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OUR YOUNG PEOPLE AND THEIR SCHOOLS

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Title: OUR YOUNG PEOPLE AND THEIR SCHOOLS


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OUR YOUNG PEOPLE AND THEIR SCHOOLS
  • Part 3 Worldly Philosophies

3
Being Aware
  • Must examine the philosophies that are a part of
    our childrens education
  • Certain worldly philosophies are detrimental to
    godly and moral living must recognize and guard
    against them (1 Tim. 620-21)

4
The Importance of Teaching at Home
  • The most important Christian education
    institution is not the pulpit or the school,
    important as those institutions are but it is
    the Christian family. And that institution has to
    a very large extent ceased to do its work (J.
    Gresham Machen)

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The Importance of Teaching at Home
  • Christian families that assume that the
    education of their children is something that
    occurs exclusively outside the home are making a
    serious mistake. Christians must pay more
    attention to the essential, indispensable role of
    the family in the overall education of their
    children

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  • If Christian young people are to be prepared for
    the years ahead, they need to know the objective
    dimension of their faith they should understand
    what they as Christians are supposed to believe.
    Moreover, they should also be introduced to the
    good and sound reasons why Christians believe
    these truths. The children of most Christian
    parents enter college with absolutely no
    preparation for the challenges to their faith
    that they will encounter. They have no idea why
    they believe that God exists or why Jesus is the
    Son of God or why the miracle of Christs
    resurrection occurred. Suddenly, without warning,
    they are confronted by a professor who challenges
    their faith with a problem or question they
    didnt even know existed consequently, they have
    no idea there are answers to these problems. And,
    even worse, if they dare to ask their parents
    what the answer is, the parents are even more
    uninformed than the students (The Closing of the
    American Heart, p. 98, 100)

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Moral Relativism
  • All moral judgments are relative and situational
  • No such thing as truth or right, but only varying
    beliefs, all justified as only shifting opinions

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Moral Relativism
  • Can be encountered in social studies, ethics,
    history, government, child development, sex
    education, etc.
  • Begins with toleration of what is considered
    wrong next, acceptance of what was considered
    wrong as an equally valid opinion

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The Elements of Moral Philosophy, James
Rachels In any case, nothing can be morally
right or wrong simply because an authority says
so (p. 47). Right and wrong are not to be
defined in terms of Gods will morality is
matter of reason and conscience, not religious
faith and in any case, religious considerations
do not provide definitive solutions to the
specific moral problems that confront us.
Morality and religion are, in a word,
differentThe arguments we have considered do not
assume that Christianity or any other theological
system is false these arguments merely show that
even if such a system is true, morality remains
an independent matter (p. 62). If we do not
destroy ourselves, moral philosophy, along with
all the other human inquiries, may yet have a
long way to go (p. 202)
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Moral Relativism
  • Creates moral confusion when discussing issues
    such as lying, adultery, political violence,
    stealing, drugs, homosexuality, etc.
  • Argues that mere existence of disagreement proves
    truth is relative
  • Encourages tolerance to other views, acceptance
    of those who are different discourages firm
    beliefs and assessing error in other views

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Moral Relativism
  • Godly morals are not relative, but absolute (Eph.
    425-29 1 Cor. 69-10)
  • It is never right to do wrong (Rom. 38)

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Values Clarification
  • A technique to help a student to form his/her
    values, not by imposing a value system, but
    allowing the student to formulate his own value
    system
  • No one can think they have right set of values to
    pass on to children applies to teachers and
    parents!

13
Values Clarification, Sidney Simon Leland Howe
  • The values-clarification approach does not aim
    to instill any particular set of valuesStudents
    learn to weigh the pros and cons and the
    consequences of the various alternativesonly
    when students begin to make their own choices and
    evaluate the actual consequences, do they develop
    their own values (p. 20)

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Values Clarification, Sidney Simon Leland Howe
  • The search for values is facilitated when there
    is a supportive and accepting environment. To
    encourage this kind of climate in the classroom,
    both the teacher and the students must learn to
    respect each others right to hold different
    views and to act in accordance with their
    different convictions. The Values-Focus Game is
    designed to help students be open to, accept and
    understand even if they do not agree with,
    different points of view. The objective of this
    activity is to help students understand more
    effectively another persons point of view,
    rather than to attempt to change the persons
    mind through attack or debate (p. 171).

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Values Clarification
  • Has produced people who do what is right in
    their own eyes (Judg. 2125)
  • God commands parents to teach godly values to
    children (Deut. 66-7 Prov. 18 31-8 131
    1920 Eph. 64)

16
Historical Revisionism
  • The rewriting (reinterpretation) of history for
    the purpose of supporting a present-day agenda or
    philosophy
  • Historians debate causation and effect of
    historical figures and events, but questioning of
    established facts and details can be detrimental
    to a view of the past and its lessons (ex -
    denial of holocaust, religious views of founding
    fathers)

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Historical Revisionism
  • We are to learn the lessons of the past, not
    reinterpret them to fit into a present-day agenda
    to justify our own teaching or action (Rom. 154
    1 Cor. 1011)

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Non-Inspiration of the Bible
  • The Bible is of human origin only, and borrows
    much of its imagery and myth from the pagan
    religions of the time
  • This is encountered heavily in college (religion
    and philosophy classes)

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Reading the Old Testament, Barry L. Bandstra
  • The uncertainties concerning the chronology and
    the very reality of the early figures of biblical
    history inevitably raise the question of the
    Bibles historicity. Readers will want to know if
    the events described in the Torah-and elsewhere
    in the Hebrew Bible for that manner-are fictional
    or true. And if they happened, was it in the way
    described? Our discussion of the written
    traditions of the Torah suggests this is not an
    easy issue (p. 46).

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Reading the Old Testament, Barry L. Bandstra
  • Stories such as we find in the early chapters of
    Genesis are mostly myths and sagas. A
    literalistic approach to Genesis 1-11 would
    confuse history with myth and reality with
    symbol (p. 50)

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Reading the Old Testament, Barry L. Bandstra
  • Chapters 40-55 of the book of Isaiah most likely
    come from the hand of a prophet who lived in
    Babylonian exile in the sixth century B.C.E.
    Dated sometime within the period 546 to 538
    B.C.E., they do not come from the hand of Isaiah
    of Jerusalem. We know virtually nothing about
    this prophet, not even his name (p. 309).

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Non-Inspiration of the Bible
  • Jewish and Christian religions viewed as
    continual evolution of religious thought
  • Difference between actual history and religious
    myth (Jesus vs Christ) modernistic and liberal
    theology

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  • Be informed and aware
  • Lest Satan should take advantage of us for we
    are not ignorant of his devices (2 Corinthians
    211)
  • for the sake of our souls and the souls of our
    children!

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