 |
Social
Statements |
Education
|
Vocation of a Lutheran College
“Our Calling in Education”:
Working Together to Generate a Strong Social Statement on Public
Schools, Lutheran Schools and Colleges, and the Faith Formation of
Children and Young People
by Marcia J. Bunge, Ph.D.
Thank you for this special invitation. It is a great privilege to
be with you and to have this opportunity to reflect together on
Lutheran perspectives on education.
As you know, the ELCA is preparing a social statement on education
that will be considered by the Churchwide Assembly in 2007. The study
booklet or guide that you received, Our Calling in Education,
was written by the ELCA Task Force on Education as a way to prompt
church-wide discussion on education and to help develop a final social
statement for the church.[i]
The actual social statement will be much shorter than this study
guide, and it is hoped that it will help set policies on education for
the church and guide its advocacy in the area of education.
A “Study Guide” or “Booklet” is an odd literary creation. First of
all, it is written with the help of sixteen people. If you have ever
edited or co-authored a volume, then you know yourself that such a
writing process is a wild endeavor. Secondly, a study guide is a
unique literary genre: it is a mix of theological essay, teaching
document, information pamphlet, and questionnaire. In academic
circles, some might therefore view it as a “nightmare.” My own
colleagues at VU who have read the study guide appreciate its
theological perspectives on education, and they are delighted that the
church will address the issue of education in a social statement.
However, they find the study guide itself lacks urgency, and some fear
it cannot generate the kind of church-wide discussion on education
needed to produce an effective social statement.
Our primary task today as a group is not to defend the strengths
and weaknesses of the study guide or to revise it into some second
edition best-seller. Rather, our common task today is to use it as a
springboard for a serious discussion about the most urgent issues in
the church regarding education and how the church might address them
in a social statement. I hope we can all agree that we do face
serious challenges related to education and that the church at this
time does need a strong and useful social statement on education—not
just on sexuality. As educators, we have a wonderful opportunity to
shape this social statement, to voice our concerns and commitments,
and to help guide the church. Thus, I am hoping that my own remarks
today will prompt you to share your ideas so that members of the task
force can incorporate them into a first draft of the actual social
statement. I have handed out a list of questions (purple handout)
that includes space for you to write your ideas so that we can give
them to the task force at its next meeting. We need your informed
response to the basic question: What should this statement include?
More precisely: What theological insights would best help guide the
church in its reflection on education? What specific issues,
questions, and challenges regarding education are most central to us
and our communities? What kinds of specific policies and practices
would strengthen the church in the area of education?
I would like to address these questions myself by making two claims
that shape the two central parts of my remarks. First, the study
booklet rightly builds its theological vision of education upon a
Lutheran understanding of vocation. Education and vocation are deeply
interwoven, and the social statement, like the study guide, should be
based on and include a strong theological statement about vocation.
Second, although the study guide addresses a wide range of issues
facing people of all ages, from early childhood education to life-long
learning, if the social statement itself aims to capture the attention
of members of the church, let alone to have an impact, then it must
narrow its focus and address urgent questions in three specific areas
of education that greatly affect the lives of children and youth
today:
1) public schools;
2) Lutheran schools and colleges; and
3) the faith formation of children and young people.
These three issues should be addressed in a large social statement
with three parts or even in three separate social statements. Thus,
the second part of my paper lists the most urgent questions and
challenges that I have heard expressed by colleagues and members of
the church about these three areas.
Although people of all ages certainly face difficulties in the area
of education broadly understood to include both academic training and
faith formation, the ELCA’s social statement should focus primarily on
children and young people. They face tremendous challenges today in
many areas related to education, and the church should address their
challenges more intentionally and effectively and be a stronger
advocate for them. For example, poor children are not prepared for
school in the first place and then must also attend dangerous or
inadequate schools. They also often lack the kind of health care or
nutrition needed to thrive in school. Even children in affluent
neighborhoods suffer neglect and abuse and struggle with drug and
alcohol abuse, suicide and depression, and lack of sexual boundaries.[ii]
Scholars also wonder about the effects of technology, the media, and
market pressures on rich and poor children alike. Although opinions
vary on the extent of these problems or how to solve them, voices
across progressive and conservative lines recognize that such
challenges are real and should be addressed. Parents, religious
communities, and the state are searching for creative and effective
approaches to these problems. Although the ELCA, like most
denominations, has spoken out and written about a number of social
issues, such as abortion and sexuality, it has yet to produce a public
document directly about concerns facing children and young people
themselves, and the statement on education provides an opportunity to
do so.
I. BUILD THE STATEMENT ON A ROBUST LUTHERAN UNDERSTANDING OF
VOCATION
Like the study guide itself, a final social statement on education
must be built on a strong Lutheran understanding of calling or
vocation. The Lutheran church has a rich legacy of thinking about and
supporting education in both Church and society, and this legacy is
built on a vital view of vocation. A strong concept of vocation, when
incorporated into a final social statement, will do much to guide the
church’s reflection and advocacy in all areas of education, whether
public schools, church related schools and colleges, or the faith
formation of children and young people.
Although a Lutheran concept of vocation can richly inform our
thinking about many areas of education in both church and society,
unfortunately, in contemporary culture and even within Lutheran
institutions, the notion of “vocation” is often misused and
misunderstood, and this is why it should be clearly introduced and
articulated in a final social statement for the Church. Through my
own work on our campus for a national initiative on “The Theological
Exploration of Vocation,” funded by the Lilly Endowment, we have found
that there are four common misconceptions of vocation among students,
faculty, and members of the church as a whole. Some people equate
vocation with one’s occupation, career, or paid profession. Others,
perhaps especially young people, understand vocation as “finding one’s
inner joy” or a sense of self-fulfillment. Some Catholics, but also
Lutherans and other Protestants, often think of vocation or calling as
entering the priesthood or ordained ministry. Finally, still others,
even those who are committed Christians or work at Lutheran
institutions, have no notion at all that vocation is a theological
concept related to their faith tradition, and they simply equate
vocation with “vocational programs” or “vo-tech.”
Last year, at a national meeting of representatives from several
Lutheran institutions that received Lilly grants, we also found that
even Lutherans who are highly informed about a theology of vocation
and engaged in programs with young people can unintentionally
introduce them to narrow understandings of it. For example, on the
one hand, we found that Lutheran colleges sometimes speak of vocation
too generically in terms of “gifts and talents” for the common good
and neglect other dimensions of a Lutheran understanding of vocation,
such as baptism or unity in Christ. Here, vocation can start looking
too much like leadership development or citizenship alone. On the
other hand, Lutheran seminaries sometimes speak about vocation too
narrowly in terms of baptism and neglect what Luther said about
creation, the common good, or the two kingdoms. Here, vocation is
sometimes equated with ordained ministry.
In contrast to these weak notions of vocation, a robust Lutheran
theology of vocation, as the study guide articulates, deeply
integrates faith and learning and empowers discipleship and service.
Martin Luther emphasized that all believers are called to love God and
to love and serve the neighbor, especially those in need.[iii]
They are called to express their faith in works of love and service
within the church and the broader culture.[iv]
Although Luther claimed all believers share this common Christian
calling, he also emphasized that they honorably carry it out in a wide
variety of specific “vocations”—in specific “stations” or “places of
responsibility” in which they serve the well-being of others, whether
at home, at work, at church, or in civic life.
Furthermore, for Luther, all work that benefits the community holds
equal religious value. As he states in his “To the Christian
Nobility”:
There is no true, basic difference between laymen and priests,
princes and bishops, between religious and secular, except for the
sake of office and work, but not for the sake of status. They are
all of the spiritual estate, all are truly priests, bishops, and
popes. But they do not all have the same work to do…Further,
everyone must benefit and serve every other by means of his own work
or office so that in this way many kinds of work may be done for the
bodily and spiritual welfare of the community, just as all the
members of the body serve one another.”[v]
For Luther, everyone therefore has a calling: everyone has these
“roles” or “offices”—whether given or chosen, for “all significant
social relationships are places into which God calls us to serve God
and the neighbor.”[vi]
Thus, even children and students have a calling here and now. They
already have certain responsibilities that benefit the family and the
community. Luther also recognizes that each individual serves others
in multiple ways in various spheres of life: the home, professional
life, the church, and the community.
Thus, from a Lutheran perspective, vocation is therefore not
primarily about paid work, personal bliss, or ordained ministry but
rather about how we are living out the totality of our lives, serving
others, and participating in God’s love and care of the world. A
Lutheran view of vocation honors activities and responsibilities
outside the priesthood or monastic life; it honors not only paid work
but also our duties as parents, spouses, sons and daughters, students,
aunts and uncles, and friends; and furthermore, it honors our role as
citizens and the need to contribute to the common good. It emphasizes
that all of our varied and specific callings are vehicles of the
general Christian calling to love and serve others.
This robust theology of vocation is closely intertwined with
Luther’s views of education: not only his support of schooling and a
solid liberal arts education for all children but also his emphasis on
religious education and the faith formation of children and young
people. Luther supported formal education and schools because he was
convinced that well-educated citizens would serve both Church and
society. For him, government supported schools were necessary so that
everyone could not only read and interpret Scripture but also gain the
skills and knowledge necessary to be good citizens. Excellent schools
help develop the gifts of young people so that they can live out their
particular vocations and take up particular roles or offices that
serve others and contribute to the common good. As he stated in a
letter to political leaders, well-educated citizens are “a city’s best
and greatest welfare, safety, and strength.”[vii]
Thus, Luther and his colleague Philipp Melanchthon were strong
public advocates for universal schooling, the liberal arts, and
educational reform. At a time when formal education was viewed as
unnecessary for most children and educational opportunities were
limited primarily to the nobility, to boys, or to those entering
monasteries, Luther and Melanchthon recommended that all children,
including girls and the poor, be given a basic education.
Furthermore, Luther and Melanchthon recommended a broad liberal arts
program for schools and universities that reflected the humanist
reforms of the day.[viii]
Through their initiatives, Luther and Melanchthon prompted several
reforms that influenced German schools and universities at that time
and still today, including public education for all children. Many
Lutherans after the Reformation, such as August Herman Francke in the
18th century, have also been leaders in educational policy and reform.
Luther’s view of vocation also informed his emphasis on faith
formation of children and young people both at church and in the
home. He believed that those who are baptized should understand their
faith and live it out in daily life. Although he believed that
pastors and congregations should certainly help children and young
people learn about their faith, he stressed that children must also be
taught the faith at home by their parents.
Thus, Luther’s own view of vocation included serious reflection on
the central tasks and responsibilities of parenting. Although Luther
knew that parenting can be a difficult task and is often considered an
insignificant and even distasteful job, he believed parenting is a
serious and divine calling that is “adorned with divine approval as
with the costliest gold and jewels.”
[ix]
Luther further underscored the importance of parenting by claiming:
Most certainly father and mother are apostles, bishops, and
priests to their children, for it is they who make them acquainted
with the gospel. In short, there is no greater or nobler authority
on earth than that of parents over their children, for this
authority is both spiritual and temporal.[x]
According to Luther, as priests and bishops to their children,
parents have a twofold task: to nurture the faith of their children
and to help them develop their gifts to serve others.[xi]
He also helped parents in this task by preaching about parenting and
by writing “The Small Catechism,” which was intended for use in the
home.[xii]
Even though there is more to say about Luther’s view of vocation, a
Lutheran understanding of vocation provides a solid theological
foundation for a Lutheran social statement on education in Church and
society. On the one hand, the concept of vocation deeply integrates
faith and learning and provides theological grounding for strong
educational opportunities for all so that everyone can use their gifts
to serve the neighbor and contribute to the common good. On the other
hand, the concept of vocation also informs the need for faith
formation of children and young people at church and in the home.
Overall, the concept invites us to reflect on a number of issues
related to both academic training and faith formation, such as: our
service to the needs of the neighbor; our unique gifts and talents;
how to strengthen and to develop them; our multiple duties in various
spheres of life; the relation between faith and learning; our
relationship to God; and God’s love for and care of the world.
II. ADDRESS URGENT QUESTIONS IN THREE SPECIFIC AREAS THAT
GREATLY AFFECT THE LIVES OF CHILDREN AND YOUNG PEOPLE
Given this Lutheran understanding of vocation, given the long
history of Lutheran engagement in education, and given the many
challenges that children and youth are facing in both church and
society, the social statement should address three specific areas of
education that greatly affect the lives of children and young people
today (or the church could even offer three separate social statements
on these issues).
A. PUBLIC SCHOOLS
Based on its understanding of vocation and its strong history of
support for the liberal arts and universal education, the ELCA should
address issues regarding the public schools. The social statement
should clearly state the Church’s commitment to strong public
education based on the Lutheran notion that the common good of society
requires educated citizens, that all children should receive a good
education, and that the education of young people is a shared
responsibility. Here are six of the most burning questions that we
have heard raised in Lutheran colleges and in the wider church that
that should be addressed in a social statement on public schools, and
you can add your own in the discussion:
1) How can the church help address the glaring inequities
(along racial, ethnic, and economic lines) in our present system of
public schools? How can the church ensure all children have equitable
access to excellent schools and to strong educational programs that
will help them to be responsible and productive citizens?
2) What role, if any, should public schools play in the
character formation if children? Are there shared moral beliefs and
values that public schools should teach? Can public schools even
teach moral values and beliefs adequately if they are not taught
within a larger religious framework?
3) Given the fact of religious pluralism and the legal right
of public schools to teach about religion, should not the church
encourage public schools to teach religion as an academic subject? If
so, then how would it be taught? What would the curriculum
include?
4) Should public schools sponsor or incorporate any religious
practices, events, or symbols into their buildings, curriculum, or
extra-curricular activities, such as posting the Ten Commandments or
saying morning prayers?
5) Should the church support vouchers and school choice? How
should the church balance its support of both public and parochial
schools?
6) How can the church help lift up the importance of teaching
and ensure that teachers are paid fairly?
B. LUTHERAN SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES
The church also needs a strong social statement on Lutheran schools
and colleges. The statement must start by informing members of the
church about the nature and number of these institutions. Many
members of the church do not even know that there are almost 2,000
ELCA preschools, 174 parochial schools, and 28 colleges and
universities.[xiii]
Like public schools and universities, these institutions seek to offer
an excellent liberal arts education and to prepare young people for
their particular vocations as family members, workers, and citizens.
However, unlike secular institutions, Lutheran schools and colleges
also have a “special responsibility and opportunity to engage faith
and learning.” They can provide “an excellent setting for the claims
of faith to interact with secular learning in the many fields that
make up a liberal education.”[xiv]
Unlike some Christian traditions, the Lutheran tradition encourages
Christians to make use of the best of secular learning, and it
emphasizes an open quest for truth in which faith and learning are not
at odds but in vital dialogue with one another. This view of faith
and learning is the basis for the Lutheran commitment to intellectual
inquiry and academic freedom.
When students are given the opportunity to engage faith and
learning, the benefits for both church and society are significant.
Some of these benefits were recently confirmed in a national study on
Lutheran college graduates. The study found that compared to Lutheran
students at flagship public universities, Lutheran students at
Lutheran colleges are far more likely to find opportunities to develop
spiritually, to discuss faith and values in the classroom, to
integrate faith into other aspects of their lives, to participate in
service projects, and to engage in church activities.[xv]
Despite such benefits and the rich theological heritage of Lutheran
schools and colleges, these institutions face tremendous challenges.
For example, only 5% of Lutheran high school graduates even attend
Lutheran colleges. Some of the schools and colleges have closed or
face serious financial troubles. Furthermore, some ELCA schools and
colleges have lost or are losing their Lutheran identity. Many of
their students do not know they are attending a Lutheran institution,
and they are given few opportunities to engage faith and learning.
Although Lutherans have inherited a rich theological understanding of
vocation, and although it can be a tremendous resource for people
today, we must humbly admit that Lutheran schools and colleges have
not consistently helped people explore this understanding of vocation.
My own institution, for example, was founded on a rich vision of
vocation. When we at Valparaiso University applied for the Lilly
grant, we proudly thought that we Lutherans already know all about
vocation; we have the market on this concept; and we will be the
leaders of this initiative. Yet we were soon humbled when we
discovered that most students and even many faculty on our own campus
had not explored let alone appropriated a deep theological
understanding of vocation.
Thus, some of the most urgent questions regarding church-related
schools and colleges are the following:
1) How could the church better inform its members about the mission
and strengths of Lutheran schools and colleges?
2) How can the ELCA’s church-wide office, synods, local
congregations, and individual members better support Lutheran schools
and colleges?
3) Even as they serve a diverse student body, how can Lutheran
schools and colleges maintain their Lutheran identity? Should they
ensure that a certain percentage of students, faculty, and
administrators are Lutherans? If so, then what percentage? What other
ways can they maintain their Lutheran character and mission in
academic courses and extra-curricular activities?
4) How can Lutheran schools and colleges more intentionally
introduce their students, regardless of their religious backgrounds,
to the intellectual heritage of the Christian tradition?
5) How can they more intentionally introduce students, regardless
of their religious backgrounds, to the wisdom embedded in a Lutheran
understanding of vocation? How can they expose all students to a
Lutheran view of vocation as they think about their future work and
life-commitments?
6) How can the everyday institutional practices and policies of
Lutheran schools and colleges better reflect their mission and a
Lutheran understanding of vocation? Do these institutions strive to
carry out just practices and policies? (Especially in the areas of
responsibilities to families, such as offering flexible working hours
or day care; just treatment of employees, especially those with the
lowest paid positions, typically adjunct faculty, housekeeping staff,
and dining staff; and environmental responsibility on campus.)
Since I have worked with the Lilly Endowment’s project on vocation
both nationally and at Valparaiso University, I would like to say a
little more about the 5th and 6th questions and offer you a few
resources. You can also find more resources on the project’s website
or by contacting any of the 88 college and universities that are
carrying out Lilly-funded vocation programs (see the blue handout).
As I have worked with the Lilly initiative on vocation nationally
and on our campus, ten general kinds of activities or “best practices”
have proven to be especially effective in helping students, faculty,
and administrators to nurture faith and to reflect on vocation. All
of them are valuable ways of creating a space for nurturing faith,
reflecting on vocation, and discerning a sense of calling. If one
looks back at the history of Christianity, then one recognizes that
these kinds of activities or practices have commonly been used
throughout various faith traditions for moral and spiritual formation.
Recent sociological and psychological studies also confirm the value
of these kinds of activities for moral and spiritual development.
[xvi] There are, of course, many more than I mention
now, but these ten have been the most significant on our campus and on
other campuses around the country. I will simply point out the list
now on your handout, but if we have time later in the discussion, then
we can all give examples of how these and other activities have been
effective in our own lives and our own particular settings and
institutions.
- Exposure to Role Models
- Naming the Gifts and Talents of Others
- Narratives of Lives of Faith and Service
- Prayer and Spiritual Fellowship
- Leadership in Worship
- Music and the Arts
- Service Projects
- Cross-cultural Experiences
- Church Camps and Wilderness Experiences
- Biblical Study and the Study of other Texts
Most church-related colleges and universities that are
participating in Lilly’s national project on vocation do include
several of these activities because students have different interests
and backgrounds, and therefore the “doorways” through which they can
best enter reflection on vocation vary. These ten activities or
practices also reflect the varied answers one finds in the Christian
tradition for answering the question: How do I discern my particular
calling? For some, a sense of calling arises primarily out of
meditation, prayer, and contemplation. For others, a sense of calling
arises more in response to learning about and then actively addressing
the particular needs of individuals or communities. Yet for still
others, discerning a sense of calling is more a process of carrying
out responsibilities in the roles in which they already find
themselves and recognizing these roles as part of God’s care of the
world. In general, a sense of calling does not come as a voice in the
night to isolated individuals but rather through relationships to
others and through activities and practices like the ten that I have
listed.[xvii]
Although these ten kinds of activities can be carried out with
little or no money, they do require intentionally creating spaces and
opportunities for people to engage in them, and they can be carried
out effectively when individuals and institutions work cooperatively
to share their assets and ideas. Among Lutherans, there are many new
collaborative efforts and initiatives that are creatively changing the
“ecology” of the church to invite more reflection on vocation and to
deepen our shared discourse about it. We see collaborative efforts
and events, for example, among ELCA colleges (through the annual
Vocation of Lutheran Colleges conferences or the vocation grants);
among colleges and seminaries that received Lilly grants for work with
high school and college youth; among individuals who participate in
programs such as Lutheran Summer Music, the Lutheran Academy of
Scholars, or the Rhodes Consultation; and among colleges, seminaries,
campus ministries, church camps, parachurch organizations, and
synodical and national church offices through efforts such as the
“Making Connections” grants or the Western Mission Network
Consultation. Although we sometimes see our church as fractured, from
a national perspective, such cooperation and networking is unusual
among most Protestant denominations. Although Lutherans hesitate to
be proud, we can feel genuinely proud and excited about the ways such
cooperative efforts are currently renewing the life of the church.
C. FAITH FORMATION OF CHILDREN AND YOUNG PEOPLE
Finally, the ELCA must also pay more attention to the spiritual
formation of children and young people and the roles and
responsibilities of both parents and the church in this task. This is
a burning issue for many parents and members of the church, and a
section of the social statement on education or even a third separate
statement must address it. Unlike some issues related to public
schools, this is also an issue that the church could effectively and
directly address without depending on political policy decisions.
Although the Church certainly cares about children and young people
and offers a number of programs to serve them, parents and other
caring adults need to do more to nurture the faith of children and
young people. Just one of many signs of the weakness of faith
formation in the Church as a whole is that children and young people,
even those who attend church regularly, know little about their faith
traditions and have difficulty perceiving or articulating the relation
between faith and their daily lives. Based on the findings of the
National Study on Youth and Religion, Christian Smith, author of
Soul Searching: The Religious and Spiritual Lives of American
Teenagers, claims, for example, that a large number of teenagers
are “remarkably inarticulate and befuddled about religion.”
[xviii] Even though a vast number of them identify
themselves as Christians and are affiliated with a Christian
denomination, they have “a difficult to impossible time explaining
what they believe, what it means, and what the implications of their
beliefs are for their lives… Religion seems very much a part of the
lives of many U. S. teenagers, but for most of them it is in ways that
seem quite unfocused, implicit, in the background, just part of the
furniture.”[xix]
The study also shows that Mainline Protestants “were among the least
religiously articulate of all teens.” Smith cites this response of a
17 year-old Lutheran: “Uh, well, I don’t know, um, well, I don’t
really know. Being a Lutheran, confirmation was a big thing but I
didn’t really know what it was and I still don’t. I really don’t know
what being a Lutheran means.”[xx]
Researchers conclude that what they call a vague “Moralistic
Therapeutic Deism” appears to be displacing the substantive
traditional faith commitments of most historical U. S. religious
traditions.[xxi]
I also know from my own experience as a college professor, and
perhaps your experience is similar, that although most of my student
are bright and articulate, and although 95% of them come from Lutheran
or Catholic backgrounds, have attended church, and are confessing
Christians, they know very little about the Bible and their own faith
traditions, and they have difficulty speaking about relationships
between their beliefs and their everyday lives and concerns.
If a vast majority of children and young people are going to church
and confessing to be Christians, then what are the grounds for this
situation? There are certainly many causes, and I’ll mention just
three that the church could address. First, although there are
certainly examples of sound religious education programs, many
congregations offer weak religious education programs and fail to
emphasize the importance of parents in faith development. The
curricula of many programs are theologically weak and uninteresting to
children, and they assume children themselves have no questions,
ideas, or spiritual experiences. Programs for children and youth are
often under funded, and leaders for them are difficult to recruit and
retain. Furthermore, there is little coordinated effort between the
church and the home in terms of a child’s spiritual formation. Many
parents don’t even know what their children are learning in Sunday
school, and parents are also not given the sense that they are
primarily responsible for the faith formation for children.
As a result, we find, in the second place, that many children and
young people are not speaking to their parents or other caring adults
about their beliefs and values, and they are not carrying out central
religious practices that nurture faith with their parents in their
homes. I am taken aback, for example, when many of my students tell
me that they have rarely, if ever, spoken to their parents about any
issues of faith, when they know so little about their parents’
beliefs, and when they are highly misinformed about their church’s
positions on issues such as creationism or sexuality. Many students
also tell me that although they went regularly to church with their
parents, they did not pray at home with them. Their experience has
been confirmed by several recent studies of the Search Institute and
Youth and Family Institute. For example, according to one study of
8,000 adolescents whose parents were members of congregations in
eleven different Protestant and Catholic denominations, only 10% of
these families discussed faith with any degree of regularity, and in
43% of the families, faith was never discussed.
[xxii] Many people apparently consider religion to be a
private issue--so private that you don’t even pray or share religious
thoughts and questions with members of your family.
In general, when we also consider that in our current consumer
culture young people and now even very young children are the targets
of intense and highly sophisticated marketing campaigns, vying for
their money and brand loyalty and shaping their values and
assumptions, the question we must ask is not “Will our children have
faith?” but rather “What kind of faith will they have?” Our children
and young people are and will be being shaped by messages around them,
and parents and churches must be more intentional about the messages
they want to their children to receive. When I learned that children
under 18 in the United States watch an average of 27 hours of TV a
week (not including time spent playing video and computer games), I
wonder how even the best Christian education programs, held perhaps
one or two hours a week, can possibly compete with TV and help young
people critically appropriate the faith, especially if their parents
are not intentionally taking time to complement these church programs
with religious practices in the home and with regular family
discussions about religious questions and beliefs. This is especially
important when common sense and recent studies show that, for better
or worse, the most important influence on the moral and spiritual
lives of children and adolescents continues to be parents.[xxiii]
A third reason perhaps that faith formation is not the priority it
should be and that children and young people know little about their
faith traditions and are not carrying out religious practices at home
is that the ELCA, like many other denominations, has not offered
serious theological reflection on either children or parenting.
Although children and parenting are central to Luther’s understanding
of vocation and faith formation, Lutheran theologians and ethicists
have generally neglected these themes. Certainly, they have devoted
significant attention to many issues related to children and
parenting, such as abortion, human sexuality, gender relations,
contraception, marriage, reproductive technology, and the family. Yet
even most studies on marriage and the family have neglected to include
serious reflection on fundamental subjects regarding children
themselves, such as the nature and status of children; parental
obligations to them; the role of Church and state in protecting
children; the role of children in religious communities; the moral and
spiritual formation of children; the role of children in the faith
maturation of adults; adoption; or children’s rights.[xxiv]
Like contemporary theologians and ethicists in other traditions,
Lutherans have tended to consider such issues as “beneath” the work of
serious scholars and theologians and as a fitting area of inquiry only
for pastoral counselors and religious educators. Thus, theological
discourse in the Lutheran tradition, as well as other Christian
traditions, has been dominated by simplistic and ambivalent views of
children and teenagers that diminish their complexity and integrity,
fostering narrow understandings of parenting and other adult-child
relationships.
Given these and other concerns, here are some most burning
questions related to faith formation at home and in the church that
the ELCA social statement on education must address:
1. How can the church best strengthen its religious education and
faith formation programs?
2. How can the church create a stronger partnership between the
home and the congregation and better support parents in their task of
parenting and shaping the moral and spiritual lives of their
children?
3. How can the both parents and church leaders more intentionally
introduce children and young people to the “best practices” outlined
above for helping them nurture faith and discern their callings?
4.How can the church better support the efforts of para-church
organizations that are already doing so much for children and young
people, such as through national youth events, mission trips, campus
ministry, bible camps, or retreat centers?
5. How can the church strengthen its theological and ethical
reflection on children and parenting and lift them up as serious and
legitimate areas of concern for the church as a whole?
CONCLUSION
I have offered just a few burning questions in the areas of public
schooling, Lutheran schools and colleges, and the faith formation of
children and young people. And I am now anxious to hear your own
questions, concerns, and comments about these three areas or about
other areas that should be addressed in a social statement on
education. Certainly, however the last draft of the social statement
is written, it must narrow its focus and address some of the most
urgent questions being raised by members of the church about children
and young people. It cannot be a generic statement that covers all
areas of education most broadly understood. However, if the statement
does embrace children and youth, addresses urgent questions, and is
built on the vibrant theology of vocation that is embedded in the
Lutheran tradition, then it is bound to have an impact and to serve
and to renew both church and society.
NOTES
[i] Our Calling in Education: A Lutheran Study.
Additional copies of this resource can either be ordered by
calling Augsburg/Fortress (1-800-328-4648) or downloaded from the
ELCA website ( elca.org/socialstatements).
[ii]For more information about the situation of
children see the following web-sites: United States Census Bureau
( census.gov); The Children’s
Defense Fund ( childrensdefense.org);
The United Nations Children’s Fund ( unicef.org);
and The National Center for Children in Poverty ( nccp.org).
[iii] This sense of calling is built on Jesus’
command to his followers to “love the Lord your God with all your
heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with
all your strength” and to “love your neighbor as yourself.” Mark
12:28-24; Mt 22:34-40; Lk 10:25-28.
[iv] As Luther wrote, “Faith is truly active through
love, that is, it finds expression in works of the freest service,
cheerfully and lovingly done.” “The Freedom of a Christian,” in
Martin Luther’s Basic Theological Writings, edited by Timothy
Lull (Minneapolis: Fortress, 1989), 617.
[v] Martin Luther, Luther’s Works (LW),
edited by Jaroslav Pelikan and Helmut Lehmann (St. Louis:
Concordia Publishing House, 1955-1986), 44:129-130.
[vi]Douglas Schuurman, Vocation: Discerning Our
Callings in Life (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2004), xi.
[vii] “To the Councilmen of All Cities in Germany
That They Establish and Maintain Christian Schools” (1524) in
Luther’s Works, (Philadelphia: Muhlenberg Press, 1962),
45:356.
[viii] Their program embraced “language, reading,
and writing; the capacity for critical thinking; history and
philosophy; scientific and mathematical skills; familiarity and
training in the arts, music, and poetry; as well as instruction in
Bible and theology.” Our Calling in Education, 14.
[ix]LW 45:39. In an often quoted passage, Luther
says, “Now you tell me, when a father goes ahead and washes
diapers or performs some other mean task for his child, and
someone ridicules him as an effeminate fool--though that father is
acting in the spirit just described and in Christian faith--my
dear fellow you tell me, which of the two is most keenly
ridiculing the other? God, with all his angels and creatures, is
smiling--not because that father is washing diapers, but because
he is doing so in Christian faith” (LW 45: 40-41).
[xi] For a full discussion of Luther’s views on
parenting, see, for example: “The Child in Luther’s Theology: ’For
What Purpose Do We Older Folks Exist, Other Than to Care for…the
Young’” by Jane E. Strohl in The Child in Christian Though
edited by Marcia Bunge (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2001),134-159;
William Lazareth, Luther on the Christian Home: An Application
of the Social Ethics of the Reformation (Philadelphia:
Muhlenberg Press, 1969); and Gerald Strauss, Luther’s House of
Learning.
[xii] The German Lutheran Pietist, August Hermann
Francke, also spoke meaningfully about the sacred task of
parenting. He claimed that the primary goal of parents is to help
children live out their vocation. They are to help children grow
in faith, empowering them to use their gifts and talents to love
and serve God and the neighbor and to contribute to the common
good. See Marcia Bunge, “Education and the Child in
Eighteenth-Century German Pietism: Perspectives from the Work of
A. H. Francke, in The Child in Christian Thought, 247-278.
[xiii] Our Calling in Education, 44, 64.
[xiv] Our Calling in Education, 65.
[xv] Our Calling in Education, 67.
[xvi] See, for example, studies by the Search
Institute and the Youth and Family Institute.
[xvii] As Gustaf Wingren says, “In reality we are
always bound up with relations to other people; and these
relations with our neighbors actually affect our vocation.” Gustaf
Wingren, Luther on Vocation, trans. Carl Rasmussen
(Philadelphia: Muhlenberg Press, 1957), 72.
[xviii] Christian Smith with Melinda Lundquist
Denton, Soul Searching: The Religions and Spiritual Lives of
American Teenagers (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005),
27, 32, 260.
[xix] Soul Searching, 262. See also 218.
[xx] Soul Searching, 131-132.
[xxi] Soul Searching, 262.
[xxii] Merton P. Strommen and Richard Hardel,
Passing on the Faith: A Radical New Model for Youth and Family
Ministry (Winona, MN: St. Mary’s Press, 2000), 14.
[xxiii] Soul Searching, 261. This is a point
also made consistently in the work of Richard Hardel and Merton P.
Strommen.
[xxiv] As Todd Whitmore has argued, “For the most
part, church teaching simply admonishes the parents to educate
their children in the faith and for children to obey their
parents.” See Todd David Whitmore (with Tobias Winright),
"Children: An Undeveloped Theme in Catholic Teaching," in The
Challenge of Global Stewardship: Roman Catholic Responses,
ed. Maura A. Ryan and Todd David Whitmore (Notre Dame: University
of Notre Dame Press, 1997), 161‑85.
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