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Easter with Kids: The Best Picture Books Telling the Easter Story

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At Christmas, bookshops stock a lot of stories about Santa, and at Easter, you can’t avoid bunnies and chocolate. If you’re looking to balance that with picture books telling the original Easter story of Jesus’ last weeks on earth, here are my top recommendations.

Joy Cowley’s The Easter Story

[A version of this review first appeared in my column on family spirituality at Kiwi Families.]

After the sad death of Margaret Mahy in 2012, the title of greatest living children’s author in New Zealand must go to Joy Cowley, author of literally hundreds of books.

How lucky we are, then, that she has teamed up with Catholic priest Donald Morrison to produce the best Easter picture book I’ve come across.

The Easter Story, by Joy Cowley - one of the best Easter picture books I've come across. | Sacraparental.com

As Easter approaches, and shops are already full of hot cross buns and chocolate eggs, I know plenty of families would like to bring some balance. Exploring the original story of Easter isn’t just for Christian households, either. If you’d like any kids in your life to understand the story behind the bunnies and eggs, and why the Easter story made such an impact on human culture that even we today celebrate in ways almost recognisable to our ancestors, then Joy Cowley’s book is the one for the job.

Bible stories can be really difficult, and even inappropriate, to adapt for children, and there are three big traps that many kids’ versions of Scripture fall into. They can take the stories out of context so their original meaning, the real point of the story, is hidden. They can made traditional, but strange, decisions on what material is appropriate for children, particularly when it comes to gory and scary stuff. And too often, they’re just not that well produced, compared to other children’s books, so they’re not as appealing to kids as the other books on their shelves.

Joy Cowley’s The Easter Story avoids all these traps and earns a place in every library, church and kids’ bookshelf. If there is a child in your life who likes picture books, this would be an excellent book to give them this Easter, to put all the chocolate in context.

Here’s how it begins, over three illustrated pages:

The Easter story is about God’s love for us,
a love too big to be described in words.
But we know it in our hearts.
We can feel it like a warm presence.
This is because we all have a spark of God in us.

If we live in loving kindness
that God spark will grow into a bright God light.
But it isn’t always easy to be loving.
Life gets difficult, and we can be unkind,
especially when people are unkind to us.
Sometimes the God spark in us
gets hidden by a sea of troubles.

I think God said something like this:

My children need to learn
to live in loving kindness
on the planet I have made for them.
They need to overcome problems
in order to grow strong.
I will go to earth and join them,
to show them the way.

Why do we need Jesus? In a few simple words, with nothing heavy-handed, Cowley has introduced the big concepts of creation, sin and incarnation beautifully. She sets the scene of the Easter narrative with a winsome understanding of how God feels about us and what God wants for us.

It’s not the only way of explaining these ideas, and there might be more to add, another day, but you’d be hard-pressed to find a Christian tradition that could disagree with this prologue.

Then she and Morrison turn to more familiar scenes, lightly leading us through the story so far, with pictures of the nativity, a carpenter’s workshop, and Jesus teaching, always putting the little stories in the context of the Big Story of God-and-us.

When we get to Jesus’ suffering and crucifixion, Cowley is sensitive to the empathy small readers often feel. She allows us to feel sad for Jesus, but not traumatised by gory depictions of violence.

She foreshadows the sad things to come several pages before the crucifixion, telling us that Jesus knew both that he had to die, and that death would not be the end. We see a bare tree in winter beside a green-leafed spring version before we get to the sad news.

Facing Morrison’s image of Jesus on the cross, are these words:

All this was meant to be.
Jesus had to know betrayal, fear, loneliness, hurt,
all the painful feelings that people experience,
so that in the future, his Spirit could be with us,
comforting us in our fear, loneliness and pain.
That is why we call the day of his death
GOOD Friday.

Of course the story doesn’t end there, and Cowley has an eye on the whole New Testament as she tells what happens next.

My favourite line (I cried when I first read it!) comes on the last page:

We can tell him about our mistakes.
He knows that people who don’t make mistakes,
don’t make anything, and he tells us to keep trying.

The Easter Story is told in fresh, warm language. The book is nicely produced, with quietly engaging artwork. Best of all, it tells the Big Story of God-and-us, not just the smaller story of a man dying.

I have used the book in church with adults as well as kids. If you only had one Easter book in the house, this would be enough.

Brian Wildsmith’s The Easter Story

The other Easter picture book that I keep coming back to, thanks to our church’s resident librarian and children’s books expert Kathy, is Brian Wildsmith’s beautiful The Easter Story.

He died in 2016 – another to add to the sad list. You may have come across his vibrant, ornate illustration in the sister book, A Christmas Story, told from the perspective of a child. In The Easter Story we get a donkey’s-eye-view of events.

You can watch a reading of the story (complete with Middle Eastern music soundtrack) here:

There are dozens of excellent children’s retellings of the Christmas Story from all sorts of different perspectives – donkeys, cats, mice, neighbours, shepherds, wise men, camels, all sorts. I wish more books were produced of other Bible stories using these kinds of techniques. They make the author and adult readers more aware of how a child will view strange, foreign events, and help make sense of them.

Wildsmith’s illustrations are just stunning. Each spread is full of detail, so there’s plenty to notice with children as you read, and plenty to discover on each re-reading. The paintings are bright and a bit unexpected, and tell the story just as much as the words do.

And the angels: watch for the angels. They are richly coloured, idiosyncratically patterned and become more numerous and prominent, the darker the story gets.

This is the crucifixion page:

Crucifixion scene from The Easter Story by Brian Wildsmith | Sacraparental.com

 

I’m going to hit ‘publish’ with just these two books, but I’ll be glad to receive your recommendations, and I’ll add to the list as they come in.

Happy Easter, everyone!

For more ideas on how to celebrate Easter at home, do click through to my comprehensive Easter-with-kids post here:

32 ideas for celebrating Easter together

And all my other Lent and Easter resources are handily indexed here:

Easter and Lent: everything you need, all in one place

Easter with kids - 32 ways to celebrate together | Sacraparental.com

Check out my Easter and Lent Pinterest boards for more ideas – though possibly you (like me) should stop searching and start just doing something that’s already on our horizon from this list or elsewhere :).

And you are warmly invited to visit the Sacraparental Facebook page for daily extras and interactions.

Lastly, you might like to check out this introduction to Easter I wrote for a non-churchy audience last year at Kiwi Families. Upon re-reading it this week, I found I was quite proud of it!

The post Easter with Kids: The Best Picture Books Telling the Easter Story appeared first on Sacraparental.


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