Organic Catechesis with the Bible

Fellow blogger Ruth Curcuru (who uses the handle RAnn) recently commented on a catechetical post from my blog, observing that the current catechetical model takes “a topic-based approach that uses scripture as a resource, rather than a scripture study approach.”  Her remark clarified something for me about my own catechetical worldview that has always been rather vague to me.

I understand my task as a catechist is to teach Catholicism evangelically. If you count time in Adult Ed and RCIA, I’ve been at it since 1998. Even in that first year of Adult Ed, I was using the Bible in the classroom; but it took 11 years, eight of them teaching 6th-graders, until I truly noticed how comprehensively the Bible had revised how I thought about catechesis.

I started blogging in October of 2008. I was 51 years old, and annoyed with half-formed thoughts that never coalesced into anything definitive. Blogging would give this non-writer an easy, non-word-processing format for writing stuff down for my own benefit. October 2008 was also the second month of my fifth year of teaching 6th grade.

Soon I was writing about catechism class; I hadn’t expected to. On October 26, I posted about using Bible stories to teach textbook content.  I closed with:

“The teacher’s manual has both Bible and Catechism references for each chapter which are valuable, but mostly for a 180-day academic year. I’m thinking that there may be a way to teach the required content better over 30 classes by mining selected stories one at a time, and applying those lessons to the subject matter in the book. At this point it’s just an idea.”

Teaching the textbook’s topics with the Bible was just great. I had no explicit plan, but the more I used the Bible, the easier it was to teach within the 30-class-max Sunday School format.

In May 2009, I posted a list of all the Bible stories I remembered using that year. I was surprised at how many there were, but they were still individual, unintegrated stories coordinated with particular subject matter.

During the following 2009-10 year, I started to figure out that using Scripture as an adjunct to the textbook was not the most effective way to be teaching the kids. I was constantly jumping around in the Bible in order to align with the textbook. Maybe it would be better to align the curriculum to the Bible, and thus be able to take advantage of its intrinsic structure and Big Picture of Salvation History.

In other words, I needed a new catechetical paradigm.

To maximize the teaching potential of Scripture I had to drop the existing textbook curriculum. When the 2010-11 year began, I had a whole new approved curriculum based on following the path that had been worn 2000 years ago. It is so easy to teach Catholicism this way. It’s as though the Bible had been cleverly designed to be used for this very purpose. As Sherry Weddell would say: It Is Normal.

That gets me back to Ruth’s comment. My Sunday-Schoolers don’t learn topically anymore; instead they are doing Scripture Study. That never occurred to me until today; I always thought in terms of Teaching Catholicism from the Bible; not Teaching the Bible Which is Catholic. So they are learning their Catholic Faith not just in its details, but in its Big Picture, which coincidentally is confluent with the Bible in its details, and in its Big Picture.

Catholicism and Scripture are organically fused. The kids’ Bible Study is inseparable from their Catholic Study. They thrive together, like parents and children. Or like anything that lives and grows: where should I plant a new tree in my yard? Wherever it would naturally grow best on its own. Does the Church grow best when the faithful are fully engaged with Scripture? Surely she must.

So here’s a New Evangelization concept for the existing term “Organic Catechesis”: the whole Faith; the whole Bible; the whole time.

Copyright © 2013, Christian LeBlanc

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Christian LeBlanc

Christian LeBlanc

Christian LeBlanc is a revert whose pre-Vatican II childhood was spent in South Louisiana, where he marinated in a Catholic universe and acquired a Catholic imagination. During his middle school years in South Carolina, Christian was catechized under the benevolent dictatorship of Sister Mary Alphonsus, who frequently admonished him using the nickname "Little Pagan." After four years of teaching Adult Ed and RCIA, he returned to Sr. Alphonsus' old classroom to teach Catechism himself. Married to Janet, the LeBlancs have five children and two grandsons. Christian and Janet belong to St. Mary's Parish in Greenville, South Carolina. Christian also posts at Amazing Catechists and his blog, Smaller Manhattans. He is the author of The Bible Tells Me So: A Year of Catechizing Directly from Scripture.

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