Home
Education New
to Home Education.....Home
Education Myths...Some Parents Just Can't Teach
Some Parents Just Can't Teach
That charge is often leveled at parents by "experts"
who claim that parents either lack qualifications or ability. In
view of God's command that parents teach their children, I ask.
What kind of a charge is that? Surely, it flies in the face of God!
I really don't know if Moses was qualified to lead Israel
out of Egypt or not. I don't know if he was qualified to teach them
the law. I do know that he was told to do it rather than being asked
to do it. Furthermore, when he argued with God about his qualifications
the Lord answered "...I will be with thy mouth, and will teach
thee what thou shall say" (Ex. 4:12). Parents are likewise
"told" to teach their children, "And thou shall teach
them diligently unto thy children..." (Deut. 6:7). God will
likewise be with them as He was with Moses.
Much like any other task, large or small, teaching children depends
more upon willingness and upon obedience to the command of
God than upon measurable ability. God gives parents the desire and
he has also promised to give them the ability. "It is God which
worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure"
(Philippians 2:3). Somewhere, then, there is within the heart of
parents a place where God created an ability to teach children.
It will, if nurtured, bud and bloom into a fragrant blossom leading
to a very rewarding and fulfilling experience. As well as experiencing
it ourselves, Virginia and I have seen it happen to others.
Probably the most forgotten ability in all the hassle over the
education of children is the ability' of the child to work out his
own education. The major factor in any child's education is the
child's ability to. ask, seek, and knock, which, by the way, is
an underlying principle in anything in life. including salvation.
"Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock,
and it shall be opened unto you" (Man. 7:7).
Children who succeed in getting an education deserve far more
credit than any of their teachers. The thirst for knowledge and
the hunger to lay hold upon it is absolutely essential to success
in education. Without that natural thirst and hunger education cannot
be accomplished regardless of who teaches; with it, education
can be accomplished, often in spite of who teaches.
<<previous
next
>>
|