Your Bible May Be Worth $100,000!

Senior1Under the bright stage lights, Daniel Staddon, 18, a home-schooler from Salem, W.Va., squeezed his eyes shut as he recited verse after verse from the Bible at the inaugural National Bible Bee.  He recited the first 20 verses of the fifth chapter of Ephesians and the 21 verses of Psalm 145 in the tie-breaker round, winning first place and a $100,000 prize.

Sifted from more than 17,000 students ages 7 to 18, the National Bible Bee finals grilled 21 children on their knowledge of Scripture. The five-hour finals were preceded by regional competitions in 49 of the 50 states in September, oral contests and SAT-like tests for 300 contestants.

The Bible bee, which required the mastery of six books of the Bible, was inspired by Shelby Kennedy, a Texas woman who died at 23 of a rare form of cancer in 2005. An anonymous benefactor was inspired when he learned at her memorial service of her commitment to Scripture memorization, and he donated money for the Shelby Kennedy Foundation to launch the bee.

The bee, attended predominantly by home-schoolers and members of evangelical churches, marks a new juncture in Bible memorization. Southern Baptist children do Bible drills, and Awana clubs at evangelical churches engage in Scripture memorization, but the tradition has faded elsewhere.

Pamela Braithwaite, office manager of Scripture Memory Fellowship in St. Louis, recalled winning a trophy in a church Bible bee as a teenager in 1971, but she said such activities have dwindled over the years. David Bunker, a spokesman for Chicago-based Awana, said his organization supports the bee and hopes that it will help reinvigorate Bible memorization.

Despite the spiritual emphasis — contestants’ T-shirts read “Building character . . . one Bible verse at a time” — some participants did admit that, at least at first, the thousands of dollars in prize money was a draw.  Staddon, too, said the $100,000 prize was an attraction. He said that he expects to use it for housing and schooling but that he will have to “ask the Lord” for advice.

As fellow contestants clamored around him after the bee’s awards banquet, he said he kept one of the Ten Commandments in mind as he studied the Bible passages.  “You have to say them every day,” he said in between signing autographs. “I wouldn’t say them on Sundays since Sunday was a day of rest.”

From The Washington Post

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