The Christmas Journey
A guide to running your own Christmas Journey
Creating a team
- The event will need a team of enthusiastic people who are able to
work together to provide an exciting and thought-provoking experience for the
visitors.
- Even if your church is small, you could use this event to invite
other churches to work together to expand the team.
- Churches Togetheror
a similar local group would be a good platform to share the vision and recruit
helpers.
- It may be useful to ask for time in Sunday services at other churches
to explain the idea and encourage helpers.
- Notice sheets, church magazines and personal invitations can be
effective.
- Assigning helpers to a specific job or jobs helps the team to have
clarity of purpose and a feeling of value and responsibility.
What you'll need:
- Leaders and coordinators: to oversee the whole event, to take
responsibility for the smooth running of things and to delegate and
troubleshoot where necessary.
- Administration: to send out invitations to schools, book
follow-up and transport, produce prayer cards and T-shirts ordered.
- Publicity: to generate posters, adverts and publicity in
schools and churches.
- Layout and logistical planning: a small team can discuss ideas
and plan the sequence and smooth transition between rooms.
- Costumes and props: to circulate in church a list of costumes
and props required for the scenes.
- Scenery: preparation and design.
- Crafts: to purchase materials and assemble items such as glue
sticks, felt-tipped pens, cards so that they are ready for children to use.
- Refreshments: to provide refreshments for the visiting staff
and also for the team.
- Journey guides: to lead the children around The Christmas Journey, linking each
scene together and encouraging the group to participate in the story.
- Journey guides' assistants: to help with organising children,
helping with costumes, props and so on and, very importantly, leaving each
scene ready for the next group by replacing items.
- Puppeteers: to pre-recorded script on to CD and work the
puppets.
- Storyteller: to learn the scripts and tell the story with
empathy and skill.
- Technical support: to switch on lights, DVDs and CDs at
appropriate times.
- 'Gatekeepers', meeters and greeters: to make sure that no
child leaves the building during school visits, to make each new school feel
welcome and to deal with coats and exits.
Framework of the presentation
The Christmas Journey is designed so that the whole experience
lasts for an hour and is suitable for groups of up to 30 children, allowing for
a maximum of four school sessions per day.
Suggested daily timetable:
9.00 am Team meet for prayer and
preparation
9.30-10.30am School one
10.45-11.45am School two
12.45-1.45pm School three
1.45-2.45pm School four
Craft activity
Have a craft activity that takes no longer
than eight or ten minutes, such as a simple Christmas card using pre-cut shapes
to glue on to the card and some opportunity for colouring or using stickers or
glitter pens. Producing sticky labels on the computer with the school names and
The Christmas Journeylogo
takes a little time, but gives a professional appearance.
The set
Buy or borrow good quality metal gazebos if this is to be an ongoing
event as the plastic variety are more complicated to erect and less robust for
attaching drapes. Depending on the space available, the gazebos can be placed
in the corners of a hall, leaving a central uncluttered area in which to tell
the first part of the story. Each gazebo should be positioned slightly away
from the walls to allow extra space for props and, in some cases, to make the
storytelling room larger. For the final scene the children are led out of the
last gazebo into a lounge area outside the main hall. This creates a feeling of
travelling forward in time from a darkened area into the light of the present
day. Link the gazebos together, using dark fabric draped over poles or stapled
to slats of wood. Take care that wood is secured safely to the gazebo in order
to prevent accidents. Strong string can be used to fix the wood securely.
Lighting
Create a professional effect with simple lighting readily found in
local furniture and DIY stores. Clip-on spotlights, free standing uplighters
and strings of Christmas lights can all be used to good effect. Although the
rooms should be as dark as possible, attention to health and safety is
paramount and, for this reason, background lighting is advisable.
Budget
An important consideration is that most costs will be 'one off', so if
you are planning this as an annual event, the overall cost will drop
significantly in subsequent years. Setting up costs will of course vary
depending on the materials you buy and what you already have, for example
gazebos, fabrics, corrugated card, paint and timber.
For more information about the book, see The Christmas Journey
See also www.christmasjourney.org.uk