A Card Merely Thought Of Pdf Printer
The pages you can download here may be printed for your personal use or to share with students you lead and with other teachers you work with directly. Beyond that, please don’t republish them anywhere.
They’re copyrighted.Gospel Environment ChecklistGospel-centered lessons don’t do much good if the environment in your classroom, Bible club, camp, or family time isn’t gospel-centered as well. It’s helpful to look over this checklist after a ministry session with kids and evaluate how well you taught the gospel by the environment and attitudes you fostered. The checklist comes from chapter eight of Show Them Jesus, where you can learn more about creating a gospel environment.Gospel-centered Discussion QuestionsPost-lesson discussion leaders or parents asking about a lesson on the drive home can draw attention to the gospel by the kinds of questions they ask.
Here’s a list of general questions I like to keep in my head at all times—though you might prefer to have them on paper. They fit nearly any lesson, and will help you get kids thinking about how the gospel encourages us in four ways (by giving us GRATITUDE, CONFIDENCE, HOPE, and COMFORT). The questions come from chapter eight of Show Them Jesus, where these four aspects of gospel encouragement are examined more thoroughly.Student Discussion Sheet: Are You Forgetting the Gospel?As with all of us, it’s easy for your students to develop wrong ideas about God and the gospel of Jesus—and to end up anxious or smug or complacent. This printable sheet contains sketches of three kinds of students who each miss the gospel in one of these ways.
You can use it as a springboard for a discussion with older kids and teens of ways they think about God but won’t ordinarily admit. It lets you help them by reminding them of the gospel. It’s based on character sketches in chapter three of Show Them Jesus, where the three types of students are examined.King-of-the-Hill Visual IllustrationIt sometimes helps to explain to kids why we keep showing them Jesus and the gospel rather than just telling them what to do.
I tell them it’s like the game king-of-the-hill, where kids try to push each other off the highest spot in the playground. Sometimes we wrongly imagine that the Christian life is like a game of king-of-the-hill played between our head (the good things we know we ought to do) and our heart (the bad things we still love to do). In such a battle, bad behavior will be king most of the time because we follow our hearts. The solution is not just to learn more about what we ought to do, but to develop a bigger love for Jesus. Only a bigger heart for Jesus can shove our love for other things off the top of the “hill.”These pages help you share this illustration with your students.
Cut out the head, the heart, and the larger heart for Jesus. Arrange them on a drawing of a hill and discuss. To learn more about the illustration and how to use it in a discussion with kids, see chapter four of Show Them Jesus.God Report Card Hands-on IllustrationThe God Report Card is an illustration kids fill out as part of a discussion about how believers are justified by faith in Jesus rather than by their own good behavior. I’m afraid the discussion is too lengthy to adequately explain here; you need to read chapter two of Show Them Jesus and the tips at the end of that chapter to know how to use the God Report Card. I include the printables here as an aid to those who’ve read the book and want to have the discussion with the kids they teach.You’ll need TWO report cards and TWO envelopes for each student and leader.
Jack, so thankful for the work that God has allowed you to produce in Show Them Jesus! The Gospel is POWERFUL and God saves sinners! Thankful for your willingness to follow the Lord’s leading in writing the book, and your transparency as you wrote. I have read it several times and have been through it with many of our volunteer leaders, and it never gets old, because the Gospel is always new and always fresh. As the director of a small ministry it has been a great encouragement and has helped us to be better Gospel teachers as we learn and strive to reach children in Wisconsin and beyond.
We praise the Lord! Thank you Jack for the resources you’ve made available here on your website.
I purchased your book and have been sharing with our children’s ministry director how blessed I’ve been with your ideas to keep the focus on the gospel. I’ve had experience with CEF in the past but now serve as co director with my husband in our Awana program with the K-2nd grade (Sparks). We have limited time for our large group time, usually only twenty minutes but I really want to implement some of your ideas to make sure we use those twenty minutes to share Jesus every week. Several of our kids do not have a church family and many others are sporadic in their church attendance. We need to make sure we are using our time to reach them for Christ!!
Thank you for your heart for the gospel!
A Card Merely Thought Of Pdf Printer Reviews
Update: SCB is no longer offering any sign up bonus on this cardStandard Chartered has just launched the X Card with a 100,000 miles sign up bonus, the largest we’ve ever seen in Singapore.Details have been scarce so far, but now that, here’s what we know about the X Card, its features, and most importantly, how that 100,000 miles sign up bonus works. X Card BasicsIncome Req.Annual FeeMiles from Annual FeeFCY Transaction FeeS$30,000 (Priority Banking)S$80,000 (Regular)S$695.50 (Principal)S$107 (Supp.)30,0003.5%Local EarnFCY EarnSpecial EarnPoints Validity1.2 mpd/ 1.2% cashback2.0 mpd/ 2.0% cashbackNoneNo expiryThe SCB X Card is made of metal, with a S$80,000 annual income requirement. If you’re a Priority Banking client, you can get the card with just S$30,000 annual income (S$60,000 for foreigners).The card has a non-waivable annual fee of $695.50.
Paying the annual fee gets you 30,000 miles (in the form of 75,000 360° Rewards Points) in the first year. It is not immediately clear from the T&Cs whether you get the 30,000 miles from the second year onwards.360° Rewards Points earned on the X Card, and can be transferred to miles in a minimum block of 2,500 points (1,000 miles).
You’ll pay $26.75 for each points conversion.The T&C of the card can be found. AdvertisingEven after you take into consideration the non-waivable annual fee, the X Card’s sign up bonus simply blows the competition out of the water. Just take a look at the spend:miles ratio below, if you want some perspective. Does not include base miles, or miles from paying the annual fee. First year fee for is normally waived, but it must be paid to enjoy the sign up bonus.Final (but important) point.
Note that there are certain categories of spending which will not count towards the $6,000 spending requirement. AdvertisingOut of this selection, Miles & More, MileagePlus, and Le Club AccorHotels are the programs where it’s not been possible to earn points/miles through credit cards before.
AdvertisingThe X Card comes with, but unfortunately it’s a major weak spot in the product.You get just two complimentary lounge visits per membership year, far below what you’d expect from a card with an annual fee of $695.50. For the sake of comparison, here’s how similar cards measure up. Well, it’s not quite the right analogy.
With printers and ink, buying a specific printer locks you in to buying a specific type of ink. With the x-card, there’s no lock in as such. If you don’t want to pay the AF in the second year, you can walk away, having already more than recouped your first year AF through the 100k miles. What is more likely the case is that the KPIs have incentivized the team to go for acquisition. Because 100k miles is as good an acquisition offer as I’ve ever seen. Perhaps the goal is to cross Read more ». Thanks for the reply.
Really nice to hear from you as always Aaron – your comments are very insightful. I agree that with the X card, people can cancel it after a year, and it is vastly different from investing in a printer. Well, regarding Daniel’s comment below, I guess it happens. I think it is common to have a really nice upfront promotion, then after years go by, the points become a huge liability and that shows up badly in the P&L. Then devaluation occurs. That is what happened in Krisflyer if I’m not wrong.
I will also state Read more ». This site has steadily been attracting more and more cheapskate idiots who treat Aaron as their personal butler and concierge. Lots of whining and crying. Just look at the poster a couple of posts above – whining about so many exclusions and how they expect people to meet. Well, the hard truth that these cheapskate readers can’t accept is that if you can only spend $6k through manufactured or quasi-manufactured spend, then the bank is not really interested in you.
Those who can spend $6k easily in a retail store/boutique for example, that’s what the bank is looking for and Read more ». I got the X card appying via mobile app and without submitting any documents and no login of Myinfo.But 9 months ago, OCBC rejected my application for Voyage card. 4 months after that, I got the Amex Plat Charge.After OCBC rejected me, I got my free Enhanced Credit report from Credit Bureau Singapore (just to see if there was something -ve I was not aware of). I had a score of 2000 (max 2000/2000) and graded AA. I didn’t bother to call. Not desperate for OCBC card.Seriously.
It’s a mystery to me how banks work. PSA: SQ miles are under the SC Rewards Redemption webpage (only via browser) and not the Transfer Rewards (in app). Also, make sure you claim under Air Miles (Visa Infinite) as it costs more rewards points to claim under non-VI. The redemption process is not very coherent from my experience. If you want to claim Cashback or SQ Miles Only, it is done via SC Rewards online page.
If you want to claim miles for other airlines you have to do it in the online banking app “Credit Card Rewards” and “Transfer Rewards”. Similarly to claim travel credit you can Read more ».