For the purpose of discipleship
I recently had a healthy discussion with someone over email. I really appreciated the heart of the person I was interacting with. We can never have enough people trying to protect the hearts and minds of college-age people.
We talked about how college-age people are very open minded when it comes to belief and they can so easily be influenced by wrong theology/thinking. Our conversation was really in the context of reading books by authors teaching different doctrine than we would personally hold to.
I’ve had many students reading books I disagreed with the conclusions of. This is typical of college-age people. I actually even think it can be healthy. They are formulating their own belief system and a part of that is reading other people’s thoughts. And there is little more appealing than other views that expand their thinking!
We can step back and “boo-hoo” the idea that our students are reading certain books…or, we can read the book with a shepherds heart that wants to guide our people toward biblically mature conclusions. I personally choose the latter.
In the college ministry world I’d say that reading what they’re reading, knowing what it says FOR YOURSELF, and then helping them think through it is a great way to guide thinking. The fact is they’re going to read it whether we agree or not! Standing back and arrogantly pointing our finger at people, I think, teaches them something just as or even more dangerous.
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Thursday I had a cool experience too. The
It was also interesting to see the inside of the van. We showed the kids the van – they loved it. Then, he pulled out a HUGE flat screen out from behind the driver seat! What!? I had to take a picture of it. I laughed and jokingly said, “Well, now I know why you guys charge so much for the
I guess
If you or any of your students are thinking through the differences between Protestant and Roman Catholic faith (which many college-age people are) there is a VERY