I have always put a premium on Biblical literacy at my school for reasons other than evangelical ones. As crass as it sounds, I do not get excited when I hear about my students becoming Christians. Actually, I get suspicious. For one reason, most of the children at my school who have "wanted" to become Christian mid-school year have "wanted" to become Christian when I am about to kick them out for felonious infractions. I have had students put on a "Christian" face as they or their parents tell me of the conversion they experienced the night before. You know the face: the exaggerated, happy eyebrows and the fabricated, maniacal smile they associate with televised Christian ministers or Barney. In my general opinion, in order to get out of trouble. Sue me.
Secondly, the currency of the education business I am in is not "Christian conversions." Conversion tends only to be a topic of interest when parents or students want to "change the subject" like when parents fail to pay ("The Lord is putting us through a trial." I don't care what the Lord is doing. You never cited the Lord as being responsible for your payments when you signed contract) or when a child has strayed far enough away from the law to exempt himself from being a part of my school ("The Lord is really working with our child." I don't care what the Lord is doing with your child. He wasn't doing it yesterday). I deal with a measurable currency on one hand (money) and measurable results on the other (test results).Third of all, I already consider the children at my school to be "christian" enough for me to work with them. That is to say, we all have committed to a baseline of measurable ethics whereby adherence to it and infractions of it can be easily identified. I have had people fault me for this because they believe that a "Christian testimony" should be a requirement for entrance to my school else my student population become corrupted. What these people do not understand is that every human is like a cannister with a capability to hold only so much and only a certain kind of so much. I have had students not last the school quarter or semester or year because they could not hold what I was offering. Amongst that lot I am sure have been a few "unbelievers", but again, I am not a Sunday School and do not deal in gnostic currency.What measurable relationship to religious upbringing I have found, however, has been a collective ignorance of Biblical literacy. For eleven years now I have found it necessary to spend August through December of each year teaching my students the extensive glossary of terms, concepts, and ideas I use the remainder of the year to teach the philosophy and skills sets of the courses my students are required to take. Each year I come across exceptional students, and the ones who remain with me year after year far surpass the knowledge and understanding of the new student who is drowning in the terminology and expressions I use in order to teach. The majority of my new students are woefully behind before they even begin the first day of school.For example, out of ten new students, five will know the Bible's name for the first man (Adam), two will know the meaning of his name ("red" or "earth"), and none will know that his name is singular as well as plural.It is clear that amongst "Bible-believing people" Biblical literacy takes second place to evangelical intent. The gnostic motive in evangelical culture is to "get everybody saved" so there are fewer people in Hell. Or the gnostic motive is to "get everybody saved" so our "christian" nation can be "Christian" once more. Again, I am not sure how to "measure" the ambiguity of such endeavors. Certainly "christianity" and "Christianity" are both rooted in what you do and definitely not only in what you think. The integration point between the internal life and the external life is action (T. Harv Eker). In this country belief tends to be associated with what you think. The funny thing is that the Christian does not do much Christian thinking about much other than to "know 100% for certain" that he is going to heaven. That is all the Bible seems to be good for in his mind (Oh, and to "live right"). Everything else is essentially superfluous.
I was reading BUSH AT WAR by Bob Woodward a few years ago and came across a particularly interesting section. In chapter five on page 58 & 59, Woodward explains that it was the joint job of Colin Powell and Richard Armitage to draft up a list of demands for Pakistan who was believed to be harboring Bin Laden, the designer of 9/11. Look at the list of demands they drafted. It immediately brought to mind a Biblical pattern I know well:
DAYS OF CREATION // U.S. DEMANDS ON PAKISTAN1. Division of Light & Darkness // 1. Stop Al Qaeda operatives at your border.2. Division of Above and Below // 2. Blanket overflight and landing rights.3. Division of Land and Water // 3. Access to Pakistan, naval, air bases, borders.4. Celestial Bodies // 4. Immediate intelligence, immigration information.5. Calling of Swarms of Fish & Flocks of Birds // 5. Condemn September 11 attacks.6. Formation of Land Animals & Man // 6. Stop Pakistani volunteers from joining Taliban.7. Rest from Creation // 7. Break relations with Taliban.Is this a coincidence? At one point in his life someone connected to the White House learned a relevant pattern and leveraged it (True, he or she could have made an intelligent guess). Whichever is true, this list prioritized a series of events that resulted in a decade-long war. If a Biblically literate pattern is reliable enough to prioritize a national move that cost (at this very minute) 7,240 lives and $1,199,204,500,000, then how much more is it absolutely important that we and our offspring put our full weight on legitimate Biblical literacy?