Ten Reasons Why You Need To Pray About It Today.
Finances. Location. Perceived academic
deficiencies. These are just some of the reasons
parents spurn Christian education in favor of
its public school counterpart. But here we’d
like to offer you ten solid arguments in favor
of Christian education. There are plenty of
others, both biblical and practical. But these
are the most compelling.
1. God’s Word is taught
The place to start is at the beginning, with the
first nation, the first educational system. When
deciding how to manage your children’s
education, it only makes sense to ask the One
who invented education.
“You shall therefore impress these words of mine
on your heart and on your soul …. And you shall
teach them to your sons, talking of them when
you sit in your house and when you walk along
the road and when you lie down and when you rise
up.” (Deuteronomy 11:18-19)
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"I advise
no one to place his child where the
Scriptures do not reign paramount.
Every institution in which men are
not increasingly occupied with the
Word of God must become corrupt...I
am much afraid that schools will
prove to be the great gates of hell
unless they diligently labor in
explaining the Holy Scriptures,
engraving them in the hearts of
youth."
Martin Luther |
What we have here is a clear biblical mandate to
saturate our children’s minds with the Word of
God. It’s a difficult task under any
circumstances, but virtually impossible in a
public school setting. Once inside those doors,
children spend 30 to 40 hours a week being told
that God, if He exists at all, is no longer
relevant. No matter how spiritually grounded
your child may be, the repetition of such
destructive ideas can’t help but have an adverse
affect.
The harsh reality is that our Supreme Court
kicked God out of the public school system more
than 40 years ago. A generation later,
scientific naturalism and a host of other
anti-God values are not only being taught in
American classrooms, they’re being championed.
Christian schools offer a refreshing, biblical
alternative. Not only is the Bible taught for
what it is – the inspired Word of God – but it
forms the foundation of all other texts. In
math, in social studies, in biology, all
academic roads lead to God, in whom all
knowledge has its origin. Your children won’t
travel that road in the local public school.
2. God commands us to teach kids through the
Word
It’s a sad but true irony: public schools, the
self-proclaimed shapers of the human mind, have
chosen to ignore the God who created the human
mind. To their chagrin, they have robbed
themselves of their most valuable “textbook,”
and the only available source of absolute truth.
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"The school system that ignores
God teaches its pupils to ignore
God; and this is not neutrality. It
is the worst form of antagonism, for
it judges God to be unimportant and
irrelevant in human affairs. This
is atheism."
Gordon H. Clark |
“The fear of the Lord is the beginning of
wisdom,” writes Solomon. “And knowledge of the
Holy One is understanding” (Proverbs 9:10). As
students pursue the knowledge of math, biology
and music in a Christian setting, they’re
chasing after the knowledge of God. And the
by-products of such an endeavor – wisdom and
understanding – are the God-given rewards for
which every good student strives.
God expects you, as a Christian parent, to plant
and nurture His Word in the hearts and minds of
your children. This is best accomplished in
settings where home, church and school all send
the same message, teaching God’s truth with
clarity, conviction and consistency. And while
the benefits
of such a commitment
are often
realized much later, here’s one you’ll notice in
relatively short order. An education that uses
God’s Word as its foundational text does more
than produce spiritually-mature Christians. It
makes them wiser and more knowledgeable. It
forces them to be better thinkers. And isn’t
that the goal of education in the first place?
3. The school shares your values
If you’re like most Christian parents, you’ve
taught your children about God since the day
they were born. You’ve taken them to church,
read them Bible stories, sung “Jesus Loves Me.”
Imagine their shock and dismay when they’re
thrust into an environment in which God is
hated, ignored, or both.
Even the best public schools are prohibited by
law from reinforcing the values you teach at
home. They either compete against them or
disregard them altogether.
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"To commit our children to the care
of irreligious persons is to commit
lambs to the superintendency of
wolves."
Timothy Dwight |
And because you care
about the mental and spiritual development of
your children, you may spend countless hours
trying to bridge the philosophical gap between
Christianity and humanism – a gap that would
never have existed had they attended Christian
school.
By entrusting your children to educators who
share your values, you’ll have more time for
ball games and bike rides and meaningful
conversations. Instead of debriefing your
children, you’ll be getting to know them.
4. Safety
With thousands of students roaming their halls
and taxpayer dollars funding their bankrolls,
public schools can only go so far in the area of
discipline. The result? More frequent
occurrences of theft and physical violence, not
to mention course profanity and open rebellion
in the classroom.
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"Fathers, do not provoke your
children to wrath, but bring them up
in the training and admonistion of
the Lord" (Ephesians 6:4). |
Simply put, Christian schools are a safer place
for your children to receive an education. While
not devoid of problems – even severe ones like
drug and alcohol use – they are far less likely
to occur, and far more likely to be met with
firm disciplinary action.
In addition to physical well-being, Christian
schools offer a much safer emotional and
spiritual environment. Verbal insults and
hazing, things that go largely overlooked in a
public school setting, are less likely to be
tolerated. And the politically-correct,
socially-tolerant attitudes that pervade secular
classrooms never see the light of day at
distinctly Christian institutions.
Anti-Christian behavior such as homosexuality
and abortion is exposed for what it is, which
helps guard your children’s minds against the
licentious attitudes fostered by popular
education.
5. Academic Achievement
Contrary to popular opinion, students at
Christian schools consistently out-perform their
public school counterparts. Their standardized
test scores are way above the curve, and they’re
better prepared for college upon graduation.
Even in the areas of math and reading, subjects
that are “less spiritual” in content, students
at Christian schools have proven their
superiority.
The sad truth is, despite their claims of
excellence, our nation’s public schools are far
less academically rigorous than they once were.
Only 67 percent of all public school students
entering ninth grade
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"A truly Christian education is
possible only when Christian
education underlies not a part, but
all, of the curriculum of the
school. True learning and true
piety go hand in hand, and
Christianity embraces the whole of
life - those are great central
convictions that underlie the
Christian school."
J. Gresham Machen |
graduate with a regular
diploma four years later. United States
competency in math and science lags behind a
host of other countries. And despite the vast
amounts of government money being funneled to
public education, our SAT scores continue to
slip.
Christian schools are far from an academic
liability. In fact, in the aftermath of 2002’s
“No Child Left Behind” Act, college recruiters
are more likely to view public school
transcripts with a skeptical eye. The best
colleges are likely to pay your children more
attention, not less, if they attend a Christian
school.
6. Teachers love and fear the Lord
Part of the reason why Christian students
perform so well in the classroom is that they
have a higher percentage of teachers who
genuinely care about them. Most of these
dedicated men and women sacrifice greater
monetary rewards to serve where they can do the
most intrinsic good.
In addition to the passion they feel for their
students, the vast majority of Christian
educators love God with equal intensity. And
unlike some of their well-meaning public school
colleagues, they are not prohibited by the
United States government from making overt
claims to that effect.
Teachers are a school’s heartbeat. Its pulse.
They are also among the most influential role
models in students’ lives. And while you can
certainly find Christian educators at a public
school, the best of all academic worlds exists
when everyone – the school board, the principle,
the teachers and the parents – is operating
under the same educational paradigm.
7. Individual Attention
In addition to having a higher percentage of
caring
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"For by wise guidance you will wage
war, and in abundance of counselors
there is victory" (Proverbs 24:6).
Timothy Dwight |
teachers, Christian schools can almost
always offer more individual attention than
public schools, many of which are overcrowded
and hopelessly understaffed.
Even in cases where the ratio is virtually
identical, class size is not. Christian school
classes generally have fewer students. They’re
smaller, more intimate gatherings that encourage
students to be participants rather than
spectators. Students learn how to think quickly,
and gain valuable experience sharing their
thoughts and opinions in a public forum.
8. Success after graduation
Because Christian school students perform at a
higher level in the classroom than their public
school counterparts, it only makes sense that
their options
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"Iron sharpens iron, so
one man sharpens another" (Proverbs
27:17). |
upon graduation are more abundant.
Therefore, they are more likely to be better
prepared to handle the rigors of higher
education. They have also received the spiritual
foundation they need to excel in areas of
ministry, whether they are career or
volunteer-oriented.
In addition to these practical advantages, there
is at least one intangible benefit. Students who
have been grounded in the truth of God’s
Word day after day during their formative years
– both at school and at home – are
better-equipped to handle discrepant ideas upon
graduation. Whether in a secular university or
in the work place, young adults with a solid
biblical foundation are far less likely to fall
victim to the subtle lies of our post-modern
culture.
The question remains however, how do you define
success? Does success equal an Ivy League
education for your child, or a certain salary
level, or even a prestigious title? Then again,
how does God measure success? A healthy
marriage? An understanding of biblical truth?
These are important issues to pray about.
9. Peer Pressure
If only the Bible had told us that good company
improves bad morals, many of us would have
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"All Scripture is inspired by God
and profitable for teaching, for
reproof, for correction, for
training in righteousness" (2
Timothy 3:16). |
a
welcome reprieve. Unfortunately, the opposite is
true. Bad company corrupts good morals (1
Corinthians 15:33), the Apostle Paul tells us,
and we can assume he was writing to a
predominantly adult audience. You can imagine
what he might say to a group of impressionable
children and young teens.
Make no mistake: your kids will be exposed to
bad company no matter where they go to school.
Sometimes they may even be the bad company. But
in a Christian environment, they’ll be much less
likely to find themselves surrounded by
destructive influences, and far more likely to
find positive ones.
10. The State of Public Education
One final reason to consider Christian schools
can be
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"The United States system of
national popular education will be
the most efficient and wide
instrument for the propagation of
Atheism which the world has ever
seen."
A. A. Hodge |
founders were atheists whose hatred of
Christianity is a matter of public record. Its
current agenda – the found by taking an even
closer look at the alternative. If you study
the origin and history of modern
government-sponsored education, you’ll find
some alarming facts. Its propagation of humanistic
ideals that render God irrelevant or
non-existent – can be easily spotted in its
curriculum.
In Conclusion
None of this is meant to be a criticism of
parents who place their children in public
schools. Nor is it an indictment against
well-meaning public school educators. But the
fact remains that public schools are not allowed
to give your children the educational experience
the Bible demands. Regardless of what you may
think about Christian school, we encourage you
to seek God’s thoughts on the matter before
choosing an academic home for your children.