All the preparation came to fruition in September when the first set of sixth graders entered the youth ministry. We spent three months explaining the key doctrinal components of our denomination’s articles of faith, and I sent students home each week with at least one big word they could use to impress their parents. Slowly, they began to articulate the meanings of concepts such as justification, regeneration, sanctification, eschatology, the sacraments and the Trinity. During those early days, I wore their understanding of these concepts as a badge of honor: “Our students know more about what they believe than most of our adults!” I was determined to teach them doctrine so they would grow in their understanding of theology and ultimately own their faith.
A funny thing happened after that class, though. Some students really gained solid theological knowledge while others slept their way through the class, more intent on getting a donut than learning anything new. A third group emerged, though, one that surprised me: A couple of our students made it their desire to take their new-found knowledge and let everyone else know they had all the answers. They came armed every Sunday and Wednesday, ready to prove to their small groups they knew the answers to every question, dominating conversations and intimidating their classmates as a result.
We need to develop strong disciples in our youth ministries: young men and women who own their faith and know what they believe. This process absolutely cannot happen when the primary mode of theological education is in the classroom. A learned theology too often results in what I call debate disciples, those who make it their mission to prove why they are right and anyone else is wrong. We must walk side-by-side with our students through the classroom of life, developing theology that is lived, not just learned.
The catechism remains a crucial component of the theological education we present to our students. We further enhance those teachings, though, by providing them with an open learning environment to ask questions and wrestle with their faith for the remaining six years of their time in our ministry. Of course we want them to own their faith, but we don’t want them to use that faith as one uses a hammer, beating up others through the regurgitation of facts and ideas.
The last thing our churches need in their pews are arrogant know-it-alls, well-versed in theological knowledge but no desire to live a life marked by a love for God.
Jeremy Bixler currently serves as youth pastor at Community Chapel Church of the Nazarene in Nashua, New Hampshire. He also serves as the New Hampshire state co-coordinator of youth ministry networking for the National Network of Youth Ministries and is vice president of the New England District Nazarene Youth International (NYI).