The Sunday School Teacher 3
In
any honest examination of the modern Sunday School, one of the first things we
notice is that the traditional Sunday School as a concept seems to be dying a
slow death. Increasingly, churches of all types and sizes have shifted from the
long-followed schedule – Sunday School followed by a morning worship service,
chased later in the day by an evening worship service – to a more contemporary
type of weekend with the same service being repeated multiple times. In this
latter style, Sunday School got left on the chopping block. At the same time,
such churches realized they needed a smaller teaching venue. Cue the massive
rise of small groups.
I make no secret of the fact that I prefer
the traditional Sunday School model over the more recently popular small group
model. I intend to make just that argument in this chapter. It does not then
follow that I am against the small group model. I am most definitely not. I
have spent thousands of hours teaching in such settings, and I intend to
continue to do so. And they have been highly beneficial hours.
I believe in the power of personal
investment, in the power of time spent one-on-one or in slightly larger groups.
For example, just last week I awarded a New Testament to a young man in our
church whom I had trained how to witness. We completed that training together,
sitting across a table, one hour a week for eight weeks. I have trained nearly
a hundred soul winners over these years in the same manner. Our church
practices discipleship in a similar manner. New Christians are paired with
mature Christians and undertake a set of eight small-group Bible studies over a
two-month period. I have done hundreds of these myself. Members are only added
to our church after a meeting with me in a small group setting. Additionally, I
have spent an enormous amount of time mentoring younger preachers in a similar
setting, one-on-one at a table working through a book or concept or doctrine or
practice essential to the Christian ministry. Indeed, I hope some will use this
book in a similar manner, a mature teacher coming alongside an inexperienced
one, helping them to grow into all they can be for the cause of Christ.
The small group model has some genuine
strengths. It often increases participation and thus thought and personal
ownership of thought between the learner and the teacher. Small groups help
people to become involved and feel valued. They often do a better job of
building relationships between students than the traditional Sunday School
model does. Church plants can emerge from small groups. And when they are done
right, a properly led small group can eliminate many, if not most, of the
weaknesses inherent in the model.
If I am so obviously for it, how then can
I be against it? I am not against it so much as I am against small groups
replacing the model traditionally used in Sunday School – a teacher standing up
before a class and taking them through a planned course of study. When you
replace the traditional model entirely with small groups, you leave good stuff
on the table. Some things are taught better in the conventional model. In fact,
I would argue that most things are taught better.
Consider the broader educational
implications for society. In modern American culture, a child progresses from
Kindergarten through Twelfth Grade over a thirteen-year span. He then often
undertakes advanced studies at a college, university, or technical school for
some years afterward as well. I may be mistaken in the following sentence, but
I cannot think of a single example where all that education is conducted via a
small group model. Are the secular equivalents of small groups used in schools,
from kindergarten to a doctoral program? Yes. Are they used exclusively? Not on
your life. In point of fact, the traditional model of a teacher delivering a
lecture in a classroom is still found much more often than not. Why? Because
there are some things that are taught more effectively via the traditional
model.
I am not asking you to eliminate small
groups. I am not on a crusade against the concept. I am asking you to realize
the superiority of the traditional model in many instances, and to use small
groups as a supplement to such classes rather than a replacement of them.
Having explained my point, let me now
attempt to make it. To do so, I want to look at the negative risks one runs in
a church context by shifting to small groups exclusively, and from this,
highlight the unique strengths inherent in the traditional Sunday School model.
Small groups, by definition, cultivate
commentary from everyone. While I believe a good Sunday School class includes
much interaction, these two concepts are not the same. The former essentially
places the opinion of the carnal Christian on par with the experienced
perspective of the spiritual Christian. If a simple person (in the Proverbs
sense of the term) comes to a passage of Scripture with a neutral mind, and
thus hears two competing viewpoints in the discussion, he is left to choose for
himself which one sounds good. This is problematic at best, and something you
would find only rarely, if ever, in the traditional Sunday School model.
Put another way round, expressions of
pooled ignorance are weaker than a carefully studied lesson in every context. I
do not deny that small groups can be led well by carefully studied men or
women, but the weakness inherent in a discussion format is that the thoughtful,
prepared voice is put on par with all the voices around them. Leading a student
to grasp a biblical truth always involves thought, but it does not always
require discussion. Yet small groups only sometimes have the former, yet always
have the latter.
The Bible is an authoritative book. It
needs to be taught graciously but also with a sense of authority, an authority
not inherent in the teacher but rather inherent in the Book because it is God's
Word. If my chosen manner of transferring truth does not convey that authority,
I am incorrect in how I handle the Word and in the inferences I leave in the
mind of the listener. On the authority scale, the biblical emphasis begins with
preaching, flows on to teaching, and finally descends to conversation and discussion.
It is easiest to form the student's concept of doctrine and practice in the
weakest of those three categories, easiest precisely because our culture has
become so enamored of equalizing everyone's voice and pulling down anything
that smacks of authority. But easier seldom means better.
In addition to the philosophical
weaknesses inherent in the small group structure, any honest observer must also
acknowledge the practical risk that any church faces in fostering small groups
– a potential church split. The traditional Sunday School class model almost
never splits a church; the small group model does so often, it has become
cliché. In some sense, this is related to the authority concept discussed in
the previous paragraph. The institution Christ founded to perpetuate His
teaching in His absence was the church. Attempts to transfer scriptural truth
on the edge of a church model and largely lacking church supervision are not
wrong, per se; they are just wrong-headed. And if that sentence is too strong
for you, roll it back in your mind and at least have the intellectual honesty
to admit the risks run in a small group scenario.
"Sure, there are risks in the small
group setup. I'll admit that. But there are just as many risks in the
traditional Sunday School model."
I disagree. I do not disagree that Sunday
School classes can and have often been poorly led, with the spiritual results
negligible at best. In point of fact, this book exists in order to help combat
that. But in the main, even a badly done Sunday School class still contains
more potential for good and less risk of bad than the equivalently led small
group. A poorly conducted Sunday School class is still held at church during a
church service and is led by someone who carries the authority of the church and
the Word of God. Attendance is taken, an unspoken practice which emphasizes the
importance of the occasion.
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Jack Williams, shortly before his graduation to Glory earlier this year. |
I can still remember each Sunday School
teacher I had as a child. Mary Lou Tyree. Alice Reeves. Jack Williams. Joe
Wetzl. Rick Bartel. Each one stood before me with an open Bible and taught a
prepared lesson. Their intellectual, spiritual, and emotional capacities were
different. Their ability to connect with me varied. Decades have passed since
then, and the specific things they taught me have mostly faded from my memory.
But their elevation of God's Word still rings in my heart, and their shining
example of a love for God and His people still touches me all these years
later.
I am not opposed to biblical discussions,
nor to small groups gathering around a table to converse and learn about the
things of the Lord. But few are the lives transformed by a discussion, while
many are the lives changed by a teacher.
The traditional Sunday School model is
still best.
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