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Of course, for a person to become like Christ, he must first know Him through regeneration.  Just as
               general education begins at physical birth, Christian education begins with spiritual rebirth.  Salvation
               brings a new understanding to the mind of the student and an opportunity to mold and guide his life in
               submission to God’s will.  But growth toward godliness is a step-by-step process and takes time.  That is
               what Christian education is all about:  the incremental steps from infancy to maturity.

               In the Bible, God has commanded two institutions to educate: the home and the church.  The home
               becomes a foundation, and the church comes along side and assists the home to fulfill the biblical
               mandate to educate youth.  The Bible makes it very clear that education begins at home (Gen. 18:19,
               Deut. 6: 7, Prov. 22:6, Eph. 6:4, 2 Tim 1:5, 3:15).  It makes parents primarily responsible for their children
               and charges them with an educational task.

               The New Testament indicates that the responsibilities of the church include edification as well as
               evangelism (Matt 28:19-20, Acts 2:42, 2 Tim. 2:2).  The scriptural representation of the church as a body
               implies it is an organism that grows and matures and requires education to do so.  Also, one of the
               important spiritual gifts given to the church is the gift of teaching which assumes the necessity of
               teaching and training in the local churches.

               The government or state has no biblical grounds to be involved in education; the biblical mandate has
               been made to home and churches.  Allowing the state to dictate the standards and procedures of
               Christian education jeopardizes the ability of parents and the church to exercise their educational
               prerogatives and ensure that the education is founded on God’s Word.  So, the church and home need
               to work together to provide an environment conducive to Christian education where the process is
               theocentric in nature.

               The Content of Christian Education

               The content of Christian Education is to teach student to know God and imitate Him in His character and
               works.  They must be taught that God is the source and foundation of all truth, and His Word is His
               revelation of that truth to man.  Therefore, no idea or “fact” can be true that conflicts with the
               statements of the Scriptures.  For example, evolution as the means for the creation of man cannot be
               true, because it is diametrically opposed to the origin of man presented in the Genesis account.
               Christian education begins with the premise that Scripture is true, and all observations must be
               interpreted in light of that truth.  The central content of education is to know God and His Word, and to
               see the world from His perspective.

               The Bible declares that man rejected God in the Garden of Eden and fell into sin.  This nature to sin
               passed to every generation after Adam (Romans 5:12).  Man’s natural inclination, therefore, is to rebel
               against authority and resist submission.  This important characteristic of every student must fully be
               understood to properly design and implement an educational system that deals with these natural
               inclinations.

               The concept of kindergarten was derived from naturalists who believe that all children (German is
               kinder) are born naturally good at heart, and desire to learn.  All that is needed is to place these
               innocent creatures into a beautiful garden (garten) that provide them the most opportunities to learn
               (positive environment) and they will soak in everything that is needed to be known.  Such ideas about
               the nature of man are educationally destructive, because they refuse to understand that man is a sinner
               and will resist coming under authority and instruction.  Jean-Jacques Rousseau was a Genevan

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