Question:
Is giving a child a Christian education
important?
Answer:
For believers in Jesus Christ, the
question of whether or not a Christian education
is important seems obvious. The answer would be
an emphatic “Yes!” So why ask the question? It’s
because the question comes from a myriad of
perspectives within the Christian faith. Maybe
the question should be “who is responsible for
introducing my child to Christianity?” or
“should my child’s education be done in a
public, private or home-based system?” There is
no shortage of opinions on this topic, some very
strongly held and endlessly and emotionally
debated.
As we begin to search for a biblical
perspective, we come to the definitive Old
Testament passage on educating children found in
Deuteronomy 6:5-8: "Love the LORD your God
with all your heart and with all your soul and
with all your strength. 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. Tie
them as symbols on your hands and bind them on
your foreheads.” Hebrew history reveals that the
father was to be diligent in instructing his
children in the ways and words of the Lord for
their own spiritual development and well-being.
The message in this passage is repeated in the
New Testament where Paul exhorts parents to
raise children in the "nurture and admonition of
the Lord" (Ephesians
6:4).
Proverbs 22:6 also tells us to "train a
child in the way he should go, and when he is
old he will not turn from it." Training includes
not only formal education, but also the first
instructions parents give to a child, i.e., his
early education. This training is designed to
plant the child firmly on the foundation upon
which his life is based.
As we move to the subject of formal education,
however, there are misunderstandings that need
to be addressed. First, God is not saying that
only parents are to educate children as many
would assert, and, second, He is not saying that
public education is bad and we are to educate
our children only in Christian schools or home
schools. The principle found throughout all of
Scripture is that of ultimate responsibility.
God never directs parents to avoid education
outside of the home; in fact, it isn’t even
addressed. So, to say that the only “biblical”
method of formal education is home schools or
Christian schools would be adding to God’s Word,
and we want to avoid using the Bible to validate
our own opinions. Just the opposite is true: we
want to base our opinions on the Bible. We also
want to avoid the argument that only “trained”
teachers are capable of educating our children.
Again, the issue is that of ultimate
responsibility, which belongs to parents.
The issue in Scripture is not what type of
general education our children receive, but
through what paradigm that information is to be
filtered. For example, a homeschooler can be
given a “Christian” education but fail in life
because he or she does not truly know the God of
Scripture and does not truly understand
scriptural principles. Likewise, a child
educated publicly can grow to understand the
fallacies of the world’s wisdom by seeing its
failure through God’s Word which has been
diligently taught to him at home. Information is
being sifted through a biblical lens in both
cases, but true spiritual understanding only
exists in the latter. Similarly, a student can
attend a Christian school but never grow to
understand God in an intimate, personal
relationship. Ultimately, it is the parents who
are responsible for shaping and molding the
child in a way that will succeed in
accomplishing true spiritual education.
In
Hebrews 10:25, God gives Christians the
command, “Let us not give up meeting together,
as some are in the habit of doing, but let us
encourage one another—and all the more as you
see the Day approaching.” The body of Christ is
an integral part of the education of children,
assisting parents in nurturing and educating
children in spiritual matters. Exposure to
something outside of the family structure, in
this case sound biblical teaching from church
and Sunday school, is good and necessary.
So, no matter what type of institution of
learning we choose, parents are ultimately
responsible for their children’s spiritual
education. A Christian school teacher can be
wrong, a pastor and Sunday school teacher can be
wrong, and parents can be wrong on any
particular viewpoint theologically. So, as we
teach our children spiritual things, they need
to understand that the only source of absolute
truth is the Scripture (2
Timothy 3:16). Therefore, perhaps the most
important lesson we can teach our children is to
follow the example of the Bereans who “examined
the Scriptures every day to see if what Paul
said was true” (Acts
17:11), and to test all things they are
taught—from whatever source—against the Word of
God
(1
Thessalonians 5:21).
"The
above Question and Answer taken from "Got
Questions Ministries"
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