Year five for Year 2

Martyn Payne

This was the fifth year of 'The Christmas Journey' experience, which a Churches Together Team offers to Primary Schools in and around Frodsham, Cheshire; and it was my fifth year of involvement too for Barnabas, telling stories that top and tail the journey for the Year 2 children who come round during the week and the groups of adults and children who book in on the Saturday.

Fifteen local schools sent classes, which in groups of between twelve and 17 children at a time travel through the events of the first Christmas. A wonderful team of actors, guides, storytellers, puppeteers, craft helpers and musicians (not forgetting the coffee and tea makers!) bring the whole experience to life again and again, so much so that each group feels that it is just for them.

After having learned a special song for their travels, they start their journey by hearing the story of the biggest present ever - the great gift of this world to us from God. However, it is a gift that we have sadly misused and spoiled, yet this Giver does not give up on his gift. But how is such a broken world to be mended? That's where the great surprise of Christmas comes in. The children now step back in time to hear about the story of God's second biggest gift - that of himself as a baby. They begin by meeting Mary in the kitchen making bread, when an angel visits; they become shepherds in the fields, when the heavenly choir breaks in upon them; they become visitors to the stable, where the animals have a tale to tell; they turn up in a rich palace where they help some wise men pack presents for a long journey. And finally the children meet me again in a modern-day sitting room, where we share the story of how this special gift of the baby Jesus is God's way of mending a broken world and of the beginning of putting everything back together again.

The Frodsham Team, led by Moira Curry and Gill Morgan, has built up such good relations with the local schools over the years that they now have no trouble in persuading them to come and experience the Christmas Journey. In fact, it seems to have become a vital part of their Christmas curriculum for many. Everything is very professionally done with special packs for the schools to take away and the opportunity for the teachers to look at additional resources for their RE teaching, in particular some of our Barnabas books.

Both local authority and church schools are involved in this well-established project and this year too we had a visit from a local special school, where the children have quite severe special needs, but who nevertheless enjoyed the high levels of tactile and visual input that are a vital part of a each aspect of the Journey.

The final part of the journey in the 'sitting room' is also a chance for the children to reflect on what they have experienced, and this year was no exception. There were some great comments, in particular about how the story of Jesus has 'two beginnings'. 'It's because Jesus goes on forever,' exclaimed one; while another child explained, 'God came to Mary and asked her to have his baby and then at the end God cared for him so much and he thought about it so deeply, that he decided to bring Jesus back to life again.'

A longstanding BRF supporter from London came to visit us on the Friday, as he is hoping to persuade his own church to put on something similar in 2009. Having talked at length to the team and having experienced the journey at least twice, he later wrote:

I found all the input very moving, and the reaction of the children was quite super... I think that the opening and closing stories were the factor that made the Christmas Journey a rounded, whole experience, which must have stayed with the children as a world view, not just a pretty story, no matter how dramatically presented.

Of course it is to be hoped that many others will want to put on something similar for their local schools and to this end Barnabas is publishing the book of the Journey in June 2009 - watch out for The Christmas Journey by Moira Currie and Gill Morgan.

Over 300 adults and children experienced the 28 journeys we staged this year and which in my case added up to 56 storytelling sessions! Phew! All of us in the team are very much aware of the prayer that goes on behind the scenes, which is the source of the strength we needed and the inspiration we were given to deliver this very special experience to so many children; all of which further develops the good relationships between churches and schools in this particular part of Cheshire.

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Martyn Payne

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