Is Age Segregated Sunday School Biblical?

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For those who may be interested, I have just finished a three part series of articles entitled “Is Age Segregated Sunday School Biblical?” Here are the links:

Is Age Segregated Sunday School Biblical? – Part 1

Is Age Segregated Sunday School Biblical? – Part 2

Is Age Segregated Sunday School Biblical? – Part 3

Although I intended to be brief, and I actually wrote them fairly quickly as I had the time, I am sorry to say that they ended up being pretty long.

I welcome feedback as always, so that I might improve or correct the posts as needed. I hope the series proves helpful, especially in the context of the Family Integrated Church debate. In fact, the series is intended as a response to FIC advocates.

Thanks in advance for your kind attention to my little blog!

Discussion

I think as a response to the FICM, it’s fair and thorough. Although, when we say something is ‘Biblical’, I usually think of the term as meaning that a practice is a directive of some kind. It’s certainly fair to say that age segregated classes are consistent with and not in contradiction to many Biblical principles.

I’m generally not a fan of age segregated classes, even though I think there is a place for them, as in “older women teaching younger women”. Where I become concerned is with the content of the classes and the teaching ability and spiritual maturity of the teachers.

Maybe that could be Part 4 - if churches want parents to put their kids in SS classes, and support various age segregated ministries, then use something besides Christian comic books as curriculum and the Warm Body Method to staff them.

Karen Campbell also has some good podcasts about the FIC movement, too. if you go to her site, the “podcasts” tab, then the appropriate choice on the menu.

Only got through 1 and 2… for what it’s worth, I think it has a lot of strength. I like the approach of working through the key term “biblical” as you intend it first. And church as family is an angle I haven’t seen attended to much in this debate.

Is interesting to me that when the NT talks about discipleship, the focus is by far on what goes on among gathered believers in the local church setting in their ministry to one another as believers, not as families (we just studied 1Cor.12 at church, as a recent example). You have a couple of direct instructions to parents (with home life apparently in view) and that’s it.

Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.

I think we need to take into account authorial intent. When Paul addresses an epistle to a church, it makes sense that he would focus on church issues. IOW, I don’t think we should read too much into his focus on the church’s ministry to believers, as if by doing so, he was placing more importance on the church ‘family’ as opposed to individual families. We are siblings in Christ by virtue of adoption into the family of God, not into the family of a local church.

We have spheres of authority and responsibility that overlap in places, but I don’t think any of them should supercede each other. Beginning with the authority of the individual, to parental authority- as children and then as adults, the relationship of husband and wife, obedience to gov’t, employer/employee, the leadership of the church… there are boundaries for all of these relationships.

I think it’s fair that the FIC has gone to the extreme of drawing lines too deeply, and trying to make them ‘law’. And not everyone concerned about the preponderance of age-segregated ministry is a cheerleader for the FIC. As I do with many people and organizations who publish their ideas and positions, I glean what I find resonant and useful, and leave behind twaddle and extremism.

The epistles are written to churches and so… a church-life emphasis, yes.

But when it speaks on the topic of “how to grow as a believer,” it consistently points us back to church life. To put it another way, the NT is conspicuously missing any indication that church is second to family in the dynamic of Christian living.

… and very strong on our identity as “members” of a living body.

So, does the NT teach that church is more important than family? No. But it certainly does not teach that in worship and discipleship the church is the servant of the family or secondary to it.

Of course, some churches abuse or waste their role… filling up the calendar with all sorts of activities of dubious value and generally getting in the way of healthy family life. I share some of the FIC movement’s chagrin at that sort of thing. But the solution is not to develop a warped ecclesiology. The best churches understand that nurturing strong families is very near the top of what they ought to be doing for members of the body (without neglecting the needs of singles and those whose families are beyond their reach).

Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.

Thanks for the encouraging input. I was motivated to write the series — which actually started out as one post — because I couldn’t find a defense to the Family Integrated Church Movement on the subject, at least not a thorough one from a Reformed Baptist perspective. But most of the FICM types I meet actually come from such a theological perspective.

Well, R.C. Sproul, Jr., weighed in on a Facebook thread and called my series “lame sauce” and offered a few comments that made me think he may not actually have completely read the articles, but when I pressed him with questions he didn’t respond. Although I am not the best writer, especially when I am busy and have to work quickly, thus far I haven’t had any feedback that has led me to make any corrections in my arguments.

I wrote the articles because I couldn’t seem to find a defense for the idea of age segregated Sunday school over against the Family Integrated Church Movement (FICM), and I was afraid that the lack of a published defense — particularly from a Reformed Baptist point of view — would lend credibility to the FICM since I have heard some of the advocates of this approach claim that there is no defense and that none could be offered because we were all just blindly following tradition.

Anyway, I think we need to address this issue specifically since the FICM has attracted so many from within conservative Baptist circles. I still welcome feedback from you all or, better yet, a more capable job of addressing the issue than I have done.

I think the problem is that so many churches have Sunday School because they DO blindly follow tradition. This lends credence to the FICM position.

I’ve been a Sunday School Superintendent in churches that wanted me to purchase the cheapest curriculum I could find, or just put stuff together myself, with flannelgraph that was so old they were brittle and shedding their backing. Their goal was for the kids to be happy so the parents would be happy. It didn’t really matter what was done to make the kids happy either.

The FICM does employ the baby-out-with-the-bathwater approach, which is not a true solution, but there are enough parents who are up to here with churches that use SS and Junior church as glorified babysitting instead of a true discipleship opportunity. I think part of the answer is to offer a rebuttal of the FICM, and then to admonish churches who use SS to do so Biblically as well.

I agree that many churches may have lost sight of the proper role and purpose of age segregated Sunday School ministry, but I believe this has been addressed in my attempt to show what proper function such a ministry may and should have if employed by local churches.

In fact, one of the really sad things about the FICM, especially given that so many of its leaders and adherents are self-identified as Reformed Baptists, is that that they regularly lump their fellow Reformed Baptists into their criticisms and accusations against abuses such as you have mentioned. Yet in reality their fellow Reformed Baptists are in agreement with their criticisms regarding such abuses, and one would be hard pressed to find many — if any — Reformed Baptist churches who are themselves guilty of such abuses. They are simply branded guilty by association. All that is needed to see they they offer age segregated Sunday school classes, and they are castigated with the worst of the seeker driven, purpose driven, or emergent churches, etc.