Friday, October 10, 2014

ME, MYSELF AND I: DETHRONING THE SPIRIT OF NEGATIVE SELF-IMPORTANCE


And the multitude of them that believed were of one heart and of one soul: neither said any of them that ought of the things which he possessed was his own; but they had all things in common. And with great power gave the apostles witness of the resurrection of the Lord Jesus: and great grace was upon them all. Neither was there any among them that lacked: for as many as were possessors of lands or houses sold them, and brought the prices of the things that were sold, and laid them down at the apostles' feet: and distribution was made unto every man according as he had need - Acts 4:32-35.

If there be, therefore, any consolation in Christ, if any comfort of love, if any fellowship of the Spirit, if any bowels and mercies, fulfill ye my joy, that ye be likeminded, having the same love, being of one accord, of one mind. Let nothing be done through strife or vainglory; but in lowliness of mind let each esteem other better than themselves. Look not every man on his own things, but every man also on the things of others. Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus - Philippians 2:1-5.

Cultivate the understanding that the self is not really an independently existing entity, and begin to view self instead in terms of its dependent relation to others. Although, it is difficult to say that merely reflecting on this will produce a profound spiritual realization, it will at least have some effect. Your mind will be more open. Something will begin to change within you. Therefore, even in the immediate term there is definitely a positive and beneficial effect in reversing these two attitudes and moving from self-centeredness to other-centeredness, from belief in self-existence to belief in dependent origination - Dalai Lama XIV.

The spirit that should prevail amongst Christians is the spirit of Community, not an individualist spirit. Jesus died to make us a kingdom of priests (Revelation 1:6a), not islands. Beneath the Cross every ground is level – Hilary Johnson Chukwuma Chukwurah.   

An orchestra was playing for a group of wealthy guests. When they concluded a particular performance, the conductor who obviously was carried away by the group’s wonderful performance announced, “Now, I shall perform for you …!” No instrument responded to his command. He repeated his announcement using the first person singular. Again, nothing happened. A voice spoke from behind him, “Do not say, ‘I’; say We! He immediately corrected himself and announced, “Now, we shall perform for you …!” The instruments came alive and delivered a most commanding performance. 
Without controversy, we live in a Me, Myself and I generation; a generation where self is the epicenter. The end-time spirit of I is the spirit of negative self-love (II Timothy 3:1-5). It is characterized by “Me first” mentality and reinforced by self-importance where self is past, present and future. In this era, ego is celebrated.
I would like to commence my presentation by highlighting Biblical characters who demonstrated Me, Myself and I mentalities and those who repudiated them in what I call the Negatives and the Positives:  

THE NEGATIVES

In Scripture, several characters displayed the Me, Myself and I mentalities at various points in their lives. Amongst these were:
King Hezekiah
After King Hezekiah was healed of his sickness and had his life extended by almost twenty year, he blew the fuse. God was angry with him for showing Babylonian emissaries the secret treasures of his kingdom. In displaying His displeasure, God told him that he had jeopardized the interests of Israel and then gave him two options: to accept calamity in his days or have it occur in the days of his posterity. Selfishly, King Hezekiah chose the second option. He sealed the future of his children and that of the nation of Israel when he said to Prophet Isaiah,
“…Good is the word of the LORD which thou hast spoken. And he said, Is it not good, if peace and truth be in my days?” (II Kings 20:19).

He was not thinking of others but of himself. His self-centeredness blinded him to sufferings that awaited the people he would leave behind.  
 King Uzziah
King Uzzah was one young man who began life on a beautiful plane because he leaned on God’s Word through Prophet Azariah. As long as he paid heed to God’s directives, he prospered and did well. However, when he allowed self-importance to take center-stage of his life, he began to falter: he took laws into his hands, despised others and finally destroyed a beautiful life God had in store for him. II Chronicles 26:16 gave this sad commentary on the life and times of King Uzziah:

“But when he was strong, his heart was lifted up to his destruction: for he transgressed against the LORD his God, and went into the temple of the LORD to burn incense upon the altar of incense.”

When self is on the driver’s seat, catastrophe results. We can actually destroy ourselves by ourselves or save ourselves by ourselves.

Prodigal Son
Driven by thoughts that centered only on himself, this young man went to his father and in seven words, “…give me my share of the inheritance….”  communicated to his father his desire to live life the way he wanted it. Filled with thoughts of self, he took his own share of his inheritance and nearly destroyed himself.
We can become spiritual prodigals who live for ourselves when we allow self to dominate our relationships with God and others.          
Judas Iscariot
To say that Judas Iscariot was one of the rarest privileged men to associate with Jesus is to say the least. He threw that privilege to the garbage bin when he allowed self-interest to destroy a beautiful career ahead. His self-centeredness was revealed when he went to enemies of our Master to say to them, …what will ye give me…? (Matthew 26:15).

Note:
One of the most outstanding languages of self-centered people is Me. Amongst these characters x-rayed, you would notice the refrain, Me. Self. I. These characters and their ilk are not the only culprits. We are all involved. 

THE POSITIVES

In Scripture, several characters also displayed that they were not controlled by Me, Myself and I mentalities at various points in their lives. Amongst these were:

Abraham
Being a man of considerable spiritual maturity and one who was altruistic, faced with one of the most destructive challenges any person could face – resource control, Abraham demonstrated that self was not the epicenter of his earthly existence. In a situation that would have pitched him and Lot at daggers-drawn, Abraham said,

…Let there be no strife, I pray thee, between me and thee, and between my herdmen and thy herdmen; for we be brethren. Is not the whole land before thee? separate thyself, I pray thee, from me: if thou wilt take the left hand, then I will go to the right; or if thou depart to the right hand, then I will go to the left - Genesis 13:8-9.
John the Baptizer
John the Baptizer demonstrated uncommon leadership spirit and sportsmanship when his followers reminded him that the man (referring to Jesus) he had baptized earlier had taken the shine off him and that he was recording an avalanche of followers, John refused to yield to the demeaning spirit of self-exultation. Rather than being bitter, he fought the urge to politicize the work of God. He said to his followers:

…“A man can receive nothing, except it be given him from heaven. Ye yourselves bear me witness that I said, ‘I am not the Christ, but that I am sent before him.’ He that hath the bride is the bridegroom: but the friend of the bridegroom, which standeth and heareth him, rejoiceth greatly because of the bridegroom's voice: this my joy therefore is fulfilled. He must increase, but I must decrease” - John 3:27-30.

Apostolic Injunction
          Knowing the evil effects that Me, Myself and I mentalities could have on people, especially in Christian communities, Apostle Paul led by Holy Spirit enjoined Philippian Christians as well as Christians everywhere to de-emphasize self and to emphasize others and community attitudes:   

If there be therefore any consolation in Christ, if any comfort of love, if any fellowship of the Spirit, if any bowels and mercies, Fulfill ye my joy, that ye be likeminded, having the same love, being of one accord, of one mind. Let nothing be done through strife or vainglory; but in lowliness of mind let each esteem other better than themselves. Look not every man on his own things, but every man also on the things of others - Philippians 2:1-4

The Christian Magna Charter
In what could be described as Christian Magna Charter or Christian anthem (Motto), Christian life is summed as one that self has taken the backseat while Jesus has taken the drivers’ seats of individual Christian lives, Holy Spirit spoke through Apostle Paul who penned:

I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me: and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me - Galatians 2:20.

BASIS OF THIS PRESENTATION
          When we worship God in spirit and in Truth, we naturally tend to forget about self but when we stop worshipping God, we start worshipping self. When self is at the center, God is relegated to the background and other people become an afterthought. In this situation, God’s business becomes secondary while our individual activities become primary.
Serving God requires absolute surrender. It is one thing to be converted, but another thing to surrender. The greatest gift we can give to the Lord is personal surrender. The gift of self is the greatest gift (II Corinthians 8:1-5). God cannot move until we remove the things that inhibit the move of God in our lives and in our congregations – the spirit of self-importance.
           
WHAT IS SELF-IMPORTANCE?
Thomas Kevin observed that “Pride is nothing more than us highlighting us.” The universe of self-importance revolves around Me, Myself and I.
Roya R. Rad observes that self-centeredness is an indication of self-importance and wanting to be the center of attention. Self-centered people confuse ‘self-caring’ to being self-adulation.”  Self-caring means that you have concern for others, but not at the expense of yourself. It is the ability to strike balance.
CHARACTERISTICS OF SELF-IMPORATANT PEOPLE
Self-important people are always on self-protection mode. There is a part of them that they do not like and are trying hard to cover. They are always wearing invisible masks. They are natural energy vampires. They can be arrogant. Some of the characteristics of self-centered people are:
1.     Arrogance and taking too many measures to protect their self-images. 
2.     Inward insufficiency. They may look ‘too confident’ on the surface but feel inadequate in their inside. They are in search of ego feeders. That is why they use other people to fill up their inner gaps. 
3.     Intolerant of differences. They devalue others and put them at lesser positions. They lack abilities to feel confident internally. They feel sense of superiority by seeing others as inferior. They cannot accommodate different viewpoints. When you disagree with them, they fall out with you.
4.     Unable to have long lasting relationships. For them, people are either very good or very bad, depending on who admires them and who does not. In other words, if you fulfill their wishes, you are good; if you do not, then you are bad. They can be your friend one minute and an enemy the next.
5.     Possess self-esteem holes. Self-esteem is how well-developed our senses of self are. For self-important people, there are lots of holes in this area that need to be filled.
6.     Maximize their importance but seek to minimize that of others. They run you down by telling how important they are, asking, “Do you know me?” “Do you who I am?” “Do you know where I have been?” “Do you know the position that I occupy?”...   
SELF-LOVE: IS IT REALLY WRONG?
          Self-love is not completely wrong. Love for self is encouraged (Matthew 22:37-39). Self-love is only wrong when one thinks of self more than he/she ought to (cf. Romans 12:3-4). If I truly love myself, I would have to ascribe to others the same measure, not above or below. It must be the self-same affections (Matthew 7:12).                                                 Balanced self-love is healthy. It gives people senses of worth, and value; it encourages hardwork, discipline, focus and healthy competitive spirit. It helps people to develop self -respect and deep senses of fulfillment and belonging.
CHRISTIANS VERSUS ME, MYSELF AND I MENTALITY
Where spirit of self-importance envelopes an individual, he/she becomes trouble waiting to happen (James 3:16).
 Life is only meaningful when we live lives of altruism, that is, putting others ahead of us (Philippians 2:3-4). When we live for others, we reproduce the life of Christ in us because He counted us as more important than Himself. Because He did, today the world is all His, considering the fact that billions of souls have given their lives to Him (II Corinthians 5:14-16).
          One of the greatest battles we must fight in life is battle against self-importance (II Chronicles 26:16). Until you conquer yourself and subdue it to the point of where others become important, their opinions counting and their interests as paramount as yours are to you, you are dominated by Me, Myself and I mentality.
          Every new creature in Christ has died to self, has become alive to God and to others.  In Christ, “I” is an old story. “I” no longer lives but Christ is the one who is alive (Galatians 2:20). Christ must increase but I must decrease (John 3:30). To overcome, I must be “crucified.” This can only be realized when I die daily (I Corinthians 15:31-32). Our individual daily assignments would be to kill “I” and to ensure that “I” is not as it used to be.
          If a grain is planted but does not die, it will not spring to life to bear more fruits (John 12:24). Death must occur for our true personalities to emerge. So long as self remains on the throne, our true spiritual personalities will remain unrealized.  
          When we de-emphasize self, we will discover new senses of purpose, freedom and power. We will discover that life is more pleasurable when lived for God and for others.

DYING THAT HE MIGHT LIVE (JOHN 3:30; GALATIANS 2: 20)
          Throughout New Testament Scripture the principle of self-crucifixion and Christ’s exaltation are quite pronounced (II Corinthians 5:14-15). Self is represented by the word, “I”. This word is rooted strongly in the fallen nature of man. For the real nature of man to thrive, the fallen one must consistently die and diminish. The fallen nature is the Adamic nature but the real living nature is Christ nature. These two are present in each of us. It behooves, therefore, that the one we desire to live must live while the other dies. However, the Lord desires that we let self die (Matthew10:38-39) so that Christ can live in us and through us.
          Two great men of God in New Testament realized that this is imperative and in their respective lives were determined to let Adam die for Christ to live. To them, “Dying that He might live” was a mandate:
§  John the Baptist - “He must increase but I must decrease” (John 3: 30)   
§  Apostle Paul - “It is no longer I who lives but Christ who lives in me” (Galatians 2: 20).
          Who is presently reigning in your life - you or Him? If it is you, please let self die. But if it is Him, let there be an increase of His nature in your life daily.
ME, MYSELF AND I VERSUS GOD’S WORK
          Self should not the epicenter of earthly existence. Where self rules, God’s work is relegated to the background. We will not be sensitive to the needs of God’s work and will find it increasingly difficult to lend spiritual, morale and financial supports.                                
         We must not be at ease in Zion (Amos 6:1). We must not be like those in Prophet Haggai’s day who felt unconcerned over the well-being of God’s Work. They were busy building their businesses and developing their careers so much so that God’s House and work were left in states of ruin (Haggai 1:9).                                                         Life teaches that only a few things are REALLY IMPORTANT – that is, labouring at the foot of Jesus Christ (Luke 10:38-42). Eternity will not reward us for the things we enjoyed but for the things we sacrificed for God, His Work and for others. 
SAVE MYSELF FROM MYSELF OR DESTROY MYSELF BY MYSELF
We have been saved from our sins through faith in Jesus and in His vicarious sacrifice on the Cross at Calvary. We also must endeavour to save ourselves from ourselves – our pride, our worthiness, temperaments, selfishness, and from our self-wills.
It is an established fact that man is his own best friend and his own worst enemy. This was King Uzziah’s undoing. His self-worth destroyed him. King Uzziah’s life provides lessons on how not to let self-importance destroy us and others: 
§ We must learn not to think highly of ourselves (Romans 12:3; II Chronicles 26:16).
§ No matter how well-placed we may be academically, socially, economically and spiritually, we must never lose sight of the fact that we are what we are by the grace of God (I Corinthians 15:10). Uzziah never learned that lesson (II Chronicles 26:5, 15-16; cf. Ecclesiastes 9:11).

CONCLUSION                                                                                                             There is no gainsaying that God created us with senses of self-worth. This self-worth is what enables us to live reasonably and responsibly. However, when self-worth degenerates into negative self-importance of Me, Myself and I, it is then that we must step aside to allow God’s Holy Spirit redirect our focus on who we really are and what God expects each of to be.
       We must defeat negative self-importance by encouraging Community spirit, de-emphasizing self but emphasizing Jesus and others. Biblical discipleship demands self-denial and cross-bearing (Matthew 16:24-25).
          God bless us in Jesus’ name!
                HILARY JOHNSON CHUKWUMA CHUKWURAH
                   Church Of Christ, 14, Agbugwu Lane, Off,
                   University Market Road, P. O. Box 351, Nsukka, Enugu State.
                   PHONE: 08039596919; 08182820677.
                   E-MAIL:hilaryjohnsonc@yahoo.com, hilaryjohnsonc@gmail.com.

REFERENCES

Roya R. Rad ( 2010). “How To Deal With Self-Centered People.” Self Knowledge Base and Foundation, A non-profit dedicated to public education. www.SelfKnowledgeBase.com

Tina Vasquez (2008).Common traits of the self-centered person: How to recognize and deal with self-centered people,” Published January 09.


YOUR FUTURE IS IN YOUR PICTURE


There is a law in Psychology that if you form a picture in your mind of what you would like to be, and you hold that picture there long enough, you will soon become exactly as you have been thinking.
 - William James
    One of America’s foremost Psychologists.

In Creative Visualization – relaxing deeply and then picturing a desired goal in your mind exactly the way you want it to be. …you can picture in your mind what you want to have happen and it will happen.... Quite often the things I was picturing came true quickly and in unexpected ways.
Shakti Gawain
Author of Creative Visualization.   


I would like to commence this presentation by asking simple but salient questions – questions that I am convinced would jolt us out of our reverie; questions that are meant to spur us to greatness and awaken the giants in each of us. I dare ask - do you want to move from:
§  Zero to Hero?
§  Grass to Grace?
§  Upgrade from nobody to Somebody?
§  Transit from failure to Success?
§  Graduate from poverty to Prosperity?


If these questions speak to your heart’s desires, then, you must change your thinking. Your desire must be strong. You must have the spirit of No Retreat, No Surrender.
What I want to share with you goes by different nomenclatures: Shakti Gawain calls it, Creative Visualization. Dr. Maxwell Maltz calls it, Psychocybernetics. Dr. Norman Vincent Peale calls it, Possibility Thinking. I call it, Your Future is in Your Picture!
To establish and justify the fact that I will not be talking mere psychology, I want us to look at some Bible passages:
 At Ephesians 3:20 God’s Word says you can exceed your expectations – “Now unto Him who is able to do EXCEEDINGLY and ABUNDANTLY ABOVE ALL that we ASK or THINK, according to the POWER that WORKS in us….”  

Psalms 81:10 says, “I am the LORD Thy God who brought you out of the land of Egypt: OPEN WIDE YOUR MOUTH and I will fill it.

IMPORTANCE OF DEVELOPING APPROPRIATE MENTAL PICTURES IN OUR LIVES
A Chinese proverb says that a picture is worth a thousand words. Obtain a picture and live.  The picture you have determines the future you possess. While some people have appropriate pictures of themselves, others do not. At Jeremiah 1:11-12, God confronted Jeremiah and asked, “… Jeremiah, what seest thou?” Jeremiah replied, “I see a rod of an almond tree.” The LORD said to him, “Thou hast well seen: for I will hasten my word to perform it.” The picture you have determines what God will bring to bear upon your life.
Jesus encountered a man who was blind. Realizing that the man’s life was filled with restrictions, He took him aside to restore his sight. At Mark 8:22-25 we read, 

And he took the blind man by the hand, and led him out of the town; and when he had spit on his eyes, and put his hands upon him, he asked him if he saw anything. He looked up, and said, I see men as trees, walking. After that he put his hands again upon his eyes, and made him look up: and he was restored, and saw every man clearly.

First, the man did not see as he ought to see. He saw men as trees. Jesus knew that he was not seeing clearly. He did what He did and the man’s sight was fully restored. He began to see clearly. I dare to ask you:
§ What do you see?
§ Who do you see?

WHAT you see is as important as WHO you see. Fact remains that the you, you see is the you, you will be. Twelve men were sent to spy out God’s Promised Land to Hebrews enroute Canaan. Two men came back with the appropriate picture but ten came back with wrong pictures in their minds. Their report said it all, “And there we saw the giants, the sons of Anak, which come of the giants: and we were in our own sight as grasshoppers, and so we were in their sight.” (Numbers 13:33).
Do you see a giant or a grasshopper? Do you see an achiever or a failure? Do you see a person on a world stage or a person relegated to the background? Do you see a job creator (employer) or a job seeker? What you see is what and who you finally become. …we were in our own sight as grasshoppers, and so we were in their sight.

IMAGINATION: KEY TO PICTURING YOUR FUTURE
To create a future you so desperately desire, imagination must be your strong ally. William James made a significant statement that I consider critical:

There is a law in Psychology that if you form a picture in your mind of what you would like to be, and you hold that picture there long enough, you will soon become exactly as you have been thinking.

The formation of this “picture in your mind” is nothing other than the use of imagination. Imagination enables you to create mental pictures. When these pictures are fully developed, an imagineer begins to piece the images on his/her mind together, a kind of putting together a jigsaw puzzle. Every great invention or innovation followed this process. There is nothing mystic about it.
Dale Calvert, a networker employed this method of picturing one’s future in one’s picture to achieve success in his networking business. In their book, Dream Achievers: 50 Powerful Stories of People Just Like You Who Became Leaders in Networking Marketing, Anthony and Erik Masi quoted Mr. Calvert as saying,

When I started my business, I lived in a little 600 square-foot house. To inspire myself, I would drive my beat-up Chevette over to a really nice community where there were huge houses on a lake. I took pictures of these gorgeous homes in their beautiful settings. I’ll then put them all around my house and visualize one day that I would live there too. Nine years later we bought a home there! And right now, I’ m building a 15, 000 square-foot home on a 100-acre piece of land.        

BENEFITS OF DEVELOPING A MENTAL PICTURE
In his book, Success Secrets of Self-made Millionaires, Brian Tracy advocated the employment of Back-From-The-Future thinking. According to him, this is a powerful technique that is practiced by high-performing men and women which can have an amazing effect on your mind and on your creative abilities. He suggested that individuals should create visions for themselves for the long-term future. The clearer your visions are, the more you are likely to be driven by them and to achieve them. “When you create a mental picture of where you are going in life, you become more positive, more motivated and more determined to make it a reality. You trigger your natural creativity and come with idea after idea to help you make your visions come true…. Perhaps, the greatest discovery in human history is that you become what you think most of the time.” He wrote.

MAXIMIZE YOUR IMAGINATIVE CAPACITY
The word, “Imagination” comes from the root words, Image and Imaging. To “imagine” means to see through the mind’s eyes. To imagine, therefore, entails seeing in your mind the formation or existence of a thing. It conveys to us the understanding of the process of allowing a given phenomena take shape. This picture that takes shape in a creative mind is what finally becomes a product or service in the real world. It is pertinent to state that imaginative people are creative people.
To some people, their imagineering capabilities have been so developed that imagineering has become their second nature. Great minds like Albert Einstein, Henry Ford, etcetera were like that. In modern times, imaginative people are scattered all over the globe and can be found in various research centers, Research and Development departments of small, medium and large corporations. The interesting thing is that these are also found in various homes, schools and offices. One of the characteristics of imaginative people is that they see farther than their peers, see worth in worthless things and potentials in seemingly inconsequential objects.
Imagining how birds fly was what provided the idea-seed for Wright Brothers to think of a flying machine that could move people from place to place. This was at a time when common belief had it that whatever went up must surely come down. However, imagination and determination proved to be two great allies in the desire of these two brothers who worked hard to invent airplane.
The science of telepathy was what gave birth in the imagination of Graham Bell who imagined the possibility of inventing a device that could enable people to communicate with one another. Today, we have telephone in various designs and capabilities. O'Callaghan (1999:1) writing on Imagineering: The art or science of using imagination to intuitively make practical applications from knowledge observed:
 Imagination and intuition are the foundations of all improvements and advancements made by humankind. If someone had not imagined it was possible for man to fly, no one would have attempted to fly.  If no one had intuitively reasoned a propeller shaped like an airfoil could be used to power aircraft, no one would have attempted it. Imagination or intuition is the basis for all advancements and new designs.  The design of all prototypes is based solely on intuition.  The designer intuitively reasons or imagines the design and designs changes that result in the working prototype.  Only after testing does the design cease to be intuitive or imaginative, instead becoming scientific fact.  Until then it only existed in the designer's mind or imagination. Imagination is the process by which the human intellect travels beyond the limitations of his or her senses; imagination opens doors to an abstract world that is governed by the same rules as the physical world. The science of Imagineering is based on intuitively applying the laws of the physical world to an abstract imaginary world in an orderly and consistent manner to make predictions.  These processes give scientific credibility to imagination and intuitive reasoning.

MOSES: EXAMPLE OF FUTURE IN YOUR PICTURE
Moses' life is a study of faith in action. He demonstrated the Can-Do Spirit of an average person. He showed that human beings have the capacity to dare any odd and to come out victorious. There is power that inhabits every one of us. You can, if you think you can. Moses was a man who understood that the picture you form in your mind goes a long way in determining the future you will have, if only your faith can take a long look.

MOSES: VISION OF BECOMING PRINCE, JUDGE AND DELIVERER
Moses' life is an inspiration. Exodus 2:11-15 tells us. At Exodus 2:14, Moses was asked, “Who made you a Prince or a Judge over us?”
Why and how? Was he accusing Moses for accusation sake or was Moses guilty of trying to be a “Prince and Judge” over them? Moses actually envisioned himself as a Prince and Judge or Deliverer over the Hebrews in Egypt.
A careful study of the Hebrews in Egypt in the days, “When the Pharaoh who knew not Joseph” came to power (Exodus 1:8) and all the diplomatic games he had played in slashing down the Hebrews' population, including the circumstances that surrounded the birth of Moses, all revealed that the Hebrews' daily lives in that era in Egypt were that of “Sighing and groaning” (Exodus 2:23-24). At a point in the lives of Hebrews in Egypt, despondency set in as a result of their “Cruel bondage” (Exodus 6:9).
     Moses, at 40 years had observed the humiliations, exploitations and other numerous human right violations perpetrated against his people by the powers that were. Simply stated - the Hebrews were dehumanized. Over the years, Moses' people's pathetic state and tales had brought mist into the man's eyes. He had pondered over and over what should be done. One day, however, an idea dropped into his mind as Acts 7:23 tells us, “As he was approaching the age of forty, it entered his mind….” Mark the phrase, “...entered his mind.” Just before his fortieth birthday, an idea came into his mind; a vision flashed on the screen of his mind, immediately, he took hold of it, not letting go his grip on it.
What was Moses’ vision, his idea? To Deliver and Judge his people; to give them respite! To borrow Dr. Schuler's terms: when Moses had “Nested,” “Invested,” and “Crested” his ideas, he swung into action. Led by his vision as a Redeemer/Deliverer, he came upon an Egyptian pummeling a Hebrew, slew him and buried his corpse. That was an act of a redeemer and deliverer. Encouraged by his success, he ventured into the work of a Judge when he saw two Hebrews as they fought each other. In trying to mediate between them, he was told off by the offending party. Realizing that his act of redemption of a Hebrew, which eventually led to the death of an Egyptian had become an open secret; aware also that Egyptians would view the death of a fellow Egyptian who died for a 'worthless' Hebrews as treasonable, Moses ran away from Egypt and went into seclusion in Median.  
Succinctly stated, Moses saw the plight of his people and despite his royal upbringing longed to share in their lives (Hebrews 11:24-26). With a long-term view of an end to their sufferings, he saw the Hebrews as a people without a leader, sat down with his education and special training and mapped out strategies towards accomplishing his vision. His faith had a long look.
To reach his goal and accomplish his mission of delivering his people, he first envisaged himself as a Prince, a Hebrew Prince, Judge and Deliverer. As a Deliverer, he killed an Egyptian who was trying to kill a Hebrew. As a Judge, he went to mediate between two fighting Hebrews.
Although, those he had tried to salvage rejected him, yet, he kept the rope and after another forty years, his vision came through. Acts 7:32-36 tells us that his vision as a Judge and Deliverer over his people clicked. Moses had held tenaciously to his visions.
Desires of tough-minded optimists die-hard. Dare to dream. Hold on to the line, be tough skinned and don't give in to doubt, frustrations and discouragement. At Acts 7:32-36, Stephen, the first Christian martyr while he recapitulated on God's scheme of things for the nation of Israel and for the rest of mankind as it concerns human salvation strategically posited Moses and told how Moses' visions of becoming a Prince, Judge and Deliverer came to fulfillment:

But when he was approaching the age of forty, it entered his mind to visit his brethren, the sons of Israel. And when he saw one of them being treated unjustly, he defended him and took vengeance for the oppressed by striking down the Egyptian. And he supposed that his brethren understood that God was granting them deliverance through him; but they did not understand. And on the following day he appeared to them as they were fighting together, and he tried to reconcile them in peace, saying, “Men, you are brethren, why do you injure one another?” But the one who was injuring his neighbour; pushed him away, saying, “WHO MADE YOU A RULER AND JUDGE OVER US? You do not mean to kill me as you killed the Egyptian yesterday, do you?” And at this remark Moses fled and became an alien in the land of Median, where he became the father of two sons. And after forty years had passed, an Angel appeared to him in the wilderness of Mount Sinai in the flame of a burring thorn bush. And when Moses saw it, he began to marvel at the sight; and as he approached to look more closely, there came the voice of the Lord: “I am the God of your fathers, the God of Abraham and Isaac and Jacob.” And Moses shook with fear and would not venture to look. But the Lord said to him, “Take off the sandals from your feet, for the place you are standing is holy ground. I have certainly seen the oppression of my people in Egypt, and I have heard their groans, and I have come down to deliver them. Come now, and I will send you to Egypt.” This Moses whom they disowned, saying, “WHO MADE YOU A RULER AND A JUDGE?” is one whom God sent to be both a RULER AND DELIVERER with the help of the Angel who appeared to him in the thorn bush. This man led them out, performing wonders and signs in the land of Egypt and in the Red Sea and in the wilderness for forty years.

“Dreams do come through and true!” I thought I heard you say. Yes, dreams do come through and true. I want you to remember that for Moses it all started with a tiny seed-vision when it “entered into his mind.” I am convinced that when Moses muted that idea to some of his friends and close relatives, they must have laughed at him. Some may have tried to sow seeds of doubt and discouragement in him. Some may have made certain pessimistic comments about the visions he had expressed. Obviously, there were criticisms and other negative comments by those who seem to be ‘rationale.’ You may have come across these kinds of people who would take you through the drills of “reason” with all the facts that it is not possible; that it can't be done.
Read this: when Wrights' Brothers were working on their “Flying machine” idea, a somewhat skeptical editorial which appeared in New York Times of May 25, 1908 observed, “Flying machines, one and all, have quickly illustrated the adage of our youth, 'What goes up must come down.' ” Today, the skeptics have been proved wrong while  Wright Brothers have been proved right. When Graham Bell went to a bank to obtain loan to finance the production of his telephone machine, the irate bank manager drove him away because his idea was not only impracticable but weird as well. You and I are witnesses to the doggedness, can-do spirit and workability of the very ideas that were repudiated by the “experts” because, today, not only are machines flying and men could speak to each other from one end of the earth to the other, but also the fact that the world has been revolutionalized and made better by these two inventions. The world would not have been what it is today if these inventors had given in to the tauntings and skepticisms of those around them. Someone had rightly observed:
Beware of those who stand aloof and greet every venture with reproof; the world would stop if things were run by men who say, “It can't be done!”

Don't kill that dream; execute it! Be assured that any dream that would bring glory and praise to God; cause the expansion of God's Kingdom in the hearts and communities of men and ultimately bring blessings upon mankind is a seed of good from God. Writing to Philippian Christians in Philippians 1:6 and 2:13, Apostle Paul under inspiration wrote,

Of this I am convinced, that He who has begun a good work in you will bring it to completion… for it is God who is at work within you, both to will and to work for His good pleasure.

Dare to create that picture and God will see to it that it becomes your future. Let your faith a telescopic view. I do not know the vision you have of yourself. Do yourself this favor: whatever may be the circumstance of your present, hold on to the rope. Someday, somewhere and somehow it will click. At Habakkuk 2:3, God's Word has this to say:

For the vision is yet for the appointed time; it hastens toward the goal, and it will not fail. Though it tarries, wait for it; for it will certainly come, it will not delay.

MY CHARGE
I charge you to see the hero/heroin in you.
I charge you to see beyond the restrictions of your present.
I charge you to see beyond the limitations o your environment.
I charge you to see beyond your parental background.
I charge you to see beyond your personal limitations.
I charge you to have faith in your faith and to doubt your doubt.

CONCLUSION
Your future is in your pictures. At Revelations 3:18, Jesus challenged, “I counsel thee to … anoint thine eyes with eyesalve, that thou mayest see.” May God enable you to see what and who you ought to see for the glorious future that He had ordained for you in Jesus’ name!
_____________
Hilary Johnson Chukwuma Chukwurah is a Gospel Preacher in the Lord’s Church,  and MD/Chief Executive, Grand-Heritage Global Communications. 

Copyright protected:
*Your Future Is In Your Picture was culled from, FAITH TAKES A LONG LOOK and IDEATION AND ENTREPRENEURSHIP by Hilary Johnson Chukwuma Chukwurah.


Thursday, June 12, 2014

BENEFITS OF CHRISTIAN EDUCATION TO FAMILY AND NATION


INTRODUCTORY REMARKS
It is indeed an honour I did not covet to be requested to serve as Speaker at this auspicious occasion. The topic assigned to me is, “Benefits of Christian Education to Family and Nation.” This is a very important subject, considering the fact that education is central to the overall development of persons and their environments. I agree with an anonymous Chinese poet who lived Circa 400BC. This man knew the importance of education when he wrote,
If you are thinking a year ahead, sow a seed. If you are thinking ten years ahead, plant a tree. If you are thinking one hundred years ahead, educate the people. By sowing seed, you will harvest once. By planting a tree, you will harvest tenfold. By educating the people, you will harvest one hundredfold.
Reiterating his belief in the importance of education, British philosopher, Edmund Burke wrote, Education is the chief defence of nations.”                           
Indeed, education is a defence of individuals and families. It is a defence of any people. Generally, education is critical to human capital development. An educated society is an informed society. An educated community is one with a future. Epictetus (circa 100 C.E.) observed that “Only the educated are free.”                                   
In 1711, Joseph Addison wrote, “What sculpture is to a block of marble, education is to the soul.”  Knowledge creation and character-moulding are part of job descriptions of educators and educational institutions. Simply stated, education helps to shape destinies.                            It was said that Socrates’ mother was a midwife. As he grew up, he watched her help pregnant women give birth to their babies. When he became an adult and took up teaching as a profession, he adopted his popular midwife-teacher principles. In his own words Socrates stated,
My art of midwifery is in general like theirs; the only difference is that my patients are men, not women and my concern is not with the body but with the soul that is in travail of birth.
There are different types of education: functional and dysfunctional education. A functional education is one that serves positive goals and is holistic while dysfunctional education is one that does not serve its purpose and is part-focused. A functional education is one that teaches people to be useful to themselves, their families, societies, nations and humanity; one that teaches its recipients to be useful in material things as well as in spiritual matters. A dysfunctional education is one-sided, emphasizing one while de-emphasizing the other.                                                                
Our Lord Jesus at Luke 16:19-31 teaches need for humanity to strike a balance. In the above Bible passage we find that there are three categories of people: people who are earthly useful but heavenly useless; people who are heavenly useful but earthly useless, and people who are both heavenly useful as well as earthly useful. This is the goal of Christian education.
Aristotle, a Greek sage wrote, “The roots of education are bitter, but the fruits are sweet.” God’s Word agrees. Revised Berkeley Version renders Hebrews 12:11 thus,
Of course, no discipline seems at the time enjoyable, but it seems painful, later on, however, it affords those schooled in it the peaceful fruitage of an upright life.
            In academic communities, “discipline” is a multifaceted word. If you want to ascertain the course of study a student is pursuing, you may ask, “What is your discipline?...”  A popular adage says, “If you think education is costly, try ignorance.” Education is the meal ticket of the world. It is the access code one needs to walk in and out of places. It makes you a global citizen with a functional international passport.   

WHAT IS EDUCATION?                                                                                                            Okoro (1998:11) quotes Cicero, a Roman sage as affirming that, “Any systematic treatment of a subject should begin with a definition so that everyone may understand the subject of enquiry.” In view of this, we need to conceptualize education, which would serve as launch pad for our discourse. 
      According to Professor Steve A. Okecha, “Education has been defined in as many ways as there are cherries in Damascus.” In view of this, I will not cite a litany of scholars. I would only cite one definition that encapsulates the concept.        
  Writing on “Education” in Newswatch Magazine’s Special Independence Anniversary Edition published October 6, 2008 Professor Okecha cites Egbe Ehiametolor who defined education as,
… the acquisition of knowledge, the aggregate of all processes through which a person develops ability, skills, attitudes and other forms of behaviours with positive value in the society in which he lives.

            Professor Okecha went on to write that education is a life-long process, which frees a man from ignorance and, to some extent, superstition. He believes that education enhances the quality of an individual and enables him to build up his personality in such a way that he is able to play an effective role in the development of the society to which he belongs.                           
            There are three forms of education: formal education, which one receives in schools; non-formal education, obtained from semi-formal settings such as being an apprentice in a carpentry workshop; and informal education, obtained from the streets and peer groups. These forms of education are contributory factors in an individual’s overall personality and perception of the world around him. 
          There is no age barrier in education. This explains why an old English woman, many years ago, sat for and passed O’ Level examination at the ripe age of 90. She performed this feat after her son, a Physics’ Professor had retired from a British university.
            Succinctly stated, education is schooling, study, instruction, apprenticeship and tutelage (Acts 22:3; cf. Acts 19:9). Until this world is no more education will not cease because many people will keep devoting themselves to books and to studies (Ecclesiastes 12:12).                                    Education is not only acquired by attending a conventional educational institution, it can be acquired through non-formal means. There are people who attended schools but have remained illiterates, because even though they passed through the four walls of educational institutions they have nothing to show other than mere paper qualifications. However, there are people who do not have access to conventional education but they have continued to enlighten their minds through reading and unending quest for knowledge. Therefore, continuous reading and study are keys to beneficial education. Apostle Paul counselled Timothy, “Till I come, give attendance to reading….” (I Timothy 4:13).

GOD’S PEOPLE AND EDUCATION  
     In Biblical times, God’s people recognized the power of education and so took advantage of it. In fact, some of God’s greatest servants were men and women of sound academic orientations. Two examples here would suffice:
1.   Moses: “…Moses was learned in all the arts and sciences of Egypt” (Acts 7:22). Moses was more of a professor. His learning empowered him for God’s service. He led God’s people for 40 years and wrote the Pentateuch – Genesis to Deuteronomy and part of Psalms.
2.   Apostle Paul: “…born in Tarsus, a city in Cilicia, yet brought up in this city at the feet of Gamaliel…”  (Acts 22:3). Paul was a thoroughbred. He attended Gamaliel University. In fact, great men recognized in Paul a great academic. When he stood before Governor Felix, and began speaking with the finesse of a grammarian and erudition of a scholar, Felix was swept off his feet and so shouted, “Paul, your excessive learning makes you insane!” (Acts 26:24).
Scripture investigations reveal that:
                                i.            Paul was a great lover of books (II Timothy 4:13). The evidence of his wide exposure to education is there for all of us to see – he was the most evangelistic (cf. I Corinthians 15:10) as well as the most prolific (having written about 13 out of 27 New Testament books).
                             ii.            Physically speaking, Paul was small in stature but his writings were thunderbolt (II Corinthians 10:10). This is a powerful testimony to his education.

EDUCATION IS BEAUTIFUL AND POWERFUL                                                                             Daniel 9:1-3; 6:3 are important when it comes to appreciating the power of education and what it can do to and for any individual. Education creates a large storage space in a person’s mind and spirit to be able to see, analyze, evaluate and judge issues. It redirects one’s perspective and enables him to see what he should see.
            Daniel 9:2
In the first year of his reign, I, Daniel understood by books the number of the years, whereof the Word of the LORD came to Jeremiah the prophet, that he would accomplish seventy years in the desolations of Jerusalem.
            Daniel 6:3
Then this Daniel was preferred above the presidents and princes, because an excellent spirit was in him; and the king thought to set him over the whole realm.
            An all-round qualitative education combined with an excellent spirit will mark a person out. God wants His children not to be Heavenly useful and earthly useless or to be earthly useful and Heavenly useless. Rather, He wants His children to be Heavenly useful as well as earthly useful, which explains why Christians must embrace education and posses excellent spirits so that they can excel in whatever they do on planet earth (Proverbs 22:29).                              Education is a sweet experience! Daniel “understood by books and distinguished himself” (Daniel 6:3;9:2). Moses was “educated in all the arts and sciences of the Egyptians” (Acts 7:22). Apostle Paul was so educated that a Governor described his education as “Excessive” (Acts 26:24).  
      All of us who are heaven-bound must endeavour not to become “Heavenly useful but earthly useless” by not becoming educated. On the other hand, those of us who are educated should avoid being “Earthly useful and heavenly useless.” We must balance the equation.                               Education is not intended to make us proud but to humble us. The goal of education is to make us self-propelling, self-sustaining, independent, resourceful and visionary. Any education that makes anyone look down on small beginnings is no education at all (cf. Zechariah 4:10; Job 8:5-7). True education trains the mind, heart, and hands; it teaches us to see worth in little things.                                  
      Some Christians after exposure to higher secular education suddenly find the world alluring enough to leave God’s boat of salvation while some use their education to change the church so as to suit the world. All these are wrong. Our education should enable us to serve God by enhancing the corporate objectives of the Church towards enlarging the borders of God’s Kingdom in hearts and communities of men.                                                                                           The epicenter of education revolves around three principles: the principles of Learning to Unlearn and to Relearn! You must have an open mind, must be unassuming and must keep abreast of events in your world and in the worlds around you.

WHAT IS CHRISTIAN EDUCATION?
In an article, “Educating the complete person” Willard Collins (1990:64) defined Christian education as “…bringing up a person in the likeness of Christ.” Christian education is totalitarian. It educates the mind, the intellect, the spirit and soul of students. It trains people to be skillful in the uses of their hands and to value people. Above all, it inculcates in students love and fear of God, to appreciate principles enunciated in His Word. It teaches students to love the Brotherhood and to become patriotic citizens of their nations (Romans 13:1f). It lays foundation for them to become heavenly useful as well as earthly useful. It teaches that those who want to make heaven must as a matter of necessity be worthy earthly citizens (cf. Psalms 115:16).
Mission statements of some Christian schools summarize the goals of Christian schools across the world. For instance, Faulkner University located at 5345 Atlanta Highway, Montgomery, Alabama, USA states,

“Our mission is to glorify God through education of the whole person, emphasizing integrity of character in a caring Christian environment where every individual matters every day.” 

Freed-Hardeman University’s motto is:

           “Teaching how to live and how to make a living.”


BENEFITS OF CHRISTIAN EDUCATION TO THE CHURCH                                                   The Church of Jesus Christ will be benefited if we decide to enhance ourselves by becoming educated and more educated. Imagine a situation where God’s children are educated in all the areas of learning, so much so that you find in the church various kinds of professionals, the influence of the Church will be greater than is presently obtained.                                                           Benefits of Christian education to the Church of our Lord cannot be overemphasized. Our Lord Jesus set a powerful example when He took twelve ordinary men and for a space of about three years schooled them in Kingdom matters. Even though they were ‘commoners,’ a kind of rag-tag, the confidence they exuded after the training and the boldness that characterized their ministrations pointed to the direction where they had been (Acts 4:13). Apostle Paul’s training under Gamaliel (Acts 22:3), an eminent Jewish theologian of his era (cf. Acts 5:34) and his continued education in Jesus’ doctrines were so impactful that as he stood to speak, he towered intellectually above his audience. His elocution, carriage and charisma swept his audience off their feet that one man described him as a man with “excessive learning” (Acts 26:24).                      Writing on benefits of Christian education to the Church, Paul A. Keinel in an article, “The case for Christian education” (April, 1989:16) observed that

Christian school education strengthens the church through evangelism, solid Bible teaching, character education, strong academics, Christian citizenship, … and Christian leadership skills. Non-Christian school education cannot provide this kind of training.   

Brethren, if Roman Catholics could invest heavily in education and encourage her members to fund their various educational institutions; if our denominational neighbours could invest fortunes by establishing educational institutions and encourage their members to fund them, then the Church of our Lord Jesus Christ would be seen to lag behind if we do not engage in the establishment of educational institutions where we will educate our Brethren and endeavour to individually and collectively fund institutions owned by Christians. We must train and retrain our membership.

BENEFITS OF EDUCATION TO AN INDIVIDUAL         
     One of the greatest inventions of man is education. Education or lack of it is what makes the difference between an enlightened mind and an illiterate; between a stone aged man and a modern civilized person. Education is pivotal to mankind’s general development. It lays the foundation upon which man’s continuous search for meaning and relevance in a dynamic world is achieved.   
            Education is man’s response to God’s injunction to, “…subdue the earth…rule over the fish of the sea, the birds of the sky and over every living thing that moves on the earth” (Genesis 1:28). Education has led to exploits, revolutions and tremendous advancements in every aspect of human endeavours – agriculture, healthcare, space science, technology, and etcetera.
     Education empowers. It infuses self-confidence. It is a door opener. It places you at par with just about anyone anywhere, providing a common frame of reference. 
    Do you have opportunity to be educated? Congratulations! That is all you need to become what you want to be. Then take advantage of personal development. Keep your mind open. Read books, listen to tapes, listen to news, attend workshops – in fact, become a knowledge freak!

CHRISTIANS, EDUCATION AND CAPACITY-BUILDING
The growth of individual Christians is the growth of the Church. The well-being of Christians is the well-being of the Church and vice-versa (cf. Jeremiah 29:7). As Christians, individually, we are building blocks of the Church (I Peter 2:5). When a congregation is said to be strong, it is because all the component parts are strong. If a congregation is said to be wealthy, it is because members of that congregation are wealthy. If a congregation is said to be educated, it is because individual Christians who make up that congregation are educated. As go individual members so goes the Church.
The growth, development, stability or otherwise of individual Christians will rob off positively or negatively on the Church. Consequently, to speak of enhancing the capacities of a local congregation tantamounts to building the capacities of each Christian who make up that local Congregation. Church is simply a group of Christians.
It is high time we begin to appropriate God’s purpose for our lives. We must understand that God delights in the prosperity of His servants. God wishes and means well for each of us. We are creatures of God – we are not products of chance but of Divine design. We are all created for certain purposes. 
Every person God created is created to be somebody. God does not take time to create nobodies. Every person created by God is wired with innate abilities and potentials. Enhancing these abilities makes the difference between talents that are well-horned and utilized and ones that are not. Inability to key into one’s potentials and to maximize them is one of the greatest crimes one could commit against oneself. Capacity-building is the word.
Building our capacities is the art of strengthening our giftings towards personal development, church and national growth. Someone had wisely remarked that, “Who you are is a gift from God but what you become out of who you are is your gift back to God.”
The desire of everyone on planet earth should be to “serve the purpose of God in his (her) own generation” (cf. Acts 13:36). It is an acknowledged fact that everyone is endowed. There is a specific mission and task we are all created to accomplish towards the betterment of our immediate environments in particular and of the global community in general (cf. Psalms 115:16).
Recognizing and building your capacity becomes the first task you have towards accomplishing your life’s goals.

BENEFITS OF CHRISTIAN EDUCATION TO NATION-BUILDING

Christian education instills good citizenship education into the psyche of its recipients. Christian education breeds morally-sound, responsible, goal-oriented and God-fearing citizens – the very foundation for rock-solid national development.          
By default, Christians are not anti-social, anti-Governments or unpatriotic. Consequently, the education they provide at all levels do not promote Boko Haramism of any sort, rather are allies of government. Christian education breeds generations of nation builders.
 Because Christians are major stakeholders in their various countries, they are commanded to pray for their leaders (I Timothy 2:1-3) and to seek to promote national interests, knowing that the good of their countries would assure their well-being (Jeremiah 29:7). Why are Christians this way? Because of their education and value orientations.  
Christian education is beneficial to every aspect of national development: it is beneficial to the economy, politics, national security, social integration and productivity. No Christian worth his/her faith would dip his/her hand into public till, throw bombs at others, or over heat the polity.  
Christian education is transformational. It seeks to transform individuals to be their bests and to contribute positively towards national development and meaningful co-existence. It is a recommended type of education that any nation wishing to develop should adopt.  


SECULAR EDUCATION AND CHRISTIAN EDUCATION: WHICH IS BETTER?
  In as much as secular education is important, Christian education is better. Dr. Tim LaHaye in an article, “The need to establish moral values in public schools,” published in VOICE OF FREEDOM, September 1981, page 118 quoted a former American Senator, Samuel Hayakawa as having observed that, “… public schools have educated an entire generation of young people without benefit of moral values.” Herman Hughes (1989:24) quotes one Department of Education in a United States Midwestern state as admitting that, “It is not in the purview of public education to propagate moral values.”
      Men and Brethren; Ladies and Gentlemen, we are cognizant of the fact that here in Nigeria Christian Religious Studies (CRS) is taught in our public schools. Unfortunately, CRS is not Christian education, neither is it moral education. There is a world of difference between learning about Christianity and being taught Christian principles; there is a world of difference between of being taught about Christ and by Christ.       
    Secular education is biased towards moulding the physical person to function in a physical secular world without the benefits of educating other aspects of the human personality.
On the contrary, Christian education seeks to develop the total man (I Thessalonians 5:23). Secular tertiary institutions have become moral and spiritual slaughter houses; where moral deformation and spiritual prodigalities are norms, not exceptions.                      
The goal of Christian education is to equip students to be “worthy in learning and character.”    In an article, Your children and state universities,” J. Terry Wheeler (1984:49) observed that “… many who attend secular universities never return alive in the faith of Jesus Christ.” He went on to state that secular universities are not havens for God’s people. Rather, they are frontlines of battles between philosophies and ideologies. He wrote,

Of course, rarely is greater hostility evidenced toward any belief as the educational elite exhibit against true-to-the-Book Christian principles. Stand for Buddha and you are interesting. Stand for Darwin and you are enlightened. Stand for Jesus Christ and you are a naïve laughable buffon who gets in the way very quickly. Added to this hostility … are the problems of substance abuse, fornication and cultic assaults. This conflict is no small skirmish; it is a major warfare notorious for its casualties.
UNDER WHAT ENVIRONMENT ARE YOUR CHILDREN LEARNING?
Environment is critical to the overall development of our children. Enrolling your children into Christian schools is a vote for the future: future of our children, future of our families, future of our congregations and future of the global community. It ensures effective transference of ideals of our Faith and of the Restoration Heritage. It ensures the weeding off of denominational and apostate tendencies.
When we send our children to secular institutions, we should be ready to contend with secular philosophies and of a secularized church in the future. What we sow is what we will reap. Today, American Brethren are contending with New Age philosophies and doctrinal insurgents because, overtime, efforts of the fathers were abandoned when brethren began to send their children to secular institutions and liberal theological seminaries. When they returned, a generation that knew no Joseph emerged, “speaking perverse things,” leaving the church worse than they met her.        
Bob Rigdon, a Professor at Western Carolina University Graduate School, an Elder and Minister of the Sylva Church of Christ, USA  writing on, “The Christian Student on a secular campus” (Gospel Advocate, November, 1988:39) wrote,

For 25 years, I have taught at a state university. I wish I had kept records of all the Christian students I know who have enrolled here, a record of their attendance, and my subjective evaluation of their Christian lives. My estimate is that 75 percent did not attend faithfully any Church of Christ while at the university, even once a week.

I agree with Professor Bob Rigdon. Having preached at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka for fifteen years, I can tell you without equivocation that 50% of young people who enroll into secular universities never identify with Congregations and those who do, a certain percentage do not remain committed. We have to continuously seek them out with minimal success. This is not so in Christian universities.    

Writing on the need for Christian education, Paul A. Keinel in an article, “The case for Christian education” (Gospel Advocate, April, 1989:14) observed and suggested that,

Tragically, Christian schools are being ignored by a large number of the very people they seek to serve. …. Non-Christian education, taught by unbelievers, which undermine Scriptural values is not an appropriate training ground for the Lord’s people. Keep in mind Luke 6:40: “A student … who is fully trained will be like his teacher.” Christians should feel strongly about the kind of teachers who will influence their children.
  
 …so I hope you will choose a school for your children on the basis of its character and not on the basis of what is popular. You surely want a school that will reinforce the Christian values you teach in your home, not one that tears them down.

…I believe the words of Martin Luther: “I would advice no one to send his child where the Holy Scriptures are not supreme. Every institution that does not increasingly pursue the study of God’s Word becomes corrupt.” 


WHY SEND OUR CHILDREN TO CHRISTIAN UNIVERSITIES?
       “Our young people are the foundations on which the Church will stand in the future” wrote Gene Johnson. In an article, Private vs. Public Education,” Herman Hughes (Gospel Advocate, April, 1989, page 24) cites an anonymous writer who observed that, “There are two lasting bequests we can give to our children – one is roots, the other, wings.” He writes that as,
Christian parents, we are deeply concerned that our children put down their roots deep into God’s Word. We want them to develop a faith of their own that will not only be saving but also liberating. And we want our children to reach their full potential for a happy and successful life.
He asked,
Where do these roots and wings come from? From parents of course, and the church. But what about school? Is the school working with or against the home and church? The Christian school is committed to supporting parents and church in developing Christian values, not countering them at every turn.     
…Christian school advocates believe that each child deserves the best education possible in a disciplined and loving environment where each individual is encouraged to to achieve, where ethics are just as important as academics, and where God and country are honoured.

J. Terry Johnson, President of Oklahoma Christian College, Oklahoma, USA in an article, “College is not the real world” (Gospel Advocate, 1988:41) cited a recently completed study by Gallup Organization of Princeton, New Jersey as confirming that:

Christian college graduates are more content with life, happier in personal relationships, and more active in their service to the Church than their public college graduate counterparts. Parents who have become enlightened to the differences are influencing their children to select one of the Christian colleges. The cost may – or may not – be slightly higher, but the value received cannot be beat at any price.  

In an article, “The case for Christian education,” Paul A. Keinel (1989:18) quoted a US Government-funded Coleman Report as revealing that Christian schools are better than public schools using the following benchmarks:
1.     they produce better cognitive outcomes than do public schools with comparable students.
2.      they provide better character and personality development than do public schools.
3.  they provide a safer, more disciplined and more ordered environment than do public schools.
4.      they are more successful in creating an interest in learning than are public schools.
5.   they are more efficient than public schools, accomplishing their educational tasks at lower cost.
6.   they have smaller class sizes and thus allow teachers and students to have greater contact.  

Writing on “Parents, Churches and Christian Schools: Partners in Education,” John Waddey (1987:358) observed,

For a hundred and forty years we have known the value of Christian colleges for the training of our children. In recent years with the deterioration of public schools, multitudes of private ‘Christian’ elementary and high schools have sprung up. In these schools young people have the advantage of Christian teachers, numerous Christian peers, all classes being taught from Christian perspectives, daily Bible classes, and devotions. Beyond the advantages, they have a higher standard of discipline and are spared the teaching of evolution, humanism and hedonism by their teachers. They are also sheltered from the scourge of drugs, the filth of profanity, and other common vices found in public schools.
We must resist the pressure to lower our standards to please the non Christians who enroll their children. A Christian school must be more than a place where the Bible is not banned. It must be taught. Christians need to study the Divine Book with the same thoroughness and discipline as they do Math or history. Teachers need to be more than nominal “Sunday morning” church goers. They need to be living models of true Christianity since they have such a powerful influence over their students. Children will follow their good examples to the Savior (I Corinthians 11:1). 
The three most powerful influences in a child are his parents, his church, and his school. When a child is so fortunate as to have all of them faithfully leading him in paths of righteousness, he will almost certainly dwell in the House of the Lord all the days of his life (Psalms 23:6).


CHRISTIANS AND EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS
Acts 19:9 tells us that Apostle Paul established a training institution, which he operated for about two years. This institution was a training ground where he nurtured budding preachers of the Gospel and then unleashed them upon the world to proclaim the undiluted Word of God. No wonder, Acts 19:10 declared “…that all who dwelt in Asia heard the Word of the Lord Jesus, both Jews and Greeks.”  
“…School of one Tyrannus” may refer to a school owned by a person called Tyrannus or a school located in a place called Tyrannus. Whatever be the case, a school was operated where preachers of God’s Word were trained. The school may have operated for two years and closed shop or may have operated a two-year curriculum of training, which today serves as a model for two years program of schools. Whatever may have happened, training occurred: churches were involved and preachers were trained!

WHY THE CHURCH MUST BE INVOLVED IN EDUCATIONAL PROVISIONS 
The distinctive nature of New Testament Christianity makes her a lone voice in the wilderness of modern day religious confusion and cacophonic ministrations. Proliferation of religious houses have taken centre-stage where story-telling and entertainment of the like of Athenians’ experiences are replicated (Acts 17:16-23). Today people flock to religious houses to “hear something new.” We must take Holy Spirit’s injunction to Titus, an evangelist, seriously. In Titus 1:10-12, Paul wrote,

For there are many unruly and vain talkers and deceivers, specially they of the circumcision: Whose mouths must be stopped, who subvert whole houses, teaching things which they ought not, for filthy lucre's sake. One of themselves, even a prophet of their own, said, The Cretians are always liars, evil beasts, slow bellies.
Nothing best describes our modern day religious environment than what we find in the above Scripture passage. There are many empty talkers on various media of mass communication and in various religious houses whose mouths must be shut because they teach and preach things they are not permitted to for the sake of financial gains.
We live in an age of advancements in virtually every area of life. Ministry is becoming increasingly challenging as human societies move from simple to complex. Human beings are becoming more and more enlightened. Therefore, those who must minister to them in spiritual matters must endeavour to keep pace. As a rule of the thumb, pulpit is supposed to be above the pew not the other way round.
Training raises the human capital of our Ministers and Members to be more proactive and responsive. Divergent voices which are trying to weaken the Church’s voice would be properly coordinated if we meet on training grounds to cross-pollinate Biblical ideas and moderate our differences.
If our denominational and religious neighbours of the likes of Roman Catholic, Anglican, Assemblies of God, Presbyterian, Methodist, Redeemed Christian Church of God, Living Faith, Baptist, etcetera are investing heavily in education by floating world-class higher institutions, which would serve as training and conversion grounds for their members and would-be members, then the Church of our Lord should not be found to lag behind in this direction.  
Congregations must be in the vanguard of advocating for the education and retraining of her most critical workforce. If there are no pools of intellectual and theological resources, the Church of tomorrow will become endangered. We must continue to re-sharpen our focus by continually equipping those who will take the baton of our Congregational leaderships by reminding them to hold forth the core elements of our message (cf. II Timothy 2:2).

RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CHURCHES OF CHRIST AND EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS
Relationship between Church and educational institutions is such that one lays the foundation upon which to build superstructures of the Faith while the other builds; one plants the message while the other waters the message. It is a perfect arrangement of Town and Gown. It is so symbiotic that the absence of one will be greatly felt by the other. While congregations financially support educational institutions by making endowments, sending their children to attend institutions owned and operated by Brethren, these institutions will in turn become feeders of congregations because the people they train will at the end serve with existing congregations as well as many who will chart new paths by going to virgin areas to plant new congregations (cf. Romans 15:20).   
Our American Brethren know the importance of partnering with schools established by Brethren. Universities and preacher training institutions litter America’s geographical landscape. Universities such as David Lipscomb, Abilene Christian, Faulkner, Bear Valley, Brown Trail, Freed-Hardeman, Harding, Heritage Christian, Lubbock Christian, Memphis School of Preaching, Ohio Christian, Oklahoma Christian, Pepperdine, Sunset International, Tennessee Bible College, York College, etcetera were all set up by members of the Lord’s Church in America and are heavily sponsored by Congregations of the Lord’s Church all across America. Some were purely for preaching purposes while others combine ministerial training with secular education.
Training institutions exist for the Church. Therefore, the Church should support these institutions. It is in her best interests to do so. To do this, Brethren should send their children to be trained and support them fully; they should make occasional as well as regular donations of money and materials; take lead in securing lands and construction of permanent structures for these institutions.
Today, health and educational institutions such as Obong University (OU), Obong Ntak, Akwa Ibom State; Nigerian Christian Institute (NCI), Uyo, Akwa Ibom State; School of Biblical Studies (SBS), Jos, Plateau State; Western Nigerian Christian College (WNCC), Ogun State; Nigerian Christian Bible College (NCBC), Abak, Akwa Ibom State; Nigerian Christian Seminary (NCS), Asa Nnentu, Aba, Abia State, Nigerian Institute of Arts and Theological Studies (NIATS), Nlagu, Abia State; School of Biblical Studies (SBS), Awka, Anambra State; Carl and Merle Acuff Comprehensive Academy(CAMACA), Umuopu-Agu, Igbo-Eze North Local Government Area, Enugu State as well as Comprehensive School of Management and Technology (CSMT), Abakaliki, Ebonyi State are all testimonies to institutions owned and funded by members of Church of Christ. How well these facilities are funded are largely unknown.
If we as a church family must be relevant in the scheme of things today and tomorrow, we must put our hearts where our mouths are: we must put our hearts where our collective future is. Leaving a legacy for the Church’s posterity entails that we must be futuristic in our plans and programs by ensuring that our gains in the present are consolidated by strategically empowering our educational institutions to continue to serve the educational, theological and spiritual needs of the Church.
The spillover effects of the Church’s supports and funding of our educational institutions are enormous:
1. It will ensure a continued pool of theological and intellectual resource for our Congregations.
2.    Our capacity as a church family to contain divergent voices will increase.
3.   Our capacity to contend earnestly for the Faith will also increase as we will have in abundance not only men who are well equipped but men whose confidence in themselves and in God’s Word cannot be in doubt.
Congregations MUST SUPPORT our training schools. We must empower our educational institutions as individuals and body corporate with our financial resources and expertise in different areas of life to ensure that our present is consolidated and our future guaranteed. To do so is akin to what Samson did: he took three hundred foxes, bound them tail-to-tail, set them on fire to set afire the land of the Philistines (Judges 15:4-5).
By supporting our educational institutions we will be gathering men together, set their spirits on fire to set our communities afire by God’s Word.
Paul did that at Tyrannus, supported by congregations and the result was tremendous. More congregations were planted and nurtured all across Asia. The people our Lord left behind to ensure that the message He had brought to the world and the Vicarious Sacrifice He had made on Calvary’s Cross were properly propagated by the men He had spent three years plus training and equipping.
Supporting Christian education is a vote for the continued growth of the Church. As Christians, especially members of the Restoration Heritage, we must put our hearts where our mouths are and should be. One of the greatest legacies anyone faithful and meaningful Christian can leave behind is to ensure that the Faith continues after him/her. To ensure this, two primary institutions must be empowered: Church and Schools. Supporting the Church materially and spiritually will ensure that existence of the Faith of our Lord Jesus will be guaranteed for generations yet unborn. Supporting Christian schools will reinforce what the Church does. The relationship between Congregations and our educational institutions should be mutual, aware that they have complimentary roles.                                                                                                           Our Lord is depending on His Church to take the message of salvation to the world (Ephesians 3:10). Christian schools are willing to assist Congregations of our Lord achieve this objective. Therefore, let Congregations partner with our schools to ensure that this is realized. When this happens, it will become Partnership that Works!
In an article, “Problems facing Christian education” J. Walker Whittle (1984:165,169) observed,

“If Christian higher education is to continue the progress in recent decades, Christians must be financially involved. There are many ways for this to be done – direct donations, wills, trust, annuities, estate planning, charitable insurance and others. It is truly the work of God…. Generally, our Christian colleges are providing a tremendous service to the church, Christian young people, and the nation. You could be part of the solution to the problems within Christian education. How?
1. Be sure that your children (even grandchildren) attend a Christian college.
2.  Be so committed to Christianity that it would lead you to sacrifice.
3. Speak positively to your family and friends about Christian education.
4.      Become involved in every possible way.
5.      Pray for those who lead our institutions.   

CONCLUSION
I would like to close this presentation by quoting the words of Paul A. Keinel,
I believe that Christ and the Word of God placed at the center of education can only accrue to stronger families, better Congregations and quality of life that will please the Lord. Help us spread the word about Christian-school education.   

Thank you and God’s blessings continue to be our lots and portions in Jesus’ name! 

HILARY JOHNSON CHUKWUMA CHUKWURAH (Evangelist
                                    Grand-Heritage Global Communications
                                    37, Market Road, P. O. Box 351, Nsukka, Enugu State.
                                    PHONE: 08039596919; 08182820677.
                                    E-MAIL:hilaryjohnsonc@yahoo.com,
                                      hilaryjohnsonc@gmail.com.


References

Collins, Willard (1990). “Educating the complete person.” Gospel Advocate Magazine.  Nashville, Tennessee, USA: Gospel Advocate Company.

Hughes, Herman (1989). “Private vs. Public Education.” Gospel Advocate magazine. Nashville, Tennessee, USA: Gospel Advocate Company, April, p.24.

Johnson, Terry (1988).“College is not the real world.” Gospel Advocate magazine. Nashville, Tennessee, USA: Gospel Advocate Company, November, p. 41.

LaHaye, Tim. (1981). “The need to establish moral values in public schools,” VOICE OF FREEDOM magazine, September, p. 118.

Paul A. Keinel (1989). “The case for Christian education.” Gospel Advocate magazine. Nashville, Tennessee, USA: Gospel Advocate Company, April, p.14

Okecha, Steve A. (2008). “Education” Newswatch Magazine. Lagos: Newswatch Media Ltd., October 6,

Okoro, N. M. (1998). The Business of Advertising. Enugu: ACENA Publications.

Rigdon, Bob (1988). “The Christian Student on a secular campus.” Gospel Advocate magazine. Nashville, Tennessee, USA: Gospel Advocate Company, November, p.39.

Waddey, John (1987). “Parents, Churches and Christian Schools: Partners in Education.” Christian Bible Teacher. Quality Publications, Abilene, Texas, USA, September, p. 358.

Whittle, J. Walker (1984). “Problems facing Christian education.” Gospel Advocate magazine. Nashville, Tennessee: Gospel Advocate Company, pages 165, 169.


This paper was presented by Hilary Johnson Chukwuma Chukwurah at OBONG UNIVERSITY, Obong Ntak, Akwa Ibom State, Nigeria on May 24, 2014.

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