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Home Education: Its
Gods Idea
There are many excellent reasons for choosing to teach your own children
at home. First, there is now incontestable evidence that on average children
who are home schooled fare better academically than children of either
public or private schools. This is not surprising since tutoring has always
been recognized to be the best method of education.
Second, home educated children are spared the corrupting environment
of the peer-oriented classroom and thus are benefited socially. A
common myth of our society is that children need to be with other children
for extended periods of time to be properly socialized, but this is the
exact opposite of the truth. Much time in a peer culture is damaging to
children. Socialization is one of the best reasons to home school.
Third, any home schooling family will tell you that one of the greatest
benefits of the process is the way that family bonds are strengthened.
Parents and children grow closer through the shared hours of each day. Siblings
develop a new love and respect for one another as they live and learn and
work together day by day. These families can overcome the family-fragmenting
forces of modern life. They just plain have more time together; and love
is spelled t-i-m-e.
Fourth, home educating families prosper spiritually. Parents are
able to guide their charges in godly paths as they protect them from the
immorality and falsehood so prevalent in public schools and teach them the
Bible and its application to life. The very process of discipling ones
own child results in character growth in both the child and the parent.
As good as all these reasons are, however, the very best reason to choose
home education has not been listed yet. But to appreciate the force of this
last reason you must first agree to a vitally important premise. So let
me run that by you first.
The premise is simply this: "All Scripture is God-breathed and is
useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness,
so that the man of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work"
(2 Tim. 3;16,17). Or, put another way: "His divine power has given
us everything we need for life and godliness through our knowledge of him
who called us by his own glory and goodness" (2 Pet. 1:3). Or, finally:
"Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light for my path" (Ps.
119:105). In other words, in our Lord Jesus and his Word, the Bible, we
have all we need for spiritual and moral direction in life. The Scripture
is our wholly sufficient guide for what to believe and how to live in ways
that please God.
Do you believe that? Do you agree that what is written in the Bible is
written to tell us how to live; that when the Word of God addresses any
particular aspect of life, it is giving us wisdom to be followed carefully;
and that God has good reason for all that he reveals in his Word? If you
do, then you are ready to hear the final point.
The best reason for choosing home education is that it is Gods
revealed plan for raising our children. The Bible knows no other system
of education. God did not prescribe schools for his people; these were invented
by others. The pages of Scripture espouse, by precept and example, a process
that closely resembles what we call home education.
To grasp Gods plan for the raising of children we need to consider
what the Scripture says about four important elements of the educational
process: the teachers, the method, the content, and the goal.
The Teachers
Throughout the Word it is the parents who are assigned the role of teaching
their own children. The primary responsibility rests on the father. God
said of Abraham, "I have chosen him, so that he will direct his children
and his household after him to keep the way of the LORD
by doing what is right and just, so that the LORD will
bring about for Abraham what he has promised him" (Gen. 18:19). Paul
gave this guidance under the Holy Spirits inspiration: "Fathers,
do not exasperate your children; instead, bring them up in the training
and instruction of the Lord" (Eph. 6:4).
Of course, as the mans helper (Gen. 2:20-23), his wife is also
a teacher of the children. "Listen, my son, to your fathers instruction
and do not forsake your mothers teaching" (Prov. 1:8; cf. 6:20).
Even the grandparents are to share in the teaching task: speaking of Gods
commandments, Moses said to Gods people, "Teach them to your
children and to their children after them" (Deut. 4:9).
Home education by the parents is highlighted at the very apex of Old
Testament revelation. Israel has just heard Moses pronounce the sacred Name:
"Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God, the LORD is one" (Deut. 6:4). This is followed immediately
by the commandment which Jesus called the "greatest commandment"
(Matt. 22:38): "Love the LORD your God with all
you heart and with all your soul and with all your strength" (Deut.
6:5). Then comes the climactic charge to the people: "These commandments
that I give you today are to be upon your hearts. Impress them on your children.
Talk about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the road, when
you lie down and when you get up" (6:6,7). Parents have a solemn obligation
to learn Gods Word and teach it to their children.
The mandate for parents to teach their offspring is a perpetual one.
"He decreed statutes for Jacob and established the law in Israel, which
he commanded our forefathers to teach their children, so the next generation
would know them, even the children yet to be born, and they in turn would
tell their children" (Ps. 78:5,6). Each generation should be raised
with the expectation of teaching the next.
Beyond the parents, the priests and Levites had a teaching role in the
holy community; but even they did not teach children directly apart from
the parents. They taught "the men, women and others who could understand"
when gathered as a group (Neh. 8:3,7,8).
The Bible, through command and example, presents the parents (and grandparents)
as the only teachers of children. While it might seem at least possible,
as an exercise of parental prerogative, to delegate the teaching responsibility
to others, there is no instance of this in Scripture. (Gal. 4:2 speaks of
a child being subject to "guardians and trustees until the time set
by his father." This may have been the practice in the affluent strata
of the pagan society which was the cultural backdrop of the Galatian converts.
It is not presented as a positive practice in this context, a context which
is not addressing how parents should raise children.) Although the bare
teaching function might be delegated, the parent-child relationship cannot
be delegated. No one can successfully replace the parents as the child's
teacher because no one else is the parent, and it is this special relationship
that is central to the success of the educational processwhich leads
us to the second element of that process.
The Method
Scripture does not even use the word "education" to describe
the process of training children for adulthood. That word, as we use it,
is freighted with connotations of schooling, academics, and training of
the minda very narrow Greek/Western concept of training (rationalism
views mans mind as his primary faculty).
Those who are properly informed by a biblical/Hebrew perspective would
say that true "education" is discipleship. It is a process of
training the whole person, not just the mind. The goal is not a mind stuffed
with facts; the goal is a changed person.
The heart is the most important part of a person "for it is the
wellspring of life" (Prov. 4:23). The purpose of life is to love God
with the whole heart (Deut. 6:5); and this purpose is realized in children
as parents have Gods Word in their own hearts and then impress it
on their children (6:6,7). Fathers are to say to their sons, "Lay hold
of my words with all your heart; keep my commands and you will live"
(Prov. 4:4).
Gods method of education is revealed in Deuteronomy 6:7-9. Speaking
of Gods commandments it says, "Impress them on your children.
Talk about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the road, when
you lie down and when you get up. Tie them as symbols on your hands and
bind them on your foreheads. Write them on the doorframes of your houses
and on your gates." True education occurs any place ("home and
road") and any time ("lie down and get up"). The parents
are to be the constant companions of their children, teaching them Gods
view of life at every opportunity. Every child of a godly family will live
unceasingly in an environment that is saturated by Gods Word, and
his parents will be creating that environment.
Since the purpose of education is to love God with the whole heart and
to have his commandments lodged in the heart, the method must be one which
reaches the heart. Discipleshipalong-the-road living with the
two people to whom the child is closest (his parents)is Gods
method for reaching the heart of children.
The method is seen also in Jesus relationship with the Twelve.
He did not enroll them in a classroom course and address only their minds.
He chose them "that they might be with him" (Mk. 3:14); and they
talked, worked, walked, ate, and slept together for over three years. They
were his apprentices. They learned by watching, listening, doing, as Jesus
taught them about and modeled for them the life they were to live.
Jesus said, "A student is not above his teacher, but everyone who
is fully trained will be like his teacher" (Lk. 6:40). That is the
discipleship method: on-the-job, real-life training until the student is
like the teacher. And that is the only method of education that results
in the changed lives that God is seeking.
Biblical education/discipleship cannot be accomplished within the confines
of a classroom. A small part of it could occur there, but its main
features require involvement in the real world with real people doing real
things. It requires doing work and ministry. It demands character training
and learning life skills. It requires spontaneity as well as structure.
Teaching can occur in a school, but discipleship can only occur in the context
of real life.
Our educational method must reflect a biblical understanding of truth
and life. The Greek/Western worldview sees truth as ideas that can be reduced
to printed pages and considered in abstraction in a classroom. In the biblical/Hebrew
worldview truth is personal (Jesus said, "I am...the truth." Jn.
14:6); and while it can be expressed in the statements of Scripture, it
is always connected to life and conduct ("speaking the truth in love,"
Eph. 4:15). Truth is not only something we can know, it is also something
we can and must "do" (1 Jn. 1:6). Gods truth is only communicated
truly in the context of relationship. God did not just give us the written
Word of truth, he gave us his Son and fills us with himself ("If anyone
acknowledges that Jesus is the Son of God, God lives in him and he in God."1
Jn. 4:15).
God wants truth to fill our childrens minds, but he wants much
more. He wants the One whose name is Truth to fill their hearts and shape
their lives. That is what discipleship is all about.
In a thoroughly biblical approach to education, the method is as important
as the content.
The Content
Most discussions about education dwell upon the content of the curriculum;
and whereas the importance of method is often minimized, we should not,
in our attempt to balance the discussion, minimize content. It is absolutely
critical. Truth has content, and part of education is passing on that content
to our children.
What exactly is the content of education for Christian children? Psalm
78 puts it this way: "We will not hide them from their children; we
will tell the next generation the praiseworthy deeds of the LORD,
his power, and the wonders he has done. He decreed statutes for Jacob and
established the law in Israel, which he commanded our forefathers to teach
their children..." (vv. 4,5). The Word of God and the works of God
are the content of a godly education.
All education should focus upon the Lord God: who he is, what he has
said, and what he has done. Fathers are instructed concerning children to
"bring them up in the training and instruction of the Lord" (Eph.
6:4). Not the instruction of the world or of mere men, but "of the
Lord."
Study of the Word of God itself is the foundation for all learning since
the Word is the source of all wisdom. That is why parents are given the
task of impressing Gods commandments on their children at every opportunity
(Deut. 6:7-9). In the psalm quoted above, fathers are commanded to teach
Gods "statutes" to their children, referring again to the
written Word.
Obviously, the very words and passages of Scripture and the history and
doctrine they contain must be taught diligently and systematically. The
Book of books itself must be studied as a worthy object of attention in
its own right.
But that is not the only use of the Scriptures. Psalm 119:105 presents
one of the broader purposes of the Bible: "Your word is a lamp to my
feet and a light for my path." Gods Word is intended to illuminate
the world we live in so that we can walk pleasing to God. The purpose of
a light is to shine on an object so that it can be discerned more clearly.
Similarly, the Bible is meant to "shine" on anything we encounter
in the world so that we can understand it from Gods perspective. This
means that beyond studying the Bible itself, we should use the Bible as
our lens through which to view any other subject in life.
The second component of study in a godly education is what Psalm 78 calls
"the praiseworthy deeds of the LORD, his power, and the wonders he
has done" (v. 4). To study these works of God we must, of course, begin
with the Bible itself which reveals his mighty works of creation and redemption.
But this study will lead us beyond the pages of Scripture to the whole wide
world that God made and sustains by his power. History, science, geography,
law, art, music, mathematics, languageany subject area is a study
of the works of God since it is he who created this world and guides the
history of men in their scientific, cultural, and civil endeavors.
Each of these subject areas must be approached in the "light"
of the Word, if it is to be properly understood. The Bible should not only
be a subject in the curriculum, its truths should permeate every other area
of study, providing Gods perspective on every subject.
Also, each field of study must be viewed in relationship to the others
since creation and history are a seamless fabric of overlapping influencesall
under Gods sovereign control. Life in Gods world does not unfold
in neat categories. The traditional approach to education which presents
a student with a collection of unrelated disciplines is a caricature of
the real world. All realms of study find their unity in our Creator and
Savior. The best education will present any particular subject in its relationship
to other subjects and to the God of truth who gives them all meaning.
That is why many home educators abandon the traditional school-subject
approach to teaching in favor of a "unit study" approach which
takes into account the inter-relationship of the disciplines. Children thus
engage in academic study in the same manner in which they experience the
rest of the worldencountering the connectedness of the various elements
of life. Such an approach not only respects the nature of the content of
education, it also is most compatible with the discipleship method of teaching:
learning from real life as it is encountered "along the road"
every day.
The Goal
Each of the other elements of the educational processthe teachers,
the method, and the contentcombine to achieve one essential end. Gods
goal for us is to raise children who know, love, and obey Jesus Christ.
The aim of education is a part of the great aim of this age: to "go
and make disciples of all nations" (Matt. 28:19). For anyone who is
a parent, the discipleship mandate begins in the home. He must make disciples
of his own children.
Education ought not to be seen as an end in itself. Nor should it be
viewed in terms of mere academic or social preparation for life. Knowledge,
by itself, is nothing and leads only to pride ("Knowledge puffs up";
1 Cor. 8:1). We could give our children the very best academic preparation
in the world, and only end up making them more effective instruments in
the devils hands. No, God has something higher in mind.
God did not say: "train a child in what he should know, and when
he is old he will not forget it." He said, "Train a child in the
way he should go, and when he is old he will not turn from it" (Prov.
22:6). Education is not just about what a child knows; it is primarily about
how he lives.
Understood in its broadest terms, education is character training. God
is in the business of transforming people; and he is creating a people who
have a living relationship with himself. The beginning of the process is
simply to take God seriously in everythingor, as Scripture has it:
The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge and wisdom (Prov. 1:7;
9:10). The end of the process is mature people who know God; and who, knowing
him, love him; and who, loving him, obey him in all things.
Christian parents should desire for their children what Paul, imitating
the Lords own yearnings, wanted for his children in the faith: "My
dear children, for whom I am again in the pains of childbirth until Christ
is formed in you..." (Gal. 4:19). The great object of education must
be Christ-like men and women.
All the elements of the Bibles plan for child-training combine
to achieve this goal; and each ingredient of the plan is crucial to the
outcome.
Replace the parents with strangers or even godly fellow-believers as
teachers, and you disrupt the parent-child bond which is Gods chosen
channel of grace and influence.
If you choose a sterile classroom full of age peers instead of the rich
home-based community environment with its natural variety of ages and conditions;
if you choose mass teaching focused on the mind instead of face-to-face
discipleship along the path of real life experiencesthen you bypass
Gods chosen means of reaching the heart of a child.
If you choose teaching which presents academic subject areas in isolation
and without a biblical reference point instead of the unity of all truth
based on the God of truth and his Word, then you eliminate the means of
providing a coherent Christian worldview from which the child can engage
the false ideas of the day.
Tamper with any of the facets of Gods revealed plan, and you decrease
the prospects that your children will turn out to be godly men and women.
Scripture gives us a promise in Proverbs 22:6: our children will not depart
from Gods way if we faithfully raise them according to it. Modern
Christians have come to doubt the truth of this verse because they are seeing
their children fall off the path in such great numbers. But the problem
is not Gods plan or his faithfulness. The problem is that we have
abandoned his plan in so many ways.
We are back to our foundational premise: the Scripture is our wholly
sufficient guide for how to live. Since, by precept and example, it presents
a pattern for the process of raising our children, wisdom dictates that
we follow that pattern.
The path of safety and blessing is always that which adheres most closely
to the revealed will of God. Home education as we practice it today falls
short of the perfect pattern set forth in the Scriptures, but it is certainly
a big step in the right directionbecause home education is Gods
idea. |