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Church Kids
Church Children
CHILDREN of GOD
A little boy was attending his first wedding.
After the service, his cousin asked him, "How many
women can a man marry?"
"Sixteen," the boy responded.
His cousin was amazed that he had an answer so quickly.
"How do you know that?"
"Easy," the little boy said."All you have to do is add it up,
like the Bishop said:
4 better, 4 worse, 4 richer, 4 poorer," said the lad.
After a church service on Sunday morning, a young
boy suddenly announced to his mother, "Mom, I've
decided to become a minister when I grow up."
"That's okay with us, but what made you decide
that?" "Well," said the little boy, "I have to go
to church on Sunday anyway, and I figure it will be
more fun to stand up and yell, than to sit and listen."
A 6-year-old was overheard reciting the Lord's
Prayer at a church service: "And forgive us our
trash passes, as we forgive those who passed trash
against us."
A boy was watching his father, a pastor, write a
sermon.
"How do you know what to say?" he asked.
"Why, God tells me."
"Oh, then why do you keep crossing things out?"
A little girl became restless as the preacher's
sermon dragged on and on. Finally, she leaned over
to her mother and whispered, "Mommy,
if we give him the money now, will he let us go?"
After the christening of his baby brother in
church, little Johnny looked worried. His father asked
him what was wrong. Finally, the boy replied,
"That priest said he wanted us brought up in a
Christian home, and I want to stay with you guys!"
Terri asked her Sunday School class to draw
pictures of their favorite Bible stories. She was
puzzled by Kyle's picture, which showed four people
on an airplane, so she asked him which story it was
meant to represent. The Flight to Egypt, was his
reply. Pointing at each figure, Ms. Terri said,
"That must be Mary, Joseph, and Baby Jesus, But who
is the fourth person? Oh, that's Pontius- the pilot.
The Sunday School Teacher asks, "Now, Johnny, tell
me frankly do you say prayers before eating?"
"No sir," little Johnny replies,
"I don't have to. My Mom is a good cook."
A college drama group presented a play in which
one character would stand on a trap door and
announce, "I descend into hell!"
A stagehand below would then pull a rope, the
trapdoor would spring, and the actor would drop from
view.
The play was well received.
When the actor playing
the part became ill, another actor who was quite
overweight took his place. When the new actor
announced, "I descend into hell!" the stagehand
pulled the rope, and the actor began his plunge, but
became hopelessly stuck. No amount of tugging on
the rope could make him descend.
One student in the balcony jumped up and yelled:
"Hallelujah! Hell is full!"
Pastor Dave Charlton tells us, "After a worship
service at First Baptist Church in Newcastle,
Kentucky, a mother with a fidgety seven-year old boy
told me how she finally got her son to sit still and
be quiet. About halfway through the sermon, she
leaned over and whispered, 'If you don't be quiet,
Pastor Charlton is going to lose his place and will
have to start his sermon all over again!'
It worked."
A little girl was sitting on her grandfather's lap
as he read her a bedtime story. From time to time,
she would take her eyes off the book and reach up
to touch his wrinkled cheek. She was alternately
stroking her own cheek, then his again.
Finally she spoke up, "Grandpa, did God make you?"
Yes, sweetheart," he answered, "God made me a long
time ago."
Oh," she paused, "grandpa, did God make me too?"
"Yes, indeed, honey," he said, "God made you just
a little while ago."
Feeling their respective faces
again, she observed, "God's getting better at it,
isn't he?"
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