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Yes, but I think very few people would come. Too many Catholics (and Protestants) have sports and other events on Sunday, and tend to attend Mass on Saturday evening. I’m not criticizing that–I think it’s a good thing to be busy, and I honestly don’t know what else the sports leagues would do. They can’t hold their tournaments and competitions during the week when children are in school and parents working. So that leaves the weekends.Cat-
I believe that the Catholic Church would benefit from setting up Sunday School in each parish just like you see in the mainline Protestant denominations. (For those of you who are cradle Catholics, Sunday School is for ADULTS and kids.)
What do you think?
Sunday school is decreasing in attendance in Evangelical Protestant churches. As a result, the megachurches are holding “church” every evening during the week, and all the people are part of “cell groups” who meet in homes throughout the week. I’m not sure this is a good thing, because artificially-created groups tend to fall apart.
In the past, the method of teaching Catholic children the basics of their faith has been in the parish schools. I’m guessing that in most parishes, if they even have a parish school, a relatively small percentage of the children attend the parish school.
I have to admit, I am appalled by the lack of knowledge of Catholic AND Protestant children when it comes to the Bible stories!
I’m not talking about Bible characters like Jael and Sisera. I’m talking about the basic Bible characters–Daniel, David, Joshua, Moses–it’s dreadful!
So IMO, what would be really fun for Catholic parishes is to establish an all-parish BIBLE QUIZZING program.
Challenge ALL ages to study and learn the Bible stories, and then do fun competitions (with plenty of food!) during which the various groups go head-to-head. Winners get some little prize --probably just a mention in the church bulletin.
It’s so much fun.
A few years ago, I taught one of my original Bible songs to the parish children’s choir. The song was about Daniel, and I quickly realized that the kids didn’t know the story. So I challenged them. I gave them a list of a dozen questions to look up in the Bible and answer about Daniel. Then I told them that the following week, I would do a “quiz-off” with boys vs. girls.
Wow, did those kids study!
It was obvious to me in the quiz-off that most of the kids knew the answer backwards and forwards, and could even quote the chapter and verse!
I believe the boys won, but I gave a consolation prize to the girls (boys each got two pieces of candy, girls got one, and I gave really good candy!).
So I think this would work.
Another approach that I think would work is for the Catholic Church in the U.S. to work with Child Evangelism Fellowship so that the absolutely excellent Good News Club could be offered to Catholic children without the “proselytizing” that is part of CEF. Perhaps it wouldn’t work. But IMO, the very BEST Bible stories are done by CEF–the year that I taught the Life of David, I learned so much!
Finally, it would be best if the stories were taught to the children by their parents. But their parents don’t know the stories.
So SOMETHING needs to happen. I’m not sure what.
Our pastor challenged our parish to LEARN the Bible stories this year. I wish I knew what to do to help make it happen. I love the Bible stories, and I think quizzing would be a fun way to learn them. But I don’t know how others would take this.