Week
2 of June: The Value of Justice and Mercy
In
Connection with Richard and Linda Eyre
Editor's note: This month of June the Meridian Family Value
of the month is Justice and Mercy. Click here
to read this month's
overview article). Each week during the month we will
post an update in Meridian, illustrating a couple
of the Eyres' favorite methods for teaching This important
value to each age group. Remember that you can also
go to http://www.valuesparenting.com/
for still more ideas and teaching methods. Thanks
for your interest and participation. There are tens
of thousands of parents concentrating on this value
this month. It is a way of saving this somewhat unkind
and unfriendly society of ours ? one family at a time!
Send us your feedback, and if you want a free children's
CD on the value of Honesty, see the instructions at
the bottom of this article.
Methods for Preschoolers
Turn-Taking
Begin
to establish the idea of fairness by teaching small
children the word "turn." Two-year-olds
(and even many pre-twos) can understand this most
basic form of sharing. Help them to take a short
turn with a toy and then say, "Jamie's turn,"
as they pass it to the other child. Give big
time praise. Then help them to watch and wait for
a moment until it is their turn again.
Some
sort of timing device makes turns work better.
Use an oven clock or egg timer to help small children
take turns.
Playing Together
Help
your children see that they can have more fun and
play longer with the toy they want if they learn to
be friendlier and play together with it. As
older preschoolers learn to share and take turns,
you can explain to them that sometimes instead of
taking individual turns with something, they can share
by playing together with the same toy. Illustrate
this to children in as many ways as you can think
of. For example, in the case of a ball, each
can bounce it and throw it individually, but both
together could play catch! Or take a doll:
Each could hold it and play independently, but both
could play house as a fun game with the doll as the
family baby.
Methods for Elementary School Age
Plant a Crop
This
time of year may be the time to teach the law of the
harvest (which is the key to understanding the basic
principle of justice). Planting and growing
something will establish a metaphor and example with
which you can reiterate principles of justice and
of cause and effect. Plant a small garden.
If this is not possible, a single plant will do.
Let a child be in charge of one particular crop or
one particular plant. Teach him that with watering
and weeding, the plant will grow tall and with neglect
it will wilt or die. Remind and assist, but
let the initiative be with the child and let the law
of the harvest and of cause and effect and of natural
consequences take its course.
Then
use the experience to show that there is a natural
justice in the world and to explain other things.
For example, if we're kind, others grow and give things
to us. If we care for our things, they last
longer. If we neglect things or people they
don't do well and don't give us any return of joy
or happiness.
Add a Challenge to the Rhyming Words
Motivate
and challenge your children to be fair with each other
by telling them that you have a challenge for them
and that the challenge contains four words that rhyme:
" I dare you to share and to care and to be fair."
Have them memorize the challenge. Tell them
it is a hard challenge harder by far (and much wiser)
than some of the "dares" their friends might
give them. Talk about what each word means.
Give examples. Make it a catch-phrase in your
conversations during this month.
The W.W.J.D. Award
Reward
and praise elementary age children for fairness and
for being forgiving and in order to present the
perfect example of both qualities, add to your Sunday
awards the W.W.J.D. award (What Would Jesus Do?)
As
with each of the other Sunday Awards we have discussed
in past months, say, "Who is in the running for
the W.W.J.D. award?" Have children think
through the week just passed and call to mind any
instance when they shared, let another child go first,
took turns, and so on or when they asked to be forgiven
of something or forgave another person. Give
the award accordingly. (Remember that the award can
just be a piece of construction paper with the letters
W.W.J.D. printed on it. The winner can hang the "prize"
on his bedroom door)
Explain
that the best way to earn this award or to keep its
concept in mind is to be in the habit of asking yourself
(several times a day), What would Jesus do?"
Methods for Adolescents
Narnia
If
you have not already done so, introduce your young
adolescents to C. S. Lewis and The Chronicles of
Narnia. The relatively new movie The
Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe is terrific,
but get them into reading the books too (there are
seven in the series). No one has ever been better
at teaching the concept of Justice and Mercy to children
(or to adults for that matter) than Lewis, ant the
Wardrobe book is essentially a metaphor for
the true principles of the Atonement. Twelve- or thirteen-year-olds
will get hooked on the whole series once they read
Wardrobe.
The Story of the Mote and the Beam
Remind
adolescents that we are usually not in a position
to judge others and thus better off to try to understand
and forgive rather than to condemn. Read or
paraphrase the Bible story of the mote and the beam.
(In brief, one person cannot remove a small speck
or sliver from the eye of another person when there
is a large sliver, or beam, in his own eye.)
Also use the Biblical admonition that only one without
sin should throw the first stone (or condemn the sin
of another). Tie this to the old phrase "People
who live in glass houses should not throw rocks."
Point out that since none of us is perfect, we should
always be ready to understand and forgive imperfections
in others.
More methods for each age group next week.....see
you then.
Closing Note: Many have asked if there are actual teaching
tools to assist parents in teaching the Meridian family
value of the month to their children. The Eyres have
been involved with a series of values-teaching CDs
called Alexander's Amazing Adventures, which give
5-14 year old children a vicarious (and dramatic)
experience with each month's value. By special arrangement,
Meridian readers who have been following this column
and participating in the value of the month can now
receive, as a free gift, the HONESTY CD from this
series. Simply send a self-addressed, stamped 5 X
7 or 8 X 10 envelope (the padded ones are best) to
the Eyres at 1098 Augusta Way, Salt Lake City, Utah,
84108 and they will send you the gift CD. (You will
need to put $0.87 [87cents] in stamps or postage on
your return envelope.) Please respond only if you
have been reading and following the column, and please
do not ask for more than one copy of the CD. We hope
this gift will help make the value-of-the-month concept
even more effective within your family.