

#143 Is Orange Children’s Curriculum Going Progressive?
8 snips Mar 10, 2022
Krista Bontrager, a theologian with a YouTube ministry, Natasha Crain, an author focused on a biblical worldview, and Monique Duson, co-founder of the Center for Biblical Unity, dive deep into the implications of the Orange Curriculum on children's faith. They discuss the potential creep of progressive ideas into church teachings and emphasize the importance of preserving core Christian beliefs. Engaging insights on navigating secular challenges, racial reconciliation, and the critical need for robust discipleship shape their compelling conversation.
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Felt vs. Real Needs in Orange Curriculum
- The Orange Children's Curriculum focuses heavily on meeting children's felt needs rather than their real spiritual needs.
- It emphasizes self-affirmation and behavior over deep biblical discipleship and gospel truth.
Risk of Moralistic Bible Teaching
- The Orange Curriculum's teaching often reduces Bible stories to moral lessons focused on self-improvement.
- This approach risks teaching moralism rather than the full gospel and biblical truth.
Orange: Church and Family Partnership
- The Orange Curriculum's name reflects a partnership: the church (yellow/light) and family (red/love) join to disciple children.
- This model aims to combine influences to shape children's faith throughout life stages.