Getting Ready for Easter

I am spending this week gathering all of the needed materials for our Easter traditions. I thought I would share our traditions again on here in case anyone else was looking for some great Easter activities. I love the things we do as a family each year for Easter to help our children understand the cross and the resurrection. I love the way it keeps us thinking about the cross throughout the whole week. Most of all I have loved seeing the boys understanding more and more each year.

This Sunday we begin our Lenten Lights devotion written by Noel Piper. Each night we do a short devotion using candles. It is a series of 8 devotions than can be done once a week during the 8 weeks of Lent leading up to Easter or can be done once a day for the week leading up to Easter. We chose the daily for the week leading up to Easter. The devotion centers around 7 candles- I use tea lights on a tray around a cross. One the first night you begin with all 7 candles lit and during the devotion you snuff out one candle. Then night two, you start with only 6 lit and snuff out another, until on Good Friday you snuff out the last candle. Then on the Saturday before Easter, you do not light any candles as Christ has died, his followers were devastated, it appeared darkness and sin had won. Then on Easter Sunday you light all 7 candles again because Jesus, the Light of the World, is Alive!! Sin and death have been defeated. Last year we added a response time for the boys where they drew a picture about the lesson. It was amazing to see how much they clearly understood from the devotion. This year Caleb will write a sentence summary and draw a picture while Noah and Josiah draw pictures. If you are interested in the Lenten Light devotion click here (it's free!).




Last year I read Noel Piper's book Treasuring God in Our Traditions. It is a free PDF if anyone is interested in reading it. I highly recommend it. In her chapter on Easter she has a recipe for playdough that you make and then bake in the shape of a hill, but on the backside of the hill you use a can to create a tomb- so really the hill is hollow. And then on Palm Sunday you create people out of pipe cleaners and each day of the holy week you reenact the part of the story that occurred that day- the triumphant entry, the passover meal and last supper, Jesus in the garden, etc. And on Good Friday you put a cross on the top of your hill and reenact the crucifixion as you read the story from the Bible. Take Jesus down off of the cross and place him in the tomb and roll a stone over the entrance. Then on Saturday night after the kids go to bed, take Jesus out of the tomb and put him somewhere for the kids to find! Place angels at the entrance of the tomb. Last year the boys were more excited about seeing the empty tomb than they were about their Easter baskets! We put the resurrected Jesus with our Lenten Lights so the boys found him when we came in to light all of our candles! I am really looking forward to this project this year and am actually going to incorporate it into our homeschool time. If you are interested, I recommend downloading the book as it has a much better description of what to do!

On Good Friday we will do our Basket full of Blessings.  On Good Friday, we'll go on a rock hunt and gather rocks. Then we'll paint the rocks black to represent our sins which Jesus died for. We like to talk about how our hearts are bad and that sin is not just the bad things we do, but that we need a new heart. Then we put the rocks in the kids' Easter baskets and leave them out. During the day Saturday as we see the rocks, we can talk again about sin and about Jesus' death. Saturday night after the kids are in bed, we'll remove their rocks from their baskets and replace them with treats. Then when they wake up on Sunday morning, the rocks in their baskets have been replaced with blessings! Just like the greatest blessing our redemption and victory over sin!


On Easter Sunday we'll make resurrection rolls for breakfast. These are super easy and a great illustration. Use crescent rolls, marshmallows, melted butter, sugar and cinnamon. Dip the marshmallows in butter and roll them in the sugar and cinnamon- this represents Jesus after he has died and his body was prepared for burial. Then put the marshmallow inside of the crescent roll- make sure to pinch all of the seams so that the marshmallow won't ooze out. This is Jesus in the tomb. Bake the rolls according to the directions on the package. When they are done, open the crescent rolls to reveal and empty tomb! The marshmallow melts into a sugary, gooey yum and the tomb is empty.

That's it! I hope this sparks some ideas for you to use in your families. I am looking forward to a week celebrating the Savior!

Comments

O'Dell Family said…
I love these and will definitely be implementing a few with our little ones. Thank you for sharing!
Jill said…
hi friend! thank you for sharing. i have gotten so many great ideas from you! do you have a specific book you read to the children? thanks, carrie! xo
Carrie said…
Jill, we just use our Jesus Storybook Bible. It has the passover meal with Jesus washing the disciples feet, the Last Supper, Jesus in the garden, his arrest, crucifixion and resurrection. We just read parts for each day. And we also use our own Bibles and just paraphrase things like Palm Sunday and Jesus before Pilot, etc.

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