This is a four year history lesson outline to be used by the whole family. For now I will be posting the first year of lessons. This can be used as a stand alone guide, but for the recommended supplemental material for this year you will need the first volume and the first activity book of The Story of the World, and you will need Part 1 of From Adam to Us, along with the Map Book and Student Activity Book that go with it.

Begin with lesson 1A.

Once you finish the four years of lessons, start over. Every student should completely finish the curriculum at least twice in their school years, with activities adapted to their age and understanding. The yearly lessons are labeled by lesson number and year letter (1A is lesson one in the first year outline). This outline focuses on concurrent historical events and on the order of events rather than memorizing a bunch of dates. You can use it as a stand alone guide, but I highly recommend using it to correlate the two curriculums mentioned above. I also add LDS-Christian commentary to the lessons.

And please feel free to add your own suggested books or other learning materials to the comments section of the pertinent date.

Sunday, August 23, 2020

5A -- The Israelites (Week One)

 This lesson is divided into two one week lessons.

Week one: Isaac and Jacob


1. Lesson Pages from Supplemental Materials:

·         From Adam to Us: bottom of p.79 thru 82 (additional activities for these pages are in the accompanying Map Book and Student Workbook)

·         Story of the World, vol. 1: p. 110-112 (additional activities for these pages are in the accompanying The Story of the World: Activity Book One)

2. Study material for family discussion (older students can read on their own, parents can read and summarize for younger students):

Genesis 24-33

In the story of Isaac and Rebekah, it is important to remember that Rebekah was following the Lord’s direction when she had their son Jacob seek for the blessing from Isaac. Jacob was more obedient to the Lord.

The Phoenicians were sea traders who had established coastal towns by this time, including Tyre, Sidon, and Byblos. They were good sailors and ship builders who helped keep trade alive through the Mediterranean. They learned to contend with pirates who sailed the waters. It would be many years before they would travel out onto the Atlantic, however. Some ancient records suggest that for some time after the Flood, the Atlantic was a scary, muddy, unsettled body of water. The Phoenicians were also known for their purple dye, which they obtained from a gland in a certain shell creature called a murex. Piles of dead murex rotted around the cities, creating a putrid smell. These people were some of the Canaanites that the Israelites would later encounter, and sometimes conquer. 

3. Worksheets: There are several good activities under Fun and Games on this page: https://www.biblewise.com/characters_topics/jacob.php

You can also search this site for more worksheets by typing Jacob into the search bar, some are free some are not: https://biblepathwayadventures.com/activities/jacob-2/

 4. Videos:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7AvQ0d6HB1I (a wife for Isaac)

 https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/children/videos/scripture-stories/old-testament/10-jacob-and-esau?&lang=eng

 https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/children/videos/scripture-stories/old-testament/11-jacob-and-his-family?&lang=eng

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3BkIAZwM8U4 (Phoenicians)

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wXC8TA1SJ-A (More about Phoenician Tyrian purple)

 

5. Mapping: Using your Map 4 from the last lessons, trace Jacob’s journey from the land of Canaan where he grew up to the land of Paddan-Aram where his Uncle Laban lived, and then back to live in Shechem. Add to your map the land of Edom, where Jacob met his brother Esau (nicknamed Edom or “Red”), using this map to help you: https://bibleatlas.org/full/edom.htm

 Using the first Bible map in the LDS edition of the King James Bible (In the Gospel Library app it is under Scriptures>Study Helps>Bible Maps>1. Physical Map of the Holy Land), find Tyre and Sidon and add them to your Map 4.

 

6. Jacob’s sons eventually became 12 separate tribes. Jacob’s name was changed to Israel, so we call these tribes the 12 tribes of Israel. Design a flag for each tribe. This page summarizes the descriptions of each flag from the Bible: http://www.askmoses.com/en/article/662,2143627/What-Are-the-12-Tribes-Flags.html

 

7. Try a simple lentil stew that might have been similar to the one Jacob gave to Esau:  https://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/alton-brown/lentil-soup-recipe-1947017

8. World History Reading (use this time to finish some of the longer reading from past lessons):

·         Time-Life Student Library Ancient Civilizations 3000 BC – AD 500, p. 70-71

 

Friday, August 21, 2020

4A -- Post Flood to 2000 BC (Week Three)

 Week three: the Indus, China, Africa


1. Lesson Pages from Supplemental Materials:

·         From Adam to Us: p. 88-92 (additional activities for these pages are in the accompanying Map Book and Student Workbook)

·         Story of the World, vol. 1: p. 59-65, 66-87 (additional activities for these pages are in the accompanying The Story of the World: Activity Book One)

2. Study material for family discussion (older students can read on their own, parents can read and summarize for younger students):

https://www.historyfiles.co.uk/FeaturesAfrica/PrehistorySahara01.htm

                This article discusses the change in climate that occurred in the Sahara a few hundred years after the flood. We can surmise that the Sahara was livable for some time, or animals would not have made it into southern Africa from where the ark landed in Turkey. They would not have crossed the great desert that the Sahara has become.

There is art in the Sahara showing animals common to Africa living in the area. Scientists date the art using their best educated guess, since rocks cannot be dated like living things (which do not always date correctly either). And since they do not believe in the Flood, it skews their view of climate data they use to help date that era as well. Keep this in mind when you hear dates like 10,000 years ago.

People in this time period were spreading out, moving south into more parts of Africa and east as far as China.

            The Indus Civilization may be one of the places that was built on pre-Flood ruins. This area was built with mud-brick, but the bricks here were baked in giant kilns because it rains a lot and sun-dried bricks would not hold up to the rains.

            The Indus River still flows, but at one time she had a sister river, the Sarasvati (or Saraswati). More ancient sites are found on the dried route of this river than on the Indus. Whatever caused this river to stop flowing contributed to the decline of the civilization. This article has a map showing the original route of the Sarasvati: https://www.indiatoday.in/india/story/harappan-site-saraswati-river-indus-valley-civilisation-254124-2015-05-22 .

 3. Attention Getter: Show a picture of the Sahara desert today and ask your children what kinds of animals they think could survive there. 


4. Videos:

https://smarthistory.org/rock-art-in-the-green-sahara/ (remember, it is not possible to date rocks, and the fact the animals depicted are the same ones that exist farther south in Africa suggests these pictures were done after the flood. It is somewhat comical that after showing a definitely not man-mad enormous climate change, this ends with blaming disappearing rock art on modern man-made climate change.)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QUng-iHhSzU (Indus)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=73yFDlgqPio (Indus for teens)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xlBEEuYIWwY (Hinduism summarized, this religion most likely had its beginnings in the Indus era)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dq1pTPf0IlI (Lei zu and silk)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=50GmeiIsY2w (the very mythical version of Huangdi)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zzbbumvYsO0 (real images of Huangdi’s tomb and yearly celebration--more for teens) 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1oQ5Jd7p2aY (the San of Africa, remind students that measurements of time in the 10,000s are not correct)

5. Mapping: Find the Sahara desert and the Indus River on a modern map of the world. Which countries are these places in now? Using a scale, find out how wide the desert is from north to south and talk about what it would take to cross this. There is a student map on Student Page 28 of Story of the World, Activity Book One.

6. Poster: Draw a picture of what you think your home would have looked like in Mohenjo-Daro or in Sahara when it was still habitable.

 7. World History Reading:

·         Tales of Indian Gods & Goddesses by Divya Jain. Most of us are familiar with Greek mythology and their pantheon of gods and goddesses; this book will introduce some Indian religious figures.

·         Time-Life Student Library Ancient Civilizations 3000 BC – AD 500, p. 46-47


4A -- Post Flood to 2000 BC (Week Two)

 Week two: Abraham


1. Lesson Pages from Supplemental Materials:

·         From Adam to Us: p. 75-79, down to where Sarah is buried in a cave (additional activities for these pages are in the accompanying Map Book and Student Workbook)

·        The Story of the World, vol. 1: p. 35-38, 88-90, NOTE: remember that the world calls the period between the Old Kingdom and Middle Kingdom in Egypt an Intermediate Period and describe it as a time of turmoil in the kingdom. We know that the Old Kingdom ended with the Flood, and then their was a time of rebuilding and repopulating the kingdom before the advent of the Middle Kingdom. (additional activities for these pages are in the accompanying The Story of the World: Activity Book One)

2. Study material for family discussion (older students can read on their own, parents can read and summarize for younger students):

Genesis 11-23

Book of Abraham

Sarai, or Sarah, was probably Abraham’s niece (see Abraham 2:1-2). It was common to use the term sister for cousins, nieces, and other close female relatives. Abraham chapter 2 also tells us that Abraham’s father stayed in Haran because he went back to idolatry, Abraham left Haran at age 62, and that the Lord told Abraham to tell the Egyptians that Sarah was his sister. In the Bible we learn that the Lord plagued Pharaoh and his household so that he would not take Sarah as his wife. At this point he was happy to send her away with Abraham.

 There have been LDS people who have left the church with the excuse that the facsimiles in the book of Abraham are not accurate Egyptian. Interestingly, Abraham does not claim them to be Egyptian and the only time he refers to hieroglyphs is in conjunction with Chaldean, meaning they were probably a Chaldean script based on Egyptian, while some of his pictures were just his own descriptive sketches.

 Emphasize that Abraham’s willingness to sacrifice his son was symbolic of God’s willingness to sacrifice His Son Jesus Christ.

Most likely Noah and Shem and Eber (or Heber, for whom the Hebrews are named) were alive when Abraham was young, and it is possible that Abraham spent time with these patriarchs, who would have taught him not to believe as his idol-worshipping father. (See this site which has interesting possible ideas about dating information and some good charts: https://www.johnpratt.com/items/docs/lds/meridian/2003/abraham.html)

This site has some maps that you could bring up on the screen while you discuss this lesson:  https://scripturescript.wordpress.com/2014/02/23/abram-of-ur/

 

3. Attention Getter: Ask your child to return one of their favorite Christmas presents that they wanted for a long time. Tell them to think how this relates to the lesson as they go along.

4. Videos:

           Children: https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/children/videos/scripture-stories/old-testament/8-abraham?&lang=eng

https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/children/videos/scripture-stories/old-testament/9-abraham-and-the-sacrifice-of-isaac?&lang=eng

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mEwxLO-Z29c (Taking Isaac to the sacrifice)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gU-MJELwvMA (Sodom and Gomorrah destruction—extremely dramatized, definitely preview and decide whether or not to use—teen boys will love it)

 Amenemhet I was most likely the pharaoh when Abraham visited. This video is images of sculptures of the pharaoh. It has weird music, so you can just mute it and look at the images: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ep3cDXgJkhY

Amenemhet was part Nubian, but as the Egyptian pharaoh, he pushed Egyptian territory into northern Nubia. The two countries were intertwined throughout history. Watch this video on Nubia through 8:43, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lnoqlCV__z4&pp=QADQAwE%3D

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oG7GcpOqCPE (Nubia/Kush, may not keep interest of younger students)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zqbD8lmd7QQ (Nubia today, good views of the area)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tqY-_wAH4Wg (Overview of Egypt)

 

5. Mapping: Map 4 in From Adam to Us Map Book. After you complete the activities for this map, keep it for the future chapter about Abraham’s descendants. Find the areas on this map on a modern-day world map.

 If you kept your salt dough map of Egypt, paint the Fayum Oasis blue. This is where Amenemhet built his capital.

 6. Write your name in hieroglyphs. Story of the World, Activity Book One has a chart of hieroglyphs on Student Page 10.

 7. Poster: Draw a storyboard for the life of Amenemhet I. Put each of these events in a separate square:

            He was the son of a commoner woman and a priest.

            He was born on Elephantine, an island in the Aswan area, which means it was actually in the country of Nubia. His mother was a Nubian.

            He was most likely the vizier (highest official after the pharaoh) of the previous pharaoh, Mentuhotep IV.

                On a journey to Wadi Hammamt, at least partly made to retrieve a stone lid for the sarcophagus (stone container for a coffin) of the Pharaoh Mentuhotep IV, he saw two omens that he said showed that he was chosen by the gods to be the next Egyptian ruler. The first was when a gazelle gave birth to a fawn on the stone that would be the lid of the sarcophagus. The second was when a well full of water appeared after a rainstorm in the dry wadi. The well was about 15 feet on each side, which was a lot of water for this arid spot.

                He was a good military leader, and under Amenemhet I, Egypt grew wealthier and more unified. He built barriers to protect the country from invasion. 

                He ruled for 30 years. During the last 10 years, he had his son, Senusret I, rule with him.

                He built a new capital by the Fayum oasis, called Itj-tawy. He had a pyramid built there for him. It was not as good as the Old Kingdom pyramids, but its ruins can still be seen.

                If he was the Pharaoh when Abraham visited Egypt, he and his court learned science and astronomy from Abraham, who had learned many things from Heavenly Father.

                Amenemhet I was most likely murdered while his son was on a military campaign. Senusret claimed his father came to him in a dream and told him that a bodyguard had killed him. Senusret, a strong young man who was over six feet tall, hurried back to claim the throne. Senusret became a legendary leader and stories were passed down and created about him for many generations in many countries.

                Amenemhet I was the first ruler in the 12th dynasty of Egypt. A dynasty is when the leadership of a kingdom is passed on to members of the same family.


8. Weekly History Reading:

·         Time-Life Student Library Ancient Civilizations 3000 BC – AD 500, p. 24-25, 28-29, 38-45

·        Again, the books about ancient Egypt cover hundreds of years, but the book If I Were a Kid in Ancient Egypt is a fun introduction to a lifestyle that didn't really change much for most of Egypt's history.

4A -- Post Flood to 2000 BC (Week One)

 Week one: Sargon(Nimrod),Gilgamesh, and the Jaredites

 

This lesson has been divided into three one week lessons.

1.   Lesson Pages from Supplemental Materials:

·         From Adam to Us: p. 49, 62-72 (additional activities for these pages are in the accompanying Map Book and Student Workbook)

·         The Story of the World, vol. 1: p. 9-12, 21-24, 32-34, 53-58 (additional activities for these pages are in the accompanying The Story of the World: Activity Book One)

2. Study material for family discussion (older students can read on their own, parents can read and summarize for younger students):

                Genesis 11: 1-9

                Ether 1-3, 6

After the flood, some of Noah’s descendants settled in Turkey, others moved on and lived together between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, others went to Egypt. They often built homes of mud, sometimes with mounded roofs and other times with flat roofs that they could sleep on or work or cook on. They didn’t have to have a front door, they could enter through an opening in the roof and let down ladders to let visitors in.

As the population grew, many people fell away from righteousness and began to worship false gods. They tried to build the tower of Babel, but their languages were changed and groups of people wandered off into other parts of the land. Between the Tigris and Euphrates, cities were built up, and each city had its own king. Gilgamesh is one of these kings. We have his story because it was recorded on clay.

Many records are destroyed over time by being burned or decaying. Records on clay can harden when burned, so many ancient clay records have survived.

In the story of Gilgamesh, the king visits Utnapishtim, or Noah. Noah lived 350 years after the flood, so he was a witness to the regrowth of civilization after its destruction by the Flood.

There would have been many small groups that lived as tribes in small villages or wandered around. But these small groups did not leave behind buildings or many things for archaeologists to study. It is easier for us to study ancient people from cities. There are ruins of their cities left behind. It is interesting to note that one of the main things that archaeologists study to find out about ancient people is …TRASH! That’s right. Any group of people living in one area for long leaves behind a lot of trash. Groups who move around a lot are more likely to use up everything that they can and any trash they do have is scattered over wide areas. We have discussed the fact that after-Flood Egypt was most likely built on the structures that survived the Flood, like the pyramids in Giza. It is possible structures in other places survived as well and became the basis for new civilizations. This probably included the area of Mesopotamia.

The Jaredite history matches well with the Copper Culture or Copper Complex of North America. The Jaredites recorded that “they did cast up mighty heaps of earth to get ore, of gold, and of silver, and of iron, and of copper. And they did work all manner of fine work” (Ether 10:23). Also, we can assume since the ancient record of the gold plates was found in the Great Lake area, the cultures it describes probably were from the same area. However, this is not conclusive. These sites have good pictures of artifacts from the Copper Culture: https://copperculture.homestead.com/, https://www.mpm.edu/research-collections/anthropology/online-collections-research/old-copper-culture/artifacts . There were other civilizations in the Americas in the times of the Jaredites and Nephites/Lamanites. Maybe someday we will get records of those peoples as well!

Note: Sargon became quite a mythical character over time. As his story was told and retold, it was embellished. The sources for the stories we have of his birth, when he was supposedly put in a basket and put into the river, were written far after his time, and even after the time of Moses. So there is a possibility that the writers hijacked the story of Moses and added it to the legend of Sargon.

 

3. Attention Getter: Look up how to say some commands in another language (like sit on the chair, or pick up the book). Repeat the commands to your children few times, getting more insistent. Tell them to think about how this relates to the lesson as you go along.

 

4. Videos:

            Children: https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/children/videos/scripture-stories/old-testament/7-the-tower-of-babel?&lang=eng

https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/children/videos/scripture-stories/book-of-mormon/50-the-jaredites-leave-babel?lang=eng

https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/children/videos/scripture-stories/book-of-mormon/51-the-jaredites-travel-to-the-promised-land?&lang=eng 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mrxh2H7JlP8&pp=QADQAwE%3D (Catal Huyuk, one of the oldest city sites, found in Turkey. The dating of the site is not accurate.)

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hh6k8c7VBrA (Sumeria)      

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ki8S5I83Ccc (Note: people farmed and wrote and probably had wheels before the flood. Noah taught these things to his descendants)

 

5. Mapping:  The Story of the World: Activity Book One map activities in chapters 1, 3, 5, and 8. Find the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers on a modern map, and figure out which modern country occupies the ancient Sumerian lands.

 

6. Make your own cuneiform writing on flattened clay. You can try to find something wedge shaped like the Sumerians used, or just use a toothpick or plastic knife and do your best. The Story of the World, Activity Book One has a guide to cuneiform on Student Page 10.

 

7. Make a salt dough Sumerian city or a tower of Babel.

 Salt Dough: Mix together 4 cups of flour, 2 cups of salt, 2 cups of water, and 2 tablespoons of cream of tartar.

 Let your creation air dry overnight and then you can paint it.

 

8. World History Reading:

·         The story of Gilgamesh is retold in a picture book trilogy by Ludmila Zeman, beginning with Gilgamesh the King.

·         Time-Life Student Library Ancient Civilizations 3000 BC – AD 500 (This book covers many civilizations, pages 10-23 go with this lesson)

Thursday, August 20, 2020

3A -- Flood (about 2345 BC)

This lesson will probably take only one week. 




1.  Lesson Pages from Supplemental Materials:

·         From Adam to Us: (The family activity listed on page 49 of this lesson is a fun idea!) p. 42-48, activities on p. 49


2.  Study material for family discussion (older students can read on their own, parents can read and summarize for younger students):

Genesis 6-9

Moses 8

Note: the flood was the baptism of the earth. This and other information about a total earth flood can be found in “The Flood and the Tower of Babel” by Donald W. Parry in Jan 1998 Ensign. https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/ensign/1998/01/the-flood-and-the-tower-of-babel?lang=eng

Also note that there is more than enough water in the world to cover the earth. Recently, scientists have found evidence for more water in the ground than in the oceans above the ground. https://www.theguardian.com/science/2014/jun/13/earth-may-have-underground-ocean-three-times-that-on-surface

The date for this event is not known for sure, but this particular date fits well and is easy to remember! It will give you a general point of reference.

3. videos:

           Children: https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/children/videos/scripture-stories/old-testament/6-noah?lang=eng

 

4. Mapping: Find Turkey, the most widely accepted location of the final resting place of the ark. We have no idea where Noah began his journey.

 

5. Worksheets: There are several good activities under Fun and Games on this page: https://www.biblewise.com/characters_topics/noah.php


6. Write or narrate about what you think it would have been like to be on the ark for a year.

 

7. Poster: Draw a scene from the ark. You can add the date 2345 BC, which is an approximate date of the Flood.

 

8. World History Reading:

·         Noah’s Ark by Jerry Pinkney, a children’s book with artistic illustrations

·         God’s Design for Heaven and Earth: Our Planet Earth by Debbie and Richard Lawrence, p. 15-27, 53-59, 103-104, 123-125

·         In the Beginning: Compelling Evidence for Creation and the Flood,  by Walt Brown, PhD. This book discusses an unusual tectonic theory of hydroplates, and whether or not you agree with the theory, there are many good scientific points about the flood. A brief overview can be seen here: https://tasc-creationscience.org/article/hydroplate-theory-and-great-flood

 

9. Discussion For Teens: You will research two opposing sides of a topic, and then discuss these with a parent or peers and come to an agreement on the topic. Your consensus may agree with one side or another, or may end up being some combination of the two. For this lesson, discuss whether or not you believe the flood caused many of the layers of fossils and sediment that have been used as proof for evolution.


2A -- Pre-flood Part Two, Early Dynastic and Old Kingdom Egypt (about 3150 BC)

 Each lesson should be covered in two weeks. You cannot cover every suggested activity as well as those from the supplemental materials, so choose a few that will work well for your family.



1. Lesson Pages from Supplemental Materials:

       ·From Adam to Us: p. 50-61 (additional activites are in the Map Book and Student Workbook)

·Story of the World, vol. 1: p.14-20, 25-31 (additional activites are in the accompanying Activity Book)

2. Study material for family discussion (older students can read on their own, parents can read and summarize for younger students):

This is out of order as far as most history lessons, are concerned. But there are a few logical facts that point to the Old Kingdom of Egypt being a pre-flood kingdom.

            First of all, in Abraham 1:23 we learn that after the flood, the daughter of Ham and Egyptus discovered Egypt while it was underwater and later settled there with her son. This suggests there was some kind of landmark sticking out of the water, showing her where she wanted to settle, and she waited until the water abated to actually settle there.

            Also, any timeline of Egypt goes backward from known history, using recorded lengths of the reigns of kings, to establish dates. Doing this puts the Old Kingdom beginning before the time of the flood and ending after the flood. There is no solid date for the flood, but it seems to be somewhere between 2370 to 2345 BC. If we account for the flood, and put a break between the end of the Old Kingdom and the time Egyptus’ daughter established another kingdom (Egypt’s Middle Kingdom) built on the relics of the Old, the dates for the Old Kingdom would push back a little farther. And the Old Kingdom was built on the framework of the earlier dynastic tradition, putting Egyptian history even farther back. Either way, logically the major monuments including Sphinx and Great Pyramid were built before the flood. This makes sense, as there would be hardly any population for some time after the flood, and those projects took good technology and lots of manpower. The pyramids of the later kingdoms were never as magnificent as those of the Old Kingdom.

            It would seem that the family of the daughter of Egyptus was not affected by the language confounding that happened at the tower of Babel, which makes sense if they were not connected to that building project. They continued with the same language depicted by the old hieroglyphics.

            An interesting side note: we only know one word from the language of the Jaredites, who did not have their language confounded, which is deseret or honeybee. This matches the Egyptian word for honeybee (obviously this is not enough information to make any kind of conclusion).

            Also, tradition tells us the Great Pyramid and others were tombs, but there is no definitive proof of this. They may have had other pre-flood uses. But we can be certain the Old Kingdom ended in great wickedness, along with the rest of the kingdoms in Noah’s time.

             The off-size dimensions of the Sphinx hint that it was possibly a representation of the Egyptian god Anubis, with a dog face. This face may have crumbled, and then a pharaoh saw the opportunity to repair the monument with a tribute to himself with his own face. The monument has been buried in sand more than once in history and has had to be dug out of the ever-encroaching desert.

 

3. videos:

           https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9gD0K7oH92U (How mummies were made)

             https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QWkrqUpTdT8 (How the pyramid complex looked)

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jpb4_K7gMzc (Old Kingdom Egypt)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4F4Mwup8FQU (Old Kingdom, good pics of statues, pyramids)


4. Mapping: Make a salt dough map of Egypt. When it is dry, paint the Nile River, Red Sea, and Mediterranean Sea. Make small clay pyramids and place them in the location of Giza. Keep this map for future lessons.

 Salt dough: Mix together 4 cups of flour, 2 cups of salt, 2 cups of water, and 2 tablespoons of cream of tartar.

 Cut out an outline map of the country and trace it onto a piece of carboard. Press the dough into the outline you have drawn on the cardboard. Let the dough dry overnight, and then you can paint it.


5.  Hieroglyph activity:

https://home-school.lovetoknow.com/worksheets-printables/egyptian-hieroglyphics-kids-fun-facts-activities

 

6. Write or narrate about what you think your life would have been like in the Egyptian Old Kingdom.

 

7. Poster: Draw a scene from Ancient Egypt. You can add the date 3150 BC, which is the approximate date of King Narmer, the believed unifier of Egypt, or you can just write Pre-Flood.

 

8. World History Reading: There are more picture filled books about Ancient Egypt than I can name. Here are a couple of suggestions, but you should peruse your library or Amazon.com for more:

·  National Geographic Kids Everything Ancient Egypt by Crispin Boyer

  • Eyewitness Books: Pyramid  The first 39 pages are about the pyramids of the Old Kingdom 

 

 9. Discussion For Teens: You will research two opposing sides of a topic, and then discuss these with a parent or peers and come to an agreement on the topic. Your consensus may agree with one side or another, or may end up being some combination of the two. Remember, whatever your opinion, it may or not be the full truth. Some truth will not be known fully until it is revealed. For this lesson, discuss whether or not you believe Old Kingdom Egypt was a pre-flood kingdom. 


1A-- Pre-flood Part One, Adam and Eve and their family (about 4000 BC)

 Each lesson should be covered in two weeks unless otherwise noted. You cannot cover every suggested activity as well as those from the supplemental materials, so choose a few that will work well for your family.

 


1. Lesson pages from Supplemental Materials:

    ·         From Adam to Us: p. 1-32 (additional materials are in the From Adam to Us Student Workbook)

2. Study material for family discussion (This is  additional information to study before the lesson, older students can read on their own, parents can read and summarize for younger students):

·         Read Genesis 3-5 and Moses 4-7

·         We know from modern revelation (see Eden in Bible dictionary) that the Garden of Eden was in North America. The rivers mentioned in the scriptures as coming out of the garden would have been on the American continent (possibly continuing onto the European and African continents since the lands may have been joined at the time) and most likely were original places of settlement for Adam and Eve and their posterity. After the flood, Noah landed in the Middle East, and some of his posterity soon moved to the land of modern Iraq, where they named the rivers there after the rivers in America that were known before the flood. The face of the earth would NOT have been exactly the same as previous to the flood.

·         We appreciate this first decision, the first use of agency, made by our ancestors, Adam and Eve, which enabled us to come to mortality (2 Nephi 2:23). We also recognize that this Fall was a part of the Plan, and the Atonement was necessary because of it. “President Joseph F. Smith wrote: ‘The Lord said to Adam that if he wished to remain as he was in the garden, then he was not to eat the fruit, but if he desired to eat it and partake of death he was at liberty to do so.’ In essence the Lord told Adam that there were two directions to go, each with its unique consequences—and that Adam was to choose which one” (Robert J. Woodford, “In the Beginning: A Latter-day Perspective,” Ensign, January 1998). We look forward to Millennial day when we return to a state similar to the Garden of Eden (some information is in D&C 101).

·       This quote helps us understand what the Garden of Eden was like: "Having restored the earth to the same glorious state in which it first existed—leveling the mountains, exalting the valleys, smoothing the rough places, making the desert fruitful, and bringing all the continents and islands together, causing the curse to be taken off, that noxious weeds, thorns, and thistles shall no longer be produced—the next thing is to regulate and restore the brute creation to their former state of peace and glory, causing enmity to cease from off the earth. But this will never be done until there is a general destruction poured out upon man, which will entirely cleanse the earth and sweep all wickedness from its face. This will be done by the rod of His mouth, and by the breath of His lips; or in other words, by fire as universal as the flood. . . . Thus having cleansed the earth and glorified it with the knowledge of God, as the waters cover the sea, and having poured out his Spirit upon all flesh, both man and beast becoming perfectly harmless as they were in the beginning, and feeding on vegetable food only, while nothing is left to hurt or destroy in all the vast creation." Parley P. Pratt, A Voice of Warning, and Instruction to All People: Or An Introduction to the Faith and Doctrine of the Church of Jesus Christ, of Latter Day Saints, p. 106.

 

·         We know that Eve had many children before Cain was born, Moses 5:2-3, 16, 28. The story of Cain and Abel is important, so these two are specifically named, but they were not the first offspring as many people interpret the account in Genesis.

·         Moses 5-7 and D&C give more information to add to the account in Genesis. Here is some of the extra information we know:

o   Before Adam was created on Earth, he was our spirit brother in heaven. There he was known by the name of Michael, and he led the followers of Christ in the heavenly war against Satan, or Lucifer. Lucifer and his followers lost the war there and were cast out of heaven (This heaven war actually has been ongoing, and the casting out will not be fully complete until a short time before the Second Coming, which will cause Lucifer to become even more angry, see Revelations 12). 

o   Then Michael, or Adam, became the first person with a body. God commanded Jesus to make a physical body out of elements on the earth (found in the rocks and dirt). Adam’s spirit was placed into his body, and he was placed in the Garden of Eden. Joseph told us that the Garden of Eden was in today’s Missouri, near Independence.

o   Eve was created to be Adam’s companion. Men and women together as husband and wife are like missionary companions. They help each other, care for each other, and keep each other company. President Kimball taught that a complete “Man” is a man and woman together. Adam and Eve were married in the Garden. They had immortal bodies, which means they would not die. They were told to have children, but they could not have children until their bodies changed, which would not happen until they ate fruit from a special tree called the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil.

o   Satan thought he was ruining God’s plan by coming into the peaceful garden and convincing Eve that she should take the fruit, but he was wrong. God knows everything and would not allow Satan to ruin His plan. God had already prepared a plan to save mankind from the Fall that would happen when the fruit was eaten: the Atonement of Christ. If Adam and Eve had not eaten the fruit we would not be here (Moses 5:11, 2 Nephi 2:23).

o   Once they were sent out of the Garden, Adam and Eve could no longer speak face to face with God, but they could hear His voice and Spirit, and angels were sent to teach them things they needed to know. Adam and Eve taught their many children the things they learned. We learn in Moses 6:5-6 that Adam and his children keep a book of remembrance from which the children were taught to read and write.

o   Adam and Eve were baptized and taught their children to do the same. Adam had the priesthood and passed it on to his righteous descendants. Not all of their children were righteous, but one of their righteous sons, Seth, looked so much like Adam that the only way to tell them apart was the difference in age.

o   Three years before he died, Adam called all of his righteous children to a meeting in Adam-ondi-Ahman in today’s Missouri. Because he lived so long, he had great-great-great-great-great grandchildren at this meeting. He told his big family about the future, including these days. He blessed and taught his family. Before Christ returns as King to rule the earth, Adam, the first father of all, will hold another meeting at this same place for all the righteous. Christ will come to the meeting, and at the meeting we will learn things that will help us get ready for Jesus to rule us here.

o    There is also more information about Enoch and his city in Moses 6-8, which after 365 years was taken up to God until the Millennium. This is a very fascinating section of scripture, I recommend reading it together.

o   REFERENCES:

§  Bailey, Arthur A., “What Modern Revelation Teaches about Adam,” Ensign, January 1998

§  Petersen, Mark E., “Adam the Archangel,” Ensign, November 1980

§  Woodford, Robert J., “In the Beginning: A Latter-day Perspective,” Ensign, January 1998

3.            Videos: children

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XuUIvXRNQa4 (Children’s Scriptures Adam and Eve)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=23n2eRMGzRM (Children’s Scriptures Adam’s Family)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3SgwqRDfTBg (Children’s Scriptures Enoch)

Family:

https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/media/video/2011-03-0018-first-principles-and-ordinances?lang=eng

 

4. Mapping: Find Missouri in the United States where the Garden of Eden and Adam-ondi-Ahman were located.

5. SONG w/music notes (\/A is the A below middle C, /\A is the A above, all other notes are middle C and above)

The Ancient Ten

Adam                                                                                    /\A  G

Seth, Enos                                                                           E  D  E

Cainan                                                                                  /\A  G

Mahalaleel                                                                         E  D  DE

Jared                                                                                     /\A   G

And Enoch                                                                          E  D  E

And Methuselah                                                              /\A  G E D E

Then Lamech                                                                     \/A  CC

And Noah                                                                            C  D  D

These are the ancient ten,                                           C CC C C D

And the whole world ought to get along               E E /\A G E D E D \/A

For we all descend from them.                                  \/A  C E D C  \/A  C

 

6. Write or narrate about life from the perspective of one of Adam and Eve’s children.  OR Describe how you would imagine the City of Zion. Describe the people and the way they would act.

7. Poster: Draw a scene from the life of Adam and Eve and write the date “About 4000 B.C.”

8. World History Reading (for older students and for parents for family discussion):

                https://docs.wixstatic.com/ugd/a704d4_f5f5f851384f4767889ad115b1e52f65.pdf

9. Discussion For Teens: You will research two opposing sides of a topic, and then discuss these with a parent or peers and come to an agreement on the topic. Your consensus may agree with one side or another, or may end up being some combination of the two. Remember that whatever your opinion, it still may not be the full truth. Some truth we will not know completely until it is revealed. For this lesson, discuss whether or not Adam and Eve should have partaken of the fruit from the Tree of Knowledge.