SUNDAY CLASSES
- Infants & Toddlers
- Nursery, Room 102 with Barbara
Cravens and Rachel Cravens
- Toddlers, Room 104 with Barbara
Cravens
- Twos & Threes, Room 103 with
Pam Nickerson
- Fours, Room 108 with Patty
Chennault & Martha Puckett
- Kindergarten, Room 110 with
Jennifer Clark
- Children's Classes
- Grade 1 & 2 Room 112
- Grade 3 & 4, Room 114 with Vicki Jones and Betty Lou Switzer
- Grade 5 Room 116 with Cheree Field
- Pre-School and Children's Class Director: Jodi Doughty
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AWANA Clubs by age:
- Cubbies: preschool boys and girls
- Sparks: Kindergarten, Grades 1
& 2
- Truth & Training Girls: Grades
3-5
- Truth & Training Boys: Grades 3-5
AWANA Clubs meet in the CLC for large group and then break up into individual sessions.
Cubbies go directly to their classroom in the Children's building.
Children's Choir:
Children's Choir meets on Wednesday evenings from 6:30 - 7:30 p.m. in the choir room (just off of the Fellowship Hall).
Nursery service are provided during 10:45 a.m. Sunday morning Service
Chidren's church (for those who want to attend) is provided for children 4 yrs. - 5th grade. Children's church meets at 10:45 a.m.
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AWANAS
TBC's AWANA club meets on Sunday evenings from 5:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. in the Christian Life Center.
What is AWANA? The word Awana stands for Approved Workmen Are Not Ashamed and comes from 2 Timothy 2:15. “Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth.”
Club meetings are held in the Christian Life Center with a group assembly involving all of the AWANAs. After opening assembly each group goes to their own council time for activities. Each group has Game time that is held in the CLC.
AWANA members learn many verses as they complete their handbooks or manuals. At the close of each week's meeting awards and encouragement from fellow club members are given to those reaching designated goals in the handbooks.
The CLC was designed with AWANA in mind and the colored stripes on the CLC floor are used for AWANA games and activities and are symbolic to AWANA principles.
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