Eyewitness Assemblies
Gaynor Cobb
15 ready-to-use assemblies for Easter to Pentecost
This activity is based on part of the Diocese of Portsmouth Children’s Kairos programme.
On Your marks:
It’s hard to picture God! We can try to show what God is like. The icon painters used all sorts of techniques to show the unshowable. Here is a starter session on one icon.
Get set:
You’ll need: a copy or copies of the Rublev Trinity Icon for all the children to see. This icon can be downloaded from many sites. It’s worth having a look through the excellent simple explanations given online about this icon on the website: www.wellsprings.org.uk/rublevs_icon/rublev.htm - or do a search on Rublev’s icon of the Trinity.
Go!
Before you show the children the icon, say that sometimes artists try to paint exactly what they see. And sometimes they try to paint what can’t be seen. This might look strange to us, if we’re expecting to see a picture like a photograph. Sometimes we need to be prepared to use our imagination and look beyond the strangeness to what the artist is trying to tell us about.
Show the children the icon without giving them its name and ask some of these questions:
What is this group of people doing?
How do you think they feel about each other?
What might they be saying to each other?
Look at their faces – what do you notice?
What colours are the clothes they’re wearing?
What can you make out in the background behind them?
What’s on the table between them?
Do these objects remind you of any stories?
If you drew a line round the three figures, what shape would it be?
What happens if you draw that shape in and out of the picture, round the back of the characters?
How does the picture make you feel?
What do you think the artist wants us to think about this group?
Who do you think the three people in this picture might be?
Notes
Explain (if you need to) that it’s a picture of the Trinity: Jesus is in the middle, with God the Father below the building on the left of the picture, and God the Holy Spirit on the right.
Background objects:
Now make a list together of all the things this artist is trying to tell us about what he thinks God is like.
Drawing what God’s like
You’ll need: paints, crayons, felt tips, pastels etc, good quality paper
Ask the children: How would you draw God to show somebody who doesn’t know him what he is like?
Craft: What is church like?
You’ll need: construction materials – eg Lego, Meccano, artstraws, K’nex or similar.
Make a model of what you think your church is like – not a copy of the building, but the group of people: are you open and welcoming or closed and unfriendly? How could you show this in a model?
Active prayer
In a circle, practise holding hands crossed across your chests and turning to face outwards without letting go hands.
(Begin facing inwards, not holding hands.)
Dear God, you are three people in one circle of love.
(Hold hands, as practised, with arms crossed across chests)
We are (5? 6? 20?) people in your circle.
(Turn to face outwards without letting go hands)
Help us to bring more people into your circle.
(Lift up arms together)
Amen