¶ … Biblical principles that are related to our intellectual and spiritual education. They have a basis in the Bible (both the New and the Old Testament) and can be applied to our lives in many ways. Often times, as is shown in this paper, our own experiences bear out what these principles teach us. In this paper, a discussion of 10 Biblical principles and their relation to Scripture is provided. How these principles have applied to the writer's own life is also described. Following these discussions are plans for how the ideas developed may be practically applied in life so as to give glory to God and better our own lives.
The education of young students takes place not just on an intellectual level but also on a spiritual level. It is part of what character education consists of -- the formation of the mind and soul in terms of the principles that orient one towards the good (Lickona, 1993; Smith, 2013). Biblical principles related to education serve as those foundations that can best help anyone -- not just students in a school but also students of life -- to orient themselves towards the path to knowledge, sanctity, and goodness. This paper will examine 10 Biblical principles, discuss how they connect to Scripture and show how to apply to my own life experiences.
Recovery of Knowledge
The recovery of knowledge is a two-fold concept: on the one hand, knowledge of the good is already within us: "Each person has God's laws written on his/her heart" (#9). Just as the classical philosophers such as Socrates and Plato stated, our understanding of truth is based on the innate ideas that God has written on our soul. We know what is good and true because inside of us is the code that our creator has given us. It is the knowledge of Himself that God has placed within us and that drives us to seek Him and to know the laws that He Himself wants us to obey. As is written in the New Testament, one of God's promises to man was that He would not leave him in total ignorance: "I will put my laws into their mind, and write them in their hearts" (Heb 8:10). Therefore, the recovery of knowledge in one way is like the act of recollection that Plato describes as being the basis of all true knowledge: the act of simply recalling what God has placed within us and remembering that which is true. I have experienced this in my own life, especially as I came to formulate a concept of truth by finding the level between what was in my mind and what I experienced in reality. I found this same experience to be reflected in the writings of Plato, especially when he says about knowledge: "This is recollection of the things which our souls once saw during their journey as companions to a god, when they saw beyond the things we now say 'exist' and poked their heads up into true reality" (Plato, 2002, p. 32). As a pagan, Plato is reflecting on natural law and the fact that God's laws are written in the mind and hearts of all -- even those who have not even heard of His Son. I learned from Plato, that God has not denied any of His creatures the ability to come home to Him through reflection on the nature of their own life. Recovery of knowledge in this sense is like the recovery of our relationship with God.
The recovery of knowledge, however, also points to another type of knowledge-building. As Moreland (2007) points out, there are three kinds of knowledge aside from innate ideas: "knowledge by acquaintance, propositional knowledge, and know-how" (p 139). These types of knowledge have to do with ideas that are learned (which can help us to better understand what God has placed within our souls), ideas that serve as first principles (which are connected to natural law), and technical knowledge (which can help us to better ourselves through art and practice). These three types of knowledge recovery correspond with Biblical principle #11: "Each person has a conscience that responds both to God and to the world." This means that while God has written on our soul to help inform our conscience that we may be guided back to Him, our conscience is also informed by what we learn in our day to day lives. Through my own studies in school and through my own relationships with friends and at work, I have learned...
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