I can also remember attending vacation bible school there in the Baptist church. The theme, costumes, decorations, and lessons were all planned, made and put together by the church members. We would march into assembly singing "Onward Christian Soldiers". After singing a handful of well-known children's Christian songs, we would break out into our various age groups where we would learn memory verses, play games (London Bridge, Red Rover) and have snacks (Kool-Aid and peanut butter & crackers, and wafer cookies). At VBS we also worked on crafts each night that were simple things, usually made from popsicle sticks glued together into the shape of a cross and then painted and decorated.
Sometimes there would be felt shapes that we would glue to fabric covered boards to make wall hangings with bible scenes or we would make jewelry from beads and strings. The grand finale of bible school was held during the Sunday night service following the week of VBS. We would sing the songs we had learned and various children were selected to recite the memory verses while our proud parents, aunts, uncles and grandparents sat in the audience, fanning themselves with cardboard fans with wooden handles from the local funeral home.
As I got older the crafts changed. I was just thinking about this last night. One year we made wall hangings. They were really cool - burlap was glued to a thin wooden board (about 9" x 12"). On the burlap was an outline of a rooster with several arched tail feathers. Each night we received a specific color of corn and would spend our craft time gluing that corn onto the rooster. If you missed a night of bible school, your rooster would have a bald spot, so it was an incentive to attend every night. Thinking back, I can't figure out what the rooster would have to do with bible school unless we were learning about Peter denying Christ "before the cock crows".
I remember coming across my rooster some years later. It had been stored away in one of daddy's out buildings and mice had eaten away all of the corn and the outline of the rooster had faded. Just the colored seed coating remained and retained its color, though not as vibrant as it was on those hot and humid summer nights when it was transformed into a crowing rooster.
This one is made of beans and legumes... in your mind, just substitute colored corn. Lovely, huh?
Around this same time (the mid to late 1960s), some of the younger children spent their craft time gluing macaroni to wooden frames. The leaders would then spray the completed product with metallic paint to make lovely decorated picture frames.
I wonder if mice would eat spray painted macaroni.
There is more to come, but in the mean time, if you have any childhood memories of VBS, please share them as a comment. I'd love to hear of some of the crafts you made and some of your special memories.
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