GETTING STIRRED
UP! By the Revd Alan M. Barker
Suitable
for Whole School Aim
To begin to 'get ready' for
Christmas by reflecting how to make a better world. This assembly is designed
for the week preceding Advent.
Preparation and materials
- Ask 10 children to help you.
- A large clear pyrex bowl and mixing spoon, and the following
ingredients weighed into separate freezer bags: 3 oz plain flour; 3oz suet; 4oz
dark brown sugar; ½ tsp baking powder with ½ tsp mixed spice;
½ oz flaked almonds; 4oz raisins; 4oz sultanas; 6oz currants; 2oz mixed
peel; 2 medium eggs (best broken into a small storage container).
- The Collect (short prayer) for Stir-up Sunday on an OHP or flip-chart:
'Stir up, O Lord, the wills of your faithful people: that richly bearing the
fruit of good works, they may by you be richly rewarded; through Jesus Christ
our Lord.'
Assembly
- Explain that the season of Advent begins on 2 December. It's a time to
'get ready' for Christmas. The Sunday before Advent (25 November) is
traditionally known as 'Stir-up' Sunday. It's the time of year when Christmas
puddings are made so that they have time to 'steep' (i.e. all the juices and
flavours mix together and grow) before Christmas.
- Ask the children if they would like to make a pudding - here, now in
assembly. Would they really? When the response is sufficiently enthusiastic,
comment that the idea seems to have really got them
stirred-up!
- Introduce the ingredients one by one, in the order that they are
listed. Give one to each volunteer. There could be the opportunity to explore
the different textures and aromas. Ask each helper first to add their
ingredient to the bowl, and then to stir them together. While they are doing
this invite them to close their eyes and secretly make a wish. Traditionally,
all the members of a household would take a turn at stirring in order to do
this.
- When the mixture is complete (adding the eggs often causes a stir!),
explain that there is a special prayer associated with Stir-up Sunday. Display
the prayer and point out that the words 'stir up', 'fruit', 'good' and 'richly'
could refer to making a pudding. In fact, the prayer is about making the most
of life. How ready (stirred-up) are we to take positive action to help everyone
enjoy life more?
- Ask the children to suggest different positive actions ('good works')
to 'enrich' the lives of others and make a better world, e.g. supporting the
Blue Peter Christmas Appeal or the BBC Children in Need Appeal; befriending
those who are new to the school; visiting elderly relatives; praying for peace;
caring for the environment. The stirring spoon could be passed to individual
children to hold as they make their suggestions.
- Sum up by reflecting that getting ready for Christmas isn't just a
matter of preparing food. It's also important that we are stirred up and ready
to act upon our deepest wishes and prayers for others. But note that the
pudding mixture must now be steamed for at least 8 hours, and that in the same
way many of the changes we long for may take time!
Time for
reflection
Read together the Collect for Stir-up Sunday or use the following
prayer:
Lord God, we thank you for
the excitement of starting to get ready for Christmas. In all of our Advent
preparations, stir up our imagination and help us to be more ready to
enrich the lives of others and to make a better world. Amen.
Song 'Christmas, Christmas' (Come
and Praise, 122)
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