by John Piper
On April 14, 2014, the terrorist Islamist group called Boko
Haram kidnapped over 270 girls, most between 16 and 18, from the Chibok
Government Girls Secondary School in northeast Nigeria.
Boko Haram means “Western education is sinful.”
Part of the
motivation behind the attack is their belief that it is sinful for girls to be
formally educated at all. Educating girls is a Western effort to undermine the
Islamic view of the family.
The leader of Boko Haram, Abubakar Shekau, said in a recording,
“Western education should end. . . . Girls, you should go and get married.”
He
warned that he would “give their hands in marriage because they are our slaves. We would marry them out at the age of 9. We would marry them out at the age of
12.”
While we advocate for vigorous efforts for the return of the
young women, and while we pray for them and their evil abductors, it is fitting
to remind ourselves why we as Christians encourage our girls and young women to
seek a full education.
What I mean by “full” will become clear.
1. God created man male and female in his image.
“God created man in his own image, in the image of God he
created him; male and female he created them” (Genesis 1:27).
The unique
human capacities for knowing God and loving God belong to men and women.
The capacity to know the world as from God and through God
and for God belongs to men and women.
The capacity to delight in all good
things, out of thanks to God and for the glory of God, belong to men and women.
Maximizing these capacities in the worship of God and the
fruitful use of the world, is a divine mandate to men and women.
“God blessed
them. And God said to them, ‘Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and
subdue it’” (Genesis 1:28).
2. God has revealed his glory in the natural world, and he
intends for all his creatures to see his wonders and give him praise.
One of the great aims of education is to impart habits of
mind that can see the fullest possible range of God’s wonders in the world he
has made (Psalm 19:1;
104:23).
The praises of
women are to increase with their abilities to see and understand the wonderful
works of God in the world (Psalm 105:2).
3. God has revealed himself more fully in the inspired word
of God than he has in the natural world.
The fact that God reveals himself in a book is explosive with
implications for education, from the cradle to the grave.
All who aspire to
know and love God as fully as they can will aspire to learn to read the book of
God.
The Bible is the most important book in the world because it
is God’s revelation of what humans need to know for salvation and fruitfulness
which we cannot find out any other way.
Here is where God can be truly known,
and fully loved.
Education is the process of imparting habits and skills of
reading that enable human beings to know God and love God as fully as possible.
God wills for women to know him and love him as fully as they
can.
He wills for them to commune with him directly — as daughter to Father —
through their encounter with the Bible.
She is a fellow heir of the grace of
life (1 Peter 3:7)
and is not to be limited in her access to her Father or his word.
“You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and
with all your soul and with all your mind” (Matthew 22:37), was not a
command given only to men.
Women will be held back from knowing and loving God
as fully as they can, if they are held back from forming the habits and skills
of reading — not just the skills of a third grade reader, but the skills of
discerning the full riches of biblical revelation concerning the great work of
the Son of God in his life, death, and resurrection.
This is the great work of
education.
4. All the roles into which God leads women call for the
habits of mind which education is meant to cultivate.
These include the habits of
▪
observing all things accurately and thoroughly,
▪
understanding clearly what she has observed,
▪
evaluating fairly in the discernment of what is true,
▪
feeling intensely according to the worth of what she
has evaluated,
▪
applying wisely and helpfully in life what she
understands and feels,
▪
and expressing in speech and writing and deeds what she
has seen, understood, felt and applied, in such a way that its accuracy,
clarity, truth, value, and helpfulness can be known and enjoyed by others.
Whether she is a church-serving, globally aware, politically
awake, neighbor-loving full-time homemaker and mom, or a partner with her
husband in breadwinning, or an unmarried career woman, or other role, God’s
call on her life is to
▪
observe accurately (Matthew 13:16; Mark 8:18; Luke 6:42; John 9:39),
▪
understand clearly (Mark 8:21; Ephesians 5:17),
▪
evaluate truly (Luke 12:57; 1 Corinthians
10:15),
▪
feel appropriately (Romans 12:9; Philippians 4:4; James 4:9),
▪
apply truth wisely (James 1:22; Romans 12:2),
▪
and express herself effectively (Ephesians 4:15; Colossians 4:6).
These are the aims of a full education.
These are the aims of Christian
discipleship.
These are the aims of Christ-exalting womanhood.
Without them our
knowledge of Christ, his world, his salvation, his ways in history, and our
path of obedience will remain immature.
God does not call any of his children,
men or women, to immaturity.
Therefore he calls them all to a full education.
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