The Seven Last Words of Christ – A Blackline Master

April 1, 2011

Lent

One of the activities in my 40 Ideas for 40 Days of Lent, 2011, is an exercise on the Seven Last Words of Christ. Since I am once again only going to have about half of my students present this Monday (because of Living Stations rehearsals), I thought it would be nice to have them work on a Lenten activity related to the suffering and death of Jesus that is portrayed in the Living Stations. I realized that it would be easy to formulate this activity into a Blackline Master so that the kids would have the whole thing right in front of them. I’m happy to share these with you:

The Seven Last Words of Christ Blackline Master

The Seven Last Words of Christ – Answer key

Knowing that this activity will not take the whole period, I am also prepared to have them exercise those artistic brain cells that I wrote about the other day. I ran off copies of a Blackline Master that invites them to draw and then color scenes from Holy Week. In copying these BLMs, I actually enlarged them to 11 x 17 to give them more creative space.

Have a great weekend!

Share this:
Facebook Twitter Plusone Pinterest
, , , ,

5 Responses to “The Seven Last Words of Christ – A Blackline Master”

  1. elisa anasco Says:

    Joe, it is good to medidate on the last words of Jesus, this Lenten journey, thanks for the spiritual input.

    Reply

  2. Charlene Says:

    Thank you, Joe. We are using this activity after Lenten Reconciliation.

    Reply

  3. Angela Says:

    I’ve been following your blog for a while and used your seven last words activity with my small group of 10 year olds at catechism class last week and would like to say thank you, I think it gave them something to reflect on, especially the question asking what his last words tell us about Jesus.
    Interestingly it also made one child realise that Jesus didn’t speak English!

    Reply

    • Joe Says:

      Angela, thanks so much for the update on your class and how you used the 7 Last Words activity…I love to hear how catechists adapt activities and how kids respond!

      Reply

Leave a Reply