But when he saw many of the Pharisees and Sadducees coming to his baptism, he said to them, “You brood of vipers! Who warned you to flee from the wrath to come? Bear fruit in keeping with repentance. And do not presume to say to yourselves, ‘We have Abraham as our father,’ for I tell you, God is able from these stones to raise up children for Abraham. Even now the axe is laid to the root of the trees. Every tree therefore that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. (Matthew 3:7-10 ESV)
Recently in catechesis the youth (seventh and eighth
graders) and I were looking at Matthew chapter 3 as we considered the ministry
of John the Baptist. I had asked them to
describe John the Baptist’s preaching and message. The response from several catechumens
was not exactly what I expected. As they
considered the words of John above, they didn’t like them because to several of
the youth it seemed like John the Baptist “was discriminating against the
Pharisees and Sadducees.”
I was struck by this response and have pondered it since
then. The students who shared the
response were bright individuals. They also came from diverse experiences of
life in the Church. There was both the
situation in which catechesis during seventh and eighth grade was the first
real interaction with life in the Church, and also a life that had included
fairly regular attendance at the Divine Service and Sunday school.
There are two observations about this experience that
have implications for catechesis in the current setting of the Church. First, it underscored the need for biblical
content to be included in catechesis.
The youth did not realize that the Pharisees and Sadducees were “the bad guys” in the account and therefore they could not understand John the Baptist’s
words. In the case of individuals whose
parents had not involved them in the Church (and so had also not emphasized the
faith at home), this was not surprising.
But the fact that bright youth who had attended Sunday school and the
Divine Service on a fairly regularly basis could miss this basic point did surprise me.
We in the Church recognize that we are living in a time
of declining biblical literacy. However,
there are probably occasions when we don’t realize how dramatic the decline is
and how broad reaching are its implications.
Fewer and fewer children learn basic biblical accounts at home. The sole exposure that many will receive is
in the readings and preaching of the Divine Service and in Sunday school. Spotty attendance at both of these means that
many will attain only a weak knowledge base, and many will have virtually
none.
The youth in catechesis that day left knowing about the
Pharisees and Sadducees and why John was speaking to them the way he did. It was the first time we had bumped into
these two groups. It will not be the
last, as during the rest of this school year we will be working through the
ministry of Jesus (after completing the central narratives and institutions of
the Old Testament during the first half of the year).
Eight years ago I arrived at my current parish and
learned that I had inherited a great opportunity. My predecessor had set in place the
expectation that on Wednesday night the seventh and eighth grade youth met for
an hour in a classroom setting. Then they met for a half hour with their
parents for “Learn by Heart” – catechesis focused on the Catechism that took
place in the setting of worship.
I realized that I
was guaranteed to be able to cover the basic content of the Small Catechism
twice with the catechumens and their parents during the two years of
catechesis. Building on this solid
foundation, I decided to have two alternating years of catechesis in the
classroom setting. The first would cover
the content of the Small Catechism more deeply and in a way that we want
mature congregation members to understand and confess the faith. The
second year would focus on biblical readings. . It would survey the primary biblical narratives of the Old and
New Testament. This would bring the individual accounts learned in Sunday School into a unified
picture of how God worked out His plan of salvation. Discussion of these
narratives would provide the opportunity to teach different doctrinal topics as
they appeared in individual texts. It would seek to teach them to read Scripture in an incarnational and sacramental manner. Most
importantly, it would mean that no one would finish catechesis and be confirmed
without obtaining this basic biblical knowledge.
Every setting is different and so the goals of catechesis
will be addressed in different ways.
Nevertheless I believe we have arrived at time when catechesis will have
to include the foundational biblical narratives. There was a time when “Confirmation class”
typically focused only on the doctrinal content of the Small Catechism as
it explained in various texts like the Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod’s Small
Catechism with explanation. It dealt
with the kinds of doctrinal topics that would be addressed in the public
examination. However, such an approach is
no longer satisfactory. Naturally this content still needs to be taught. But in
addition, it is now necessary to teach the foundational biblical accounts as
well. It appears that other pastors have
arrived at similar conclusions, because I hear about more and more pastors who
include the biblical narrative in their catechesis.
The second observation deals with something that is far
more difficult to address. It was disconcerting to hear these youth evaluate
the account of John the Baptist using the category of “discrimination.” Clearly their schooling and culture was teaching
them to think in terms of “rights.” Such
an approach reflects the manner in which the homosexual movement has framed
questions about sexuality and marriage in terms of “civil rights.” The one who defines the terms usually wins, and
it is frightening to see how our youth are being taught to think.
It is frightening because as the Church, we have so few opportunities
to influence the way youth think. When compared with the all encompassing
interaction that our culture has with them through school, the media and the entertainment
industry, the limited opportunities of the Church can’t begin to compare. What can we do?
On that day, I taught the youth that John the Baptist’s
words had nothing to do with “rights” and discrimination. Instead it was about
right and wrong, and so was a matter of Law and Gospel as John proclaimed law
in order to bring about repentance so that forgiveness could be received
through the Gospel. As we seek to teach
the faith and defend our youth against the culture’s insidious influence on
their thought we need to be explicit in diagnosing these contradictory ways of
thinking about life. We need to use opportunities
that present themselves to bring into sharp perspective the presuppositions of
the world, and then set them in contrast to those of the biblical worldview. Such an approach does not guarantee success
in every case. But it does seek to be faithful
in addressing the realities we face today.
Maybe we should rethink our "tithing our bairns to Moloch" by sending them to government schools. You seem surprised that kids sent to such institutions 40 hrs/week for 9 months/year would repeat the (Democratic) party line when interviewed in an institution in which he spends 1 hr/week. Even the salutary influence of regular family altar (assuming parents who take their baptismal vows seriously) may still be but a drop in the bucket.
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