Milosevic Family

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Lamp Lighter (Luke 11) Worksheet
This worksheet looks at the idea of ‘Light’ and how Jesus used it as a teaching tool. It accompanies the lesson on the Lamp lighter but could be used for any light based passage. think of how we describe light and dark differently, create a light path, test your shape recognition to unscramble a verse, and decorate the streets with lights as you ponder how you could bring light to your world. Perfect for indipendant readers as a discussion tool or overflow activity.

To complete the worksheet you will need some color pencils, an eraser and to turn your thinking caps on!

The PDF can can be downloaded by clicking on the image.
 

This is such a classical image, the basket and the lamp-stand, the light spilling out. This simple spinning craft which shows the basket being removed from the light is lovely for any age group, though younger groups may benefit from the pieces being pre-cut.

To make this craft, you will need a pair of scissors, sticky tape (optional), the printout and a split pin. This craft works fine on standard paper but would also work on thin card.

Cut out the three pieces.

Be sure to remove the small white circles in the centre, this will allow the split-pin to move freely.

The circle on the background piece does not need to move, and so you can easily just push through a small hole here for guidance.

Lay the blue piece on-top of the yellow light circle and thread the turning tab through the slit.

Place the background circle in place and thread a split in through the holes.

Fold the little yellow tab over the back and tape in place. While this step is not necessary, it really helps the top and base circles not to spin.

Turn over your creation and using the blue tab move the basket from the light so it can shine freely.

the Milosevic Family

Help keep the free items on this site free by donating. This site supports my family as we live by God's great economy.

A4 size
(210 x 297 mm)

Download colour Download no colour

US letter size
(8.5″ x 11″)

Download colour Download no colour

This story about the lamp lighter or the underlying passages about lamps and lamp stands are key Christian concepts for kids to grapple with. They use a very tactile and easy to demonstrate element – light. As such, all these games play on the idea of light and vision and may need a darkened environment to work fully. Please check if your teaching area can have dimmed light before selecting the best activity for your group.

Catch the light

Age group recommendation icon

Under 7’s

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Small group

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No Setup time

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Noisy game

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Space needed

A beautifully simple game for little ones using multiple bright torches – have the group close their eyes while the adults or older kids shine the light into a given spot. When the kids open their eyes, they must catch the light spot on their palm. This only works if the torch is placed or held stationary. Talk about where light comes from and how it’s position affects how light the room is.

Long burn

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All Ages

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Small group

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Requires setup time

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Quiet game

Suitable for seated groups icon

Can be seated

There is something special about working with real light and flame. If you have a small group, then this very basic science experiment will be great. Have a line of candles and different sized glasses to cover them with, and one non-transparent object like a mug. Have the kids predict which candle will go out first. You could also try different coloured glasses. Talk about how the non-transparent container stopped us from seeing the light, and how the light needed oxygen from inside the glass to burn. End by saying, the candle that burns the longest is the one we did not cover at all.

Blind mans buff

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All Ages

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Any size group

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No Setup time

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Noisy game

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Space needed

If your group needs to squeal and get the wriggles out, this is a classic, involving a blindfold and catching people. Remind the group that the catcher can’t see, but they can hear. Talk about how dark the blindfold is and how we require light to see.

Uncover my light

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All Ages

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Any size group

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Requires setup time

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Noisy game

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Space needed

This is a really simple parachute game that involves a dark room and a bright lantern. Place the lantern beneath the parachute and position the kids around the edge. Call out the name of one child to be lit, the rest of the group push the parachute to the floor while the chosen child raises the parachute up to light themselves. You could also call out everyone, or nobody or the rooms distinguishing features like the door.

High glow

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Ages 7+

Any sized group icon

Any size group

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Requires setup time

Noisy game icon

Noisy game

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Space needed

Great for slightly older groups, give each child a glow stick that is already glowing. Tell them they must hide the light. Once every light is hid slowly reveal whose was hid the highest. Then get them to repeat the process in pairs and teams. Is it harder to hide light when there are more glow sticks? Is it easier to spot peoples light when it is higher or lower?

Under the baskets

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All Ages

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Any size group

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Requires setup time

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Quiet game

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Can be seated

Use a selection of baskets or tubs to hide things under. Slowly provide the kids with clues as to what each object is until they guess it. Have one light. If possible, have some items that may make a noise or smell so when the basket is lifted the kids don’t need to look to see what it is. Talk about how we identify items and how they may be different when covered / uncovered. If you have time, you can play track the basket with the light under.

These are the Character resources provided for: Light in the Darkness (Luke 11)

Each JWL lesson has a collectable card alongside high-quality character images and a colouring page that links to each lesson.
Click on the images below to see a larger version.
Save the images by right click + ‘save image as’ (computers) OR long press + ‘save image’ (mobile).

These images are NOT copyright free.

These resources are provided for personal/classroom use only.
Use can use them for teaching, games, publicity, decor, big screen presentations, flannelgraphs, stickers, or any other non-commercial activity in your church, school, home, or organised group.
You may not use them in products you are going to sell – both printed and digital, or to upload the original images online, on websites, social media or in YouTube videos.
Any questions, please reach out to me using the contact page link at the end of the page.

This is a story rather than a biblical retelling. It is recorded that Antioch had street-lighting in the early centuries, so it’s not a big jump to assume there would have been a lamp lighter. It’s also assumed that people had started to scribble down the words of Jesus before the gospels were compiled. By attaching a face to this story, it makes it easier for children to relate to the central teaching it contains. It also highlights how God uses ordinary people and professions.

This retold version of the Bible passage is supplied for inspiration, feel free to omit or embellish to give it your personal voice.

Main Passage : Luke 11

Other passages: Luke 8:16-18, Matthew 5:14–15, Mark 4:21–25

Antioch was one of the first cities in the world to have street lights. Albas was a lanternarius, a man whose job was to light them. Every day he would fill the lamps with oil. Then, as the sun sank low in the sky, he would carry a flaming torch to light each and every one. Lighting the lamps meant that businesses could keep working after dark, that people could move about the city safely, and parties could be held with dancing and music in the evenings.

Albas liked his job, he was both nosy and a gossip. Travelling around, he spied in hidden places and heard all the cities secrets. One day, he heard that the preacher Paul was going to be teaching. It didn’t sound very exciting to Albas, but being nosy, he decided he’d go and see.

Albas had seen many parties and crowds, but he had never seen a crowd like this one. Everyone was mixed together. The rich and the poor, tradesmen and slaves, kids darted about and old women hugged soldiers like old friends. Merchants and beggars sat side by side. It was unlike any other party Albas had been to, it was all very confusing.

Paul stood up to one side of the room and started to tell them about Jesus. Albas thought he had heard the Jesus story already, the man who was also God, who died and came back to life. These people believed it was true. Paul told them about Jesus’ teaching. He pulled out a scroll where someone had written Jesus’s words, and read: “No one lights a lamp and puts it under a clay pot. A lamp is put on a lamp-stand, so everyone who comes into the house can see the light.”

Albas sat forward, he knew all about lamps. Because he had such a long stick with a flame on the end, people would pay him to come to light their lamps hung up high in the room or on a very tall stand.

“Your eyes are the lamp for your body.” Paul continued. “When your eyes are good, you have all the light you need. But when your eyes are bad, everything is dark. So be sure your light isn’t darkness.”

Albas paused, was his light really darkness. He carried a torch, but he spread darkness. Dark gossip and dark secrets. It was like Jesus had spoken the words just for him. Albas found himself standing up, he couldn’t stop himself shouting out “I’m know darkness. How do I get this light?”

Paul walked through the crowd to Albas and took his hand. It was like being held by something bright, Paul had a light about him that Albas had never seen. Albas didn’t understand, but he knew that he wanted that light too.

Albas joined the Christians and started to learn, and soon he was a different man, even people on the street noticed and asked him why he had changed. He spent his life bringing light to people not just with a torch but also with the messages of Jesus.

 
Lets face it, the bible has some pretty interesting screw-ups and God uses them all, but while it’s great that the kids know David threw stones and Balaam chatted to a donkey these aren’t exactly the behaviors we are hoping our kids will imitate. With so many questionable stories is copying bible characters a good way to really teach our kids then… well I still think so.

The pull of a face

I love teaching with bible characters. It can be a really pure way of teaching the bible and there is something quite special about putting a face to a story. There is a deep and real reason for linking a story with a specific face – it’s the way we are programmed as a human race. As infants we learn to process and understand faces a whole lot earlier than any other object. A few years ago some scientists suggested that a four month old could process a face at an almost adult level while other objects or shapes were still being processed by a lower part of the visual system!

nun in the roomShortly after Christmas my husband shouted to me from the bedroom that there was a nun in the house. What he had seen was a partial pillow reflected in a mirror. Meanwhile what his brain had so readily done was try to assign the shape meaning and hit on a face. As a race we see faces everywhere, it’s even got a name : pareidolia. If you’ve ever thought a car was looking angry or a socket looked like it was screaming (image credit) it’s because of this.

Kids tap into this almost subconsciously. If you ask a child to draw a person the head will often be dis-proportionally large, because the face is the important part they want to show. This is well studied, having clearly defined eyes and high contrast faces is a technique used deliberately in children television programs. Even non humanoid shapes will undergo anthropomorphism having human features like eyes and mouth added – think Thomas the Tank Engine or Disney Cars. Ultimately we resonate with things that look more like us, we are attracted to people who share our features, we are drawn towards the familiar.

The importance of imitation

But it’s more than just a face that has me choosing bible characters over catechism so often, it’s another hard wired thing – imitation. Imitation is one of the primary building blocks of learning from the youngest ages. It’s generally understood that kids see most of their world in black and white terms. For an infant the imitation is fixed, “if you do this then that happens so if I do the same action again I will get the same result”. Things change after the age of 2 when children begin to use symbolism thanks to the developing imagination.

The infants stick is now a wand, a pen, a drumstick! While they continue to learn about their world through their senses they can learn about worlds closed to them by practicing the art of imitation. They unlock the dressing up cupboard and suddenly little Susie is Elsa and Dan is Spiderman. This is an important step in the development of empathy, role play allows us to imagine other peoples feelings in a way children’s brains are not hard wired for. Yet when Elsa runs away the child knows exactly what to do because they know these characters narratives already. As they repeat the characters actions the link with them becomes stronger and the more the narrative settles in them. Pause and just that last sentence with bible characters in mind.
 

 
Lets put this into real terms…

What kid doesn’t recognize Zacchaeus’ issue as they stared at coat backs unable to see the main event? Josiah clearing out the temple becomes the parents favorite lesson idea even if it involves a huge paper fight. Rhoda forgetting to unlock the door to Peter becomes a great lesson in over-excitement. John the Baptist allows us to grapple with the very difficult idea of humility as he speaks of being unworthy to untie Jesus’ saddles. These faces don’t just teach stories but become faces the children can inhabit to peer out of into the biblical pages.

When there is no character

Sadly not all passages have characters, so much of the bible is instruction, poetry or law. It doesn’t neatly fit into a lesson on a specific character. This is where you have to make a decision on how much you’ll let your bible passage be accompanied by non cannon material. A technique used by almost every kids bible show I’ve ever seen is expanding the story beyond the text. This has been used for centuries by literature and art.

On the most basic level it’s why we think of Jesus with long hair and a long beard when culturally he would almost certainly have had short hair and a neat beard if one at all. Remember Judas had to identify Jesus (Matthew 26:48) with a kiss to be arrested. On a deeper level you end up with CS lewis and the world of Narnia – a story woven deeply with biblical reference but choosing not to be explicit with it. Much of the bible allows you to weave a story that falls between these two, keeping pure biblical details but adding in extra characters and padding. This can be done badly, taking the emphasis away from the scripture, but when done right it can have the added benefit of linking other texts and biblical details allowing you to represent more of the big bible picture.

A practical example

The latest lesson onsite is a good example of this. Jesus teaches about the lamp being hidden under a bed or basket, a bushel. It’s a simple idea, it lends itself well to science experiments and games in dimmed light but I’ve chosen to give it a face.

The Apostle Paul’s home town of Antioch was one of the earliest place to have known street lights, oil lamps, strung up on a series of ropes (read more). The guard responsible for lighting the house lamps was called the lanternarius and so making the logic jump to having a lamp lighter for the city center is a but a skip. This character then epitomizes the idea of a light being seen, he has a long torch that reminds us the light must be lifted high and his job is to illuminate the darkness. Importantly he takes the conversation one step further, he not only learns the symbolic meaning of Jesus’ words he also ties the narrative into the apostle Paul and how the message transformed his life going forward.

I know some won’t touch this story. There are purists who will balk at biblical movies that bend the text to accommodate extra plots and inwardly sigh just a little when the great King David is a scrap of asparagus in Veggie tales. I know they would rather say Jesus said this and lets play with lamps. The kids will learn the lesson, they will hold high their candles and torches understanding they are symbolic. But will it inspire kids to want to turn that stick into a torch to be a lamp lighter?

Live the story

When a story resonates with a child they live it. They can walked those streets with Albas the lanternarius, peer into windows with him and felt the sting of Jesus’ words. That’s what story does, it draws you into a different perspective. That perspective is somehow more powerful when you are looking at the world through someones eyes. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if our kids wanted to be Mary as much as Elsa and David as much as Spider man?
 


This talk was written for the bible creative conference which I sadly pulled out of. Just an extra note : Jesus without language also recently got featured in the top 20 kidmin blogs to follow by Feedspot! Click through to get some of the latest kidmin content delivered to your inbox!

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