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Images of God Who are we really praying to? Images of God Who are we really praying to?

Images of God Who are we really praying to? - PowerPoint Presentation

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Uploaded On 2018-11-06

Images of God Who are we really praying to? - PPT Presentation

Learning Intentions To develop skills to critique prayers To understand the difference between critiquing and criticising prayers To develop skills for enabling students to depth their prayers ID: 717742

prayer god prayers students god prayer students prayers images father world pray lives develop image critique loving time drawing picture mandala lord

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Slide1

Images of God

Who are we really praying to?Slide2

Learning Intentions

To develop skills to

critique

prayers

To understand the difference between critiquing and criticising prayers

To develop skills for enabling students to depth their prayers

To develop skills for enabling students to further develop their images of GodSlide3

Success

Criteria

I can:

Critique prayers in terms of the image of God presented within in the prayer

Be able to develop a culture for students to become confident in writing prayers (building capacity for prayer writing – rather than criticising prayer writing)

Name at least 1 strategy for enabling students to depth their prayers

Formulate some questions to enable students to further develop their images of God.Slide4

When you were a child, what was your image of God?

What did you imagine that God was like?

What would a google search reveal?Slide5

Has your image of God changed from when you were a child?

If so, can you name 1 or 2 factors that contributed to that change?Slide6

Images of God video

View video on the REAP website for day 3Slide7

Old Testament Images of God

Ezekiel 34:11-16 (God is like a Shepherd)

Jeremiah 18:1-6 (God is like a Potter)

Isaiah 49:15 (God is like a mother)

Deuteronomy 32:10-12 (God is like an eagle)

1 Kings 19:11-20 (God can be found in the sound of sheer silence)

Isaiah 42:13-15 (God is like a soldier, and a woman in

labor

)Slide8

Images of God from the Greek world

The introduction of one God (instead of a God for this, another God for that…)

The introduction of the monarchical images of God (King, sits on a throne in heaven…)

God was perceived as male, creator of the world but apart from it (in heaven). Slide9

So let’s CRITIQUE

some images of God in prayers

Do these images come from the

jewish

perspective or the

greek

world perspective?Slide10

Glory to God

in the highest

,

and peace to

His

people

on earth

.

Lord God, heavenly King

,

Almighty God

and

Father

,

we worship You, we give You thanks,

we praise You for Your glory.

Lord Jesus Christ,

only Son of the Father,

Lord God, Lamb of God,

You take away the sin of the world:

have mercy on us;

You are

seated at the right hand of the Father

:

receive our prayer.Slide11

Activity:

Read the following prayers.

What does the prayer say about what God is like? (Is this depiction of God accurate or does it need to be rewritten slightly to portray a more accurate image of God?)

Suggest ways that the prayer could be rewritten to portray a more accurate image / understanding of God.Slide12

Dear God,

We pray that your presence will be with us today, as we gather for this special occasion.

May we be blest in our work.

May we be blest in our lives.

Amen.Slide13

Almighty and ever loving Father,

We pray that you will bring about peace in our world, and in our lives.

We ask this prayer through your son, Jesus

Who taught us how to pray. Amen

We pray for Dominic, that he will get well and be healed from all illness.

Heavenly God, hear us.

Heavenly God, hear our prayer.Slide14

We pray for the poor of our world. Please lift them from poverty and ease the burden they carry in their lives.

We pray for rain. Send water on our parched earth and have compassion on our farmers, who need rain so desperately. Lord hear us.Slide15

“God is not only our father, but even more so our mother”. Pope John Paul I

God is beyond gender. How does the language we use about God teach students what God is like?Slide16

We come to know God through our own personal experiences.

If I only talk about God as a loving Father, do all my students have the experience of a loving Father?

A little girl once described growing up with no experience of a loving father, or a loving mother, but of having a little dog who loved her unconditionally. So as a child she thought about God being like her dog.Slide17

Naming God in Prayer

God of Wisdom

God of Mercy

God of Love

Creator God

Compassionate God

Forgiving God

El Shaddai

Comforting God

Create a list of names with students – keep adding to this throughout the year. Whenever it is time to pray (or write a prayer), encourage students to choose a name for God that is relevant and meaningful for them at this point in time.Slide18

To assist students to write great prayers:

Start with a name for God that is meaningful

Allow God to be God in the prayer and avoid telling God what to do

Create a list of useful verbs for prayer (e.g. instead of ‘May we be’…empower us; strengthen us; guide us…)

Critique the theology coming through in the prayer (what is this prayer saying about what God is like?).Slide19

The following slides show work of year 5 and 6 students. Their task was to create a mandala, and then choose an image / way of naming God that was most meaningful for their lives at this point in time.

Mandala prayer – start with a blank circle. Place a dot in the middle to show that God is in the centre of our lives. Use colours and shapes to fill in the rest of the mandala that are appropriate for how you are feeling at this point in time.Slide20
Slide21
Slide22

Note the wording in this prayer. Mandala prayers are intensely personal, but anything that raises a red flag that all is not okay in the student’s life needs to be followed up privately, sensitively and appropriately. E.g. “I noticed that you wrote about dark emotions. Are you okay? Would you like to talk with me or someone else that you trust?” Slide23

The following two prayers are examples of prayer through drawing.

Student activity:

Take 5 minutes to draw about anything you like – whatever comes to mind today (ensuring it is appropriate for a public audience).

Now look closely at your drawing. What could you say to God about your picture?

What might God want to say to you

? Choose a name / way of describing God that is appropriate to go with your picture and write your prayer to go with this picture.

Note: Never tell students that their drawing is for prayer or immediately many students will start drawing religious symbols etc and the focus of the prayers is narrow. If you tell students after they have completed their drawing that they now need to compose a prayer to go with their picture, the prayers will have wide diversity, much greater depth and more accurately reflect the needs / joy of the world and their own lives.Slide24
Slide25
Slide26

And what about songs people use for prayer?

God is watching us...

Sometimes songs about God become popular in mainstream music. Assist students to critique the lyrics. How accurately do the words of this song portray God? God is watching us, but not from a distance. God is intimately part of our lives, wanting us to be loved, to know our own giftedness…Slide27

Listen to Amy Grant’s song: El Shaddai (God of the mountain tops) and critique the lyrics. How is God portrayed in this song?

Amy Grant in concert singing

El ShaddaiSlide28

A beautiful children’s story book that can be used with people of all ages to explore images of God is ‘In God’s Name’ by the Jewish author Rabbi Sandy Eisenberg

Sasso

.

Click here for a link to Amazon books - view a preview of this book

Click here for a

youtube

clip about this bookSlide29

Our challenge:

In time to come, how will our students today name the way they thought about God when they went to a Catholic school?

What part will you play in their response?