Scripture Union
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Scripture Union (SU) is an international, inter-denominational, evangelical Christian movement. It was founded in 1867, and works in partnership with individuals and churches across the world. The movement's stated aim is to use the Bible to inspire children, young people and adults to know God.
SU's work is carried out through local people in ways which are seen as appropriate to each country, culture and situation in which a movement is based. This can include running camps, and missions (e.g. holiday beach mission), working in schools and with student groups or producing resources for Bible reading, family counselling, AIDS education, urban children and youth ministry and ministry to the handicapped.
Scripture Union is an autonomous organisation in each country, linked together by Scripture Union International. It is primarily a volunteer organisation with a small number of full-time staff training, encouraging and coordinating ministry workers around the world.
[edit] Origins
- Josiah Spiers at Islington, London (2nd of June, 1867)
Fifteen children aged between seven and twelve joined together in the evening at the house of Thomas 'Pious' Hughes (309 Essex Road, London). They were joined by Josiah Spiers who sang, taught the children hymns and choruses and told them stories of Jesus. It was also so lively, so informal and so very different from the boring sermons they had sat through at the dry-as-dust Sunday Schools they attended normally that all the children returned the following week with some of their friends.
- Josiah Spiers at Islington, London (8th of December, 1867)
By November 17, the Hughes' had a capacity crowd of fifty children in their front room. They needed a larger auditorium, so on the 8th the Children's Special Service Mission (CSSM) opened in a school-house in Islington with sixty-five children. The movement also acquired a name which continued being its title for nearly a hundred years.
- Josiah Spiers at Llandudno, North Wales (26th of August, 1868)
Josiah was on holiday at the seaside at Llandudno in North Wales. Holidays by the seaside were a new fashion in England at the time, and the beach was crowded with children. So Josiah saw an opportunity. He called a group of children to him and suggested that they should make a text in the sand. He marked out the letters "God is Love" with a spade. When the text was finished, he told Bible stories to the children. The first Scripture Union beach service had been held. - Annie Marston at Keswick (1879)
There was a young Sunday School teacher at Keswick, in the north of England, who wanted to encourage the children in her Sunday School class to read the Bible each day. Every Sunday she wrote out lists of passages for them to read. The next Sunday she discussed the passages with them, and answered their questions. As time went by, more and more children asked for the list of passages, so Annie Marston wrote to Scripture Union (still with the name CSSM = Children Special Service Mission) in London suggesting that they should print the list of Bible passages for children to read. The first reaction of the General Secretary and the Committee was negative. But Annie kept on writing to London, and eventually they gave way. The first Scripture Union Bible reading card appeared on 1 April 1879 with 6,000 members, all children. It was an immediate success and within months there were members as far away as Belgium, Spain and Russia. By 1887 there were 328,000 members in the UK alone.
- Two students at Littlehampton (1892)
It is hard to believe nowadays, when Christian camps for children and young people are commonplace all over the world, that this was unknown until the 1890s. It was two students from Cambridge University, who came up with the idea for a camp. They wrote: "Our plan is as follows: to collect together as many as possible in tents, to provide for them all the sports and amusements dear to the heart of boys, and while in the midst of these enjoyments, to influence them more by example than by words." It is reported "that on the last night some of the most unlikely ones, who had come to camp as a joke, told how they found Christ that week".
- Tom Bishop's statement on the Bible (1894)
In the 1890s a number of Christian organisations in the west began to change their message. The influence of rationalistic Biblical criticism, originating in Germany, was spreading widely. Scripture Union had always been willing to experiment with new methods of evangelism. The question was whether they should change their message as well. Tom Bishop and the English Committee gave a great deal of thought to the issue. In 1894 they issued a long clear statement on their attitude to the Bible, which was published every year in the Annual report. This helped to keep the movement on course, at a time when several similar organisations in England and in other countries were turning aside.
- John Laird at Old Jordans (1960)
At 1960 there was the first International conference. Up to then, Scripture Union, with a few exceptions, was run from England. Old Jordans changed all that, and turned SU into a family of equal, autonomous National movements. Everybody agreed that SU should become a family of autonomous National movements, kept together with a small framework in which the National movements could cooperate. The conference also agreed to form Regional councils, to which all National movements could belong as equal members, and an International council to link together the various Regional councils. It was clearly understood that the International council would not exercise control over the Regional councils, but would provide guidance and leadership, and would be a means of liaison between them. And finally the conference agreed on statements of our aims, beliefs and working principles as framework for all National movements.
[edit] National organisations
"Scripture Union has a black face, blond hair, wears a kimono and speaks Spanish" - Paul Clark, Harare, 1985
Scripture Union exists as a growing family of national movements in more than 130 countries around the world. They all submit to the same aims and beliefs and working principles, but organise their work in a range of ways appropriate to the country, culture and situation in which the movements is based.
View a full list of all the national movements.