Introduction:
Christianity is a religious belief system
based on the teachings revealed by ‘Jesus Christ’. The central tenet of
Christianity is the belief in Jesus as
the Son of God and the Messiah (Christ). The title "Messiah" comes from
the Hebrew word מָשִׁיחַ (māšiáħ)
meaning anointed one. The Greek translation Χριστός (Christos)
is the source of the English word "Christ"
.
Definition:
According
to Webster dictionary
Christian-
following the teachings or manifesting the qualities or spirit of Jesus Christ.
A Christian Philosophy of Education
From a
Christian philosophy of education, thoughts and actions can be derived, implemented,
and defended. The elements to be considered in developing a Christian
philosophy of education range from theological and doctrinal to social and
educational. The first step is the development of a Biblical base. The Bible
becomes the skeleton on which the practical application of our philosophy can
be arranged.
The
Biblical Base
A
God-centered pattern of education demands that the Christian educator spell out
clearly the processes involved in the total structure of the curriculum. This
means all procedures and processes must be based on a definite theory of
knowledge.
Since
education deals primarily with the communication of knowledge, the defining of
knowledge of truth becomes important. Knowledge may be defined as an
understanding or a clear perception of truth. The Biblical view of knowledge
presupposes a source of all knowledge, for knowledge is dependent on truth; and
truth, in turn, is dependent on God. All avenues of knowledge stem from God.
God, Himself, is truth, and has chosen to reveal Himself through natural
revelation and special revelation.
The
implications of having a God-centered theory of knowledge as a base for the
philosophy of education are clear. Since god is the source of all truth, then
all truth is God's truth.
Since God
is central in the universe and is the source of all truth, it follows that all
subject matter is related to God. Thus, the revelation of God must become the
heart of the subject matter curriculum. The Bible itself becomes the central
subject in the school' curriculum. It, as God's primary revelation to man, must
become the integrating and correlating factor in all that is thought and taught
at the school. It is the basis by which all other channels of knowledge are
evaluated and used. Through the bible the inter-relatedness of all other
subjects and truths is made possible.
We may
conclude therefore that the function of the bible in the subject matter
curriculum is two-fold. First, it provides content of its own. Second, it
provides a service function to the other subjects. The principles of Biblical
truth should be applied to and in all other subjects. Claim to truth from other
areas should be tested and evaluated by the philosophical and theological
truths of the Word of God.
In summary
some of the advantages of having a Biblical philosophy of education are as
follows:
- It co-ordinates the various
spheres of life as a whole.
- It relates knowledge
systematically.
- It examines the
presuppositions, methods, and basic concepts of each discipline and group
of disciplines.
- It strives for coherence, the
formulation of a worldview.
- Its method is to consult data
from the total experience.
Christian Philosophy and Metaphysics
The Christian philosophy view of metaphysics—of ultimate reality (ontology and cosmology)—is part of what C.S. Lewis termed “Mere Christianity.” There are certain things virtually all Christians believe, and one is that God is the supreme source of all being and reality. He is the ultimate reality. Because of this, we and the entire space-time creation, says Carl F.H. Henry, depend on the Creator-God “for its actuality, its meaning and its purpose.”1 This creation is intelligible because God is intelligent and we can understand the creation and Creator because He made us in His image with the capacity to understand Him and His intelligent order.
The Christian philosophy view of metaphysics—of ultimate reality (ontology and cosmology)—is part of what C.S. Lewis termed “Mere Christianity.” There are certain things virtually all Christians believe, and one is that God is the supreme source of all being and reality. He is the ultimate reality. Because of this, we and the entire space-time creation, says Carl F.H. Henry, depend on the Creator-God “for its actuality, its meaning and its purpose.”1 This creation is intelligible because God is intelligent and we can understand the creation and Creator because He made us in His image with the capacity to understand Him and His intelligent order.
The Epistemology of Christianity
Epistemology is the branch of
philosophy which deals with knowledge. Epistemology is the analysis of the
certainty of what we claim as truth. Christians
often tell us that they have a special kind of epistemology which gives them a
conduit to some divine truth, to which we mere mortals are not privy. These
kinds are usually one of three: Biblical infallibility, “divine intervention”
(miracles) and divine revelation.
Axiology
Axiology is the task of assigning
value to beauty. As such it is a broad category that encompasses many different
philosophical disciplines. To assign a value-judgment to a work of art as being
either “good” or “bad” is, in essence, a judgment from an ethical viewpoint.
Consequently, one’s views on ethical matters will greatly determine what one
accepts as artistic or beautiful.
WHAT IS
CHRISTIAN EDUCATION?
Ideally
there should be a healthy triangular relationship between three role-players -
the parents, the church and the school. While the parents are the pivotal
role-players (Deut. 6:7-9), this triangular relationship sets up an
accountability structure as follows:
1.
|
The Church preaches
Biblical doctrine and truth, which forms the theological foundation of the
school and the family. They encourage and guide parents, from Scripture, to
take up their Biblical responsibility to educate and raise their children in
the fear of the LORD. At its heart Christianity is a teaching religion -
Jesus Christ is referred to as "Teacher" (John 3:2), the Holy
Spirit's ministry includes teaching (John 14:26) and the Great Commission
includes "teaching them to observe all things I have commanded you"
(Math. 28:20). Christianity and the Church have always supported education.
|
2.
|
The parents are the
primary role-players in the child's education, discipline and rearing in the
fear of the LORD. They support their child going to Church, heeding the Word
of the LORD as well as in receiving an education.
|
3.
|
The school expounds
on the Biblical Worldview, looking at all areas of life, including from
mathematics, to the sciences, to the languages and the arts from a Biblical
Christian perspective. This is to equip the Christian child to take dominion
for Christ and His Kingdom. It really is an extension of the parent's mandate
to "train up a child in the way he should go (according to his
character, calling and God-given talents), and when he is old he will not
depart from it" (Prov. 22:6) and the Church's mandate to "make
disciples of all nations" (Math. 28:19).
All three key role-players re-enforce one another and eradicate the mixed-messages between the values of the Church and home been put against the secular humanist values of the public school. They mutually support godly discipline and therefore reduce delinquency and increase Christ-like character. Godly discipline allows for greater learning, hence greater academic achievements. It is important that parents be the main governors of schools to keep accountability to a maximum. All three are subject to Word of God. |
The
Role of the Educator
The
Christian educator or teacher is to be a guide or resource person in the
wonderful experience of learning. He is to be neither a drill sergeant nor a
manipulator, but rather, a facilitator of learning. His learners must know that
he cares about them. The educator must have experienced the reality of what his
is attempting to teach or else he is just a blind man leading blind men.
This is
why the school or college that would develop a Christ-centered and Biblically
grounded program must fly from its masthead this standard: 'No Christian
education without Christian teachers', and must never, under any condition,
pull its colors down. Compromise of this issue, always results in the
progressive de-Christianizing of an institution.
The nature
of the teaching process gives us some clues as to the function of the teacher.
As a Christian educator the teacher must be both a Christian and an educator.
As a Christian he has experienced the reality of God's truth, and he has god's
Spirit to empower him and his teaching. As an educator he functions in
accordance with the mandate of God to teach in accord with the educational
principles contained in the Word of God. Educate means to change one's
behavior.
In the
book of 1 Corinthians, Paul exhorts his readers to be followers of him as he is
of Christ. This must be true of the teachers too, for as leaders they must
exemplify what they are trying to teach. They must be sprit-filled men of God.
Six
Qualifications for a Spirit-filled Teacher are:
- The teacher is the communicator
of truth, he must be openly and boldly a Christian.
- Every teacher must know the
bible. Because the Word of God is relevant to all subjects.
- The Christian teacher must be
committed in every aspect of his life and work, in all his being, to the
truth.
- The teacher must seek
excellence. This is a seeking after intellectual excellence to the glory
of God, and a Christian teacher should be content with nothing less than
superiority in this area.
- The Christian teacher must
truly love his students, seeking their highest good even when at times the
way may be hard. Not only should he love his students, he should genuinely
like and understand them.
- Finally, the Christian teacher
should exercise complete submission to the one great teacher. Every
teacher must listen to the Lord, and the Holy Spirit, for his lessons and
never should he think that he does not need to be taught of Him.
A very
helpful summary concerning the teaching role is give by Dr. Roy Zuck. His five
points fairly well sum up what the Bible expects of its educators:
- Remember that Christian
education is a supernatural task.-The presence of God's Holy Spirit in
teaching takes Christian education beyond mere programming, methodology,
and techniques.
- A teacher is to rely on the
Holy spirit.-Seen in light of the Spirit's teaching ministry, Christian
education demands you be submissive to the guidance and direction of the
Spirit. Teachers must work with God, not against Him.
- Teachers are to relate God's
Word to the pupil's experiences.-A proper understanding of the work of the
Holy Spirit provides Christian teachers with a balanced, blended approach
to the question of content and experience.
- Teachers are to rest satisfied
with nothing less than spiritual results.-A teacher must constantly test
his teaching to see if it's resulting in spiritual growth on the part of
his pupils.
- Teachers must recognize that,
in the final sense, God, the Holy Spirit, is the teacher.-It is God who
does the teaching, a teacher is merely a channel of His grace, an
instrument doing the planting and watering. The spiritual effectiveness of
a teacher's work rests ultimately with the Holy Spirit.1
The
Role of the Learner
The
learner represents the challenge to the Christian educational process. Each
believer brings to class a personal set of needs, wants, and goals. Each is
looking for fulfillment and growth in his own personal and spiritual life.
Every learner starts with his own basic needs, thus the educator must seek to
motivate the learner to discover and apply God's provisions to his life. In
Christian education true learning comes as the learner experiences the wonder
of God's truth applied to his life.
The pupil
is to be considered as an individual, a person of worth, as god sees us as
individuals. His personal experiences and knowledge have value. He is a
responsible member of a learning group, having something to contribute and
something to learn.
"A
pupil's growth is determined not by what he hears, but by what he does about
what he hears. The important thing is what is happening inside the pupil. He
may accept or he may reject whatever is going on outside. Learning is what the
pupil does and what the outer forces do to him. Teachers can influence the
inner factors only by properly using the outer factors. If a teacher will work
with the Spirit of God, He can use him to effect the desired inner
changes."2
Biblical
Foundations for Christian Education
- God's revelation is the basis
for all truth (Luke 11:52; Proverbs 1:7)
- Parental responsibility is the
priority control (Deut. 6; Ephesians 6; Genesis 18:17-19)
- The example of early Christians
(Acts)
- Significance of the Holy Spirit
in the life of the teacher (John 16:13; 1 John 5:19-21)
- Christian Education is
education for the whole man (Proverbs 22:6)
- God's education is always in
contrast to man's education (Colossians 2:8)
- Biblical Education requires a
submission of all intellect and will to the Lordship of Christ (1 Cor.
1:18-31; 2 Cor. 10:5)
- What is Christian Education?
(Acts 8:31:31; Jn. 16:13; 1 Tim. 4:6; Eph. 6:4; Prov. 22:6; Jn. 1:18; 2
Peter 3:18)
- Pattern of teaching involves:
- Introduction: intrigues
interest in investigation (Jn. 4-7).
- Interpretation: defines in
framework of known to unknown (Jn. 4:10-14)
- Interaction: encourages
participation deepening impressions (Jn. 4:15)
- Integration: assimilates new
truth into enlarged life (Jn. 4:29)
- Manner of instruction is:
- More than telling or showing;
engaging in participation (Matt. 22:19)
- Many times unconscious in
effort as well conscious (Matt. 22:16)
- Multiplied in various
activities as worship, camp, play, etc. (Matt. 5:1; 21, 28)
- Manifested by imparting,
counseling, discussing, living! (Matt. 22;16)
- The Student...
- Personality with attitudes,
desires, knowledge, skills, etc (Jn. 2:23-25)
- Created in the image of God
(Gen. 1:27)
- Marred by sin (Rom. 3:23)
- Adorned with mental,
physical, spiritual, social interests.
- Learner, follower, disciple,
endowed with: (Matt. 5:1-2)
- Mind to discover, understand,
perceive truth confronted (Rom. 1:14)
- Heart to appreciate, desire
truth made attractive (Phil. 1:8-10)
- Will to appreciate, respond
to truth and opportunity (Jn. 7:17)
- Through Experiences...Will to
do His Will (Eph. 1:17)
- Education involves a
teacher-pupil-subject-relationship
- Teacher introduces,
interests, explains, encourages (Jn. 4:7, 14)
- Pupil investigates,
appreciates, assimilates, acts (Jn. 4-15)
- Subject is truth around which
this interaction revolves (Jn. 4:26)
- Education takes place only
when truth is:
- Understood in the mind, not
mere mental assent or repetition (Acts 8:30-35)
- Related to previous
experience or fragmentary (Matt. 4:19)
- Related to life situation or
artificial (Matt. 4:20)
- Believed in the heart (the
entire being) (Acts. 8:37; Roman 10:9-10)
- Actualized into life (adopted
by will) (Acts 8:38; Prov. 3:6)
- Of Truth...(Jn. 14:6; 17:17)
- All truth is God's truth, but
received in portions (Col. 2:3; Heb. 1:1-2)
- Expressed in nature,
providence, Scriptures, Christ (Rom. 1:20; 2:15)
- Received by intuition,
experience, authority, reason, faith (Heb. 11:3)
- Holy Spirit illuminates,
providing super-rational truth (Jn. 16:13)
- Into a Life... (Jn. 20:31)
- Purpose of grace and truth is
conformity (Jas. 1:22f; 2 Cor. 3:18)
- Christ is not only truth but
life (Jn. 10:10; 14:6)
- Provision of truth is complete
(Rom. 8;32)
- Standard of measurement of
maturity is Christ (Eph. 4:13)
- Instructions are adequate in
Scriptures (2 Tim. 3:16-17)
- Power is provided in Gospel
(Rom. 1:16)
- Completed only when see Him
and become like Him (1 Jn. 3:2)
- Of Service... (Rom. 12:1-2)
- Meanwhile, God provides an
outlet for love (2 Cor. 5:14)
- And the world awaits its
demonstration (Jn. 13:35)
- To the Glory of God! (1 Cor.
10:31)
- That in all things He might
have the preeminence (Col. 1:18)
Roles and Responsibilities
Every profession has its “bottom line.” For the
Christian teacher, that bottom line is to apply a biblical philosophy of
education to the following seven classroom roles and responsibilities:
1. Knowledge of the students one is teaching
2. Knowledge of the course content
3. Knowledge and use of instructional skills
4. An ability to organize and
manage the classroom
5. Knowledge and skill in using media and
materials
6. Knowledge and skills in planning
7. Interpersonal skills
ROLE OF THE PARENTS
1. Christian parents need to
reorient their values and attitudes, for the sake of their children
2. Aggressively teach your
children Christian doctrine, for we do not know how long we will continue to
have custody of them. Do not put off any longer key teachings of doctrine
and of salvation. Pray daily for your children, praying a "hedge of
protection" [Job 1:10], even a "Wall of Fire" [Zechariah 2:5]
around them. Parents must hold their precious children up to the Lord
daily in prayer.
3. Teach your children that
they are not to divulge anything about what happens inside the home.
They are not to assume that an adult is their friend in whom they can
confide.
Role of Father
1. Spend time with your children. They grow up fast in this busy
life. Interact with homework, share work and projects around the house and go
to church as a family. This builds unity
and mutual love for God and you.
2. Build
up your children's self-esteem. Give confidence to your sons and daughters in
what they do.
3. Pray
together. Not only for special requests, mealtimes or holidays but for each
other's needs. This shows your concerns and teaches how God interacts with our
lives.
4. Read
the Bible as a family. A verse read by the children before meals then
discussing application insures God is in their life. A special day, perhaps
Sunday when a little time spent in God's word nurtures their faith and
understanding builds character. Truth is contained in Scripture and is gained
by study.
5. Know
that your children are observing you through times of stress and times of
happiness. They learn from your actions. Ask for forgiveness if a situation
warrants it. Be a Christian father that places his faith at the core of what he
does.
6. Take
inventory of your leadership skills.
7.
Discipline with care and grace. To be a Christian father means placing
boundaries around your children for their own welfare. Overreacting produces
alienation.
Role of Mother
1. A good mother has been historically expected to contribute
her whole life to her family. Mothers have been the glue that holds a family
together because it is up to them to provide the loving care and support needed
by growing children.
2. The mother spends the most
time with the children.
3.
Mothers have great influence over the character children develop because they
see her the most.
4. Fulfill your role
before God with diligence, love, honor, and wisdom.
ROLE OF THE STUDENTS
1. Children are to the best of their understanding love the LORD
God with all their heart and with all their soul and with all their might.
2. Children are to grow in wisdom and in stature and in favor with God and man. This is accomplished through learning the Word of God and eating and exercising and sleeping and obeying according to the wisdom of the Word of God.
3. Children are to honor their parents and be submissive to their will as long as it does not violate the Word of God.
4. Children are to love their neighbors, those around them, as themselves.
5. The roll of children is to go to school and respect their elders for if children don't do that the future society will be corrupt.
2. Children are to grow in wisdom and in stature and in favor with God and man. This is accomplished through learning the Word of God and eating and exercising and sleeping and obeying according to the wisdom of the Word of God.
3. Children are to honor their parents and be submissive to their will as long as it does not violate the Word of God.
4. Children are to love their neighbors, those around them, as themselves.
5. The roll of children is to go to school and respect their elders for if children don't do that the future society will be corrupt.
Conclusion
A sobering reality often strikes teachers, especially those who
understand the roles and responsibilities of the profession—teaching is an overwhelming
task. But they realize also that it is an incredible opportunity that
God has called them to, and they know that they have an incomparable
provision from the One who says, “I will be your God and be with you in
your classroom.”
Be strong and of good courage; do not be afraid or
dismayed, for the Lord your God is with you wherever you go (Joshua 1:9).
0 comments:
Post a Comment