A couple of years ago I was chatting with
one of the college lecturers, and he remarked: “If you wanted to catch up
with the people in your church you didn’t need to do a diploma. I could have
taught you in an afternoon what they know.”
He was being cynical, but truth lay in
his words. The decline in biblical literacy in our culture has been
startling. Here is what theologian
Professor George Lindbeck has written:
The decline of
biblical literacy has been abrupt and pervasive. Language, culture and
imagination have also been debiblicised at a remarkable rate….The decline
affects intellectuals and non-intellectuals, the religious and the
non-religious, those inside the churches and those outside, clergy and laity
and…Bible-loving conservatives as well as purportedly less biblical
liberals. ….When I first arrived at Yale, even those who came from
non-religious backgrounds knew the Bible better than most of those now who
come from churchgoing families.
Though I came from a non-Christian
family, I found I knew lots of minor details about the Bible when - nearly
10 years ago - I first set foot inside my local Baptist church.
I knew, for example, that there were an
Old and a New Testament and 10 commandments. I knew the names of the four
gospels as well as plenty about the life of Jesus. I could recite the Lord’s
Prayer. And I knew about many of the characters, stories, expressions and
proverbs from the Bible.
I guess this was partly because I had
travelled a lot – not least with six months in Israel, exploring my Jewish
roots – and had accumulated many life experiences, including for some years
a deep involvement in Zen Buddhism.
Also, I had always been a bookish,
studious person. When I was at primary school in New Zealand, in the 1950s,
we had 30 minutes of (non-compulsory) religious education each week (as do
primary school kids still, here in Melbourne). One day the Congregational
minister who taught us announced a contest, to see who could most accurately
write down the Lord’s Prayer.
The winner? – Me, one of the few kids in
the class who never went to Sunday School.
In any case, I find that some other
non-Christian people my age also know a lot about the Bible. And younger
people too often know little. I think it’s a disaster. To quote George
Lindbeck again:
Every major literate
cultural tradition up until now has had a central corpus of canonical
texts.…Without a shared imaginative and conceptual vocabulary and syntax,
societies cannot be held together by communication, but only by brute force
(which is always inefficient, and likely to be a harbinger of anarchy). But
if this is so, then the biblical cultural contribution, which is at the
heart of the canonical heritage of Western countries, is indispensable to
their welfare, and its evisceration bespeaks an illness which may be
terminal.
December 10th, 2002