UNIT
ACTIVITY

Trap 3: The Impact On Others

Description

Students will reflect on how their choices and freedoms are not exercised in isolation – and how a selfish use of personal freedom can unintentionally limit or harm others, considering how the Biblical vision of freedom is relational and rooted in love, rather than self-interest.

Central theme: True freedom is willing to be responsible for the good of others.

Introduce

Students respond with a think/pair/share to the prompt:

Can you think of a situation where someone’s freedom came at someone else’s expense?

(The Freedom Trap Slides)

 

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Watch & Discuss

Watch the “The Impact on Others” clip and then participate in a class discussion. Depending on time and dynamic this could be a mix of whole-class and/or small group responses to the following questions.

  • In what ways should our freedom be limited for the good of others?
  • Do you think humans are naturally selfish? Why or why not?
  • Can you think of a time when someone’s choice affected you in a negative way?
  • Have you ever made a choice that helped you but ended up making things harder for someone else?

(The Freedom Trap Slides)

 

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Written Response

Students compose a written response to the prompt:

Is what small way could you use your freedom this week to increase someone else’s freedom or wellbeing – not just your own?

(The Freedom Trap Slides)

 

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Bible Engagement

Display Galatians 5:13 and invite students to rewrite the verse in their own words, with a specific relationship in mind (family, friendship, work colleague or sporting team context etc.).

(The Freedom Trap Slides)

 

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Extension

Students compose a short story, poem, or social media post imagining a scenario that would happen in a world where everyone used freedom for others, not just themselves.

 

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