Reggie Weems Blog

August 6, 2008

Teaching Children, er…Adults, the Bible

Filed under: Uncategorized — Reggie @ 10:02 am


Recently at Heritage I have been commenting on Genesis 12:1-3; its implications about God and its responsibilities for the people of God.  If you are a parent or if you are teaching children the Bible, Dr. John Walton’s www.teachthetext.com will be an invaluable resource for you.  Below you’ll find an exemplary article that defines the difference between teaching children ‘about’ the Bible, (which takes place in most evangelical homes and churches) rather than actually teaching children the Bible.  Sadly, the vast majority of modern Protestants don’t understand the difference and can’t appreciate the difference either in their child’s classroom or from the pulpit.  Thus, it is important to ‘retrain’ ourselves to understand the wonderful distinctiveness of actually teaching the text, both to ourselves and future generations.  In that regard, adults must first learn and apply Dr. Walton’s hermeneutical observations to their own Bible study.       

Hermeneutics and Children’s Curriculum by John Walton

Seminaries and grad programs that train pastors, and the academics who teach in those programs are very concerned about proper hermeneutics. We want pastors to have the very best training so that God’s word is handled properly and that preaching proceeds from the authoritative teaching of the text rather than from human cleverness or tangential ideas. This is as it should be since we seek to teach with the authority of God’s Word. My question is, why do we not show the same interest in assuring that children are taught with the same care?  

It has been my practice over the years to work with the Children’s education program in my church to evaluate curriculum and train teachers for the pre-school through elementary grades. What I find in curricula is consistently shocking from a hermeneutical standpoint. I should hasten to say that curricula are often excellent from an educational standpoint—for that is the expertise of those producing curriculum. In the area of hermeneutics, however, the violations of sound method are frequent and obvious. I have identified five basic fallacies that appear repeatedly:

1. Promotion of the Trivial: The lesson is based on what is a passing comment in the text (Josh 9:13, they did not consult the Lord), a casual observation about the text (Moses persevered in going back before Pharaoh over and over) or even a deduction supplied in the text (Joshua and Caleb were brave and strong). The Bible is not being properly taught if we are teaching virtues that the text does not have in focus in that passage. We would like children to be virtuous, but we dare not teach virtues rather than the Bible. The plague narratives are not teaching perseverance nor is the feeding of the multitude teaching sharing (as done by the little boy in one of the accounts).  

2. Illegitimate extrapolation: The lesson is improperly expanded from a specific situation to all general situations (God helped Moses do a hard thing, so God will help you do a hard thing. But the hard thing Moses was doing was something commanded by God whereas in the lesson the hard thing becomes anything the child wants to achieve). In these cases what the text is teaching is passed by in favor of what the curriculum wants to teach and biblical authority is neglected.

3. Reading Between the Lines: This occurs when teachers or students are asked to analyze what the characters are thinking, speculate on their motives, or fill in details of the plot that the story does not give. When such speculations become the center of the lesson, the authority of the biblical teaching is lost because the teaching is centered on what the reader provided.

4. Missing important nuance: This occurs when the curriculum pinpoints an appropriate lesson but misses a connection that should be made to drive the point home accurately. It is not enough, for instance to say that God wants us to keep his rules—it is important to realize that God has given us a sense of who he is and how we ought to respond in our lives. It is not just an issue of obeying rules—God wants us to know him and respond to him by following in his ways and being like him.

5. Focus on people rather than God: The Bible is God’s revelation of himself and its message and teaching is largely based on what it tells us about God. This is particularly true of narrative (stories). While we are drawn to observe the people in the stories, we cannot forget that the stories are intended to teach us about God more than about people. If in the end, the final point is “We should/shouldn’t be like X (= some biblical character)” there is probably a problem unless the “X” is Jesus or God. Better is “we can learn through X’s story that God . . .”

If we are negligent of sound hermeneutics when we teach Bible to children, should it be any wonder that when they get into youth groups, Bible studies and become adults in the church, that they do not know how to derive the authoritative teaching from the text?

We all have a working hermeneutic, even though most have never taken a course. Where do we learn it? We learn it from those we respect. For many people this means that they learn their hermeneutics from their Sunday school teachers. Teachers in turn teach what is put into their hands. Perhaps we ought to be more attentive how Sunday school curriculum is teaching our children to find the authoritative teaching of God in the stories.

What has been your experience in your church? Have people in your church recognized this problem and what are you doing about it?

For more information on this problem in curriculum see the article posted on my curriculum website, www.teachthetext.com and for guidelines about how to approach the Old Testament narratives see J. Walton and A. Hill, Old Testament Today (Zondervan, 2004).

Waltonj
John H. Walton (PhD, Hebrew Union College) teaches Old Testament at Wheaton College Graduate School. He is the author or coauthor of several books, including Chronological and Background Charts of the Old Testament and the forthcoming A Survey of the Old Testament–Third Edition.

 

 

9 Comments »

  1. Thank you for posting this! It is so encouraging to hear that other people 1) think about the same things as me and 2) actually care and get frustrated [to the point of action] about them. This is an issue I have been becoming progressively more aware of in the last year or so, and it has really been discouraging because I felt that no one understood my pleads for both depth and strict adherence to the text in Biblical examination.

    Comment by Brittany Williams — August 6, 2008 @ 2:51 pm

  2. […] This is a very good article that I hadn’t seen yet.  Let me briefly explain the coincidence providence in how I learned about it today.  As I got in my car to leave for work a local well-known preacher was on the radio.  I listened for a few minutes before putting on yesterday’s Issues, Etc.  I noticed some points being made that I will touch on below.  A good friend calls me about 10 minutes later and tells me about Dr. Walton’s article above and how several people, including my friend Pastor Reggie, were commenting that it’s not just childrens’ curriculum that has this problem.  We talked about this well-known preacher I had just heard and it all fit together nicely and hence, sermoneutics came to mind. […]

    Pingback by Sermoneutics | Sweet Tea & Theology — August 7, 2008 @ 3:13 pm

  3. I’m with ya Brittany!

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