The Triad Objectives that are Critical to a Meaningful Bible Programme.

The Triad Objectives that are Critical to a Meaningful Bible Programme.

I never thought I would do this, but in the first few weeks of my time at a new Christian School, I threatened to shut down the Scripture/Bible programme. I love the Scriptures and value their place in Christian schools; however, they were doing more harm than good in this case. I know that sounds almost blasphemous, but from what we could tell, the short-term and long-term impact that the program was having was more negative than positive.

It consistently received the worst feedback from students and parents and was the only subject that some board members’ children had dispensation not to attend. This is not a good look for a Christian School.

I did not want to close the programme, but I felt I had little choice. The current curriculum and pedagogy left many students bored and despising both the class and what it represented.

I met with the teachers of Bible to discuss the pending difficult decision.? After a lengthy discussion, I asked them why they think we teach Bible classes at school.? Their answer was to help students live by its ways and know how to interpret Scripture.? It was then that I realised what was wrong; our purpose for a Bible programme in school was well intended but not well considered.

After some deep reflection, our programme now has a threefold purpose and is intentionally implemented through these three dimensions, not just in the senior years but across the school.

Three-fold Purpose: Authoritative, Relevant and Curiosity

When all three objectives are present, the program has value. However, if even one of the objectives is missing, the program requires major Holy Spirit intervention to be good.

Authoritative: Our students need to understand that they can trust the Bible as a guide for life; its words are more than just a suggestion or another piece of advice. The words are from our Creator, the designer of our being, and the words contained in Scripture are true and trustworthy. Ultimately, what is present in Scripture is not suggestions but truth.

Relevant: Scripture is more than a historical document.? The words on the page were recorded so long ago that they are relevant to the world we live in today.? They give us direction on how to live in harmony with others, how to live a full life and how to find peace with our Creator.? They speak of how to live a life of no regrets and understand the temptations and sins that are prevalent in the 21st century. The relevance of the Bible enables us to live a life of fulfilment and inner peace.? ?

Curiosity:? Our students need to develop a curiosity for Scripture.? There is a need to ensure that our students desire to read the scripture, to grow a passion to learn more and to engage frequently with it.? This is not something that is necessarily ‘taught’, rather it is more likely caught.? Teachers who love the Scriptures are more likely to inspire a love for the Scripture in their students.

A solid Bible programme within a Christian school needs to have all three objectives present in order to be effective for our students. These three objectives will help students understand the completeness of His Word. The intentional involvement of these objectives must be delivered through meaningful exposure to and saturation of the content of Scripture.

When the triad objectives are central to a scripture programme in a Christian school (or even a Sunday School), the Bible is not presented as a collection of stories but a series of lessons.? Rather than learning about Daniel and the lion’s den, students are taught about God’s faithfulness even when we don’t understand how we can get out of something…with the lion's den as an illustration of this faithfulness.? We do not teach Scripture for history’s sake; we must teach Bible in such a way that it equips our students for the future God calls them into.

The Bible is not Shakespeare and it is not Aesop’s fables; it is the Living Word of God, full of reminders of who our Creator is, the promises He has for us and His instructions for how to live our best lives.? We need to be sure our Bible classes reflect this truth.

One final and practical note.? Our students are less likely to develop a curiosity for the Scriptures if their teachers do not have it.? This is not a skill or even teachable.? As with students, it is caught.? Either hire well or create an environment that values and models this.

The following table explores what happens when any one of the triad objectives is absent from a Bible program. Like a three-legged stool with one leg missing, the program loses its value significantly.? ?

The Effect of a Missing Triad Objective.

The Effect of a Missing Triad Objective - Shaun Brooker

Do not stop teaching Bible in your Christian School.? And when you teach it, do so with the triad objectives in a way that students understand the completeness of the Canon, the way the authors knit with precision, prophecy, poetry, miracles and manuscript, wisdom and parables.? ?

Would I have pulled the Bible programme from our school? I do not think so.? However, it sure is important to get our objectives right for what we hope to achieve in such an important program in a Christian school.? Christian education must bring students closer to the Scriptures, not create a barrier between them and a lifelong love for His Word.

I pray God gives you wisdom as you review your students' experience of your Bible programme.?

Blessings as always,

Shaun

www.christianeducation.org.nz

Danie Vermeulen

Seasoned executive manager experienced in Continuous Improvement (Kaizen), Strategy, Operations, Supply Chain and Governance. Currently serving the For Purpose (Not-for-profit) sector, including Christian Education.

3 周

Thanks Shaun. Very relevant and timely! Blessings

回复
Heather Johns

Teacher at Hillcrest Christian College

3 周

Dear Shaun, This is an excellent framework. From years of profoundly desiring to teach biblical content and bring students into a relationship with Jesus personally, the issue of engagement is really important. Students need to tackle the highly relevant content of the Word and connect it to how they live. Topics such as forgiveness, the character of God and how this is lived out through us, our need for redemption, and the brokenness of our world, which are explained by an understanding of the origin of evil, are highly relevant to our world. This lens to interpret everyday life decisions and choices is key to engagement. It is vital to ask students to consider the content presented rather than necessarily agree with it. Engaging their higher-order thinking about what they believe and why they believe it creates a safe place and platform to teach the bible with passion and authority. He promises his word will not return void.

Carrie Graham, PhD

Fractional Learning Solutions Architect | Workplace Learning Strategist | President & Founder

4 周

Absolutely appreciate and agree with your triad from a spiritual perspective. From a learning perspective that supports instructors, ensuring their facilitation methods engage students, build content so it's remembered, and support content application.

Murray Burton MNZM

Principal Elim Christian College, Proprietor Elim Education, Chair South Auckland Middle School. Board member PSSM.

1 个月

Brilliant and insightful work as always Shaun. I continually reflect that even if our Christian. Curriculum is amazing as you have outlined…. It needs teachers who are absolutely and authentically committed in their own discipleship - they need to be pursuing God with fervour themselves and the outworking of such a deep spiritual relationship with Jesus will be a curriculum that is not only authoritative, relevant and curious but one that truly comes alive for students. If’s caught even before it’s taught!!

Noah Meagher

Secondary Religious Education Teacher

1 个月

Great read! Even though the context I teach in is quite different from yours, these are really helpful ideas to consider as a guide. I became a Christian through ‘Bible in Schools’ in primary school and asked my parents if I could attend HCS for high school. You may be encouraged to know that the Bible program was hugely influential in my Christian walk. Reflecting on my experiences two qualities stand out that impacted me the most, causing me to grow both in my love for Jesus and for His word (which would be my aspirations as a Religious Education teacher for my students):

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