Inspector Gadget and The Case of the Search for Hashem - Part 1

Inspector Gadget got a new case and he did not have very many clues that he could use to solve the case. His new assignment was to find out about G'd [HaShem] and needed some help to get some ideas about what HaShem is. He needed to know what people knew about G'd.
So he called our synagogue and asked to speak to Rabbi Gross. Rabbi Gross told the inspector that he was very busy preparing for the High Holidays. However, he said that if talked to some of the students at our Sunday School, he could get help there.
We are going to help Inspector Gadget and we are going to work with him to get to the bottom of this mystery.
"Kids, I read that a long time ago, some people believed that there was a god of the sea and a god of the sky... that there were gods for all kinds of things, " said Inspector Gadget. "Do you think that is true?"
Let's think about how we want to answer his question.
We have a clue to the answer we want to give him:
When we recite the Shema together as a group at our services, what are we saying?
The words of the prayer are: Hear, O Israel, the Lord our G'd, the Lord is One.
Another bit of information that we can tell Inspector Gadget is the story of Abraham and the idols in his father's shop. Abraham was the first Jew. When he was a young boy, his father put him in charge of his shop while he ran an errand. Abraham's father made idols out of clay of the gods of his city, at a time when people believed in many gods. One of the idols fell off the shelf and broke into a thousand pieces. Abraham took a bat and put it in the hands of a much larger statue of a different god. When his father came back to the shop, he asked Abraham what had happened. Abraham told him that the smaller idol had made the larger idol angry. Also that the larger idol had punished the other statue by knocking it to the ground with the bat. His father believed him. Already, Abraham had trouble believing that the idols that his father made were gods. Now, when he heard his father say this, he thought that was probably the silliest thing he had ever heard. When Abraham got older he left home and gave up believing in a lot of gods and began to believe in the one G'd that we worship today.
There is something else that we can tell Inspector Gadget. We never talk about a god of the sky or a god of thunder or a god of the ocean, do we? We feel G'd is not just in the santuary at our synagogue, but everywhere that we can be. We believe that our one G'd is everywhere: in the sky, in outer space, in the ocean, in the forests and in the deserts. We have a clue here as well.
So kids, shall we tell Inspector Gadget that (1) we believe that there are a lot of different gods or (2) that we believe that there is one G'd? Let's give him an answer now.
"Okay, that tells me how many gods we are trying to track down," said Inspector Gadget. "I now have the first piece of evidence that I need."