DORMITION
Objectives:
Possible Lesson Plan:
Later, when Jesus was grown, He left home to begin His life’s work. Mary saw little of her Son during the years of His teaching and miracles. But, she still loved Him as mother loves her child. Mary was at the foot of the cross when her Son, Jesus, was dying there. Jesus saw her and knew how sad His pain and suffering made His mother. He called out to His disciple, John. John was to care for Mary as if she were his own mother. And so, for the rest of her life, he cared for the Theotokos as a loving son.
After the day of Pentecost, Mary stayed in the city of Jerusalem, living with the disciple John. She comforted and worked lovingly with the new Christian church. When Mary was about 50 years old, she was sick and dying. She told her friends that she wanted to be buried in Gethsemane, the garden where Jesus prayed. At that time, all of the apostles were scattered around the world preaching the Gospel. When they heard of Mary’s dying, they all returned to Jerusalem. Some made the journey by foot; others were miraculously transported by the Lord Himself. All arrived in time except St. Thomas, also known as Doubting Thomas. The apostles are pictured on either side of Mary, St. Peter at the head of the bier and St. Paul at the foot of the bier. With everyone gathered, Mary “fell asleep” in Christ. She died peacefully, knowing that the resurrection of her Son would also be hers.
Below the bier in the icon we see Antoninus the Jew. He was an enemy of the Christian community and tried to break up the burial of Mary by dumping over the bier. An archangel appeared and cut off the hands of Antoninus to keep him from dishonoring the Theotokos. Antoninus knew now that Jesus really was the Son of God and became a Christian. His hand was healed.
When Thomas arrived, the other disciples took Thomas to the tomb in Gethsemane where Mary had been buried near her parents, Joachim and Anna. But the tomb was empty! The Church believes that Mary was resurrected bodily and taken to heaven, just as we all will be in the future.
Add Mary, the Theotokos, to your timeline.
True False
Dormition means “falling asleep”. Below the bier in the icon we see Jesus.
Sts. Peter and Paul are in the icon. Thomas arrived on time to see Mary.
The apostles returned for Mary’s death. Mary died in Rome.
Mary died in Jerusalem. Antoninus was Mary’s friend.
Thomas found Mary’s empty tomb. Mary lived to be 100 years old.
Color the storywheel composed of sections of the icon on the next page. Glue it onto a paper plate. Take another plate and cut away ¼ of the circle. Punch a small hole in the center of each plate and connect the two plates with a brad as shown. Tell the story again together, turning the plates from Mary dying, to the disciples, to Antoninus, and finally to the victorious Jesus taking Mary into heaven as you go.
OK: Class of toddlers? We celebrate Dormition with flowers. Have each toddler tracer their hand on pieces of colored, or white, construction paper. Roll the "hand" into a lily, sticking a green pipe cleaner down the middle and sticking it all together with green tape. You can use a pencil to shape the "petals". What a lovely and simple bouquet!