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Sunday, February 8, 2015

Lesson 8: Jesus Christ Cleanses the Temple

Lesson 8: Jesus Christ Cleanses the Temple

Primary 7: New Testament, (1997), 25–28

Purpose

To help each child feel greater love and respect for Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ and for sacred places.

Preparation

  1. 1.  Prayerfully study John 2:13–16
  2. First account
  3.  13 ¶And the Jews’ passover was at hand, and Jesus went up to Jerusalem,
     14 And found in the temple those that sold oxen and sheep and doves, and the changers of amoney sitting:
     15 And when he had made a ascourge of small cords, he drove them all out of the temple, and the sheep, and the oxen; and poured out the changers’ money, and overthrew the tables;
     16 And said unto them that sold doves, Take these things hence; make not my Father’s house an house of merchandise.
  4. Second account  nearly three years later and just a few days before his crucifixion
  5. Matthew 21:12–14,
  6.  12 ¶And Jesus went into the temple of God, and cast out all them that sold and bought in the temple, and overthrew the tables of the moneychangers, and the seats of them that sold doves,
     13 And said unto them, It is written, My ahouse shall be called the house ofprayer; but ye have made it a cden of thieves.
     14 And the blind and the lame came to him in the temple; and he healed them.
  7. Second account   
  8. Luke 19:45–48,
  9.  45 And he went into the temple, and began to cast out them that sold therein, and them that bought;
     46 Saying unto them, It is written, My house is the ahouse of prayer: but ye have made it a bden of thieves.
     47 And he taught daily in the temple. But the chief priests and the scribes and the chief of the people sought to destroy him,
     48 And could not find what they might do: for all the people were very attentive to hear him.
  10.  and Exodus 20:7
  11.  Thou shalt not take the aname of the Lord thy God in bvain; for the Lordwill not hold him cguiltless that dtaketh his name in vain.

  12. Then study the lesson and decide how you want to teach the children the scripture account (see “Preparing Your Lessons,” p. vi, and “Teaching from the Scriptures,” p. vii).
  13. 2.  Additional reading: Mark 11:15–17.
  14.  15 ¶And they come to Jerusalem: and Jesus went into the temple, and began to cast out them that sold and bought in the temple, and overthrew the tables of the moneychangers, and the seats of them that sold doves;
     16 And would not suffer that any man should carry any vessel through the temple.
     17 And he taught, saying unto them, Is it not written, My house shall be called of all nations the house of prayer? but ye have made it a den of thieves.
  15. 3.  Select the discussion questions and enrichment activities that will involve the children and best help them achieve the purpose of the lesson.
  16. 4. Materials needed:
    1. a. Bible or a New Testament for each child.
    2. b. The following wordstrips:
      We can show love and respect for Heavenly Father and Jesus by:
      Our reverence in Primary and sacrament meeting.
      The language we use when we pray.
      The way we dress.
      The way we act.
      The way we speak.
    3. c. Picture 7-9, Jesus Cleansing the Temple (Gospel Art Picture Kit 224; 62163).

Suggested Lesson Development

Invite a child to give the opening prayer.

Attention Activity

Draw a horizontal line across the chalkboard. Write RESPECT above the line and DISRESPECT below. Ask the children to pretend a friend is coming to their home. Tell them you are going to draw a “respect line” on the chalkboard. Mention things the friend does (see below), and have the class decide if the friend is showing respect or disrespect for you and your home. Draw a continuous line, intersecting the horizontal line on the chalkboard, moving up for situations showing respect and down for ones showing disrespect. Use situations such as the following:
The friend:
  • Waits quietly outside until invited in.
  • Walks in with muddy feet.
  • Thanks you for the invitation to come.
  • Shouts and yells loudly in your home.
  • Greets your parents politely.
  • Demands something to eat.
  • Treats your possessions carefully.
  • Ignores your parents when they speak to him or her.
  • Invites you to visit at his or her house.
Your “respect line” may look something like this:
respect line

Have the children answer the following questions to themselves:
  • • When you visit a friend’s home, what does your “respect line” look like?
  • • When you come to Primary, what does your “respect line” look like?
  • • What does your “respect line” look like when you are in your own home?

Scripture Account

Teach the accounts of Jesus cleansing the temple in Jerusalem. The account of the first cleansing is in John 2:13–16. The second account, nearly three years later and just a few days before his crucifixion, is in Matthew 21:12–14 and Luke 19:45–48. (For suggested ways to teach the scripture accounts, see “Teaching from the Scriptures,”p. vii.) As you teach these accounts, have the children ask themselves how Jesus feels about Heavenly Father and the temple. Help the children understand that this temple was a sacred place, just as our temples and church meetinghouses are today, and Jesus wants us to respect these holy places.

Discussion and Application Questions

Study the following questions and the scripture references as you prepare your lesson. Use the questions you feel will best help the children understand the scriptures and apply the principles in their lives. Reading the references with the children in class will help them gain insights into the scriptures.
  • • What did Jesus find some people doing in the temple? (John 2:14.)



At the Great Temple in Jerusalem the annual tax levied on Jews was 1/2 shekel per male. the 1/2 shekel and shekel were not always used in everyday commerce, but were the only coins accepted by the temple. Many taxpayers required a currency exchange, so money changers set up in the Temple court. Jesus found this business and their shouting (advertising rates) offensive, so he threw over their tables.

(http://www.forumancientcoins.com/numiswiki/view.asp?key=Why%20Money%20Does%20Matter)



I read on one internet site that Josephus wrote about this incident and said that the sellers of sacrificial animals inside the temple courts would charge fifteen times the going rate that you would normally pay.








  • • Why did Jesus drive the sellers and money changers out of the temple? What did Jesus say to them? 
  • Take these things hence; make not my Father’s house an house of merchandise.
My ahouse shall be called the house ofprayer; but ye have made it a cden of thieves.

It is written, My house is the ahouse of prayer: but ye have made it a bden of thieves.


  • • What did Jesus do in the temple after he had driven them out? (Matthew 21:14Luke 19:47.)
  •  Matthew 21: 14 And the blind and the lame came to him in the temple; and he healed them.
  • Luke 19: 47 And he taught daily in the temple. But the chief priests and the scribes and the chief of the people sought to destroy him,
  • Why do you think it is important to be reverent in holy places such as homes, temples, and church buildings? For whom are we showing respect?
Discuss the importance of being reverent in places that have been dedicated to the Lord. Help the children understand that reverence is profound honor and love.
  • • Who was Jesus showing love and respect for when he cast out the money changers? (John 2:16.)  make not my Father’s house an house of merchandise.  Why did he do this?
  • • How can we show love and respect for Heavenly Father and Jesus at church? at home? at school? at play?
Display the wordstrips one at a time. Discuss with the children ways to show love and respect for Heavenly Father and Jesus. Include the following ideas:
  • When we are reverent during the sacrament, we are showing love and respect for Jesus and the covenants we make with Heavenly Father.

  • It is important to be reverent and attentive during all of Primary,
    but perhaps the most important time is when another child is giving a talk. 
  • When we listen to the talks in sacrament meeting and are reverent in Primary, we learn more about Heavenly Father and Jesus and what they want us to do.
  • When we pray appropriately, we are showing respect for Heavenly Father.

  • When we dress modestly, we are showing that we respect our bodies as sacred creations of Heavenly Father.

  • When we act the way Heavenly Father and Jesus want us to, we are showing that we believe in them and that it is important to us to do what they have asked us to do.
  • When we use the name of the Lord reverently and do not misuse it, we are showing others that we respect and love him.



Enrichment Activities

You may use one or more of the following activities any time during the lesson or as a review, summary, or challenge.
  1. 1.  Have the children read and memorize Exodus 20:7. Relate and discuss the following incident told by President Spencer W. Kimball, and help the children make the commitment to keep this important commandment.
    “In the hospital one day I was wheeled out of the operating room by an attendant who stumbled, and there issued from his angry lips vicious cursing [swearing] with a combination of the names of the Savior. Even half-conscious, I recoiled and implored: ‘Please! Please! That is my Lord whose name you revile.’ There was a deathly silence, then a subdued voice whispered: ‘I am sorry.’ He had forgotten for the moment that the Lord had forcefully commanded all his people, ‘Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain; for the Lord will not hold him guiltless that taketh his name in vain’ (Exodus 20:7)” (“President Kimball Speaks Out on Profanity,” Ensign, Feb. 1981, p. 3).
  2. 2.  Get several pictures of temples and church buildings. Write the names of the temples and buildings on separate pieces of paper, and ask the children to match the names with the pictures. Have them match names and pictures a second time while you explain how these buildings help the Lord further his work here on earth.
  3. 3.  Describe the feelings you have had when you have attended the temple, or invite someone in your ward or branch to share his or her feelings about the temple. Help the children realize how sacred the temple is and that those who attend can feel close to the Lord there. Discuss what the children can do in their lives to be worthy to enter the temple.
  4. 4.  Give the children each a piece of paper and a pencil. Have them write down specific ways they can show love, honor, and respect for Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ during the coming week. Ask them to keep the list where they can see it often.
  5. 5.  Draw another “respect line” on the chalkboard as the children give examples of actions that show respect or disrespect in the church building.

Challenge

Refer to the “respect line” again and tell the children that they need to have a “respect line” for their relationship with Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ. Challenge the children to keep their line up by showing love and respect for Heavenly Father and Jesus in all they do.

Conclusion

Testimony

Express your reverent feelings about Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ and your desire to show love, honor, and respect for them by the way you live.

Suggested Home Reading

Suggest that the children study Matthew 21:12–14 at home as a review of this lesson.
Invite a child to give the closing prayer.

Lesson 7: Jesus Christ Was Tempted by Satan

Lesson 7: Jesus Christ Was Tempted by Satan

Primary 7: New Testament, (1997), 21–24

Purpose

To help each child learn how to resist Satan’s temptations.

Preparation

  1. 1. 
    Prayerfully study Matthew 4:1–11Mark 1:12–13, andLuke 4:1–13. (Note footnote references to the Joseph Smith Translation.) Then study the lesson and decide how you want to teach the children the scripture account (see “Preparing Your Lessons,” p. vi, and“Teaching from the Scriptures,” p. vii).
  2. 2. 
  3. 3. 
    Select the discussion questions and enrichment activities that will involve the children and best help them achieve the purpose of the lesson.
  4. 4. 
    Materials needed:
    1. a. 
      Bible or a New Testament for each child.
    2. b. 
      A paper and pencil for each child.
    3. c. 
      The following three wordstrips:
    4. d. 
      Picture 7-8, The Pinnacle of the Temple.

Suggested Lesson Development

Invite a child to give the opening prayer.

Attention Activity

Give each child a piece of paper. Ask the children to write down three things that they think children their age might be tempted to do that are wrong. Have the children tell you what they wrote down. You might want to list their answers on the chalkboard and discuss the problems they face today. Tell them that this lesson will help them learn how to resist such temptations.

Scripture Account

Teach the story of Jesus being tempted as told in the scriptures listed in the “Preparation” section. (For suggested ways to teach the scripture account, see“Teaching from the Scriptures,” p. vii.) Note: The Joseph Smith Translation (JST) clarifies the account found in the King James Version of the Bible. Help the children understand that the JST makes it clear that Jesus was “led by the Spirit into the wilderness to be with God” and not to be tempted by the devil. Explain that Jesus did not willingly go into a situation where he would be tempted, and he doesn’t want us to do so either. Also explain that the JST states that Jesus was taken by the Spirit to the pinnacle and the high mountain and not by the devil as it reads in the Bible.

Discussion and Application Questions

Study the following questions and the scripture references as you prepare your lesson. Use the questions you feel will best help the children understand the scriptures and apply the principles in their lives. Reading the references with the children in class will help them gain insights into the scriptures.
  • Why did Jesus go into the wilderness? (Matthew 4:1, footnote b.)
  • In the Joseph Smith Translation of Matthew 4:2 it says that while Jesus was in the wilderness, he “communed with God.” What do you think it means to commune with God? How can you commune with God?
  • How do you think the forty days of fasting and communing with God helped prepare Jesus to withstand temptation?
  • How did Satan first tempt Jesus? (Matthew 4:3.) Why do you think this temptation might have been hard for him to withstand? (Matthew 4:2.) How did Jesus answer Satan? What did Jesus mean? (Matthew 4:4.)
  • What were the other ways Satan tempted Jesus? (Matthew 4:5–6, 8–9.) How did Jesus respond to these temptations? (Matthew 4:7, 10.) Do you think these were the only times Christ was tempted? (Luke 4:13. “For a season” would indicate these weren’t the only times.)
  • How did studying the scriptures help Jesus resist the temptations? (Matthew 4:4, 6–7, 10.)
  • What is Satan trying to do to each of us? (2 Nephi 2:18;2 Nephi 28:20–22D&C 10:27.)
  • How can Heavenly Father help you resist temptations? What can you do right now that will help you avoid future temptations?
  • What great promise has the Lord given us regarding our temptations? (1 Corinthians 10:13.) Read this scripture together.
Discuss three things we can do that will help us avoid and resist temptation. Display the wordstrips as you discuss them.
  1. 1. 
    Decide to resist temptation before you are faced with it.
    Read and discuss the following quotation by President Spencer W. Kimball:
    “Right decisions are easiest to make when we make them well in advance. …
    “When I was young, I made up my mind … that I would never taste tea, coffee, tobacco, or liquor. …
    “The time to decide on … honesty is before the store clerk gives you too much change. The time to decide against using [illegal] drugs is before a friend you like teases you for being afraid or [righteous]. The time to decide that we will settle for nothing less than an opportunity to live eternally with our [Heavenly] Father is now” (“Decisions: Why It’s Important to Make Some Now,” New Era, Apr. 1971, p. 3).
  2. 2. 
    Pray that you can avoid temptation (Mark 14:38) and that if you are tempted, you will have the power and faith to resist. Explain that daily prayer, striving to avoid any kind of temptation, and pursuing worthwhile service and activities will help us.
  3. 3. 
    Listen to the Holy Ghost. Explain that after we are baptized, we are given the gift of the Holy Ghost, which can help us overcome temptation (see D&C 11:12).
Ask the children to talk about experiences when they have been tempted. Have them share what they did to avoid or resist the temptation.
Refer to the temptations that were written on the chalkboard during the activity at the beginning of the lesson. Discuss several of these individually, and have the children consider how a young person can avoid and resist each one. Ask the children to privately choose one temptation they want to be prepared to resist and plan how they can avoid or resist this temptation.

Enrichment Activities

You may use one or more of the following activities any time during the lesson or as a review, summary, or challenge.
  1. 1. 
    Play a “What if” game. Write on pieces of paper “What if” questions that describe temptations the class members might face, such as the sample questions below. Have a child take one of the questions out of a box or jar, read the question, and respond to it. Then have that child choose someone else to select another “What if” question from the box. Emphasize that deciding in advance is an important help in resisting temptation.
    • What if you find something that belongs to someone else?
    • What if you promise your father you will help him, but a friend comes by and asks you to play?
    • What if your friends make fun of you for not smoking some cigarettes they found (or drinking alcohol or taking drugs)?
    • What if you know you will get in trouble if you tell the truth?
  2. 2. 
    Have the children pantomime or role-play resisting temptations.
  3. 3. 
    Prepare some “Temptation Cards.” On 3″ by 5″ cards or pieces of paper write temptations that the children might have, such as lying, cheating, stealing, using vulgar language, and so on. On other cards, “Help Cards,” writeFaith in Jesus Christ, Parents, Teachers, Good friends, Prayer, Fasting, Church leaders, Scriptures, the Holy Ghost, Avoiding temptations, and other things that help people resist temptation.
    Place the Temptation Cards face down in one pile and the Help Cards face down in another pile. Have a child choose a Help and a Temptation Card and tell the class what is written on each. Let the class discuss how what is on the Help Card can make it easier to resist or avoid what is on the Temptation Card. Let each child take a turn choosing cards.
  4. 4. 
    Share with the children the following quotation from President Joseph Fielding Smith: “Habits are easily formed. It is just as easy to form good habits as it is to form evil ones” (New Era, July 1972, p. 23). You might want to help the children memorize this quotation.
  5. 5. 
    Ask the children to name some decisions they have made that will help them avoid temptation in the future.
  6. 6. 
    Help the children memorize Matthew 4:4.
  7. 7. 
    Have the children sing or read the words to one or more of the following songs: “Hum Your Favorite Hymn”(Children’s Songbook, p. 152); “The Still Small Voice”(Children’s Songbook, p. 106); “Listen, Listen” (Children’s Songbook, p. 107); “Keep the Commandments” (Children’s Songbook,p. 146).

Conclusion

Testimony

Bear testimony that we have the power to resist the temptations that come to us. Express your love for Jesus and his example of resisting Satan’s temptations.

Suggested Home Reading

Suggest that the children study Matthew 4:1–11 at home as a review of this lesson.
Invite a child to give the closing prayer.

The Baptism of Jesus Christ


Purpose:  To help us want to keep our baptismal covenants.



What is the gate that is the entrance to the strait and narrow path that leads to eternal life? 



2 Nephi 31:17 Wherefore, do the things which I have told you I have seen that your Lord and your Redeemer should do; for, for this cause have they been shown unto me, that ye might know the gate by which ye should enter. For the gate by which ye should enter is repentance and baptism by water; and then cometh a remission of your sins by fire and by the Holy Ghost.




Scripture Discussion

I asked one of the crew members for the "Life of Christ Bible Videos," Where did you film it? She answered,
"Goshen, Utah. It is down by a stream that runs through. They dug it out a bit to have it deep enough for that scene. Probably the greenest part of the property."


Compare and Contrast Your Baptism 
with the Baptism of Jesus Christ

When?
How Old?
Where?
How?
Who was there?
Why?
What did Heavenly Father Promise?
Who performed the baptism?
Who was usually baptized at the time?




What is a Covenant? 
A covenant is a sacred agreement between God and a person or group of people. God sets specific conditions, and He promises to bless us as we obey those conditions.

https://www.lds.org/topics/covenant?lang=eng


What did you promise when you were baptized?  

  • We take upon us the Name of Christ. 
    • We become members of Jesus’ church.
    • Be help others in His Name.

  • We always remember Him.  
    • We stand as witnesses of Heavenly Father at all times and in all places.
  • We keep His Commandments.
    • We serve Heavenly Father and keep his commandments.
  • We endure to the end.
    • With His help, we become holy. 
2 Nephi 31: 20 Wherefore, ye must press forward with a steadfastness in Christ, having a perfect brightness of hope, and a love of God and of all men. Wherefore, if ye shall press forward, feasting upon the word of Christ, and endure to the end, behold, thus saith the Father: Ye shall have eternal life.

What does Heavenly Father promise you? 
  • If we keep our covenants, Heavenly Father covenants to:
    • Forgive our sins.
    • Give us many blessings.
    • Give us daily guidance through the Holy Ghost.
    • Give us eternal life. 



Article of Faith 4 We believe that the first principles and ordinances of the Gospel are: first, Faith in the Lord Jesus Christ; second, Repentance; third, Baptism by immersion for the remission of sins; fourth, Laying on ofhands for the gift of the Holy Ghost.