 Parents
and kids talk about what it means to believe in and follow Jesus
“We’re talking and growing,” says Carol Leber,
Director of Education at
Resurrection Lutheran Church in Plano, Texas. “New ways of thinking
about our faith and what we believe are helping parents and
confirmation-age youth communicate with one another. It’s exciting!”
The Crossways International course, An
Apostles’ Creed for the New
Millennium, is one of their church’s Wednesday Education Night
offerings for adults—a mid-week program that includes dinner,
children’s choir practice, confirmation classes, youth and adult
classes, and music rehearsals.
“We especially targeted the parents of confirmands and
of fourth
graders who were studying the Apostles’ Creed in
their own classes. We
sent letters to these target groups, and included information about the
classes in both the confirmation orientation packets as well as the
adult education brochure. We also put announcements in the church’s
monthly newsletter and the Sunday bulletin,” says Ms. Leber.
The goal of the simultaneous parent-child study of the Apostles’ Creed,
which ran for nine weeks in 45-minute sessions each week, was to
provide faith-enrichment for adults, and to offer parents help with
engaging in faith discussion with their children.
Ms. Leber adds, “To help parents broach the topic of
faith with their
kids, I broadened the scope of the class to challenge parents to ‘think
outside the box’ of the orthodox creed. I warned them that, if it
hasn’t happened already, their kids would soon confront them with
doubts—even rejection—of statements in the Creed, and they needed
to be
able to work through these, sharing their own doubts and faith
struggles.”
Objectives for the class were:
•To examine the meaning of the Apostles’ Creed in
its orthodox form,
and then compare it with Dr. Wendt’s An Apostles’ Creed for the New
Millennium.
• To look at the 5th century worldview underlying the original Creed
and find ways to express these faith statements in 21st century
language.
• To provide parents with support for initiating and sustaining
meaningful conversations about faith in the home, and so foster genuine
Christian discipleship in their kids—a huge responsibility for parents.
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