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It is the purpose of this article to explain why we maintain
a Christian School, and why it is
necessary for believing Christian parents to provide Christian education
for their children.
The Christian School in History
The Christian school is no new thing. It has a long
and honorable tradition. What is new is the
willingness of parents who confess Christ to have their children
educated in schools from which God's
Word is rigorously banned. During the centuries before the
birth of Jesus Christ, the Word of God was
central in the instruction which the people of God gave to their
children, as God Himself commanded in
Deuteronomy 6:6-9. The education provided for the children
of the Church during the 1400 years between
the time of the apostles and the time of the Reformation of the
Church in A.D. 1517 was permeated with the
Word of God. In this period, the schools were closely connected
with the Church. After 1517, the
Reformers, notable among whom were Martin Luther and John Calvin,
were agreed in their zeal for the
establishment of schools in which all the children might receive
an education. Their concern for schools
was only surpassed by their concern for the Church herself.
But they were also one in their insistence that
these schools be founded upon and ruled by the Word of God, the
Bible. Those early citizens of our own
country who set up schools and universities that were intended to
be Christian continued the long tradition
of the Christian School.
What Is A Christian School?
A Christian School is not to be confused with a Sunday School,
or with any other institution that
exists to give children instruction in the Bible. The Christian
School is an institution which has the function
of instructing children in the various departments of knowledge
which also constitute the curriculum of the
public school: reading, history, science, math, and other
subjects. It does this seven hours a day, five days
a week, throughout the school year. This raises the question:
What is the distinctive feature of the Christian
School, which warrants its existence as a separate educational institution?
The Christian School certainly
does begin each day's classes with prayer to God and with the reading
of the Bible. It does this under the
conviction that nothing which man does is profitable unless God
blesses it. Everything must be "sanctified
by the Word of God and prayer" I Timothy 4:5. However,
these activities of prayer and bible reading,
although they are important, are not the main reasons for the existence
of the Christian School. the
distinctive feature of the Christian School is expressed in the
word Christian. It is a school which is
Christian throughout. It has a Christian foundation; it has
Christian teachers; it gives Christian instruction;
it provides a Christian moral environment' it has a Christian goal.
All of this must be briefly explained.
The Bible Is The Word of God
The starting point is our firm faith that the bible is the inspired
Word of God. The bible itself teaches this:
"All scripture is given by inspiration of God . . ." II Timothy
3:16. As the Word of God written, the Bible is
the authority for our faith and our life. To believe and live
according to God's Word is the mark of a
Christian. A Christian School, therefore, is a school which
is founded upon and in every respect in harmony
with the Scriptures, the written Word of God.
Instruction of the Children of Believers
God in His Word calls those who believe in Jesus Christ to
bring their children up "in the nurture
and admonition of the Lord" Ephesians 6:4. The total upbringing,
or rearing, of the children of believers
must be an upbringing that has God as its source, as its standard,
as its goal and as its center. It must be an
upbringing in Jesus Christ, for it is Jesus Who is "Lord."
It must be Christian. In calling believing parents
to this task, the New Testament repeats the emphatic teaching of
the Old. Included in this required Godly
upbringing is the education of the children in the schools.
The education of the children in the schools is an
important part of their upbringing, both from the viewpoint of the
nature and power of education and from
the viewpoint of the huge amount of time given over to this education
in the children's lives.
The reason for God's requirement that the children of believers
be reared in a Christian way is
God's gracious salvation of these children in Christ. Both
Old and New Testaments teach that God saves
believers and their children. In Genesis 17:7 God promised
to Abraham "to be a God unto thee, and to thy
seed after thee." In Acts 2:39, Peter assures the believers
of the New Testament time that "the promise is
unto you, and to your children . . ." the children of believing
parents, by God's gracious appointment,
belong to the Church of Christ, and are regarded and addressed as
members of the Church in the New
Testament epistles, e.g., Ephesians 6:1-3 and Colossians 3:20.
As covenant children, the children of believers belong to
Jesus Christ entirely, with all they are and
with all the talents and abilities they possess. He has bought
them, soul and body, by His death on the cross.
Therefore, He may rightfully claim them for Himself in their entirety.
As covenant children, the children of
believers have as the one and only purpose of their lives the knowledge
and praise of God, Who is revealed
in His Word and in His creation.
All of the instruction given these children must serve this
purpose.
Teaching The Truth
The Christian School is established to give the students a
sound education in all the branches of
human knowledge. It is not satisfied with anything less than
the most thorough academic training. To that
end, it hires qualified teachers (those with degrees from state
accredited colleges and universities, usually);
it uses the best textbooks; it maintains a classroom and personal
discipline that is most conducive to the
highest degree of learning; and generally makes every effort possible
to promote the instruction of the
children. This is directly related to the foundation of the
school. The mind, talents, abilities and time of the
children are Christ's and must be developed and used to the maximum
for His sake.
In all of this instruction, however, the Christian School
is concerned to teach the truth. Although
the Christian School does not exist to give instruction in the Bible,
all of the instruction which it does give
in all of the areas of learning is based upon the Word of God, is
ruled by the Word of God, and is in
harmony with the Word of God. In every subject, not only in
"religion," the truth is God. The truth about
every aspect of this creation, including man and his doings, is
its relationship to God, the Creator, Ruler,
and Judge of the world. What does it reveal of God, Who framed
the worlds by His Word (Hebrews 11:3)
and Who made all things to show forth His glory (Revelation 4:11)?
This is the basic question in every
subject. And it is God's Word, the Bible, that sheds light
on every branch of knowledge.
The bible is no textbook for science, math, history or any
other academic subject. Nevertheless, it
is the essential basis for teaching the truth of all subjects.
It is the essential basis for teaching the truth in
science. It condemns the theory of evolution. Evolution
is not a correct, accurate description of how the
world came into being. More than this, it is not the truth,
but is rather the lie, in the sense that it denies God
and intends to rob Him of His rightful glory. Instruction
in science that is based on Scripture is able to give
the true account of the beginning of the world in its creation by
God in six days. The Bible is also the basis
for the teaching of the truth in the field of history. it
forbids representing history as the slow
(evolutionistic!) development of the human race from lowly origins
in the animal world to lofty destinies in
some perfected society on earth. Scripture reveals that the
history of the human race is to be viewed as the
life and labor of men who have fallen into sin and who are therefore
enemies in their very nature of God and
one another. The wars and catastrophes that plague mankind
are not regrettable evils which man will
overcome, but the consequences of sin and the judgments of God upon
the sinners. There is hope for peace
and life and glory, not from man himself, but from God in Jesus
Christ, and from Him alone.
These are fundamental principles of education.
To ban the Bible from schools is to prohibit the truth.
To have the bible as the basis of the
instruction makes the teaching of the truth possible. In the
schools, too, "the fear of the Lord is the
beginning of knowledge" Proverbs 1:7.
The Moral Environment of the School
Without denying that the responsibility of instructing the
children how they ought to live morally
belongs to the home and to the Church, the school will inevitable
engage in some degree of training the
children in behavior and conduct. In fact, the school in its
totality will possess a certain moral environment
in which the children work and play. The very instruction
itself must tend towards influencing the children's
ethical attitudes and behavior. When all of the instruction
is God centered, the love and fear of God is
stirred up in the children's hearts. In addition, the Christian
School points out to the child that in all the
relationships of life he is called to love and fear and, therefore,
obey God. This is the very foundation of
morality. Out of thankful love to God and His Christ, he is
also to honor his parents, submit to his teachers,
subject himself to the State, live purely, love his neighbors on
the playground, and work at his studies to the
best of his ability.
For this reason, the Christian School is not a threat to the
state. It most urgently and consistently
binds upon the children and youth that they submit themselves to
the authority of the government, honor the
authorities (from the president to the local policemen), and do
all this "not only for wrath, but also for
conscience sake" Romans 13:5. The Christian School abominates
the current revolutions among the young
and in the schools, and will not tolerate them. It trains
young people to be citizens that willing do their duty
to the State.
The Responsibility For Educating
Since the calling of God to instruct their children comes
to the parents, it is the responsibility of the
parents to provide their children's education. In Ephesians
6:4, the Word of God addresses "ye fathers,"
when it says, "bring them (your children) up in the nurture and
admonition of the Lord." this is in harmony
with the fact that God gives the children to the parents and the
fact that the children belong to the parents.
The Christian School does justice to this parental responsibility
for the education of their children
in that it is established and maintained and governed by an association
of parents. It is this association, and
thus the parents themselves, that have and exercise the authority
over the entire school, its instruction and
operations. The parents are able, therefore, to see to it
personally that the School is and remains in every
respect Christian. Nor is this an incidental matter.
The current crisis in the schools of our land stems in part
from the failure of the parents to execute their responsibility,
choosing instead to shrug the duty of
educating off on the State and its instructors.
We do not view this task as only a responsibility. It
is a joyful work and a privilege.
The Reward
There are special hardships involved in the maintenance of
a Christian School. One is the extra
financial burden. Parents must pay double. They pay
for the support of the non-Christian, State schools,
and they pay for the Christian Schools. But the sacrifice
is not worthy to be compared with the reward.
The reward is implied in the proverb, "Train up a child in
the way he should go; and when he is
old, he will not depart from it" Proverbs 22:6. it is a joyful
work to be instrumental in training covenant
children to live and work in this world as those that see and seek
the Lord our God in everything. It is a
privilege to strive to the uttermost that the children and youth
neither ignore nor deny God in "earthly
things," but, in and with all things "earthly," confess God's name
and direct all to His honor.
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