The RenewaNation Review 2018 Volume 10 Issue 1 | Page 17

“Any education that ignores or omits God cannot impart real knowledge and thus misses the point of all life for “from Him and through Him and to Him are all things.” of his teaching then becomes of paramount importance. An education without a focus on Christ, who is the Truth and the very source of knowledge, simply amounts to the student’s acquisition of facts and information—knowledge to be sure—but very limited in scope and not constituting a sure and enduring knowledge. 7 Knowledge Inseparable From God exists in logical form with rules and order (Ps 119) to allow communication, a function of God’s Trinitarian nature, and meaning, part of God’s sure and enduring purpose. Even geography boasts of the preeminence of Christ in all things, as Jerusalem and thus the nation-state of Israel, God’s chosen instrument to bring the knowledge of God to the world (Isa 49:1-7), exists “at the center of the nations” (Ezk 5:5).   Education is the process of instructing or teaching. Indoctrination is deliberate education into a particular teaching (i.e., a doctrine), and it occurs through the educa- tional process. Indoctrination into falsehood constitutes a working definition of brainwashing. However, indoctrina- tion into truth brings clarity to reality and leads to life. In fact, for the Christian, indoctrination is commanded (Eph 6:4). 6 The failure of parents to indoctrinate their children into truth will simply give someone else the opportunity to indoctrinate them into something other than the truth. This is critical considering the sobering reality of Jesus’ words in Luke 6:40, “Every student, when he is fully trained, will be like his teacher.” The teacher, his character, and the substance So, if knowledge begins with God, and our teaching should be “in the discipline and instruction of the Lord” (Eph 6:4), then how is this done practically and with everyday objects and events? Is there a moral relevance?   Take a pencil for instance. How do you know how long it is? If you compare it to a paperclip, it is long; to your arm, it is short. So how do you know its length? The only way to ascertain real and useful knowledge (in this case and in general) is to compare the pencil to a standard: a reference that does not change, like a ruler. Interestingly, all science (which means “knowledge” or “to know”) is based on measurement, 8 and all measurement is based on the concept of standards as the basis of knowledge regarding the measured entity. 9   Imagine a room without windows. Knowledge of time is perceived by the hands of a clock moving against the backdrop of a stationary (reference point) face. 10 Outdoors, knowledge of time is perceived by comparing the position of the sun in the sky with reference to the horizon, which is for us, a fixed and unmovable point. How does a student know if they’ve passed a class? They reference a standard grading scale that does not change. Knowledge of personal identity is based on who your parents are, an unchangeable fact. The list could go on. Practical knowledge, whether it be physical or nonphysical, is ascertained via comparison to a standard.   As is evident from Einstein’s theory of relativity, estab- lishing an unchanging reference point, absolute in all circumstances in the natural universe, is not possible. Given a Big Bang and an evolutionary unfolding of the universe, by definition, nothing is stable. In an evolutionary universe 17