Hermeneutics for Halflings

by Aug 7, 2008Uncategorized1 comment

Check out this post from Zondervan’s new blog, Koinonia. It describes common errors of Bible interpretation committed against the weakest among us: children.

The post is right: children’s Bible lessons fly under the hermeneutical radar. I should know; I edit and write them for a living.

I predict that most teachers of children would respond to a post like this with, “But these are just kids! We can’t give them high theology! We just need them to connect with simple Bible stories. They can learn the finer points later!”

Simple Bible stories… That’s just it. Kids are renowned for loving stories—and paying close attention to the details! When I was a kid listening to bedtime stories, my father would purposefully mix up details or read things incorrectly. I was constantly saying, “Read right, Dad!” If I had heard the story, I knew he was altering it!

The Bible tells a big story. Surely kids from Christian families should come out of their childhood with a grasp of this story, at least in its overall sweep. Right now their understanding is too often atomistic and moralistic: David and Goliath have nothing to do with Jesus or grace and everything to do with my five smooth stones of Bible memorization, prayer, church attendance, and… was it no video games?

For more on this, see Graeme Goldsworthy’s Gospel and Kingdom.

Read More 

Review: Why I Preach from the Received Text

Review: Why I Preach from the Received Text

Why I Preach from the Received Text is an anthology of personal testimonies more than it is a collection of careful arguments. It is not intended to be academic, and I see nothing necessarily wrong with that. But it does make countless properly academic claims, and...

The First Thing I Ever Wrote That I Still Have

This is so random, and I don't know who would care—but I just stumbled across the very first document I saved in what ultimately became my Dropbox/Academics folder. It was an exercise I wrote for an English class in high school. I was 16 and 3 mos. What I find...

A Little Help for Your Charitableness from Kevin DeYoung

A Little Help for Your Charitableness from Kevin DeYoung

There are few figures on the national evangelical scene that I like and trust more than Kevin DeYoung. I think he nails the balance between, on the one hand, graciousness and fairness and charity and, on the other (can anything be on the other hand from...

Review: The Power Broker, by Robert Caro

Review: The Power Broker, by Robert Caro

The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York by Robert A. Caro My rating: 5 of 5 stars Robert Caro is fascinated by power. He has given his life to exploring how it is gained and kept. And in Robert Moses, the subject of this epic book, power looks like the...

Leave a comment.

1 Comment
  1. dtjohnso

    “But these are just kids! We can’t give them high theology! We just need them to connect with simple Bible stories. They can learn the finer points later!”

    That kind of thinking has frustrated me for a long time. Certainly children need to have complex themes explained in terms with which they are familiar (which is hard to do), but those of us who teach children’s SS (and those few who write the curriculum) need to remember Matt 18:6 and realize that children do not begin thinking only after they join the youth group or go away to college.