Bible-Shaped Teaching
By John Shortt and David Smith
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About this ebook
John Shortt
John Shortt is Senior Adviser to the European Educators' Christian Association and Professorial Fellow in Christian Education at the National Centre for Christian Education, Liverpool Hope University, England. He is co-author with Calvin College's David Smith of The Bible and the Task of Teaching (2000). He was the founding editor of Journal of Education and Christian Belief and the first director of the Charis Project, UK.
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Bible-Shaped Teaching - John Shortt
Bible-Shaped Teaching
John Shortt
19752.pngBible-Shaped Teaching
Copyright © 2014 John Shortt. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical publications or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Write: Permissions, Wipf and Stock Publishers, 199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3, Eugene, OR 97401.
Wipf & Stock
An Imprint of Wipf and Stock Publishers
199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3
Eugene, OR 97401
www.wipfandstock.com
isbn 13: 978-1-62564-558-6
eisbn 13: 978-1-63087-767-5
Manufactured in the U.S.A.
Scripture quotations marked (NIV) are taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version®, NIV®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide.
For my grandsons, Callum and Dylan, from whom and with whom I learn so much
Foreword
David I. Smith
Part of being a Christian is to stand in, and to foster, a certain relationship to the Bible. Of the countless books imprinted on tablets, scrawled on papyrus, printed on paper, or downloaded to pocket devices since folk first began reading, this collection of writings holds a special place. It is to be received not just as a pleasant read, or a handy collection of information, or even a tool for inspiration. It offers itself to us as Scripture, as words given by God for us to ponder, think with, meditate upon, and obey. For Christians, the Bible is to play a significant role in shaping who we become.
Another part of being a Christian is to seek the kind of wholeness of life that the Bible calls for. In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make your paths straight,
says the book of Proverbs in the Old Testament. Offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God,
says the book of Romans in the New Testament. These and various other passages point to a life that is not carved up into a religious zone that is kept for weekends but has little influence over how we conduct ourselves in the workplace or the marketplace. For Christians, life is to be approached as a whole.
For Christians who are teachers, these two simple (but challenging) truths can give rise to a particular kind of puzzlement. If our lives are to be consistently Christian, and the Bible is to direct our thinking and doing, and our calling is to teach, how do we connect these things together, especially when we find that the Bible has little or nothing directly to say about schools as they exist in the modern world or about many of the particular things that we teach? Could there be anything Christian or unchristian about how I teach mathematics, or languages, or biology? And is it any use drawing the Bible into such questions, when it is more concerned with salvation than with sums or cell systems?
This book offers help with such questions. It is not a how-to manual. It does not set out to provide a complete set of solutions or a Christian guide to every area of teaching and learning. Instead it focuses on understanding the different ways in which the Bible speaks, and on how we might build bridges between the world of the Bible and the world of today’s classroom. It offers a map that shows some possible pathways towards being at one and the same time faithful to our calling as educators and faithful to the Scriptures as Christians.
Its author, John Shortt, has invested a lifetime in thinking about and helping other teachers to think about the craft of faithful Christian education. He is also himself a model Christian educator and a gentle, humble, winsome person. He is a fine choice of guide for those wanting to push a little further into questions about how the Bible might speak to teaching and learning. In the chapters that follow he sets out to broaden our sense of possibility—to free us from searching for the two or three verses that appear to say something about our discipline, and leave us instead with a wider sense of the variety of ways that that Bible can guide our paths.
How do stories (which make up much of the Bible) shape our sense of which ways to follow? How can the imagery of Scripture spark our educational imagination? What might we learn from the ways in which Jesus taught, or from the ways in which the Bible itself goes about teaching us? How do the truths stated in Scripture impinge on our beliefs about learning? What Christian virtues are important for teachers? These are big questions, deep questions, but in this book they are made accessible and brought alive through personal stories and examples. For any teacher looking to reflect further on how their accountability to Scripture might connect with their work in teaching, this book provides a valuable place to start.
Preface
This book is the outcome of a long process of learning from and with many friends and colleagues, teachers, and students. It is an attempt to bring together insights gained from numerous personal conversations and classroom discussions as we have explored together ways in which the Bible shapes us in our lives and our work as teachers.
Two very good friends have especially influenced me in this process. One has been David Smith of the Kuyers Institute for Christian Teaching and Learning at Calvin College in the U.S. While we were colleagues in the research department of the Stapleford Centre in England, David and I worked together on a book entitled The Bible and the Task of Teaching. Most of the main ideas were David’s and it was a great pleasure to work with him in the development of them. The book was written for a mainly academic readership of lecturers in college and university education departments, teachers studying for higher degrees in education, and others working at that level. It was published in 2002 and since then I have made much use of these ideas in working with teachers on courses and in conferences and seminars.
The other very good friend and key influencer has been Raymond Le Clair of the Center for Educational Programs in Kiev, Ukraine. I have learned much from Ray as we have travelled and worked together in conferences and on courses for teachers in Ukraine and Russia and elsewhere in that part of the world. Together we have worked over the main ideas that I have been using in my presentations, refining them and adapting them for the school and classroom contexts in which these teachers work. In this process, the insights of these teachers have been invaluable and their enthusiasm and commitment to living for Christ in the classroom has been a constant encouragement and blessing.
Since the idea of writing this little book was born, both David and Ray have encouraged me to press on with it and provided detailed and very helpful comments on earlier drafts. Without their help and encouragement it would not have been completed, and I am very grateful to them for all they have done. I am also grateful to a number of other friends who made perceptive and helpful comments on later drafts. I am sure that the quality of the book has been enhanced by their input but the remaining inadequacies in it are undoubtedly all my own responsibility.
Although