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Find out more about Who Comes First?

Who Comes First?
Inspiring stories from the history of the Games
Chris Hudson

Exploring Friendship using Bible Stories 7: Jesus is let down by his friends - the Kiss of Death

Introduction:

Curriculum links

Key Stage 2: New Testament; Stories from the life of Jesus; Easter; Circle Time/PSHE and SEAL themes using Bible stories - Getting on and Falling out; Relationships

Introduction to this story:

Jesus experienced the full force of broken friendship in the Garden of Gethsemane when he was arrested. He had offered friendship with God to all who came to him but now that friendship was thrown back in his face as the tide turned and people chose to become his enemies instead. Only hours before, in the Upper Room, he had told his disciples that they were his friends and so great was his love that he would lay down his life for them. In the following Bible story that friendship is betrayed by a kiss, denied by one of his closest friends and abandoned by the rest. Jesus experienced the pain of broken friendship.

Christians believe that Jesus took all this into the grave and then, through the resurrection, made available a new power to choose friendship with God again.

The following lesson outline explores how Jesus tasted the destruction of friendship in order to mend what had been broken.

Preparation:

Use the retelling of this story from The Barnabas Schools' Bible on page 307.

Development:

1. Play some simple games that try to capture some of the experiences of the disciples and Jesus that night in Gethsemane.

Use these simple games to explore some of the feelings ready for the story.

2. Next tell the story of Gethsemane from a hidden spectator's point of view.

Set up some covered chairs around your room for your class to hide behind like bushes and trees in a garden. Also darken the room as much as you can. Tell them that they are observers of the story late that night on the Thursday before Easter.

Jesus arrives just after midnight with his friends, hoping to find some time to pray.

Focus on the different sounds that the hidden spectators will probably hear from behind the bushes including:

Occasionally stop the narrative to invite the children to come up with how they feel about what they are hearing.

3. Jesus experienced being thoroughly let down that night.

Judas gave him a kiss, which should have been a sign of affection but in fact was the cue for Jesus' arrest.
The disciples all ran away.
Later in the courtyard near where Jesus was being tried, his best friend Peter denied even knowing him.

Make a list of all the qualities the children associate with being a true friend and then compare that list with the events and the reactions of disciples that night. Jesus knew all about friendship that fails.

4. As a painful visual aid for this story, collect together some attractive friendship bracelets, preferably twelve of them. Then, if you can bear it, cut them up as you talk, sharing how Jesus' friends let him down. Use the torn and jagged pieces of the friendship bracelets to make a cross shape as a link to what happens on Good Friday.

5. As a reflection together print off the word FRIENDSHIP in large letters and then cut up the individual letters.

Place these in the right order in the centre of your circle. Then as you talk about friends who have fallen out with each other, break up the letters, scattering them around randomly.

For Christians, the fact that Jesus experienced all this is very important. To illustrate this, reform the letters as a cross.