Author: Lynn Green

  • Time Bombs – In Education

    Time Bombs – In Education

     

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

    Do you ever read something that contains a new thought, and then that thought begins to trigger little time bombs in your mind? That is, it continues to set off other new thoughts over the following days and weeks. Obviously that happens to me or I would not be mentioning it!

    EDUCATION FOR THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION

    I read a statement which claimed that our current format for schools and education is the product of the industrial revolution. Leaders of formative industries needed to find a way to free adults from the responsibilities of caring for and educating their children so they could work in factories. So education, as we know it, developed as a by-product of the drive for economic growth and wealth creation.  Most of the workers producing this wealth were parents working long days while their children were in school.

    This cultural shift resulted in new and highly valued freedoms.  Boys were no longer destined to stay in the trade of their fathers and girls began a path to more opportunity than ever before.   I am grateful for all the wealth created; it has resulted in many benefits—better health, housing, food, literacy, democratic processes—the list could get very long.

    PARENTAL RESPONSIBILITY

    However, this must have some implications for how we think about education. I for one have long felt that the primary responsible for educating, training, developing children lies with parents and yet our current arrangement places that responsibility firmly in the hands of professional educators. They are the ones who have our children for the majority of their waking hours. Our cultural and financial expectations push us to turn our children over to others at a very young age.  We rarely know those “others” well enough to be confident about what they are teaching and whether or not they will model the values held by the parents.  They in turn have been shaped by professional educators and the content of what they teach is usually mandated by government policy and educational specialist in the sphere of government.  Is this a healthy thing?

    DESTRUCTIVE EDUCATION

    Most Christian parents on either side of the Atlantic over recent years will have been concerned about several aspects of the education of their children.  Recently, we have seen the shift towards sex education including redefining marriage, gender fluidity, normalising transgender medical procedures, etc.  These subjects are important.  However, equally or more important is the teaching of such foundational subjects as English literature, History and Science with a studied absence of any reference to God or any higher authority.  Our children usually absorb the idea that human intellect is the highest authority and that morals and values are relative and evolving.  Understandably, most Christian parents harbour some level of concern that the nature of their children’s education, if it is provided by State schools, does not build any sort of foundation of faith and is almost always actively destructive to Christian faith and behaviour.

    WHERE ARE THE NEW MODELS?

    At the same time, and paradoxically, the Christian community has a growing confidence in the intellectual integrity and consistency of their faith.  Yet we have little or no opportunities to impart that confidence to our children.  We are simply too busy to do that, and so out of practical necessity, we accept that professional educators will shape our children and to a great extent their beliefs.  I conclude that we have to “swim against the tide” and develop more ways to educate our children in the beauty of our faith.  We were created to “love the Lord our God with all our heart, mind, soul and strength”.  Without concerted, God-centred education, our children will not be likely to obey this, “the greatest of all commandments”.

    WHAT ARE WE MULTIPLYING?

    These thoughts have led me to think again about how we help less developed nations.  Christian missionaries and workers are often on the frontline of providing assistance, technology and finance to nations and peoples who are less developed. One of our assumptions is that they need schools like our schools.  Many Christians have committed themselves to developing education systems in poorer nations.  I have been to some of those schools and they can be wonderful.  The teachers are trained in the best of education principles but are also spurred on in their spiritual growth and their Christ-centred living.  But are we possibly imparting a system that is too vulnerable to follow the path of our developed nations?  Should we be looking at ways to engaged parents more in the process of developing their children?  Is the accepted format for education with at least five long days a week spent in school the best we can do?  Is the system itself somehow flawed?

    TAKING EDUCATION BACK FROM GOVERNMENT

    I am convinced that centralised, national governments are not the appropriate authority for overseeing education.  We will probably always want and need professional educators, but they should be directly accountable to parents.  We will have to work out more ways to develop good standards and oversight without abdicating our God-given, parental mandate. There are some workable models in developed nations so we are not starting from scratch.

    I don’t have any complete answers at this point, but I think change often begins with asking the best questions.  Maybe you have some questions to go along with mine.  Than after thinking about the questions we might start finding some steps towards a better approach to education, one that does not so thoroughly drive a wedge between parents and children.  We are suffering because of this separation which may not always be caused by education, but there is certainly an educational contribution to it.

    IT IS OUR RESPONSIBILITY

    If we continue to pray the prayer the Lord taught us, “Thy Kingdom come, Thy will be done…” then perhaps He has some new ways for us to think about how His kingdom comes in the education and development of our children.

    Lynn Green.

  • The Shack

    The Shack

     

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

    A few months ago my wife, Marti, and I visited my sister and brother-in-law in Colorado and they invited us to go see the movie, The Shack.  I had read the book, so wasn’t that eager to see the film because I don’t really like sitting through a film and I was pretty sure the film would be a disappointment after reading the book.  The book was superb and I was pretty sure that no film could compare with the images created in my imagination as I read the book.  But, we went and I was moved to tears several time as I watched. I loved it! 

     Then they suggested we should watch the first episode of the author’s talks on TBN.  Again, I wasn’t that keen but I respect their judgment so we watched “Restoring the Shack”, Episode one.  It also impacted me much more than I thought it would.  We both decided that we would ask our home Bible study group to watch it.  They agreed and we are just finishing the last two of the 20 episodes.  They have far exceeded my expectations! 

    Paul Young is a great story teller so he certainly holds the viewers’ attention.  His talks also helped me pick up the many smaller points and symbolism in the book and film.  I was surprised at how much thoughtful theology he had woven into the story.  This series has been a very positive influence to draw us and some of our friends into greater love for God and has somehow been a source of greater grace to be like Jesus.

    The Shack, the film, is widely available now and the book continues to be a best seller in many nations.  We recommend reading the book, then watching the film, then start watching the TBN episodes with some friends.  The TBN series has some advertising and fund-raising segments, but they are not too long so they are worth sitting through.

    The following link will take you to “Restoring the Shack”.    https://www.tbn.org/programs/restoring-shack

    Lynn.

  • Reconciliation of Christians and Muslims

    Reconciliation of Christians and Muslims

     

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

    In April, 1096 AD, Christians left from the cathedral in what is now Cologne, Germany and walked across Europe bringing many tears of sorrow to the eyes of many Muslims in their path. They called it a Crusade. Exactly 900 years later, on Easter Sunday, 1996, about 150 Christians left from the same cathedral to begin a second walk across that same route, but this time they brought wide smiles and tears of joy to many Muslims.

    Their first stop was a Turkish Mosque. The leader, Lynn Green of YWAM (Youth With A Mission) read an apology to the gathered Muslims apologizing for the atrocities of the Crusades.

    The Muslims broke into spontaneous, load applause for a long time. The leader of the mosque, the Imam, joyfully exclaimed, “When I heard the nature of your message, I was astonished and filled with hope. I thought to myself, ‘whoever had this idea must have had an epiphany, a visit from God himself. It is my wish that this project should become a very great success.”

    That same Imam later told a participant that many Muslims were beginning to examine their sins against Christians and Jews. He said that their example would encourage them how to act in a similar way about the sins of the past. He promised to tell the other 250 mosques in Europe.

    One participant told this writer that as they came into Istanbul, the chief imam of the city came out to greet them with open arms. In an excited voice, he shouted, “Welcome! No Christian has ever come to apologize to us in 1000 years! You are the first. We welcome you!

    Others report Turkish policemen weeping when they heard of this apology. This was a common reaction by many Muslims to this request for forgiveness from the itinerant Christians who walked the entire route of over 2000 miles in rotating shifts of several dozen at a time. About 2,000 Christians from 27 countries participated in this walk wearing T-shirts and caps that say “I apologize” in Arabic or Hebrew.

    About 500 participants reached Jerusalem on July 15, 1999, the 900th anniversary of the killing of about 60,000 Jerusalem residents and the destruction of the city.

    Here is the text of that historic apology:

    Nine hundred years ago, our forefathers carried the name of Jesus Christ in battle across the Middle East. Fuelled by fear, greed and hatred, they betrayed the name of Christ by conducting themselves in a manner contrary to His wishes and character.

    The Crusaders lifted the banner of the Cross above your people. By this act, they corrupted its true meaning of reconciliation, forgiveness and selfless love.On the anniversary of the first Crusade, we also carry the name of Christ. We wish to retrace the footsteps of the Crusaders in apology for their deeds and in demonstration of the true meaning of the Cross.

    We deeply regret the atrocities committed in the name of Christ by our predecessors. We renounce greed, hatred and fear, and condemn all violence done in the name of Jesus Christ.Where they were motivated by hatred and prejudice, we offer love and brotherhood. Jesus the Messiah came to give life.

    Forgive us for allowing His name to be associated with death. Please accept again the true meaning of the Messiah’s words:”The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because He has anointed me to bring good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let the oppressed go free, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favour.” As we go, we bless you in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ

    font – http://www1.cbn.com/reconciliation-christians-and-muslims

  • Communications in YWAM

    Communications in YWAM

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**