One of the goals of Classical Christian Education is to teach students how to think Christianly. Naturally, it follows that the first question we need to answer is what it means to think Christianly.
At first glance, it seems this expression must mean we are to teach students to think biblically. And that is true, but only part of the answer. It’s not the full story.
In his 1963 book, The Christian Mind, Harry Blamires helps us get closer when he explains,
There is no longer a Christian mind. There is still, of course, a Christian ethic, a Christian practice, and a Christian spirituality. As a moral being, the modern Christian subscribes to a code other than that of the non-Christian. As a member of the Church, he undertakes obligations and observations ignored by the non-Christian. As a spiritual being, in prayer and meditation, he strives to cultivate a dimension of life unexplored by the non-Christian. But as a thinking being, the modern Christian has succumbed to secularization (3).
What Blamires rightly asserts here forces us to drill deeper into the issue of education than the sincerest motivation most Christian parents have for homeschooling or sending their children to Christian schools. Of course, sincere Christian parents want to raise children who subscribe to a biblical morality, undertake biblical responsibilities, and pray and meditate on the Scriptures. This is all necessary and proper. But it is not enough.
Christian children (as well as their Christian parents and teachers) need to be able to think Christianly too. But how is this different than what was noted above? How is this different from Christian piety?
The answer lies in the categories of thought that we take for granted. It is rooted in the presuppositions and frames of reference we never think to question. It’s akin to the old saying, “We don’t know what we don’t know until we know there is something we don’t know.
One way to illustrate what I mean is to recount a humorous anecdote the late philosopher, David Foster Wallace, shared in a speech title, This Is Water. He says,
There are two young fish swimming along who happen to meet an older fish. The older fish nods at them and says:
‘Morning boys, how’s the water?’
The two young fish swim on for a bit and then eventually one of them looks over at the other and asks:
‘What is water?’
Irrespective of Wallace’s personal philosophy, his fish story is meant to illustrate the fact that some of the most important realities—ones we would think should be the most obvious to us—are usually the hardest to see. Those of us living in the modern era were born and raised to think in categories and along lines that appear to be our natural habitat. And until we can find some way of flopping ourselves outside the proverbial fishbowl, we will never discover that we’ve been breathing water this whole time.
To put it plainly, I’m talking about Secularism. Secularism is view that everything from public education to matters of civil policy should be engaged and conducted without the introduction of a religious or metaphysical element. It is the materialist belief that these matters are in and of themselves neutral and “objective science” is the measure of all things.
Secularism is the water we in the modern world were born into and we are so used to swimming in it and breathing it, it’s difficult to imagine another reality. It’s also the same fishbowl to which the church and the academy unfortunately immigrated a century or more ago; and now we all (Christians and Secularists alike) have been settled here for so long, we think in secular terms and the church has forgotten its native tongue.
Blamires explains it this way: “Except over a very narrow field of thinking, chiefly touching questions of strictly personal conduct, we Christians in the modern world accept, for the purpose of mental activity, a frame of reference contracted by the secular mind and a set of criteria reflecting secular evaluations” (4).
In other words, although most Christians seek to live a life pleasing to God, personally, and want to raise their children to do the same, they think about everything–even their Christianity–in secular terms. Secularism is, in most cases, the framework by which modern Christians organize their categories of thought, it is the standard by which they evaluate the quality and cogency of those thoughts, and it’s the faculty by which they imagine their identity and existence.
More to the point of this article, secularism is the water in which most Christian parents are seeking to teach their spawn to swim like Christians.
My thesis is this does not work in the long run and a liberal arts education is an essential part of developing a proper frame of reference outside the secular fishbowl so Christian parents can teach their children to think Christianly.
If you would like to follow this discussion and learn more about the idea of thinking Christianly, be sure to subscribe and you’ll receive an update in your inbox each time I post.
Clayton Reed says
Scott – agree with you on your point. Can you flesh it out with a concrete example? Hope you are well.
Scott Postma says
Clay, Good to hear from you. It’s been a while. I hope you are also well. One example germaine to our current political climate might be the idea of justice or freedom. Most Americans’ sense of justice is rooted in Pagan Naturalism and not Christian ethics. Depending on how one answers, “What is justice?” and “What is Freedom or Liberty?” their presuppositions will usually be pretty evident. Most Christians tend to discuss these ideas and others like them in secular terms without even realizing it. Another glaring example is the modern church. The modern American evangelical church at large is deeply rooted in secular categories of thought, like corporate leadership strategies, social justice theory, and critical race theory. The examples are endless, but these are a few. I will continue to roll out more on this. Blessings!