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What Was Sabbath School Like When You Were a Child? — 7 Comments

  1. When I was young Sabbath School was a lot like what you described. Our church had about 500 people attending on any given Sabbath. The Sabbath School classes were active and 13th Sabbath was a special treat ( or dressed if you hadn’t remembered all of your memory verses). My mom taught at the school in our sister conference, so we would often go to the church affiliated with the school as well. I enjoyed Sabbath School at that church also where I saw many friends from school. I felt like I had two church homes and both were full of kids. Now I am the one in the position of the parent looking for a church with kids. As we have moved from state to state recently,we have done the “church shopping” to find a good fit with active children’s ministries. This is mainly because we have always been in smaller churches at times where our kids were the only kids. We have been the ones starting the VBS or building the Sabbath School program up so that our kids would have something. Now that we have kids spanning from Beginners ( Cradle Roll) to Earliteens and we are now in a location with larger churches, we find it important to find a church with an active program. Our kids rarely have Adventist friends since the church didn’t have many kids. While this is great to share their faith, I also want them to see that they are not alone. Since we homeschool I am eager to find a community here at our new location. I was shocked to find that even at the larger churches here, the Sabbath School is just as small! While my younger kids joined a class with a handful of kids altogether, my junior and earliteen found their classroom closed with no one. ??? There are kids at this church! Where are they? Apparently they are working to build up their program again since it has gone down since COVID. Many come later for the church service. We have been guilty of that as well. We plan on coming earlier to help build the program. Maybe one day my kids will have the same experience as I did? ( And yes, we do pass a very small church that is right down the street as well. Guilty)

  2. My Sabbath school experience was a lot like yours, though most of my childhood was in the 80s. I nod my head when I hear your memories. I remember the felts that were a present part of every Sabbath school from Cradle Roll to Primary. My parents also taught Sabbath School and we had our own personal set of the felts at home so I got my share of the felts. When our parents were enjoying their “lay activities” on Sabbath afternoon, my sister and I would often use the guide book for the felts and recreate the pictures. I will admit that sometimes we made our own stories with them that deviated from the Bible a bit (the pool of Bethesda became a hotel swimming pool!)

    I am most thankful that I learned the Bible so well during Sabbath school, especially as the whole Bible story sequence was followed for the 3 years of Kindergarten and then the three years of primary. I think the changes to the Sabbath School curriculum with the emphasis on grace have mostly been positive but I don’t think our children growing up know the Bible as well as I did. I am also thankful I heard mission stories and learned about the history of our church.

    What I wish was different? Probably nothing at the time, but looking back, the grace orientation was lacking in the 80s, for sure. I went to a Christian school of another denomination and I distinctly remember being asked in grade 2 “How do you get to Heaven?” I raised my hand and said “If you do lots of good things”. Well, as you imagine, that was not the right answer and I remember that experience to this day, nearly 40 years later. I don’t think my parents or my Sabbath school teachers told me that, but somehow I absorbed that message. And I’m sorry that was so.

  3. My parents were missionaries in Papua New Guinea in the 1950’s, and Children’s Sabbath School consisted of our family and one other family, along with about 20 curious local village children, some of whom had never seen European children before. One of the nurses at the leprosy hospital my father built, ran our Sabbath School program and we loved it! The local children learned to participate, and today, so many years later, there are many thriving Adventist communities in the area.

  4. I did not attend the SDA Sabbath school as a child. But when I was 11 I asked my Sunday school teacher “why do we not keep the 7th day of the week?”

    • Shalom Saints, I did not grow up in the Seventh-day Adventist church. I would read The Bible Story (Arthur Maxwell) story that related to the Sunday School lesson. I also took on a personal challenge to read a story from The Bible Story each night (2 if the stories were short). This concreted the foundation to accept the doctrines of the Holy Bible (as presented by the SDA church) more readily.

  5. My family started attending the Adventist Church in the early 70’s when I was 8 years old, so I started in Primary Sabbath School. Our church was a company at the time but growing fast and within a year became a church. At its height we had around 300 people because the local community hospital that was just built was Adventist run. So we had missionaries & doctors from all over the world that came to run the hospital. Previously I had a neighbor who took me to Sunday School in our small village, but I found it very dry & boring. Sabbath School was different. There were lots of children and we sang songs, had mission stories, memorized Bible Verses, had felt Bible Stories, crafts,& 13th Sabbath presentations, I loved it. I also loved dressing up in long dresses & dress shoes that clickety clacked on the hard wood floors. We rented from a local Methodist Church while our new church was being built. It was all very exciting for a little kid who had been unchurched in a small rural community. I also attended the local Adventist School and many of my Sabbath School friends went there as well.

    I left the church when I was 17, but returned at 25. When I took my oldest son to Sabbath School for the first time there were still a lot of children and he had similar experiences to mine, but eventually after divisions and people moving away, when I took my youngest 2, it was just them most of the time. I homeschooled as well, and taught them in Sabbath School. We prayed fervently every week for more children and they were so excited when some would show up, but it was sporadic. By the time they got to Juniors though, we had a room full of kids again. 15-20 years later, they are all still close friends, getting together regularly to study the Bible and are active young adults in our church. Thanks to AY and the members who gave them responsibilities within the church in their teens. Many of them married one another, including my daughter.

    Children’s Sabbath School took a big hit after COVID and after many fits and starts, it is finally beginning to thrive again, thanks to dedicated younger members (our leader was in that Junior Sabbath School group). So don’t give up, keep praying, if you build it, they will come. I Hope my story encourages someone not to give up.

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