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Teaching Divine Nature
BTW, one thing that always comes to my mind on Divine Nature is something I heard John Bytheway say - and I don't know how you'd display it, but it's a neat idea. He talked about people who have done their genealogy back for generations and generations and have a pedigree chart as long as they are tall. Then he held up an index card and said our spiritual genealogy fits on the card. It starts with our name and only has Heavenly Father and Heavenly Mother. That's where we get divine nature.
DIVINE NATURE - Bring a vine of some kind, with fake fruit hanging off of it made of construction paper. Write a quality that someone could have on each paper. Display it then say "I brought Di- Vine to show you your nature!" Have them pick one off and explain that each of us have these qualities we just need to recognize them in ourselves. Our Personal Progress goals will help us to do this. (Handout - Grapes, slip of paper says "Bear the fruit of your Divine Nature"
Show pictures of a butterfly in its different stages (caterpillar, cocoon, butterfly). Discuss the various stages that a butterfly goes through. Tell the class that we do not understand how these changes take place but we do know the end result. Explain that we are like the caterpillar and that we have the potential of becoming like Heavenly Father. We may not understand how it takes place, but we know the end result. Discuss what could keep a caterpillar from becoming a butterfly and compare that with what can keep us from becoming like Heavenly Father.
Our YW president taught the lesson on Divine Nature and she
had all of us call the moms of the girls we were over and ask them to tell us
what they thought their daughters' divine gifts were. We did this over the
phone and then wrote them out on a pretty card for them. She wrapped all of the
cards up in one box and they were the handout. I think the girls liked getting
these and it was good for the parents to do it too and have to think
We decided to have a selection of hats that would illustrate all the roles they may play throughout their lives. We thought to have young women come up to model each and explain the value of each role. Then, we were going to talk about the same hat that everyone wears all the time, all throughout life and eternity - and that is the hat (crown) of a daughter of God. Because we wear that hat (crown) we are of incalculable, infinite worth.
I had to explain
where my spiritual thought came from. I retold the scene where Flick tries to
explain (pretending the rock is a seed), that everything the
seed needs to
become a big tree is already contained in the seed (with sunshine and rain).
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