Teach Your Children Well_1
Teach Your Children Well
Scripture: Deuteronomy 6
Faith is best taught "in action". In the normal routines of life. When you go in and out - lie down get up. . .
Impress them on your children - something they will never forget. Young minds are more impressionable. Not information.
What are we instructed to pass on to our kids? What is the admonition of the Lord?
Integrated Faith - when you go about the normal routines of life.
Intimate Faith - when you sit at home. - talk about it.
Intentional Faith - I deliberately & purposefully want to influence my children to serve the Lord.
Identification - bind them as symbols. What have been some faith symbols for us over the years? Fish symbol - Greek character "chi" - WWJD - serves as a personal declaration and accountability.
4972 sphragizo { sfrag-id’-zo}
from 4973; TDNT - 7:939,1127; v
AV - seal 22, set to (one’s) seal 1, stop 1, seal up 1, set a seal 1, vr seal 1; 27
GK - 5381 { sfragivzw }
1) to set a seal upon, mark with a seal, to seal
1a) for security: from Satan
1b) since things sealed up are concealed (as the contents of a letter), to hide, keep in silence, keep secret
1c) in order to mark a person or a thing
1c1) to set a mark upon by the impress of a seal or a stamp
1c2) angels are said to be sealed by God
1d) in order to prove, confirm, or attest a thing
1d1) to confirm authenticate, place beyond doubt
1d1a) of a written document
EDUCATION. The child has always been of paramount importance in Judaism, as the Mishnah and Talmud clearly show in several passages. For that matter, Jesus certainly taught the value of children, in his kindly treatment of them as well as in his instruction regarding them. Because of this, there are a number of source-books for the study of education in the biblical period to be found in the OT, the Apocrypha and the Mishnah; viz. Proverbs, Ecclesiasticus, Wisdom of Solomon and Pirqe Aboth, quite apart from useful allusions in other books. On the other hand, actual details of schooling are few; the word ‘school’ occurs but once in av, and then refers merely to a lecture-room borrowed by Paul (Acts 19:9), not to any Jewish or Christian school.
I. Early links with religion
Three events stand out in the history of Jewish education. They centre on three persons, Ezra, Simon ben-Shetah\ and Joshua ben-Gamala. It was Ezra who established Scripture (such as it was at the time) as the basis for schooling; and his successors went on to make the synagogue a place of instruction as well as a place of worship. Simon ben-Shetah\ enacted, about 75 bc, that elementary schooling should be compulsory. Joshua ben-Gamala improved existing organization, appointing teachers in every province and town, a century later. But otherwise it is not easy to date innovations. Even the origins of the synagogue are obscure, though the Exile is a likely time for their rise. Schürer doubts the historicity of Simon ben-Shetah\‘s enactment, though most scholars accept it. In any case, Simon did not institute the elementary school, but merely extended its use. Simon and Joshua in no way interfered with existing trends and methods, and indeed Ezra only made more definite the previous linking of religion with everyday life. So it will prove better to divide the topic by subject rather than date, since none of the three men made sweeping changes.
II. The development of schools
The place of learning was exclusively the home in the earliest period, and the tutors were the parents; and teaching in the home continued to play an important part in the whole of the biblical period. As it developed, the synagogue became the place of instruction. Indeed, the NT and Philo support Schürer‘s view that the synagogue’s purpose was primarily instructional, and only then devotional; the synagogue ministry of Jesus consisted in ‘teaching’ (cf. Mt. 4:23). The young were trained in either the synagogue itself or an adjoining building. At a later stage the teacher sometimes taught in his own house, as is evidenced by the Aramaic phrase for ‘school’, beÆt_ saµp_eraÆ, literally ‘teacher’s house’. The Temple porticoes, too, proved very useful for rabbis, and Jesus did much of his teaching there (cf. Mt. 26:55). By Mishnaic times, eminent rabbis had their own schools for higher learning. This feature probably started in the time of Hillel and Shammai, the famed 1st century bc rabbis. An elementary school was called beÆt_ has-seµp_er, ‘house of the book’, while a college for higher education was known as beÆt_ mid_raµsû, ‘house of study’.
III. Teaching as a profession
The first tutors were the parents, as we have seen, except in the case of royal children (cf. 2 Ki. 10:1). The importance of this role is stressed here and there in the Pentateuch, e.g. Dt. 4:9. Even as late as the Talmud, it was still the parent’s responsibility to inculcate the law, to teach a trade and to get his son married. After the period of Ezra, there arose a new profession, that of the scribe (soµp_eµr), the teacher in the synagogue. The scribes were to change their character by NT times, however. The ‘wise’, or ‘sages’, seem to have been a different guild from the scribes, but their exact nature and function are obscure. The ‘sage’ (h\aµk_aµm) is, of course, frequently mentioned in Proverbs and later wisdom literature. By the NT period, there were three grades of teacher, the h\aµk_aµm, the soµp_eµr and the h\azzaµn (‘officer’), in descending order. Nicodemus was presumably of the highest grade, the ‘teachers of the law’ (Lk. 5:17, where the Gk. term is nomodidaskalos) of the lowest. The generic term ‘teacher’ (Heb. melammeµd_; Aram. saµp_eraÆ) was usually applied to the lowest grade. But the honorific titles given to teachers (rabbi, etc.) indicate the respect in which they were held. Ideally, they were not to be paid for teaching, but frequently a polite fiction granted them remuneration for time spent instead of services rendered. Ecclus. 38:24f. considers manual labour beneath a teacher’s dignity; besides, leisure is a necessary adjunct to his task. But later on there were many rabbis who learnt a trade. Paul’s views can be seen in 1 Cor. 9:3ff. The Talmud gives stringent rulings about the qualifications of teachers; it is interesting that none of them is academic—they are all moral, except those that prescribe that he must be male and married.
IV. The scope of education
This was not wide in the early period. The boy would learn ordinary moral instruction from his mother, and a trade, usually agricultural, plus some religious and ritual knowledge, from his father. The interplay of religion and agricultural life would have been self-evident at every festival (cf. Lv. 23, passim). The festivals also taught religious history (cf. Ex. 13:8). So even at the earliest period everyday life and religious belief and practice were inseparable. This was the more so in the synagogue, where Scripture became the sole authority for both belief and daily conduct. Life, indeed, was itself considered a ‘discipline’ (Heb. muÆsaµr, a frequent word in Proverbs). Education, then, was and remained religious and ethical, with Pr. 1:7 its motto. To read was essential for the study of Scripture; writing was perhaps lessimportant, although it was known as early as Jdg. 8:14. Basic arithmetic was taught. Languages were not taught per se, but note that, as Aramaic became the vernacular, study of the Heb. Scriptures became a linguistic exercise.
Girls’ education was wholly in their mothers’ hands. They learnt the domestic arts, simple moral and ethical instruction, and they were taught to read in order to become acquainted with the law. Their education was considered important, however, and they were even encouraged to learn a foreign language. King Lemuel’s mother apparently proved an able teacher to him (Pr. 31:1); this chapter also shows the character of the ideal woman.
V. Methods and aims
Methods of instruction were largely by repetition; the Heb. verb sûaµnaÆ, ‘repeat’, came to mean both ‘learn’ and ‘teach’. Mnemonic devices such as acrostics were therefore employed. Scripture was the textbook, but that other books were not unknown is evidenced by Ec. 12:12. The value of rebuke was known (Pr. 17:10), but an emphasis on corporal chastisement is to be found in Proverbs and Ecclesiasticus. But discipline was much milder in Mishnaic times.
Until comparatively late times, it was customary for the pupil to sit on the ground at his teacher’s feet, as did Paul at Gamaliel’s (Acts 22:3). The bench (sap_saµl) was a later invention.
Jewish education’s whole function was to make the Jew holy, and separate from his neighbours, and to transform the religious into the practical. Such, then, was normal Jewish education; but undoubtedly there were schools after a Gk. pattern, especially in the closing centuries bc, and indeed Ecclesiasticus may have been written to combat deficiencies in such non-Jewish instruction. Hellenistic schools were found even in Palestine, but of course more frequently among Jewish communities elsewhere, notably in Alexandria.
In the infant church child and parent were told how to behave towards one another (Eph. 6:1, 4). Church officers had to know how to rule their own children. There were no Christian schools in early days; for one thing, the church was too poor to finance them. But the children were included in the church fellowship, and doubtless received their training there as well as in the home.
Bibliography. W. Barclay, Educational Ideals in the Ancient World, 1959, chs. I, VI; F. H. Swift, Education in Ancient Israel, 1919; E. B. Castle, Ancient Education and Today, 1961, ch. V; TDNT 5, pp. 596-625; entries s.v. ‘Education’ in IDB and EJ. (*Wisdom; *Wisdom Literature; *Writing.) [1]
1d1b) to prove one’s testimony to a person that he is what he professes to be[2]
1348 Letting Children Free to Develop?
Coleridge was once talking with a man who told him that he did not believe in giving little children any religious instruction whatsoever. His theory was that the child’s mind should not be prejudiced in any direction, but when he came to years of discretion he should be permitted to choose his religious opinions for himself.
Coleridge said nothing; but after a while he asked his visitor if he would like to see his garden. The man said he would, and Coleridge took him out into the garden, where only weeds were growing. The man looked at Coleridge in surprise, and said, “Why this is not a garden! There is nothing but weeds here!”
“Well, you see,” answered Coleridge, “I did not wish to infringe upon the liberty of the garden in any way, I was just giving the garden a chance to express itself and to choose its own production.”[3]
4174 Princeton Parents’ Imprints
When Woodrow Wilson was president of Princeton University, he spoke these words to a parents’ group:
“I get many letters from you parents about your children. You want to know why we people up here in Princeton can’t make more out of them and do more for them. Let me tell you the reason we can’t. It may shock you just a little, but I am not trying to be rude. The reason is that they are your sons, reared in your homes, blood of your blood, bone of your bone. They have absorbed the ideals of your homes. You have formed and fashioned them. They are your sons. In those malleable, moldable years of their lives you have forever left your imprint upon them.”[4]
3925 lamad { law-mad’}
a primitive root; TWOT - 1116; v
AV - teach 56, learn 22, instruct 3, diligently 1, expert 1, skilful 1, teachers 1, unaccustomed + 3808 1; 86
GK - 4340 { dm'l;
1) to learn. teach, exercise in
1a) (Qal) to learn
1b) (Piel) to teach
1c) (Pual) to be taught, be trained[5]
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[1]The New Bible Dictionary, (Wheaton, Illinois: Tyndale House Publishers, Inc.) 1962.
[2]Enhanced Strong’s Lexicon, (Oak Harbor, WA: Logos Research Systems, Inc.) 1995.
[3]Tan, Paul Lee, Encyclopedia of 7,700 Illustrations, (Garland, Texas: Bible Communications, Inc.) 1996.
[4]Tan, Paul Lee, Encyclopedia of 7,700 Illustrations, (Garland, Texas: Bible Communications, Inc.) 1996.
[5]Enhanced Strong’s Lexicon, (Oak Harbor, WA: Logos Research Systems, Inc.) 1995.