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By John Longhurst
EVERY YEAR since 1995, Wheaton College – one of America’s preeminent evangelical post-secondary schools – has tested the Bible knowledge of incoming freshmen students.
These students are among the best and brightest of Christian youth in the U.S. Most come from strong churches – and have a long history of involvement in Sunday school, youth groups, camps
and mission trips. They are students “who are the most intentional about cultivating their faith,” says Wheaton New Testament professor Gary Burge.
Despite this, they do poorly on the simple Bible test. Many can’t put Bible events in order, Burge says. They don’t know that Abraham came before the Old Testament prophets; who preceded the
death of Christ; or who died before Pentecost.
They find it hard to identify biblical characters like the apostles, or the name
of the thief released by Pontius Pilate. They struggle to locate stories like
Paul’s missionary travels in the book of Acts, or the Passover story in Exodus.
“We tend to assume that because they come from strong churches, they know the
details of the biblical story,” says Burge. “But students tell me after they take the test that they didn’t have a clue.”
Wheaton isn’t the only school where students lack basic Bible knowledge; something similar
is happening at Hesston College, a Mennonite Church school in Kansas.
Like at Wheaton, all new students at the school are required to take a biblical
knowledge test. As at Wheaton, many do poorly; on average, students get half of
the answers right.
“They know some individual Bible stories; but the majority don’t know how the whole story fits together,” says Michele Hershberger, who teaches in Hesston’s Bible and Ministry department.
I’m not aware of any Canadian Christian colleges or universities that are
conducting similar tests. If they are, I wouldn’t be surprised if the results were similar.
How did we get into this situation? Burge believes most of the blame can be laid
directly at the feet of local congregations.
“The problem starts at the church level,” he says. “Bible instruction today is episodic, looking at a few favourite passages, out of
context . . . Most teaching is based on felt needs. They never get the
storyline from front to back.”
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Karen Jones, author of Transforming Student Ministry: Research Calling for Change, echoes Burge’s sentiment.
“There are key passages and books that we faithfully teach [to youth], but large
portions of scripture that we overlook or only mention in passing,” she wrote in 2006, adding that youth “rarely complete an in-depth study of the entire Bible. Whether it is intentional
or not, the result is the same: our teenagers often leave our ministries with
an incomplete understanding of biblical truth.”
Of course, just knowing Bible facts doesn’t make someone a better Christian. As Hershberger puts it, “just knowing information about the Bible isn’t transformative.” But without knowing the basics, “we’re lost.”
What’s the solution? Burge believes churches need to take a “curricular approach that tells the story.” Without such an approach, he believes, young people won’t be able to assess the Bible and apply it to their lives. “They can’t do analysis about something they really don’t understand,” he states.
Hershberger agrees. At Hesston, she walks students through the whole Bible
story, beginning with Genesis and ending in Revelation. Through it all, she
seeks to help them answer this question: “How has God worked in history to solve the sin problem, and bring everything
under the Lordship of Jesus Christ?” Along the way she provides visual and mental “hooks” to help them remember not only the stories, but the sequence and how they fit
into the big picture.
But helping youth learn the Bible is about more than better teaching in Sunday
school, she notes – adults also play a role. “If we want to make the Bible come alive for youth, we have to make it a priority
as adults. If we are on fire about learning our faith, it will help youth to be
more excited.”
In 1999 Burge wrote a seminal article in Christianity Today, titled ‘The Greatest Story Never Told.’ In it he recounted how he asked youth leaders whether their students were
learning the content of the faith and the stories of the Bible.
“It is hard to find time,” one told him. “But I can say that these kids are truly learning to love God.”
“That is it in a nutshell,” Burge wrote. “Christian faith is not being built on the firm foundation of hard-won thoughts,
ideas, history or theology. Spirituality is being built on private emotional
attachments. Is it any wonder then that our young people and adults do not know
the stories of the Bible? That they cannot reason theologically?”
No one, he went on to say “is teaching them. No one is modeling it for them. No one is announcing that the
biblical story is The Story that defines our identity and life in the church.”
John Longhurst directs marketing and sales for Mennonite Publishing Network,
which produces Gather ‘Round, a Bible-based curriculum for children and youth. (gatherround.org)
September 2010
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