How to Teach Religion eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 220 pages of information about How to Teach Religion.

How to Teach Religion eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 220 pages of information about How to Teach Religion.

Who can measure the potentialities that lie hidden in the soul of a child!  Just as the acorn contains the whole of the great oak tree enfolded in its heart, so the child-life has hidden in it all the powers of heart and mind which later reach full fruition.  Nothing is created through the process of growth and development.  Education is but a process of unfolding and bringing into action the powers and capacities with which the life at the beginning was endowed by its Creator.

THE CHILD AS THE GREAT OBJECTIVE

The child comes into the world—­indeed, comes into the school—­with much potential and very little actual capital.  Nature has through heredity endowed him with infinite possibilities.  But these are but promises; they are still in embryonic form.  The powers of mind and soul at first lie dormant, waiting for the awakening that comes through the touch of the world about and for the enlightenment that comes through instruction.

Given just the right touch at the opportune moment, and these potential powers spring into dynamic abilities, a blessing to their possessor and to the world they serve.  Left without the right training, or allowed to turn in wrong directions, and these infinite capacities for good may become instruments for evil, a curse to the one who owns them and a blight to those against whom they are directed.

Children the bearers of spiritual culture.—­The greatest business of any generation or people is, therefore, the education of its children.  Before this all other enterprises and obligations must give way, no matter what their importance.  It is at this point that civilization succeeds or fails.  Suppose that for a single generation our children should, through some inconceivable stroke of fate, refuse to open their minds to instruction—­suppose they should refuse to learn our science, our religion, our literature, and all the rest of the culture which the human race has bought at so high a price of sacrifice and suffering.  Suppose they should turn deaf ears to the appeal of art, and reject the claims of morality, and refuse the lessons of Christianity and the Bible.  Where then would all our boasted progress be?  Where would our religion be?  Where would modern civilization be?  All would revert to primitive barbarism, through the failure of this one generation, and the race would be obliged to start anew the long climb toward the mountain top of spiritual freedom.

Each generation must therefore create anew in its own life and experience the spiritual culture of the race.  Each child that comes to us for instruction, weak, ignorant, and helpless though he be, is charged with his part in the great program God has marked out for man to achieve.  Each of these little ones is the bearer of an immortal soul, whose destiny it is to take its quality and form from the life it lives among its fellows.  And ours is the dread and fascinating responsibility for a time to be the mentor and guide of this celestial being.  Ours it is to deal with the infinite possibilities of child-life, and to have a hand in forming the character that this immortal soul will take.  Ours it is to have the thrilling experience of experimenting in the making of a destiny!

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Project Gutenberg
How to Teach Religion from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.