Leader Guide
Teaching
- Jeremiah Signpost Cards
- Three sheets of cardstock or paper
- Optional: tape
- Bibles or the Superbook Bible App
Discipleship Challenge materials:
- Lifeline Bookmark
- String, twine, or yarn in six-inch lengths
- Sample craft made in Lesson 1
- Copy the three Jeremiah Signpost Cards onto cardstock if possible, in color or black and white.
- Discipleship Challenge materials (for children who missed previous lessons; see Lesson 1 for details)
Appointed by God: Jeremiah points to Jesus.
Have a child select the first Signpost card and read it aloud. Tape the card to the wall or prop it up so children can see it. Lead a discussion with the information below. Repeat for the other two Signpost cards. Additional material is included for Grades 4–6 to look up and discuss.
Signpost 1 Honor God’s Temple
Jeremiah’s life and words point us to Jesus. The words that Jeremiah spoke to the people of Israel and to leaders of different nations were not his own. Who gave Jeremiah the words to speak? God.
God touched Jeremiah’s mouth when He was a young man and said, “Look, I have put My words in your mouth!” Through Jeremiah, God called His people to repent and return to Him. God called Himself the potter; what did He call His people? Clay.
God loves His people and wants to form us according to His plan and purpose. He longs for His children to honor and worship Him. Instead, the people in Jeremiah’s time worshiped idols and dishonored God and His Temple. They believed they could do as they wished and still be safe from God’s anger, simply because the Lord’s Temple was in their midst. The people turned God’s Temple into a market place!
Jeremiah warned the people as they brought goods into the city gates to sell on the Sabbath day. He called the Temple a den of thieves. Do you remember who also called the Temple a den of thieves many years later? Jesus.
Jesus entered the Temple and turned over the tables and chairs of the merchants and moneychangers. He drove out everyone buying and selling animals for sacrifice. Both Jeremiah and Jesus were bold and took action to purify God’s temple!
Because they were not afraid to speak the truth, both men were falsely accused, arrested, and punished. Both were persecuted by their own people!
OPTIONAL VERSES FOR GRADES 4–6
Jeremiah 7:8-11 (NLT):
Matthew 21:12-13 (NLT):
Jeremiah 20:1-2 (NLT):
Luke 22:13-18 (cev):
Signpost 2 True Predictions
Jeremiah also points us to Jesus through the prophecies and predictions he made about the future—events that only God could reveal. Jeremiah predicted that the Messiah would be both human and God. How did Jesus come into the world? He came into the world as a baby born to Mary.
The angel of God named Gabriel announced to Mary that the Holy Spirit would come upon her and she would bring forth a child named Jesus, the Holy one—the Son of God!
OPTIONAL VERSES FOR GRADES 4–6
Jeremiah 33:15-16 (NLT):
Luke 1:28-33 (NLT):
Romans 1:3-4 (NLT):
Signpost 3 The New Covenant
Jeremiah points us to Christ by talking about God’s agreement with His people, called a covenant. The people were angry that Jeremiah was pointing out their sins. He reminded them that they were ignoring the covenant and living in disobedience to God. He warned them that God would punish them for their sins.
However, this was not the end! Jeremiah prophesied that God would make a new promise to Israel. This covenant would be different. He would place His instructions deep within them and write it on their hearts. God would forgive them and no longer remember their sins. What an amazing love God had for His people—and also has for us today!
Sin ruined Israel’s relationship with God. They turned their back on Him to worship false gods and to follow their own ways. It is the same today; sin can ruin our relationship with God. Yet, just like in Jeremiah’s day, God calls us to repent and return to Him. Through Jesus, we have a new covenant or agreement with God. Jesus died for the sins of all people. When we trust in Him, we are forgiven. Our sins are washed away, and He no longer remembers them. 1 John 1:9 says:
Jeremiah predicted Jerusalem’s downfall. He also spoke of their bright future in Jeremiah 29:11:
As Jesus, God became man. He lived a sinless life and suffered death on the cross to pay for our sins. He rose to life again to give us a new life here and forever in heaven.
Through Jesus, we share in the hope of the new covenant. John 3:16 says:
OPTIONAL VERSES FOR GRADES 4–6
Jeremiah 31:31-34 (NLT):
Luke 22:20 (NLT):
Give any child who missed Lesson 1 a Life Ring Bookmark page and a six-inch length of string, twine, or yarn. Show children the sample craft made in Lesson 1 and have them assemble the craft at home.
Hold up the sample craft.
In the past two lessons, our challenge was to learn the first two parts of Jeremiah 29:11 written on the Life Ring. Who can close their eyes and say it?
Did anyone face a difficult situation and choose to take hold of your lifeline instead of worrying? Children respond.
Our final challenge for this course is to learn the last part of Jeremiah 29:11:
Everyone wants to be filled with hope. If we have hope, we can endure hard times. God is our future, our hope, and salvation; we have a bright future in Him! When we accept Jesus as our Lord and Savior, we know that He is living inside us, giving us power and strength and peace. And we also know that someday, He will take us to heaven to live with Him forever!
So let’s say the whole verse together.