“Train up a child in the way he should go; even when he is old he will not depart from it.”
We are living in a time when the need for godly instruction and spiritual formation has never been greater. As the world grows increasingly complex and morally confused, the Church must rise with clarity and conviction, reclaiming the divine responsibility of Christian education. This sacred calling is not confined to classrooms or limited to clergy—it is the shared duty of every believer to nurture minds, shape hearts, and disciple lives in the knowledge and fear of the Lord.
Let us remember: Christian education is discipleship. It is the intentional process of grounding every subject—science, history, literature, ethics—in the truth of Scripture and the lordship of Jesus Christ. It equips students to think critically, act compassionately, and live faithfully in a culture that often promotes values contrary to the Gospel. In Christian education, truth is not relative, but revealed. Purpose is not self-defined, but God-given.
The home, the church, and the Christian school must work hand in hand. Parents are the first educators, and their example and instruction set the spiritual tone for their children. Churches must come alongside families, offering robust teaching and mentoring that continues through every stage of life. Christian schools and ministries are not just alternatives to secular education—they are mission fields and training grounds for future leaders who will carry the light of Christ into every sphere of society.
Let us be vigilant. To neglect Christian education is to allow the next generation to be shaped more by the world than by the Word. To relinquish this responsibility is to risk raising children who are culturally competent but spiritually empty—who know how to make a living, but not how to live for God.
Therefore, I urge you: invest in Christian education. Support it with your prayers, your resources, your time, and your gifts. Be involved—whether by teaching, mentoring, encouraging, or learning yourself. Whether you are a parent, pastor, teacher, elder, or student, you have a role to play. Every conversation, every lesson, every act of encouragement is a seed planted for the Kingdom.
Let us rise to the call. Let us teach boldly, learn humbly, and disciple faithfully. For the glory of God, and the good of generations yet to come.
To neglect Christian education is to risk spiritual drift. But to embrace it is to build a legacy that honors God and equips His people for every good work.