Category Archives: Learning/Education

WEST POINT AND CHRISTIANITY

I was browsing through some of the key books they read at West Point.  Not surprisingly, there were no books on the list which offer any real argument for pacifism.   

This got me thinking more about education, and what a true education requires.  I know some, perhaps many, would say the reading of thoughtful critiques of the military-industrial complex too risky for undergraduates at West Point.  I’m not so sure. 

I think some wars are “just,” though war is always ghastly in so many ways.

Too many of us Christians live in echo chambers where our views are never challenged.  I think we too could benefit from reading critiques of those from outside the faith.  We just might learn a thing or two. 

 

TEACHING AND LEARNING!

The professor is in class to incite, cajole, inspire, and assign matters so that a young man or woman reads for the first time a book they may never have heard of. This is what he owes them. They want to know, moreover, not just what Plato had to say but what their teacher has to say. Yves Simon, in a famous passage, that I never fail to stress, tells us that there are three kinds of students: those only interested in grades, those who already know everything, and the eminently teachable, those who will allow him, in a short time in their youth, to take them through things which it took him into old age to figure out. The professor hopes that they all finally become “eminently teachable” and that he is worthy of teaching them.

From James Schall,”A Final Gladness,” The Last Lecture at Georgetown

 

 

 

RUSTLING PAGES

I just finished a terrific new biography on George Whitefield.  I will soon be posting my interview with the author and Baylor history professor, Thomas Kidd.

It is interesting to note that both George Whitefield and Daniel Defoe commented on how active the Scots were in church with rustling the pages of their Bibles.  Ah to hear that sound again!

TRUE LEARNING IS THREATENING

One fears to plow through a new volume if there is a chance that a favorite landscape will be bulldozed in the process. One fears discovering a truth which will demand rethinking several views and changing the mind. One fears that somehow the knowledge will somehow negate the pleasures of naïvete.
Fred Craddock
HT: Allan Bevere 

http://www.patheos.com/blogs/jesuscreed/2015/03/14/fred-craddock-by-allan-bevere/#ixzz3UmAoDVyZ