Bible blog of award-winning bestselling Christian author, Stephen M. Miller. for Monday, 8 September 2014 "How to teach kids the Bible"How to teach kids the Bible

SPONGE. Kids soak up information – good or bad – and store it
inside their tiny heads, sometimes for the rest of their life. One mom wants to
know how to get some of the good stuff from the Bible inside the head of her
kids even though she doesn’t know much about the Bible herself. Photo by Oleg Afonin.
A LADY
SHOWED UP on my Facebook news feed a
few days ago complaining about people tearing into her for homeschooling her
kids.
“I am absolutely done,” she said, “with the ignorant opinions
people have towards homeschooling.”
My first thought was to add this comment to her post:
“It’s ‘toward homeschooling.’ There’s no such word as
‘towards.’”
I decided that would be more unkind than helpful.
It is true, though. She was making a common grammatical mistake
that I learned about in my journalism classes in college.
“Towards” is, however, correct in Great Britain.
Here’s the Bible Question of the Week. It comes from Cheryl Baranski,
who gets a free copy of Who’s Who & Where’s Where in the Bible for Kids
for bothering to send me the question. Thank you very much.
How do you teach the Bible to your children, when you aren’t
that strong in that area?
Hummm.
Consider this.
- How do you teach your children
grammar when you don’t know a “toward” from a “towards”?
- How do you teach your children
geography if you don’t know Africa’s a continent, not a country?
- How do you teach your children
the importance of reading if they never see you reading?
And the answer is
Do what teachers do.
Teach yourself. Then teach your miniatures.
Or, if need be, teach yourself while you teach your miniatures.
Learn with them.
I have a fair number of teachers in my extended family. I have a
niece fresh out of college, now teaching music to children in kindergarten
through fifth grade in Mobridge, South Dakota. She started teaching just a
couple of weeks ago. This is her first-ever teaching job. So I have been
worried about her. Not just because she’s a rookie, but because she is 1,200
miles away from her Ohio family. I wrote about her in Feeling a little homesick?
Over Labor Day weekend I spent some time with a nephew of mine
who has been teaching for several years. Because of my niece, I asked him what
his first year was like.
“Insane.”
He said he was able to stay only one day ahead of his students
because he had to do his lesson planning in the evening. He had lesson plans
that he needed to create for all six of his classes. So he often needed to stay
up until around midnight each school night during that first year.
How to teach the Bible to kids
Get yourself a book with stories from the Bible.
Either read the stories with your kids or read the stories ahead
of time and then put the stories in your own words. Kids absolutely love to
hear you tell stories.
I told my kids stories just before bedtime. We had a 30-minute
timeslot before lights out. I called it “Feet off the Floor” time. They would
get in bed and read a little. And I’d go in and tell them one story. I
generally gave them three stories to choose from, and they picked the one they
wanted. We ended “Feet off the Floor” time with prayer.
I don’t usually write books for kids, but I do have one: Who’s Who & Where’s Where in the Bible for Kids.
I’m giving a signed copy to Cheryl.
If the kids are a little older, you could try something like the
Complete Guide to the Bible, Student Edition.
I’ve seen young people reading this book. One time I walked up
to a young lady reading it during a book convention, and I asked her what
she thought about it. She said she liked it. We talked a bit about what it was
she liked. Colorful pictures, for one.
I’ve heard from other folks that the book raises questions in
the minds of some young people and they end up talking about them with their
parents. One mom wrote me and said it felt pretty cool that her teenagers were
talking to her about the Bible, of all things.
The Bible says we parents should be doing this for our kids.
Spell out the headlines of what you believe:
“Get them inside of you and then get them inside your children.
Talk about them wherever you are, sitting at home or walking in the street;
talk about them from the time you get up in the morning to when you fall into
bed at night,” (Deuteronomy 6:6-7).
There are lots of good books out there to help you ease your
kids into the Bible. Printed books. Digital books. Books to buy. Books to
borrow. Don’t be stealing any. Or downloading them for free from sleazy
websites that slip in malware.
Pick a book that interests you and that you think just might
interest your kids. Then spend some book time together with your kids. From
there, I’m pretty sure, you’ll head toward the Bible to get the rest of the
story.
But not towards
the Bible.
Unless you’re British.
Read in browser »
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