Tuesday, February 20, 2007

Doubting [insert name here]

A funny thing happened at church this week. I was going to start a new unit at our jr. high Bible Study this Sunday. I was all gung ho and ready to go, until I arrived at church and panic set in; turns out, I brought the wrong curriculum book. The one I was going to use was about holiness; the one I had was a book we went through last year. The first lesson in this book was about doubts. So I quickly developed a new lesson plan based on that one, and hoped for the best. I figured that I could just start the unit on holiness next week. But then something odd happened.

At first we started talking about the typical doubts we always talk about in church--the 'apologetic doubts'. These are the ones that all those 'other' people have ('other' being anyone who isn't a conservative Christian). These are nice safe doubts to talk about, because they're highly impersonal and we can talk about them on a completely intellectual level. And, of course, when we memorize the answers to them, we can be prepared for when any of those 'other' people come to use with those doubts. If, for example, someone says they doubt that Jesus really was the Son of God, we can reach into our bag of "Answers for Heathens" and shoot them out like balistic missiles.

It wasn't long before my "I've heard it all before" teens were looking pretty glassy-eyed. So I asked them what kinds of doubts Christians might have. Silence. We started talking about it more, and a lot of interesting questions came up. And it didn't take long for me to see that we needed to spend some more time on this.

So we're going to take five or six weeks and talk about a specific doubt each week. And I was hoping that, as I try to create curriculum out of thin air, I could get some help from all of you people who are smarter than me. I'm going to post a list of the doubts they brought up below, and I'd like your feedback and thoughts on them. How would you respond to someone who says, "I doubt that...

...God really cares about me
...a loving God would send people to hell
...God really answers my prayers
...it's very important for me to read the Bible
...a loving God would let bad things happen
...God's people would disagree so much."


Any thoughts?

1 Comments:

Blogger Paige said...

It's pretty tempting to me when I read 'any thoughts?' ... I'm not smarter than you but I think if people don't have these questions they haven't learned how to be very honest with themself yet- I think it's a lifelong journey.

10:51 a.m.  

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