
Reach for this book when your child is struggling with the heat of competition, whether on the sports field or during a living room board game. It is especially helpful for children who find it difficult to handle losing or who become overly aggressive when they want to win. This story follows the Bear family to a baseball game where the typical excitement of the sport is used as a backdrop to teach a deeper lesson about peacemaking and sportsmanship. Through the lens of the Berenstain Bears series' faith-based Living Lights collection, the book explores how to prioritize kindness and harmony over the desire to be first. Parents of children aged 4 to 8 will find this a gentle tool for discussing how our behavior affects others and why being a 'peacemaker' is more rewarding than winning a trophy. It provides a familiar, safe environment to address the 'win at all costs' mentality that often emerges in early elementary years.
Your experience helps other parents find the right book.
Sign in to write a reviewThis is a religious (Christian) approach to conflict resolution. The tone is direct and didactic, typical of the Living Lights sub-series. There are no heavy topics like death or divorce, just the common social friction of sports.
A 6-year-old who is starting organized sports like T-ball or soccer and is struggling with the emotional regulation required when things don't go their way.
This book is explicitly Christian. Parents should be prepared to discuss the biblical verse mentioned. It can be read cold as the plot is straightforward. A parent might reach for this after witnessing their child have a meltdown over losing a game or seeing their child treat a 'rival' teammate unkindly.
Preschoolers will enjoy the baseball imagery and the colorful Bear family. Older elementary students (7-8) will better grasp the abstract concept of 'peacemaking' versus just 'playing nice.'
Unlike many sports books that focus on 'trying your best,' this focuses on the spiritual and social responsibility of maintaining peace in a high-energy environment.
The Bear family attends a Grizzlies baseball game. While the excitement of the game builds, the narrative focuses on the interpersonal dynamics of the fans and players. The story emphasizes the Beatitude 'Blessed are the peacemakers' by showing the Bears navigating moments of potential conflict, such as disagreements over plays or competitive tension, and choosing to respond with grace and fair play.
This overview was generated by AI based on the book's content and reviews, and may not capture every nuance.
