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This is probably the most unusual
Sunday school I've ever done, but hopefully it will do what
needs to be done. Here's the title. Why Christian education and all
education are so important. and where we'll be going in the
months ahead. How's that for a Sunday school
class title, okay? Jesus, you can see it up here
on the mission board, Jesus not only said all authority in heaven
and on earth is given to me, but he said you go make disciples,
make followers of me, baptizing them, that's kind of step one,
and then teaching them, not just teaching, but teaching them to
keep all that I've commanded. and low and with you always to
the end of the age." Teaching means teaching, okay? And so
why Christian education and all education are so important. I'm
going to give you a real quick, let's see, 15 minutes summary
of church history channeled through education. Christianity and the
Transformation of Education. So basically, we look at three
periods in church history. One is the early church, and
that's roughly the first four centuries. And there was a growing
conviction, because the New Testament was built on the old, that the
fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge. Now fear is not
quaking fear here. Fear is a deep respect for it's
a it's a trust in it's a looking to it's okay So the fear of the
Lord is the beginning of knowledge now. I'm going to anticipate
what's going to come Our modern culture by and large has replaced
this with something else Okay, so the fear of the Lord's the
beginning of knowledge. So what happened you're baptized in the early
church and And you're taught, that's what Jesus said to do,
and you're taught to be made a disciple. And we taught Joe
and Linda catechism. That was the primary way of teaching
people a basic question and answer way of understanding what the
Bible taught. Who is God? What is God? God
is a spirit, infinite, eternal, and unchangeable. Why did God
make you? These kinds of things, that's
called catechism. And there were catechism classes. Now, here's the thing about education.
Education is a little bit like eating peanuts. When you begin to get a little
education and you learn things, and that helps you govern your
own life and your role in the world, you want more education. So, within a few centuries, In
the Christian church, along with catechism, there were schools.
And those schools were, basically it began by teaching people trades.
As the Bible says, you're supposed to labor six days, right? Well,
how do you labor? And of course, trades come in.
languages, and history, and not all at once, but grammar, and
logic, and science. And so by the 5th century, 400s,
there were pretty well-developed schools in the early church.
And I never realized this, but St. Augustine, who was probably
the leading one of the church fathers, did a six-volume work,
Mary you'll appreciate this, on music. And Augustine dealt
with what the Bible teaches about music. He dealt with the orderliness
in music, beauty in music, and so on. And that became kind of
the standard for how people understood music for many years. So it broadened
into other fields. Why? Well, there was a sense
God, remember this is dawning on pagans, God created the world,
okay? And so there's truth that's impregnated
into the world and there's beauty and there's a sense of justice.
And so the text, Psalm 19 and verse 1, the heavens declare
the glory of God and the skies proclaim the works of his hands,
and we're made in God's image, and so we're creative, and we
investigate, and we learn, and so on. That blossomed. And here is what I really want
to impress upon you. It was both men and women who
learned, and that was different than with the pagans. With the
pagans, the women were not even treated, in many cases, as human
beings. And yet Christians did instruct
both men and women. By the fourth century, by the
400s actually, St. Augustine said, our Christian
women are better informed in divine matters than pagan male
philosophers. Wow. So again, I'm telling you
folks, the view that Christianity has degraded women, it turns
truth on its head. Then we come to the Middle Ages,
basically the 5th century 400s to the 15th century, the 1400s,
not the Dark Ages. Recent studies are showing that
there was a lot of technology that was developed in Europe
at the time. And what's interesting, see what
happened is this. The Roman Empire collapsed in
the 5th century. And the Roman Empire was the
repository, it was the library, for basically the knowledge that
had been acquired at that point from the Greeks, from the Romans,
from those that preceded the Greeks, but especially the Greeks
and the Romans, who did a lot of writing and a lot of poetry
and a lot of drama and music as well. When the Empire fell,
There were monasteries, Christians who separated themselves from
culture, and they took this material and copied it and so on, and
therefore the monasteries became schools, and later developed
into universities. Now, I want you to think about
the name university. University means basically there
is one mind. There's a unified truth, university,
like unified, because they knew that education came from the
one true and living God. And there was also the tremendous
development of technology. By AD 1200, European technology
really was outstanding in many, many ways. Now, that brings us
to the 16th century, the 1500s to the present, the Reformation
and the post-Reformation period. The reformers, you see a couple
of their pictures in there, Calvin and Luther in particular. Luther,
Martin Luther, was a strong proponent of education. Why? So he could
read the Bible. And he said the poorest handmaiden,
a woman with her Bible, has far more understanding than a priest
without it. And it was actually, both Luther
and Calvin regarded it as criminal if parents did not educate their
children or have provision for their education. So they saw
rightly, not the state, but the family had responsibility for
the family. And then there was, with the
Reformation, a surge of schools in Europe, including schools
for women, especially in the Protestant areas. And then later,
1700s, that's the evangelical awakening. A lot of the hymns
that we use from Isaac Watts, for example, was a big proponent
of education. He wrote picture books for children,
Isaac Watts, interesting guy. So anyway, with the evangelical
awakening, there was a realization people were ignorant, and people
were having children, population was growing, and there wasn't
the provision of what were called common schools back then, or
public schools. So there was a surge of schools
run by volunteers, and because the children, remember they worked,
they were beginning to work in the factories and so on, the
only time they could meet was Sunday, which was still respected
as a day off. Hence, in July 1780, under a
woman named Mrs. Meredith, in a place called Sooty
Alley, Gloucester, in England, you had the first what? Sunday school, July of 1780,
she invited children into her home to not only teach them the
Bible, teach them how to read, how to write, and so on. And
by 1831, this is fascinating, there were about one and a quarter
million children in England. And about one quarter of them,
you can do the math, were attending Sunday schools. They were led
by Christians who volunteered their labors, as people have
done in Sunday schools for years. And there were tens of thousands
of Christians that would open their homes or go to stores,
wherever it would be, and you have the Sunday school movement
that began and that developed into ragged schools because the
Sunday schools were for the children who the parents had money and
they looked good. And parents who had children
that didn't look good or smell good, they didn't want to send
their children to the Sunday schools, so they developed the
ragged schools for the poor children. And that's a fast, it was started
actually by churches. They offered free education and
food and clothes, and they taught not only reading and writing
and arithmetic, the big three, they taught women how to cook.
They taught trades, especially carpentry. The big thing they
taught people was how to make shoes. And so it was very practical
education. And why did they do that? Because people are made in God's
image. And while you had a class system that was developing in
England where you had the hoity-toity and all the rest, Christians
said, here's where doctrine comes in. People are made in God's
image, and they all should be taught and educated. It's a fascinating
study. And then that, of course, spread to the mission field.
Burma, Myanmar, is known as Myanmar today. Adoniram Judson and his
wife started schools in Burma. And in India, that's where William
Carey went. And after many years of not a
whole lot of success in his work, things really took off and developed
with schools. And I love this. Because folks,
Christian education is inherently counter-cultural. It doesn't
ape the culture, challenges it. You know where Christians got
in trouble in India? They got in trouble with, because
they opposed the caste system. There was a whole group of people
called the Untouchables, because you didn't go near them if you
were not in that caste. And the Christians basically
said, my words, baloney. And they educated, they worked
to educate. They got a lot of opposition for it too, but they
worked to educate the untouchables. Why? Because they're made in
God's image. So a book, a fascinating book by Vishal Mengelwadi, my
apologies if I'm mispronouncing his name, but really interesting
book, an Indian Christian. And his book is called, The Book
That Made Your World, How the Bible Created the Soul of Western
Civilization. And it's really an interesting
read as he talks about India, because that's where he's from,
and how India was influenced, at least in certain areas, by
the Christian faith. It's really a fascinating read.
And there were similar developments in the United States of America
that kind of paralleled this. Wow, two minutes ahead, because
I do want you to ask questions. where we're going to be going
in the months ahead. Jesse Kelly and I have our difference
of opinion about this. We called it the Sunday Seminary
in Franklin Square. Jesse said, that doesn't really
communicate in our culture, but for once, I'll disagree with
her. We're gonna call this the Haven Sunday Seminary, okay?
And I'm your professor, and we'll have some others come in and
visit. What's a seminary? You learn the, a good one, you
learn the doctrines of the Bible. And you learn, seminary, it's
like seminal. You just get seed ideas. And for some of us, they were
pretty big seeds, but you get seed ideas that you develop in
your ministry. And so we're gonna give you seed
ideas that you develop in your own lives. So we'll call this
the Haven Sunday Seminary. God willing, in January of 2023,
which is coming our way, We're going to start working through
the book Instruments in the Redeemer's Hands by Paul David Tripp, which
is a primer on counseling. And here's the reason for that.
We've talked about a Christian counseling center here. What's
interesting is counsel that we've received from other pastors have
been basically don't do it. Because a counseling center will
tend to drive the church. and you'll have people who come
to the counseling center that will never darken the doors of
a church, and you drain your energies. Far better to do what
the father of biblical counseling, Jay Adams, said, called competent
to counsel. Train every Christian to be able
to do basic counseling. So we'll, that's God willing
what will begin in January. But what are we gonna do between
now and December? If you and I are going to counsel
people, and connect with them and not be speaking to the left
or the right or above or below them. You've got, and I have
got, to understand this culture that we're in. And it has been
rightly called by Dr. Carl Truman in his popularized
version of his book, The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self,
strange new world and that we're going to be, I'll be using this
seminally for seed thoughts for our classes and discussion. Why
go through this book? This West, now follow me folks,
this is kind of a rough ride, okay? This Western historic view
of education which begins with words, is developed by words,
and grows by words. That Western historic view of
education has been deeply eroded in our culture, and in other
cultures too, incidentally. And it's being eroded right now.
And in fact, you and I experience that erosion in various ways.
Now this is Pastor Shishko's kind of popular history of things,
because I love, I'm fascinated with what's called media ecology,
how the medium influences the message. Beginning in the 1950s,
not that there weren't problems before then, but beginning in
the 1950s, there were multiple developments that have created
a confluence. A confluence is a lot of different
forces all coming together to form a whole different view of
education. It's no longer the fear of the
Lord is the beginning of knowledge, a respect for, a clinging to,
a trust in. It's the fear of the iPhone.
is the beginning of knowledge. And again, obviously I'm not
against them because I have one. But all media influence things. Today,
it's the idols of technology that are forming a whole different
way of thinking. It's forming, and not just a
world view, it's a heart view. What do I mean by the idols of
technology? Television, the internet, magazines,
which actually proliferated in the 1950s, social media, an interesting
phrase, virtual reality, the iPhone, much of which is sexually driven. When television became more common
in the 1950s, it was 1952, and Westinghouse was selling its
appliances, its refrigerators. And they found out that if Betty
Furness, who was very pretty, was advertising the refrigerator
on television, their sales went up. Because psychologically,
when you're watching that image, and Betty Furness is promoting
the refrigerator, you're not just getting the refrigerator,
guess what else you're getting? That's a very simple thing, but
it will become even far more profound That created what probably
the leading authority on, who wrote the book A Secular Age,
Charles Taylor, calls the social imaginary. Not words that form
the way we think, but the social imaginary. What's the social
imaginary? This is my definition. A common
understanding about self and the world that is not particularly
reflective. Reflection usually comes from
reading and digesting and thinking of words, but rather is imagined
as reality, leading to common practices, the social imaginary,
and a widely shared sense of legitimacy, especially in sexual
matters. the social imaginary, a common
understanding about self and the world that is not particularly
reflective, but rather is imagined as reality, leading to common
practices and a widely shared sense of legitimacy, especially
in sexual matters. For example, it doesn't really take much reflection
to realize God made a difference with men and women. Right? It doesn't take a whole lot of
reflection. Now, yeah, there are genetic kinks, and there
always have been, but that's a very small minority. But the social imaginary, a common
understanding about self and the world that is not particularly
reflective but rather is imagined as reality. If I really believe
and feel that I'm a woman, then there must be something to that. Without even asking the question,
what makes you feel that way, right? But it's also to leading
to common practices. And you wed this with technology.
I can get hormones. I can get estrogen or testosterone
that can be put into my system to make me feel even more like
a man or a woman. And I can get the surgery that
will make me look like a man or a woman. You'll see where
we're going with this in just a moment. Remember Carl Truman's
book, The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self? And so with
LGBTQ issues, homosexual marriages, Polyandry and polygamy. Oh, yeah,
they're right there coming right down the pike. Why? People feel
like they love a number of people. Why can't they have multiple
spouses? And it leads to common practices
like homosexual marriages and a widely shared sense of legitimacy,
especially in sexual matters, which comes out like this. You
must respect my right to live out of my feelings. Okay, we respect the fact they're
made in God's image, yes. The right to live out of your
feelings. Historic view is that our feelings may be dangerous
things. I may feel like killing somebody.
It's just that that hasn't become legitimate yet in the social
imaginary. But this is what's happening.
Not only do I have the right to have this practice, but it's
wrong for you to oppose it. And in fact, you're an enemy
if you oppose what I want to do with my body. I think that's
where we are, folks. So that's called the social imaginary,
a common understanding about self and the world that is not
particularly reflective. but rather is imagined as reality,
leading to common practices and a widely shared sense of legitimacy. Now this brings tremendous challenges
to those of us from the older generation. That doesn't include
Hayoung and Jackie, but for a lot of us in here, okay. This brings
tremendous challenges to those of us from the older generation,
because we don't understand this. let alone do we really know how
to connect with it, with the social imaginary. And here's
what churches will do. They'll hunker down and keep
the old ways they've done things, and a lot of them we need to
keep that way. They will not interact with their culture and
just basically say, let it go to hell in a handbasket. Those
churches will die. because we're in the world, but
we're not to be of it. So how did this social imaginary
come into being? And more importantly, what's
a biblical framework for understanding it? And how do you respond to
it? That's what we're going to begin
doing next week, okay? And I'll be using Strange New
World, but I'm going to use it as kind of a jumping off point.
I really want to look into some of the biblical texts, so I want
you to bring your Bibles next week. Now, a few less things
and we'll be done. You can ask your questions. This book has helped me to deal
with things in our own family. And they're things that a lot
of you are going through in your family. In fact, it is so disconcerting
to read how this opens up our culture. And I don't want the
class to be disconcerting for you, but boy, it really helps.
And so as it's helped me, I think this will help you. We're not
going to do this to be critical. This is not going to be gay bashing
or LGBTQ bashing. I don't want to have any of that
stuff. But how do you understand this strange new world? And more
importantly, how do you come up with a constructive alternative
to it? That's not really difficult.
The Word of God gives us that. So here's what the goals are
gonna be, and it's pretty much the goals Dr. Truman has in his
book. One, to help us live in intentional
and counter-culture ways. thinking about what you do and
realizing, yes, the way the Word of God tells us to do things
in the fear of the Lord, it's going to be real counterculture.
And my guess is it's going to mean there's going to be some
legal battles for some of us. It is number two to embody and
promote an alternative to the social imaginary. The social
imaginary is not real. I mean, folks, if you have a
law professor of the Berkeley University Law School who struggles
to define what a woman is, you know that's a social imaginary
that she's trying to live with. And you can't. You cannot escape
living in God's world. So we want to embody, live out,
and promote an alternative to the social imaginary. The challenge
to the rise and triumph of the modern self, number three, is
to demonstrate truth about you and others as human people, body
and soul. And folks, particularly the sexual
practices that are being promoted in our culture, I'm not gonna
bash all this stuff, I'm telling you right now, it's gonna destroy
lots of people. Why does the church exist? As
a community, we need to be what our name is, a haven, so people
can come and not have their lifestyle accepted, but have a certain
understanding of why they're doing this. And that's gonna
come by listening, incidentally. Saying to them, the way of the
transgressor is hard, without being condemnatory, the way of
the transgressor is hard, And let's show you an alternative,
not a social imaginary, but a social reality. And that's really what
it's about. The difference between the real
and the imagined. And that's why, folks, I want
to do this, because, to put it real bluntly, I don't want this
to be another dying OPC. Just keep the way we've done
things and speak to the 1950s generation. You ain't going to
reach this culture. It's hard enough to reach this
culture. But at least try to understand where people are coming
from. Let them come to your homes,
to the church, to our gatherings. And so long as they know that
you're showing the love of Christ to them, and you've got something
real that they don't, wow, what an impact you can have. So that's
what we're gonna go with. It's kind of like that couple.
Bill and Margaret are holding hands. We want a relationship
like that. See, that's the kind of thing.
Okay, so I'm done. 1229. See Jim, I told you you'd be done
by 1230 so you get your wife home. Questions, comments, arguments,
issues, and I'm not asking you to agree with me on everything,
but I want you to listen. Please. Yes. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, she is down in North Carolina.
Yeah, Rosaria Butterfish. I forget what her married name is. She was head of the
School of Lesbian Studies up in Syracuse. Oh, she's brilliant. And what
was interesting, this is an example for you. Ken and Floyd Smith, the pastor
and his wife, had her over. It's funny to hear, when she
went to the house the first time, she had a pickup truck. She says,
I don't know if I want to go into the house. But she did go
in, and they didn't even talk with her about church or the
Lord. But then they had family worship,
and they sang psalms. And she was fascinated with the
singing of these old things written a thousand years before Christ.
And that's what began to draw her in, the word of God. I think
not only technology but also so-called science is preventing
people from knowing God as well. Because before, when there were
a lot of mysterious, it was easier to have fear for the Creator. But then with the modern science,
like in China, when you are talking about spirituality, they will
put that into the category of superstition. Superstition. Science or religion? Religion. Because you can't say it, you
can't use science to prove it. It cannot be proved as true. So that influences a lot of people
believing in God as well. Yeah, very interesting. And there
really is not science, there are scientific theories. Some years ago when Dr. Mether,
I don't know if you remember Dr. Herb, Dr. Mether ended up
being an elder in Bohemia, but he was an elder in Franklin Square.
And he taught in the physics department at Stony Brook. And
he was quite an anomaly there, because secular school, and he's
a very committed Christian, a reformed Christian. And so we were talking
about scientific truth. He said, there is no scientific
truth. There's just scientific theories that can fit the facts
as we know them. But as you learn more, those
theories will change. So even that concept of science
as truth is part of the social imaginary. Yes, Iris. We can. I don't think you need
to, Iris. I mean, if you want a copy, we
can get it and you can read it. Yeah, I'm going to go through
the chapters. Oh yeah, yeah, I'll be using
it. You really don't need it. I'd rather you be reading your
Bibles, quite frankly. John? He wrote a book on education
in America. It was fascinating. He talked
about the history of the enemies of God. They're very much coordinated
and they're very deceitful in education more than anything
else. And really, all the way back
to Roman times, where he used this phrase, idea, idea, idea. And it's sort of like the indoctrination
of children. And that's what the movement
has become since really the turn of the 20th century. You know, just a real quick one.
He just showed how, you know, early on, I guess the turn of
the century, every classroom there'd be a Bible at the desk. And they went through this whole
routine with the Bible. And what they did is they took
that away and put the American flag. And then they put the Pledge
of Allegiance as a replacement. Yeah, that's profound What's
the book Battle for the American mind
Okay, I want to use Fox News as we rep it that's two things
in that regard the children your children are not the state's
They're yours. And the drive in public education
from Horace Mann in the 19th century on has been, we're raising
citizens of the state. No way. They want to be good
citizens. First of all, you're raising
them to be citizens of the kingdom, and that's the second thing.
But they're not your children. They're not the state's children, they're
yours. Now, Fox News. I don't, I listen to CBS news
a little bit, we don't have a television, not out of conviction, I just,
I don't want to waste the money. You want to waste the money,
it's your business. At night, I will, on my phone, I will read
Fox News for the day. Drives me crazy. linked with a story about the
Ukraine and are we going to have a nuclear war because of Vladimir
Putin. There's a story about the affairs,
sexual affairs, of a couple of celebrities I'd never heard of
before. And then there's a story about
a shooting. And then there's a story about another affair.
All listed. That's the social imaginary. It creates a world, and I'm using
that word properly here, it creates a world that is not real. And it makes you homogenize every
single thing that you listen to. When you put the possibility
of nuclear war on par with two relatively unknown people, or
whether they've had affairs with them. But notice what they put
in. It's an affair. See the sexually driven character
of media. So we're all affected by this,
folks, okay? But we do need to be aware of
it. And I said 12... Yes, sir. Yeah. One more quick
thing. Yeah, sure. And then Mike. Just real quick, he said that
all news, you cannot sit in front of a TV and listen to or watch
news and be neutral. That you are sucked into that
world, and that world, he described it like thinking you can breathe
underwater. Yeah, that's right. He used that
illustration. And he thought he was breathing
underwater, then finally someone grabbed him and pulled him out.
That's the social imaginary. Beautiful illustration. whether you know it or not, it's
called amusement. You don't think, it's not particularly
reflective. You react to it. Incidentally, the Christian Reformed
churches used to do a television program. and they studied media,
they stopped doing it, because they said you cannot but alter
the message when you're using visual medium for it. They're
not against television, but they use the radio broadcast for the
word, so yeah. Mike, use it. I would just say
it's a world we live in yet, still, so a world we have to
interact with. Got to. And I think a great news
source, I would just give a plug for Epoch TV, E-P-O-C-H. Yeah, okay. Wonderful news source.
Truth in reporting, I don't think there's nothing else out there
like it. It's linked to NTD as well, and
that's a sister station, and it's great reporting. Nobody knows about it. It's like
every time I talk to people, it's amazing to me that nobody
knows about Epoch. people, you know, experts, world
experts on these topics. Yeah, they send out a daily thing
too. I get a number of things from them on your phone. They have Epoch Times too. I
mean, you know, it's a paid subscription, but you can get it on smart TVs
for free. All right. Thank you. So bring
your Bibles next week. Bring something to write on.
If you want the book, I can order it for you. You really won't
need it. But I love this kind of discussion that we're going
to have. All right. Yes, Mary. Oh. A week from this
Thursday. Okay. Right. Linda, Samaritan's
Christmas child. in Samaritan's Purse, the Christmas
shoebox, Christmas collection. I'm going to pass out information,
suggested items that we can send. I'll do the collections. You
bring everything here, and I'll make it to the donation site.
And we'll make the shoeboxes, right? We'll put them together?
It can go in a regular shoebox. It can go in a plastic bag. You can also go to Hobby Lobby. They have a special section. Oh, neat. OK. Okay, good. Okay. Thank you, everybody. Mission,
mission, mission. John, why don't you lead us in prayer and ask
the Lord's blessing and pray for God's blessing on the food.
Let's pray. Heavenly Father, once again, we thank you for
the preaching of your word today. We do rejoice that you are our
Father, our Lord. Amen. As we come in prayer, O Lord,
we come as children to a father and asking these things. We thank
you, O Lord, for the provision that you've given us with the
food. We thank you for the brewers
being with us and for the work that they did in providing the
food. We are thankful for that each and every day. Just praising
for this class, we pray it might be a means by which We are driven
to be changers in this world and a haven to those. Amen. Bless this time now, O Lord,
in Jesus' name. Amen.
Strange New World Intro
Series Strange New World SS
Become part of The Haven Sunday Seminary. This first series builds on Dr. Carl Trueman's rich volume Strange New World. This class introduces the series after a quick introduction on the importance of Christian education - and all education.
| Sermon ID | 10192221552909 |
| Duration | 39:38 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday School |
| Bible Text | Proverbs 1:7 |
| Language | English |
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