Friday, 13 November 2015

CHRISTIAN GROUND FOR SOUND UP-BRINGING OF THE CHILD

PROF. BEN ONYEUKWU (REV.)
NCE(Eng.) ND/HD (Journalism); BA (Hons) MA, PhD.
Call: +2348037346939  E-mail: professorbenonyeukwu@yahoo.com

CHRISTIAN GROUND FOR SOUND UP-BRINGING OF THE CHILD

“Train –up a child in the way he should go; and when he is old,
he will not turn from it”, (Proverb 22:6).

INTRODUCTION:
            In his book, “You can help others in your life”, Dr. Gary Collins remarks that, “there is now a field of study known as community psychology and another termed Community Psychiatry. People who work in these areas seek an active involvement in the society, including politics, service clubs, educational institutions, and the news media. The focus here is the changing of the society to make it less stressful. This concept holds that the right kind of information and education would prevent personal problems, reduce existing difficulties and improve the mental health of the people.
            History shows that the Nigerian society has an age-long experience of social vices, stress and juvenile delinquencies. The reason for this is not farfetched. The Nigerian educationists and policy makers jettison the ideals of biblical principles in child upbringing. Agencies involved in child training in Nigeria seem to have been greatly influenced or illusioned by the secular ideas prevalent in Nigerian system of education, which is devoid of God and Christ. Secularism offers no solid educational foundation for the up-brining of the child. For instance, the United States of America, the world’s most outstanding secular state suffers a great deal of social ills in the contemporary world because of its shift from a bible-based policy on education to an absolute secular policy for the up-brining of American child. Similarly, Nigeria’s secular approach to education since 1970 has been fingered by some concerned individuals as the genesis of the outrageous social ills in the country.
            Before the government take-over of schools by the Gowon Administrations in 1970, the Nigerian society maintained a high degree of moral profile that was cherished both locally and internationally. This moral blessing that resulted in good governance, social stability, honest labour and sincerity of purpose, no doubt, was as a result of the high level of moral education carried out by the then proprietors of schools, especially those schools owned and managed by missionaries. However, not too long after the government take-over of school in Nigeria, the Nigerian society began to experience on unprecedented evil of social vices and juvenile delinquencies.
            Considering the impending social ills in the Nigerian society of today, the child training agents (parents, pastors and school teachers) have to adopt both preventive (avoiding or presenting with caution any information capable of building negative academic and moral disposition in the child) and restorative (bringing back to the consciousness of the child the ideals of sound academics, punctuated with godliness and moral uprightness) measures in their efforts in child training. When a proper educational foundation is laid for the child, coupled with well articulated and biblically guided information, no doubt, a sound academically and morally polished child that will be the joy of the home and society will emerge.
THE ROLES OF AGENCIES IN CHILD TRAINING:
            Fundamentally, the home is the initial training institution for the child. Two other outstanding agencies that complement the effort of the home in child training are the church and school. Each of these institutions plays important roles and by divine arrangement should co-operate in child upbringing. Where there is conflict in ideology and training goals, confusion and fruitlessness will definitely prevail. The agencies engaged in child training must share a common concept if the child would be given a clear sense of direction.
            The church’s participation in the upbringing of the child is an indication of God’s interest in this noble task. In the book of Deuteronomy 6:6-9, God expressly instructed Moses to charge the people with the responsibility of teaching the children of Israel the precepts of the law. Since the mode of education in Israel’s context at the time of Moses was basically religious, the process consequently metamorphosed into the establishment of rabbinic schools where pupils were trained in the Law of Moses.
            Building on the prevailing situation in Nigeria as a secular state, the Nigerian child if would be balanced in human development, needs four areas of concentration in his education, namely, the moral, social, mental and spiritual dimensions. These dimensions have to be properly taken care of before one can talk of a sound Nigerian child. This makes it imperative for the Nigerian educators and policy makers to give special attention to these cardinal points in child training when fashioning-out a suitable curriculum for Nigerian schools.
THE HOME AND CHILD TRAINING
            At the pre-school age (in Nigeria context 0-5 years) the home is outstandingly prominent in the training of the child. The parents being the informal instructors of the child feature in the moral, social, mental and spiritual development of the child. During this period, the basic family and society values are put into the child. Furthermore, the home features considerably in some degrees of mental training for the child. In his spiritual training he is directed to know God and keep His commandments. This spiritual training suffers where the parents of the child are heathens or careless. The child’s social aspect of home training is geared towards teaching him the mode of relationship with the people in his society and environs. The mental education for the child at home gives him an ample of the knowledge of what he is to meet in school.
            It is unfortunate to note that most parents and guardians neglect this initial role in child up-bringing. In such careless homes, no true sense of direction is in any way given to the child upon which he can build. This underscores the reasons for Nigeria’s record of high degree of Juvenile delinquency in every nook and cranny of her society. With the above facts in mind, it becomes vital to state that God’s word charges every parent and person in child training business to train up the child in the way he should go – (Proverb 22:6). In training the child, therefore, he should be shown:
(1)           The right social way
(2)           The right moral way
(3)           The right spiritual way
(4)           The right mental or intellectual way
These are the bases for making a sound child.
THE CHURCH AND CHILD TRAINING
            Principally, the church is commissioned to teach the precepts of God’s kingdom. Since the precepts are all embracing, the church is therefore qualified to give education that would develop the total man, spirit, soul and body. Like the home, the church curriculum in child training programme should cover the spiritual, moral and mental life of the child. In moulding the child spiritually, the church should lay a strong foundation of the love of God in him, pointing out very clearly that such love should be operated from the energies of the child’s might and strength. The Church’s social moulding of the child requires showing him how he should also love and relate with his fellow human beings as himself. The moral dimension of the child’s church training should center on the articulation of God’s ethical principles (rights and wrongs) as we have them in the Bible. In the mental or intellectual training of the child, the church should play an advisory role, guiding him on how best he should go about his academics in schools, in the fear of God.
            Regrettably, every sincere observer with a clear perception of the activities of churches in Nigeria will attest to the fact that most Nigerian church operatives and para-church agents adduce imbalance training programmes for the child. In most cases these misguided operatives and agents extremely hold onto the spiritual dimension of the child’s training at the expense of others. Where they try to incorporate every dimension, they along the line fall victim of misdirecting their prospects, owing to wrong subjective impressions. For instance, most churches do not have a sound biblical viewpoint about the society. As such, they present to their members in their programmes only the ills of the society, leaving behind its noble values and thereby mounting up in them an attitude of “holier than thou” which makes them isolate from the real issues of life. The church’s imbalanced curriculum in child training is a great disservice to humanity.
PARENT-SCHOOL TEACHER CONFLICT IN CHILD TRAINING
            At the school Age (in Nigerian context 6-12 years) the home begins to share its training responsibility with the school. This is where the problem sets in. the teacher with different ideology from that of the parents will at this time begins to mount-up opposition against the family principles instead of complementing them. For instance, a teacher with a low moral profile has no backup for the parental training that a child has received at home. Instead, such a teacher with a deficient moral standing would want to impose his negative disposition on the child against the will of the home and parents. Hence this had been the prevailing situation in Nigeria, it is therefore evident that most Nigerian kids are spoilt in schools at the expense of moral, social, mental and spiritual values which every concerned parent aims at.
THE NEED FOR PARENT – SCHOOL TEACHER CO-OPERATION IN CHILD TRAINING
            Before any meaningful training can be achieved in the life of a given child, the parent and teacher have to come to agreeable points.
(1)   They teacher and parent should not work in isolation.
(2)   They should come to the understanding of the tendencies in the child they wish to train.
(3)   They should always investigate to know the source(s) of the negative influence(s) on the child, whether from peer group or people of higher social status and try to avoid such influence(s)
(4)   They should equally report to themselves of any positive or negative development in the child’s life in the process of training.
(5)   They should also learn to correct the child with one voice.
It is evident that where the teacher-parent co-operation is not enforced, there is bound to be a breakdown in the set objective for the child-s up-brining. This calls for proper caution on the side of the parent in making a choice of school for the child.
MAKING A CHOICE OF SCHOOL FOR THE CHILD.
It has been psychologically proven that “man is the product of his environment”. As such, the place where a child is trained is of vital importance. A writer underscores this truth with the following lines “like the leader, like the follower”. Institutions with divergent ideology from that of the parents and family will not offer education that will be satisfactory. Similarly, institutions with staff team of low moral disposition will have nothing to offer to the child morally. Therefore, in making a choice of school for the child, the following factors are to be considered. 
(1)        The moral value of the school, leader and staff.
(2)        The academic levels of the leader and staff of the school.
(3)        The principal ideology of the school and the leader.
(4)        The religious persuasion of the leader and staff of the school (this includes whether they are members of secret clubs or society).
(5)        The interest of the school, staff and leader in training, whether it is incentive or job oriented.
In conclusion, it is the sincere effort of the writer of this piece to show how the home, the church and school should play complementary roles in the up-brining of the child. It is hoped that the biblical light shed in the project will be of immense help to the well-meaning trainer of the child. Thus, the writer prays that God uses these lines to direct the reader towards the path of sound child up-bringing. BEST WISHES.