Creating Bible Lessons For Children’s Ministry


To teach the Bible to children we need to communicate not just what knowledge of happened but also the meaning and then think how that applies to us now.

So bible talks give:

  • Knowledge
  • Meaning
  • Application

And we said that application is about our response to God’s word. It answers the question “So what?” What should my response be?

Now, on one level we should let God’s word speak for itself. And God does speak powerfully – often in a way that is exactly right for us at exactly the right time.

But we should also point the children in the right direction –after all, there are plenty of examples in history of Christians finding wrong applications from Bible verses.

With children we’re really looking out for only 1 or at the most 2 straightforward applications. They’ll be about encouragement to keep going as a disciple of Jesus or a challenge over an attitude or behaviour.

Like the numerous signs we see as we drive along a road, here are 6simple application signs to look for in your Bible passage:

  1. Positive examples sign– behave like this person did in this situation.
  2. Negative examples– don’t sin like this person did.
  3. Warnings– don’t let this thing from the culture around you shape your life.
  4. Direct commands – Just do it. Because Jesus says so; He knows best and He’s King.
  5. Promises. Get this stuck into your head. It’ll keep you going.
  6. Reasons to give praise or prayer to God.

So, let’s look at examples of each of these in turn. You might want to grab a Bible so you can look out for the application signs.

First – Daniel in the lions’ den- that’s Daniel 6.

Daniel’s got a tough choice. Does he honor God and get into trouble, or do what others are pressuring him to do? He chooses to follow God…and faces execution…but God rescues Him and the King turns to God as a result.

So it’s a positive example sign – of Daniel, who chose to go God’s way, even if that had meant becoming lion food.

How do we apply that with children?

Well, why not get them together in groups with a leader and list on a sheet of paper times when it’s difficult to choose to follow Jesus.

That might include what to do when they’re in an RE lesson and the teacher says that all religions are the same. Or when there’s peer pressure to join in with some sinful behavior.

In each situation what would Daniel have done?

For much younger children you may just want to say that sometimes it’s difficult to do what pleases God and we need to copy what Daniel did when he found it tough.

The second example: The Golden Calf in Exodus 32.

That’s the tragic incident when the Israelites, bored of waiting for Moses, made and worshipped a golden calf instead of God. The problem was that they failed to recognize that the Lord had rescued and provided for them and only the Lord was capable of bringing them through the desert to the promised land. And so they glorified an Egyptian-style idol instead.

It’s a negative example to us: the sin of idolatry. It sounds crazy…but so often we fall into the same sin – believing that other things will get us through this life, rather than Almighty God.

Now to apply for older children maybe you could have some pictures of things people put their trust in – like fame, qualifications, popularity, possessions, good looks or being religious or good…and talk about how we can avoid trusting in those things.

For little children that would be quite difficult to understand, so you might want to flip it on its head and together write or stick some words on a sheet which explain why God is the only one to be trusted – words like ‘strong’ and ‘knows everything’ and ‘ loves me’ etc.

The third example is from the parable of the rich fool in Luke 12.

In that one, a man asks Jesus to solve an argument over the family inheritance.

Jesus replies in v 15, ‘Watch out! Be on your guard against all kinds of greed…’ and then he tells the parable of the fool who gets richer and more and more comfortable yet totally ignores God. And then he drops dead and has to face God with nothing except the claim that he was comfortable when he was alive.

So here’s a warning: Jesus says, “Be on your guard against all kinds of greed”.

This is just as real to apply today. So, for older children you might want to do something like flicking through some magazine adverts and look out for the messages that suggest that we’ll be happier if we have the latest such-and-such.

Jesus isn’t saying we shouldn’t have possessions. But He is warning against the world’s message of seeking comfort in this life over the Kingdom of God.

For younger children you might want to show them some toys that appeal to them at their age.

Explain that they’re fun to play with but Jesus tells us ‘Don’t want those things so much that we ignore God’.

Proverbs 22:6

The fourth example: the parable of the unforgiving servant in Matthew 18.

That’s when Peter asks Jesus how many times he should forgive someone who keeps hurting him. Jesus’ reply is His parable of the unforgiving servant.

You know; the one where the King has a servant for whom he writes off hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of debt. But that servant then imprisons his own mate over a debt of a few dollars.

The clearest sign is in verse 22, Jesus’ reply to Peter’s question is ‘Forgive…not seven times but seventy times seven’ This is a direct command. ‘Keep on forgiving’ and why? ‘Because God is willing to keep on forgiving us’.

So to apply maybe you’d want to give the children some space on their own to write down the names of children they find irritate or upset them.

Explain that forgiving means forgetting about what they’ve done and not telling everyone else how rotten they’ve been. They could write “Keep on forgiving.” next to the names.

For younger children it might be enough to say that we often find it difficult to forget when people are nasty to us. But God forgets what we’ve done when he forgives us – and Jesus tells us to ‘keep on forgiving other people even when they keep being mean’. OK.

Here’s number 5: The Great Commission Matthew 28: “…Go and make disciples of all nations, baptising them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”

Well in there there’s a direct command ‘Go and make disciples’, and also a promise: ‘I am with you always’. Jesus promises that He doesn’t leave us alone to try to live for Him but that through His Holy Spirit He is with us – always.

To help children apply this how about some printed pictures of places where we can tell our friends about Jesus – like school, home, their street and invitations to church events.

Chat about in which of these Jesus promises that he’ll be with us.

And the final example – all those wonderful Bible passages like most of the Psalms or Genesis 1 that give us a reason for praise or prayer .

So, if the application is praise then let’s praise God – using singing, painting, drawing, writing raps or a whole manner of other creative stuff. Or is it prayer? – maybe if we’ve been looking at Jesus’ death on the cross we need time to consider what God’s done for us, maybe by writing some prayers, and maybe singing a song in response.

So, that’s our 6 application signs to look out for: Positive Examples, Negative Examples, Warnings, Direct Commands, Promises, and Reasons for praise or Prayer.

Now, you’ll have noticed that most of these application ideas are deliberately practical and active. That’s better than just talking at the children and it works much better in small groups.

And children are more likely to be honest and open in a smaller group, especially If they have the same leader each week.

So, there ya go. The application signs to look out for and some practical ideas to help the children explore the application of these passages in their lives.

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<h2><strong>How Much Does A Custom Puppet Cost?</strong></h2>
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<p> <strong>What is a custom puppet?</strong> A custom puppet is <g class=a one of a kind puppet. It can mean a puppet a puppet builder makes for personal use or sale, a puppet of the builder's choice. It can also mean a puppet specifically commissioned to have a certain look or style or specific features such as blinking eyes.

A custom puppet is not just foam and fabric. A custom puppet represents hours of intense hand labor.

Whos wants a custom puppet? There are hundreds of different commercially made puppets on the market. You can find virtually any puppet you want, be it a red-haired girl, a talking book or a chicken. There are inexpensive, but well-made puppets like "Doug & Melissa" offer, great animal puppets like Folkmanis offer and many other choices. For $100, you can get a good puppet.

But you will not be the only person with that puppet.

Axtell Possum Puppet
Axtell Possum Puppet

Professional ventriloquists and puppeteers often want a custom puppet. They want a one of a kind character to keep their shows unique. One of my favorite puppets when performing ventriloquism is my Axtell Possum puppet, but it is not a custom puppet. Many ventriloquists have and use the same puppet. For most shows, this is not a real problem, after all, folks are not watching that many ventriloquists. But if I was to perform on a nationally televised show, I would not use my possum. I would use one of my unique, one of a kind builds.

ESPN portrait puppets by Chappell Puppets
ESPN portrait puppets by Chappell Puppets

Companies sometimes want a special puppet made to represent their business in commercials and advertisements. Sometimes folks want a puppet that looks like them, called a portrait puppet.

Other folks just want a cool puppet. You can find a lot of custom puppets for sale on eBay and Etsy. They often are shocked when seeing the price. I found one on Etsy for $7500. Ten times higher than the average custom puppet. But depending on what you need it for and the builder you hire, prices can vary significantly.

Sticker Shock when searching for custom made puppets
Sticker Shock when searching for custom made puppets

What goes into building a custom puppet?

What kind of puppet do you need? Before we can even consider the cost of a custom puppet, we need to know what we want. Do you want a person puppet, an animal, a talking object like a book or banana? Do you want a look-a-like puppet? Do you want a half body or a full body with legs?

Are you looking for a wooden ventriloquist puppet with moving eyes, wiggling ears, eyebrows that raise, eyelids that blink? You could be looking at spending $5000 or more.

Do you want a sock puppet with plastic googly eyes and a tuft of hair? $20 - $40 will probably do the trick.

Latex covered puppet
Larry is one of the first puppets I sold.

In this article, I will focus primarily on the Muppet-style, foam arm and rod puppet. This has become a very popular style with ventriloquists and for television.

Materials to build a custom puppet are expensive. A good quality puppet will use good quality materials.

Antron fleece, the fleece used on Muppets and most top-notch puppets costs $40-65 per yard if purchased pre-dyed. It is half as much to buy white and dye your own, but then you add hours to the process. The average puppet will require about 2 yard of fleece. It only makes sense for the builder to dye his own fleece if he is dying large quantities or looking for a very specific color.

Polyester fleece can be used and will cut the cost considerably. Although the fabric store fleece looks good, often it is harder to hide seams when sewing the fabric. For this reason, most professional builders want Antron fleece.

If you want a live arm puppet, (a puppet where the operator's arm becomes the puppet's arm and hand), you will double the amount of material needed.

Reticulated foam is a light weight foam. It will cost about $50 for enough for a full body puppet. Polyfoam is a very inexpensive alternative but will make an excellent puppet.

In addition to the fleece and foam, there will be the cost of hair for the puppet. Hair can be inexpensive fur or can be an expensive wig. Costumes and accessories also add to the cost. If the clothing needs to be made for the puppet, that will push up costs. Sewing a costume takes time. Time is money.

Add to this all the little incidentals like eyes, arm rods, mouth plate materials, plus other building materials and the coat goes up.

The materials to build a custom puppet can range from $30 to several hundred dollars. A good quality soft puppet for ventriloquists will usually have a minimum of $100 in materials.

How long does it take to make one? A custom made puppet can take 40 or more hours to make, depending on the complexity of the build. Even at a modest $20/hour, that puts the value of the labor put into a custom puppet at $800 and up. If a builder is having to design a pattern and create a costume to meet a very specific design for a customer, 40 hours and even three times that is not unusual.

Most of my puppets I build are built from a pattern or just built up from my imagination. Since a specific design or look is not necessary, the time I put into a quality puppet build is about 20-40 hours. I have a few patterns that use painted foam, no fleece or fur covering, and I can make them in 10 hours or less.

Some puppet builders use the same pattern for all their puppets and they can "mass produce" their puppets, making several heads and bodies at once. They will then customize them indivdually when adding fabric, features and clothing. This can really cut building time.

Nutty Puppets has some amazing custom puppets. Each of their puppets is unique and one of a kind. If you check out the photos on their page though, it appears that they are only using one or two patterns. This makes for fast assembly. What makes their puppets unique is the color of fabric, the hair and the costumes and accessories. This allows them to build a puppet quickly and keep prices low.

Prices vary from builder to builder. The price of your custom puppet will also depend on the builder you choose. We all have different experience and different styles. Some will line the inside of the puppet head with fabric. This gives a more durable puppet, but adds to cost.

Others use more expensive materials for mouthplates, or arm rods or eyes. Different building styles also make builds go faster or take more time. Some puppet builders fabricate their own puppet accessories and mechanisms adding time, cost and quality to the build.

Two builders could build the same puppet and their prices could be several hundreds of dollars apart. If you actually saw the materials cost and watched everything that went into the build, you would likely see why the one would be more expensive.

Usually, the more expensive build is worth the extra cost, but depending on your needs, you may be just as happy with the lower cost puppet and still have an outstanding, quality puppet that will last many, many years.

Who owns a custom puppet's design? If you have a puppet built, the design is still the builder's property. You may draw the picture. It may be your original idea, but the builder owns the design and you cannot have it reproduced by someone else.

You may know, that when you have professional photographs taken, the photographer actually owns the picture, even if it is your family. You cannot reproduce the picture without compensating the photographer.

It is the same way with a custom puppet. You own the puppet. You can use it for performing and entertaining, but the builder still owns the design. It is his intellectual property.

I recommend you negotiate the ownership of the design with the builder before it is built. If the puppet will be used in shows, commercials or other public and commercial purposes, be sure you actually own the character. You will want to be free to use the puppet without needing to worry about intellectual property laws. You want to own the property.

If the puppet has a big future, I recommend you talk to a lawyer. You don't want to get your first HBO special and find out you cannot sell T-Shirts with the puppet's picture.

Where can I buy a custom puppet? Possum Woods Puppets makes and sells custom puppets. Possum Woods is my company and I often have a variety of puppets for sale. See our "Puppets For Sale" page for available puppets.

" data-pin-description="

How Much Does A Custom Puppet Cost?

What is a custom puppet? A custom puppet is a one of a kind puppet. It can mean a puppet a puppet builder makes for personal use or sale, a puppet of the builder's choice. It can also mean a puppet specifically commissioned to have a certain look or style or specific features such as blinking eyes.

A custom puppet is not just foam and fabric. A custom puppet represents hours of intense hand labor.

Whos wants a custom puppet? There are hundreds of different commercially made puppets on the market. You can find virtually any puppet you want, be it a red-haired girl, a talking book or a chicken. There are inexpensive, but well-made puppets like "Doug & Melissa" offer, great animal puppets like Folkmanis offer and many other choices. For $100, you can get a good puppet.

But you will not be the only person with that puppet.

Axtell Possum Puppet
Axtell Possum Puppet

Professional ventriloquists and puppeteers often want a custom puppet. They want a one of a kind character to keep their shows unique. One of my favorite puppets when performing ventriloquism is my Axtell Possum puppet, but it is not a custom puppet. Many ventriloquists have and use the same puppet. For most shows, this is not a real problem, after all, folks are not watching that many ventriloquists. But if I was to perform on a nationally televised show, I would not use my possum. I would use one of my unique, one of a kind builds.

ESPN portrait puppets by Chappell Puppets
ESPN portrait puppets by Chappell Puppets

Companies sometimes want a special puppet made to represent their business in commercials and advertisements. Sometimes folks want a puppet that looks like them, called a portrait puppet.

Other folks just want a cool puppet. You can find a lot of custom puppets for sale on eBay and Etsy. They often are shocked when seeing the price. I found one on Etsy for $7500. Ten times higher than the average custom puppet. But depending on what you need it for and the builder you hire, prices can vary significantly.

Sticker Shock when searching for custom made puppets
Sticker Shock when searching for custom made puppets

What goes into building a custom puppet?

What kind of puppet do you need? Before we can even consider the cost of a custom puppet, we need to know what we want. Do you want a person puppet, an animal, a talking object like a book or banana? Do you want a look-a-like puppet? Do you want a half body or a full body with legs?

Are you looking for a wooden ventriloquist puppet with moving eyes, wiggling ears, eyebrows that raise, eyelids that blink? You could be looking at spending $5000 or more.

Do you want a sock puppet with plastic googly eyes and a tuft of hair? $20 - $40 will probably do the trick.

Latex covered puppet
Larry is one of the first puppets I sold.

In this article, I will focus primarily on the Muppet-style, foam arm and rod puppet. This has become a very popular style with ventriloquists and for television.

Materials to build a custom puppet are expensive. A good quality puppet will use good quality materials.

Antron fleece, the fleece used on Muppets and most top-notch puppets costs $40-65 per yard if purchased pre-dyed. It is half as much to buy white and dye your own, but then you add hours to the process. The average puppet will require about 2 yard of fleece. It only makes sense for the builder to dye his own fleece if he is dying large quantities or looking for a very specific color.

Polyester fleece can be used and will cut the cost considerably. Although the fabric store fleece looks good, often it is harder to hide seams when sewing the fabric. For this reason, most professional builders want Antron fleece.

If you want a live arm puppet, (a puppet where the operator's arm becomes the puppet's arm and hand), you will double the amount of material needed.

Reticulated foam is a light weight foam. It will cost about $50 for enough for a full body puppet. Polyfoam is a very inexpensive alternative but will make an excellent puppet.

In addition to the fleece and foam, there will be the cost of hair for the puppet. Hair can be inexpensive fur or can be an expensive wig. Costumes and accessories also add to the cost. If the clothing needs to be made for the puppet, that will push up costs. Sewing a costume takes time. Time is money.

Add to this all the little incidentals like eyes, arm rods, mouth plate materials, plus other building materials and the coat goes up.

The materials to build a custom puppet can range from $30 to several hundred dollars. A good quality soft puppet for ventriloquists will usually have a minimum of $100 in materials.

How long does it take to make one? A custom made puppet can take 40 or more hours to make, depending on the complexity of the build. Even at a modest $20/hour, that puts the value of the labor put into a custom puppet at $800 and up. If a builder is having to design a pattern and create a costume to meet a very specific design for a customer, 40 hours and even three times that is not unusual.

Most of my puppets I build are built from a pattern or just built up from my imagination. Since a specific design or look is not necessary, the time I put into a quality puppet build is about 20-40 hours. I have a few patterns that use painted foam, no fleece or fur covering, and I can make them in 10 hours or less.

Some puppet builders use the same pattern for all their puppets and they can "mass produce" their puppets, making several heads and bodies at once. They will then customize them indivdually when adding fabric, features and clothing. This can really cut building time.

Nutty Puppets has some amazing custom puppets. Each of their puppets is unique and one of a kind. If you check out the photos on their page though, it appears that they are only using one or two patterns. This makes for fast assembly. What makes their puppets unique is the color of fabric, the hair and the costumes and accessories. This allows them to build a puppet quickly and keep prices low.

Prices vary from builder to builder. The price of your custom puppet will also depend on the builder you choose. We all have different experience and different styles. Some will line the inside of the puppet head with fabric. This gives a more durable puppet, but adds to cost.

Others use more expensive materials for mouthplates, or arm rods or eyes. Different building styles also make builds go faster or take more time. Some puppet builders fabricate their own puppet accessories and mechanisms adding time, cost and quality to the build.

Two builders could build the same puppet and their prices could be several hundreds of dollars apart. If you actually saw the materials cost and watched everything that went into the build, you would likely see why the one would be more expensive.

Usually, the more expensive build is worth the extra cost, but depending on your needs, you may be just as happy with the lower cost puppet and still have an outstanding, quality puppet that will last many, many years.

Who owns a custom puppet's design? If you have a puppet built, the design is still the builder's property. You may draw the picture. It may be your original idea, but the builder owns the design and you cannot have it reproduced by someone else.

You may know, that when you have professional photographs taken, the photographer actually owns the picture, even if it is your family. You cannot reproduce the picture without compensating the photographer.

It is the same way with a custom puppet. You own the puppet. You can use it for performing and entertaining, but the builder still owns the design. It is his intellectual property.

I recommend you negotiate the ownership of the design with the builder before it is built. If the puppet will be used in shows, commercials or other public and commercial purposes, be sure you actually own the character. You will want to be free to use the puppet without needing to worry about intellectual property laws. You want to own the property.

If the puppet has a big future, I recommend you talk to a lawyer. You don't want to get your first HBO special and find out you cannot sell T-Shirts with the puppet's picture.

Where can I buy a custom puppet? Possum Woods Puppets makes and sells custom puppets. Possum Woods is my company and I often have a variety of puppets for sale. See our "Puppets For Sale" page for available puppets.

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