Americas schools need to return to propagating a Christian ethos
ANALYSIS/OPINION:
Ever wondered how we got into this mess? Ever wonder how we became the âDivided Statesâ rather than the United States? Has it ever crossed your mind how a culture that so proudly boasted of âco-existenceâ just five minutes ago became so fractured, so angry, and so hypocritical?
I mean, just look around. Our governors are misogynists. Our Congress is corrupt. Our president is inept. Our borders are a joke. And our streets literally burn while our magistrates fiddle with their masks. Itâs no wonder that poll after poll indicates that Americans are pessimistic about their future.
If you want to understand whoâs responsible for this cultural chaos, you need to look no further than our nationâs schools. As the parable of the prodigal son, as well as the story of Esau, teaches us - When you sell your birthright for a pot of stew, youâre going to end up wallowing in the slop with the pigs.
And what is that âbirthright?â What is that inheritance that our nationâs schools have so foolishly squandered?
Well, put succinctly, it is that of a Biblical worldview.
The history of education in the United States is clear. Schools in our nation were established to propagate a Christian ethos. The guiding philosophy for American education until that last handful of years, historically speaking, was to promote moral development and civic responsibility and to prepare upright, honest and trustworthy leadership. Simply stated, the primary purpose of education in America for the first couple hundred years of our countryâs existence was to maintain the nationâs moral order. Schools were founded to galvanize future leaders in a common faith: faith in Christ and faith in America.
Want proof? Consider this:
Harvardâs founding motto was Christo et Ecclesia, âFor Christ and the Church.â Princetonâs was Vitam Mortuis Reddo, âI restore life to the dead.â Yaleâs was âto know God in Jesus Christ andâ¦to lead a Godly, sober life.â These first three of Americaâs most seminal institutions were unquestionably charted as Christian schools. Their missions added depth and detail to their mottos. Harvard said its goal was to âlet every student be plainly instructed and earnestly pressed to consider well the main end of his life and studies is to know God and Jesus Christ which is eternal life and therefore to lay Christ at the bottom, as the only foundation of all sound knowledge and learning.â Yale declared its purpose was for its students to âlive religious, godly and blameless lives according to the rules of Godâs Word, diligently reading the Holy Scriptures, the fountain of light and truthâ¦.â Princetonâs purpose could not have been more precise: âCursed is all learning that is contrary to the cross of Christ.â
But it doesnât end there. Seven of the eight âIvy Leagueâ institutions were founded in like manner to train up future generations in a biblical ethic, to educate a moral citizenry, and, thus, lay the foundation for a free people and a free nation. Dartmouth was founded to âChristianizeâ the Native American tribes, and its motto even to this day is Vox Clamantis in Deserto: âThe voice of one crying in the wilderness.â The University of Pennsylvaniaâs motto was Leges Sine Moribus Vanae: âLaws without morals [are] useless.â Brown Universityâs was In Deo Speramus, which means âIn God We Hope.â Columbia Universityâs motto was taken directly from Psalm 36:9, In Lumine Tuo Videbimus Lumen: âIn Thy light shall we see light.â
The list could go on and on and literally cover coast to coast. Amherst College: Terras Irradient â" âLet them enlighten the lands.â Wellesley College: Non Ministrari sed Ministrare â" âNot to be served, but to serve / Not to be ministered unto, but to minister.â Northwestern University: Quaecumque Sunt Vera â" âWhatsoever things are true.â Kenyon College: Magnanimiter Crucem Sustine â" âValiantly bear the cross!â Ohio University: Religio Doctrina Civilitas, Prae Omnibus Virtus â" âReligion, Learning, Civility; Above All, Virtue.â Indiana University: Lux et Veritas â" âLight and Truth.â Emory University: Cor Prudentis Possidebit Scientiam â" âThe wise heart seeks knowledge.â Valparaiso University: N Luce Tua Videmus Lucem â" âIn Thy light we see light.â The University of Southern California: Palmam Qui Meruit Ferat â" âLet whoever earns the palm bear it.â The University of California: Fiat Lux â" âLet there be light.â
These institutions are just a few of hundreds that explicitly cited a Judeo-Christian ethic as their guiding ethos and the very reason for their existence. Americaâs educational âinheritanceâ is, indeed, rich with the assumption that the highest goal of the academy should be to teach and model personal integrity within the context of those âself-evident truths that are endowed to us by our Creator:â Truths such as respect for the law, a desire for virtue, a heart for sacrifice, and the value of sobriety, religion, morality, and Biblical wisdom.
Want to know why we are where we are today? Look no further than your local schools and how far they have strayed from their original home. Maybe itâs time they followed the prodigal and returned to their Father with a spirit of repentance.
⢠Everett Piper (dreverettpiper.com, @dreverettpiper), a columnist for The Washington Times, is a former university president and radio host. He is the author of âNot a Daycare: The Devastating Consequences of Abandoning Truthâ (Regnery) and, most recently, âGrow Up: Life Isnât Safe, But Itâs Good.â
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