The RenewaNation Review 2018 Volume 10 Issue 2 | Page 42

G N I N I A R T T I HAB THE CHRISTIAN IN M O O R S CL AS teel By Joleen S C HARLOTTE MASON, a British educator at the turn of the twentieth century, said, “The habits of the child produce the character of the man.” She believed habit train- ing is the foundation for developing and producing godly characteristics. Three of her habits have become an integral part of my kindergarten classroom: obedience, attention, and respect.   The importance of habit training became clear to me while teaching my young class the skill of finger knitting. Several students proclaimed loudly that they knew how to finger knit and moved ahead with the task before I finished instructing them. The result was a fistful of knots and cries of dismay: “I just can’t do this!”   I chatted quietly with each student and gently untangled the mess they had made. “This is a difficult task,” I said. “I know you thought you knew how to do this, and now it’s not working out. Let’s start again, but this time, trust me to show you the right way. If you pay close attention and obey, God will help you accomplish it.”   Later in the day, during our class devotions, one of the students who had struggled with finger knitting prayed, “Dear Jesus, help us listen to Mrs. Steel when she tells us how to finger knit so we can do it the right way.” How lovely to see this young child understand the biblical truth of obedi- 42 ence and its impact on her life. My student expressed her understanding that she ought to obey not because she is little and I’m big, but because the acts of attention, obedi- ence, and respect produced good things for her. She would learn to do things the right way.   Yet even the reward of good things is not the end goal of habit training in the classroom. Reliance on Christ is essential. Otherwise, the training is merely another behavior modification program. We must steer our students away from the secular mantra of “I can do this!” The “just apply yourself and work hard” ideology is a dead end for students. Relying on themselves to do better, achieve more, and work harder leads students to believe they are the beginning and the end of their own success. If what they can do is the basis of their value, they are likely to be wrapped up in pride or swallowed in the despair of mediocrity or failure.   My students’ initial approach to finger knitting produced the inevitable response of self-deprecation. They set them- selves up as ones who knew best and could accomplish the task in their own way. Yet failure turned them against them- selves and produced such frustration that they would have quit the task without redirection. Reminding them to submit themselves to the power of Christ and apply themselves to the habits of attention, respect, and obedience encouraged