Jump directly to the Content

Teaching So Adults Listen

A Christian attorney was appointed to chair the adult education program. He was perfectly willing to oversee the program. He was willing to teach. He was a good teacher. But he was completely unwilling to take a course offered in that church. I asked him why.

"I learned everything I need to know about the Christian faith when I was a kid in Sunday school," he replied. "Now I'm an adult, and the challenge is to live what I already know."

To him, adult education was remedial, for adults who somehow missed getting a Christian education when they were younger.

This not-uncommon view arises, in part, from a common attitude toward education in our culture: schooling is for the young. At a certain point you graduate, and you are all done with education.

Often our Sunday schools, confirmation classes, and youth programs send the subliminal message: Education is for children. The sooner you're through with it, the better.

But that attitude can be turned around. When I came to one church, fewer than ...

April
Support Our Work

Subscribe to CT for less than $4.25/month

Homepage Subscription Panel

Read These Next

Related
A Message from the Publisher: April 01, 1980
From the Publisher
A Message from the Publisher: April 01, 1980
From the Magazine
I Wanted a Bigger God Than My Hindu Guru Offered
I Wanted a Bigger God Than My Hindu Guru Offered
As my doubts about his teachings grew, so did a secret fascination with Jesus.
Editor's Pick
What Christians Miss When They Dismiss Imagination
What Christians Miss When They Dismiss Imagination
Understanding God and our world needs more than bare reason and experience.
close