A chart to help students compare the lifestyle of the city of Laodicea with the description of the Laodicean church in Revelation.
A chart to help students compare the lifestyle of the city of Laodicea with the description of the Laodicean church in Revelation.
A chart listing the positive and negative attributes of the seven churches addressed in Revelation.
This activity-rich document helps teachers train their students in reading skills and historical appreciation through reading Twice Freed by Patricia St. John. From the contributor: I used it with grades 5-6, but the reading level was almost too high for grade 5, plus the concepts stretched them significantly. The book sets the stage for, and invites some pretty profound discussions of, Christian principles and life concepts. Reading level seems to me to be ideal for grades 6-7, but the content
True-or-false questions check students' understanding of chapter sixteen of Twice Freed.
This acrostic chart helps students describe Onesimus' time in Rome
True-or-false questions check students' understanding of chapter fourteen of Twice Freed.
"The Hound of Heaven," a poem by Francis Thompson, addresses a theme also found in Twice Freed. In this document, Thompson's classic description of God's pursuit appear side-by-side with a partial paraphrase that helps students understand the poetic and archaic language of the poet.
A simple "Who is Guilty?" activity chart for chapter three of Twice Freed by Patricia St. John.
A one-page fill-in-the-blank activity focusing on the characterizing aspects of Ephesus in the Roman Empire.
14 questions ask the reader to draw inferences from chapter five of Twice Freed by Patricia St. John.
Discussion points for chapter nine of Twice Freed help students share their observations from the story, and make predictions and inferences about what is happening.
A chart to help students compare the lifestyle of the city of Laodicea with the description of the Laodicean church in Revelation.
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