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Engaging Faith

Practical Lesson Ideas and Activities for Catholic Educators
Archived - December 2007

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The Bible Lab

Dr. Daniel Smith Christopher, Professor of Theology at Loyola Marymount University and author of The Old Testament: Our Call to Faith and Justice is a “hands on” teacher who has envied those in the math and science fields who are able to enhance their courses with work in a “lab.” He’s proposing that teachers of religion (and the other humanities) have the same opportunities to make lab or studio sessions part of their coursework. And he’s asking for your help. Here’s a sample of Dr. Smith Christopher’s favorite Bible Lab sample with a link to two more lessons. We hope to grow the Bible Lab with the possibility of eventually publishing a book with the best interactive ideas for teaching and learning Scripture. We are seeking out some of your best ideas with the invitation to have them sited here for many to share. If you are interested please label and e-mail them to the attention of the Bible Lab! at this special address.   Dr. Moorey’s Mystery Background The most successful hands-on experiment that I have used in my freshman college courses (and with visiting high school students and in adult education settings, too) is what I call: “Dr. Moorey’s Mystery.” It is named for Dr. P.R. Moorey of Oxford University (who passed away in 2004), with whom I consulted on the original design of the this experiment when I first invented it while a graduate student at Oxford. Preparations You will need a total of four homemade clay pots for this experiment. Pot 1 should be roughly made as a “pinch pot” without using a wheel. For my series, each of the pots has an obvious rim . Each of your four pots should have one obvious feature that remains constant throughout the series. This is a very significant clue, and illustrates what archeaologists look for in studying pottery styles. The next three pots should be made on a wheel. Pot 2 should be made with thick walls. Leave your finger impressions on the side (e.g. do not smooth the walls on the outside). Don’t forget your constant feature (like the rims on my pots). Pot 3 should be made with thin walls, smoothed surface, and even some decorations (e.g., a design, or even simple animal figures, etc.). After this one is made and fired, take it apart from the others, find a safe place to burn some paper, and set this one pot only on the burning paper to get some black sooty markings on this pot. Pot 4 should be very much like Pot 3, but only with smooth walls, and no designs, and no burn marks. When you have finished making these four, generally similar sized pots, each one of them should exhibit at least one generally similar feature (as I said, for my set it is rims around the top). Next, break up (smash!) all four pots. Keep only a few pieces of the first, hand-made pot, including pieces that feature your main stylistic clue (e.g. rim, etc.). This is your “most primitive” pot, and should have fewer sample pieces than the others. I keep all my pieces together in a box, and bring it to class on the very first day of the course, in order to have a surprising, “hands on” activity for a class that most students think is going to be bookish and slow. Classroom Directions I ask the entire class to stand, come forward, and draw pieces of broken pottery from the box. I then tell the entire room that there is a story in these pieces, and their task is to tell the story. Make up something fun, like, “While digging the foundation for my house, something incredible was found . . .” or “While the gardener was working in the garden by the school, he stumbled onto . . . .” I always stop, with a smile, and say, “This is not a true story.” Finish the story with: “These pieces are dying to tell you a story—your task is to give these pieces a voice! Tell their story!” You must clarify, however, that the key to unlocking the story is that they must also seek the answer to a single critically important question that is answered with either “yes” or “no”. I inform them that they can ask any question they want at any time, but I will only answer the correct question. If the class is not moving toward this question, I give a hint – “it has to do with how they were found.” In the meantime, I tell the students to circulate around the room, collecting information about the pottery pieces. They will make lots of good observations. Affirm the observations they make, like: “the pieces seem to come from more than one pot” and “the pieces are made from the same material” (suggests same people making them?). Eventually someone will say: “Were they all found at the same time?” That is the question and they immediately realize that the different pots they are discerning among the mixture must represent different pots from different times. Now have them group the pieces, and try to guess which came first, then next, and analyze why they are saying this. The key to the experiment is making sure that students are not allowed to speculate beyond reasonable inferences from the evidence. Teaching the Lesson The point of the lab experiment to illustrate a number of critical skills for the study of biblical texts: - biblical study requires careful, critical, and rational thought; - biblical study requires historical analysis based on evidence; - biblical study must rely on the evidence first and foremost; - speculation must have a basis in evidence. In this particular mystery, the evidence is the pottery pieces. In the Bible, the evidence is the text itself—not what we think it says, not what it is supposed to say…but what it actually says. The experiment teaches students to examine the evidence before making guesses as to meaning and purpose in biblical study. And, it is lots of fun as you get better at guiding groups through the experiment.

The Prophets and the Advent Liturgy

The Church proclaims readings from the Book of Isaiah during Advent and on Christmas Day. Use the opportunity to remind your students that the Book of Isaiah actually contains the work of more than one writer, from more than one time. The book of Isaiah is usually divided as follows: Isaiah 1–39.These chapters are mostly stories about, and sayings of, the actual prophet Isaiah of Jerusalem for whom the book is named.Isaiah 40—–55.A second, unnamed prophet known as “Second Isaiah” is credited with this portion of the book. Second Isaiah lived at the end of the Babylonian period and the beginning of the Persian period (545–534 B.C.) and likely witnessed the collapse of Babylon to the Persian Empire.Isaiah 56–66.The final chapters are thought to have been collected by disciples of Second Isaiah (called “Third Isaiah”), writings from Jerusalem and the Diaspora after thexile. These chapters emphasize the importance of the Temple and invite all nations to join Israel as God’s Chosen People. Have the students read the following passages from the Sundays in Advent and the Midnight Mass of Christmas and write how they refer to the coming of the Messiah and God’s Kingdom.First Sunday of Advent Isaiah 2:1-5First Sunday of Advent Isaiah 11:1-10First Sunday of Advent Isaiah 35:1-6a, 10First Sunday of Advent Isaiah 7:10-14Christmas at Midnight Isaiah 62:11-–-12

Feast of the Immaculate Conception Lesson Ideas

This Saturday, December 8, is the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, in which the Church celebrates the clean and pure beginnings of Mary, the Mother of God, from the time she was conceived. Tradition identifies Mary's parents as St. Anne and St. Joachim. Tradition also plays an important role in the development of this Feast. The Feast of the Immaculate Conception is a good example of how the lived beliefs of the people led to the declaration of a Church dogma. From the earliest centuries, written testimony exists that Mary was free from original sin. In the East, the Feast was originally called the "Conception of St. Anne," meaning that Anne had conceived and given birth to Mary. As the centuries went on, devotion to Mary's Immaculate Conception grew, especially among the Franciscans and Carmeliites. In the fifteenth century, Pope Sixtus IV allowed the whole Church to celebrate the Immaculate Conception, but he did not command it. Finally, in 1854, Pope Pius IX elevated the Feast to the highest rank when he declared it a dogma of faith that Mary was conceived without original sin. He wrote:   The most Blessed Virgin Mary was, from the moment of her conception, by a singular grace and privilege of Almighty God and by the virtue of the merits of Jesus Christ, Savior of the human race, preserved immune from original sin (Ineffablis Deus   Interestingly, in the appearance of St. Bernadette at Lourdes, France, in 1858, the Lady eventually identified herself saying, "I am the Immaculate Conception." Many felt that this was Mary giving her approval for the Church's recognition of her purity. On December 8, 2007, the Church formally begins the celebration of the 150th anniversary of Mary's appearance at Lourdes. This belief in the Immaculate Conception of Mary also has roots in the Bible for the Angel Gabriel revealed at the Annunciation of Jesus' birth that Mary was "full of grace." Additional Lessons     Explore more about the relationship between Sacred Tradition and Sacred Scripture. See Catechism of the Catholic Church, 80-84. Point out the relationship between the dates the Church commemorates in the life of Mary: the Annunciation (March 25) is nine months before Christmas; the Immaculate Conception is nine months before the birth of Mary (September 8). Relate the story of Mary's appearance at Lourdes. Explain something of how the Church officially approves apparitions. Include mention of Our Lady of Guadalupe (December 12). If possible show all or part of the film, Song of Bernadette. Using a concordance or Bible search engine, have the students look up every Scripture passage that refers to Mary. Ask them to use the Biblical commentary to report on the meaning of one or two of the passages. Demonstrate how clean water comes from a clean sponge. Point out how it was necessary for the sinless Savior to be born of a mother who was also preserved from sin.