So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them. Genesis 1:27
(Lester Kern)
I have been a Sunday School teacher for grade school children for many years and scarcely need to look at the curriculum to know how lessons will be presented. Some children like to colour pictures and do word puzzles, but many find the seat work to be boring. I have collected many games and crafts to supplement my teaching and have learned a lot about various learning styles through trial and error.
When I was a child, churches in North America collected old Sunday School materials and shipped them overseas to missionaries. People like my parents distributed Sunday School papers to children with few material possessions. I remember one little girl in Durban, South Africa who died from some illness. Her mother placed a few treasured Sunday School papers in the coffin before her burial. Mom taught Bible lessons with flannel figures on beautiful oil painted backgrounds. I loved those stories and bought the entire Bible in flannel figures twenty years ago. I use them regularly and children still enjoy them. In the past few years we have had more children from various racial backgrounds and I am very aware that all my flannel figures are Caucasian with no colour variations.
When I was a child, churches in North America collected old Sunday School materials and shipped them overseas to missionaries. People like my parents distributed Sunday School papers to children with few material possessions. I remember one little girl in Durban, South Africa who died from some illness. Her mother placed a few treasured Sunday School papers in the coffin before her burial. Mom taught Bible lessons with flannel figures on beautiful oil painted backgrounds. I loved those stories and bought the entire Bible in flannel figures twenty years ago. I use them regularly and children still enjoy them. In the past few years we have had more children from various racial backgrounds and I am very aware that all my flannel figures are Caucasian with no colour variations.
Jesus welcomes little children (Jesus Mafa)The African village gospel pictures shown here were created for people in the Mafa region of Cameroon. These beautiful, culturally relevant paintings were done by a French artist in the 1970s. I found other sites on the internet featuring African American religious art including this one. God created man in his image and it was not an exclusively white likeness. The traditional art renditions we recognize as Jesus Christ are not what he really looked like either.
It is good to step outside of our traditional perceptions of God. Earlier this year I read The Shack by Willam P. Young. The book has its strengths and weaknesses but I enjoyed the author's allegorical approach to the image of God. Some people I know felt the presentation of God as an African American woman was heretical, but that characterization did change later in the book. God is a spirit, neither male or female, and exhibits the strength we associate with a man along with the compassion and tenderness of a mother.
I hope the children and grandchildren of the people my parents taught in South Africa now get Sunday School papers with pictures like these on them.







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