I just happened to wander past my stepdaughter as she was watching some JW videos this morning before school, and I noticed a 'Lesson 4' video, about not stealing. Hopefully it's YouTube'd already and someone will post a link, I can't do it at the moment.
The plot is simple. Caleb's in the grocery store, and his mom just tells him [off-camera] 'No candy today.' They're about to leave, and then Caleb sees this massive stack of giant, circular lollipops, all glittering and all--even a little comedic heavenly chorus thrown in that moment. So the thought hits him, oh, I can just take (steal) it, and he gets a devious look on his face and looks like he's about to stuff this lollipop under his shirt.
(How he planned to get away with hiding such a large lollipop is beyond me, given that his mom would surely notice [and the candy would die as Sparlock had, at least if he'd already licked it or something], but he's just a kid, so...maybe he hasn't thought that far ahead.)
In that moment, the memory of reading 'Learn From the Great Teacher' pops into his head (and onto the screen). He's sitting in bed with the book open, and hears his father's voice asking him something like, 'Can you be Jehovah's friend if you steal?' He shakes his head. 'Do you want to be Jehovah's friend?' He nods. Thus, the memory stays his thieving hand and he puts the lollipop back and leaves the store.
I don't see anything wrong about teaching kids not to steal, it's a pretty universal moral value, so I'm not feeling too critical of this one. Except using the literature rather than the Bible to underscore the point, same as in the Sparlock video. I think kids could also stand to learn that human society also has laws against stealing, and that the police can arrest you for stealing. Perhaps a concept like 'superior authorities' is a bit much, though, for the very young. But hopefully we have more reasons to avoid stealing than just wanting friendship with God. It creates major problems for everyone when people steal--burdens on the police and courts, higher prices and annoying security measures in stores (you know, stuff is locked up like it's in prison so you have to get someone to unlock the case for the product), and the heartache it causes the victims of thievery.
Guess it beats the 'Pray Anytime' song, but I admit I was a little creeped out by Caleb's devious face. It actually scared me a little. But we're just getting to know this little kid. Perhaps we shall assume that the same 'school friend' who gave him Sparlock also taught him it was okay to steal? Sure, why not? Sounds easy enough.
--sd-7