|

Walk
Through The Church Facility: The Nursery Suite
Joseph
R. Miller
When I was a baby, the nursery suite in the small-town/rural
church was the pine benches in the congregational
service. These benches were made of a wide and narrow
pine board for the seat, and two narrow boards for
the back rest. According to my mother, I could lie
on the bench on my stomach with my legs and arms hanging
over the bench to secure my sleeping position.
There
is a trend among a certain following today to return
the nursery to the congregational service, with the
mothers caring for their babies in the service regardless
of the level of disturbance. This concept is also
being applied to church education, stating that it
is the parents` responsibility to teach the children
at home. I was in one church recently where everyone
was kept together in the auditorium for Sunday school
while the lesson was directed to the adults and the
children were left to color. No one learned
anything in this setting, especially the majority
of the adults who no longer have small children and
were distressed with the chaos.
Several
years ago, Dr. Fred Barlow (Mr. Sunday School) would
describe the ideal church nursery in his Sunday school
workshop as one with attendants in nurses uniforms
to show their official qualifications, while a disinfecting
light was shining in the room to give the impression
that the room was sterile. The institutional setting
was purported to be the ideal church nursery setting.
Now we realize that young children usually are terrorized
at the sight of the nurse, thinking it is time to
get another inoculation.
The
nursery suite is that group of rooms for children
ages 03 (crib, creepers, toddlers). While there
may be a preference in some communities for a cry
room with a window adjacent to the auditorium for
mothers and babies, in most settings it is essential
to have a nursery suite with view to special ministry
of discipleship for young parents and outreach to
other community prospects.
The
nursery is second only to the rest rooms in expectations
related to first priorities when people
consider your church. You must get them to accept
the parking accommodations, rest rooms, and nursery
before you have the opportunity to minister to them.
This suite of rooms should be directly accessible
from the main commons (foyer), but positioned to avoid
congestion as parents come to get the children after
the service.
Even
the smallest church should have a suite of 3 rooms
so that crib babies, creepers, and toddlers can be
separated for safety and other reasons. A room for
nursing mothers is also in strong demand today. The
maximum number of children in any of the rooms should
be no more than 12. This means the large church should
have a nursery complex with the capability of subdividing
larger rooms, or providing a series of smaller rooms.
Avoid
the institutional look. Make the nursery suite as
much like the home nursery as possible. Carpet the
floor, including padding under the carpet (while other
areas of the building have carpet without padding).
Follow a decorating theme (such as birds or animals)
and an appropriate, restful color palette. Provide
adequate light (at least 20 footcandles), with light
that can be dimmed in the crib room.
Design
the complex to control parent traffic, providing a
single drop-off location. Include a rest room within
the nursery suite, a changing table, and marked storage
for each child`s belongings. Maintain safe, clean
toys, avoiding a collection of junk people leave for
the nursery. Provide lower windows and other features
sized specifically for toddlers.
Avoid
casualties by implementing a system of care for the
nursery that protects each child, parent, and worker.
Provide a system for screening workers. Work in teams
for accountability. Use an electronic system for calling
needed parents from the congregational gathering.
(I`ll publish more on the nursery operation later.)
Your
church nursery can be a very fruitful ministry in
outreach and discipleship. Envision it as much more
than necessary babysitting. Instill the spiritual
ministry ideal into your carefully chosen nursery
staff.
|