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| PentecostalTheology.comToward a Pentecostal
Philosophy
of Education
Jeffrey
S. Hittenberger
Introduction
Michael Parra serves as Outreach Coordinator at
Valley High
School in Santa Ana, California, an urban
community
south of Los
Angeles. Every day
Michael works with students in crisis, on the
verge
of
dropping out, involved in gangs, pregnant, suicidal. He states:
‘
Whereas some people might say, “This kid is lost,” I have an of what God can do. Some
expectation
call
people might say I’m optimistic because I’m But what
young.
or see as a attitude, I would call
people optimism, positive
expectation, vibrant expectation of what God can do. Outside looking in, some might see it as youthful impetuousness, but I see it as a recognition of God’s power, and my wanting to be involved in God’s Kingdom
work.
Michael Parra is one of perhaps millions of Pentecostal educators, tens of thousands of whom are
working
in formal education
systems.
To be a Pentecostal or Charismatic Christian
(henceforth,
for the sake of simplicity, Pentecostal)
is to be one of more than 400 million
people
in the world who have submitted their lives to Jesus Christ and
opened
their souls to receive the
baptism
or
infilling
of the
Holy Spirit. Terminology varies,
but Pentecostals share a belief that the
gifts
of the
Spirit
did not end with the Apostles,
that the
signs, wonders,
and miracles in the Acts of the
Apostles are not confined to the first
century,
but that that
outpouring
of the
Spirit continues into the presents.
I
How do Pentecostal Christians think about and do education? How do Pentecostal
experience
and
theology shape
Pentecostal educational
philoso- phy
and
pedagogy?
I am
especially
interested in how Pentecostal
experi- ence and
theology
influence our
teaching
and
thinking
when we teach in formal education
systems
and in higher education
systems.
Do our
experi- ences of Spirit
baptism
or Spirit in filling and our beliefs about the ongoing outpouring
of the
Spirit give
our educational ideas and
practices
a distinc-
‘
I David B. Barrett, and Todd M. Johnson, “Annual Statistical Table on Global Mission: 1999,” International Bulletin of Missionary Research 23:1 (January
1999),
Johnson estimate
pp. 24-25. Barrett and Pentecostal/Charismatic
population at just over 449 million in mid-1999. define this
They category as “Church members involved in the Pentecostal/Charismatic Renewal.” ”
217
1
tive
quality?
Is there some
special gift
that Pentecostal educators have to share with the
larger
church and with the wider world?
Four sections
follow, corresponding
to the
major questions
to be addressed:
What do Pentecostals
say
about how their
experience
and
theology impacts their educational
thought
and practice? .
What framework
might
allow us to formulate and
compare philosophies
of education?
How do Pentecostal educators
adopt
and adapt various educational
philoso- phies ?
What framework
might
enable Pentecostals to further
explore
and articulate the
impact
of Pentecostal
experience
and
theology upon
their educational philosophy
and
practice?
–
The bulk of this study is descriptive and analytic in character,
covering the first three questions above in some detail, while
suggesting
a preliminary framework in response to question four. This
study
is exploratory in nature and seeks to contribute to Pentecostal
thinking
and
practice regarding
edu- cation. The structure of this article is inductive,
moving
from the
specifics of Pentecostals
reflecting
on their own
experience
as educators toward the generalities
of educational
philosophy.
I do not presume to articulate a Pentecostal
philosophy
of education in any
definitive fashion. I do
suggest, however,
that Pentecostal
experience and
theology
have relevance for the educational
philosophies
and
practices of Pentecostal educators, a relevance that
opens fascinating possibilities
for further research and development.
For the
purposes
of this
study,
“Pentecostal” is defined
broadly
to include those Christians who consider themselves Pentecostal or Charismatic, embracing
the works of the
Holy Spirit
in the
first-century church as described in Acts and elsewhere in the New Testament as relevant and normative for
contemporary
Christians. Pentecostal
experience, by extension,
is defined as personal participation in Christian communities that embrace and seek the continuous
outpouring
of the
Holy Spirit
and practice the multiple
gifts of the Spirit
described in the New Testament. A subsequent study might fruitfully
examine distinctions
among
various Pentecostal and Charismatic
groups (with
their varied ideas of the nature of the continuous
218
2
outpouring)
with
regard
to educational
philosophy.
Education is also defined
broadly
to include both the formal
(school- based,
credit- or
degree-oriented)
and nonformal
(church-
or home-based, mentoring-oriented).
A Pentecostal
educator, therefore, might
be a teacher, a pastor, a mentor, a parent, or a friend who
intentionally
contributes to the learning
of another. This broad definition of education also
recognizes
that much
learning
occurs
indirectly,
or
informally,
and this is of particular sig- nificance to Pentecostals. The
primary
focus of the
study, however,
is on education in formal and
post-secondary settings.
Peterson has defined a
philosophy
of education as “a unified set of philosophical assumptions together
with their
implications
for the educa- tional
enterprise.”2 Knight
notes that the task of educational
philosophy
is to bring educators into
z
.
Face-to-face contact with the large questions underlying the meaning and purpose
of life and education. To understand these questions, the student must wrestle with such issues as the nature of reality, the meaning and sources of knowledge, and the structure of values. Educational
must
philoso- phy bring students into a position from which they can evaluate alternative intelligent- ly ends, relate their aims to desired ends, and select
methods that harmonize with their aims. Thus a major task of educational philosophy is to help educators think
pedagogical
about the total educational and life process, so that they will be in a meaningfully better tion to
posi-
develop a consistent and comprehensive 3 program that will assist their students in arriving at the desired goal.3
.
This
study’s methodology
includes interviews of Pentecostal educators, a cross
disciplinary
review of literature related to this topic, as well as philo- sophical
and
theological
reflection. This article is also informed
by
a life- time of interaction with Pentecostal educators and
by my
career as a Pentecostal educator
serving
in a variety of educational contexts.
.
What Do Pentecostals
Say
about How Their
Experience
and
Theology
Impact
Their Educational
Thought
and Practice?
Pentecostal educators face a dilemma. The Pentecostal movement is, among
other
things,
a
Spirit-inspired protest against
structures and forms that obscure the truths of God’s
Kingdom.
Pentecostals have
historically
‘
.
2 Michael L. Peterson, Philosophy of Education (Downer’s Grove, IL: Intervarsity Press, 1986), 24.
3 George R. Knight, Issues and Alternatives in Educational Philosophy, 3d ed. (Berrien Springs,
MI: Andrews University Press, 1998), 3.
219
3
shared Jesus’ distaste for religious
systems
that have become instruments of oppression.
“Woe to you experts in the law,” Jesus said, “because
you
have taken
away
the key to knowledge. You yourselves have not entered, and you have hindered those who were
entering.”4 They
have also shared the
per- spective
of the Apostle
Paul,
who wrote, “See to it that no one takes you cap- tive through hollow and deceptive
philosophy,
which
depends
on human tra- dition and the basic
principles
of this world rather than on Christ.”5 Pentecostalism is a renewed
experience
of God’s direct intervention in one’s life, God’s
self-revelation in the world. For a Pentecostal, a second- or third- hand
experience
of God does not satisfy. True ideas about God are no sub- stitute for God’s
tangible presence.
This Pentecostal
emphasis
on
immediacy
makes more abstract thought,
or academic discussion about
spiritual experiences, suspect.
It is one thing to have a theology of Holy Spirit baptism. It is quite another to be baptized
in the Holy Spirit.
These attitudes toward education,
particularly
of the rationalistic vari- ety, are clearly
not
unique
to twentieth-century Pentecostalism. Tertullian, in the second
century,
differed with Justin
Martyr
and Clement of Alexandria as to the value of classical education,
posing
the famous
ques- tions : “What indeed has Athens to do with Jerusalem? What concord is there between the
Academy
and the Church?”6 For
Pentecostals,
to
quote Cheryl Bridges
Johns,
the
question might
be
rephrased,
“What has Athens to do with Azusa Street?”
Almost six hundred
years ago,
Thomas a
Kempis
wrote in his classic The Imitation
of Christ:
.
Cease from an inordinate desire of knowing, for therein is much distrac- tion and deceit. The learned are well-pleased to seem so to others, and to be accounted wise… If thou dost more thine own reason or
than upon that power which
rely upon
brings thee under the obedience of Jesus Christ, it will be long before thou become enlightened; for God industry
will have us perfectly subject unto him, that being inflamed with his love, we may transcend the narrow limits of human reason.7
Apprehensions regarding
formal education and the
pursuit
of knowl-
4 Luke 11:52 (New International Version).
5 Colossians 2:8 (New International Version). All subsequent biblical references are from the New Revised Standard Version.
6 Tertullian, “Prescription Against Heretics.” in D. Bruce Lockerbie, ed.,
A Passion for Leaning:
The History of Christian Thought on Education (Chicago: Moody Press, 1994), 71. 7 Thomas a Kempis, The Imitation of Christ (Chicago: Moody Press. 1984), 26; 48.
220
4
edge
have been counterbalanced for Pentecostals
by
Jesus’ inclusion of the mind in the greatest commandment: “You shall love the Lord
your
God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all
your
mind, and with all your strength.”8 Moreover,
Jesus and his biblical
followers, including
the writers of
Scripture,
embodied the
Apostle
Paul’s
injunction,
“Be trans- formed
by the renewing
of your minds.”9
Of special interest to Pentecostals is the scholarly
approach
of the writer of Luke-Acts, who frames his Gospel with these words: “I too decided, after investigating everything carefully
from the
very first,
to write an
orderly account for you, most excellent
Theophilus,
so that
you may
know the truth concerning
the
things
about which
you
have been instructed.”10
Spirit
and mind are clearly
complementary
for Luke.
Likewise, church leaders and reformers
through
the centuries have drawn
upon
their formal education in the conviction,
encouraged by leaders like Augustine, that “all truth is God’s truth.” Several of the early leaders of the twentieth
century
Pentecostal movement benefited from their own
expe- rience in higher education, like E.
N. Bell,
first
Superintendent
of the U.S. Assemblies of God, who had a Bachelor’s
degree,
a seminary degree, and three
years
of graduate study at the
University
of Chicago.
So
despite
ambivalence about formal
education,
Pentecostals
recog- nized the need to prepare believers to be effective students of Scripture and articulate ambassadors of Christ. Pentecostals
quickly began
to establish Bible schools, then Bible
institutes, then Bible
colleges,
then Christian lib- eral arts
colleges, and,
most
recently, theological
seminaries and
compre- hensive universities. I I Pentecostals
pursued
and obtained advanced
degrees and Pentecostal churches
began
to
produce
scholars. Each of the Pentecostal educators I interviewed for this
paper
has at least a Bachelor’s degree
and almost 80 per cent have earned doctorates.
They represent
the large
number of Pentecostals who combine a Pentecostal
experience
with advanced formal education
‘
8 Mark 12:30. 9 Romans 12:2. 10 Luke 1:3-4.
‘
11 For
a summary of the development of higher education in the United States Assemblies of God, the largest denomination in Pentecostalism, see William W. Menzies. Anointed to Sen?e: The Story of the Assemblies of God (Springfield, MO:
12
Gospel Publishing House, 1971 ).
For this paper, I interviewed 35 Pentecostal educators either in person or via telephone or email. The profile of my interview group is as follows:
Pastors – 2 ,
Missionary
Educators – 3
,
221
5
The
responses
of these educators have
greatest
relevance for Pentecostals in higher education, since over 70 per cent of my respondents fit that
profile.
In principle,
however, many
of the same
findings apply
to Pentecostals in other educational
settings,
as my respondents in these other settings
tended to confirm.
Future studies of this topic would do well to focus on and compare other populations
of Pentecostal educators
(e.g.,
those in two-thirds-world set- tings ;
without formal
higher education;
in various academic
disciplines; from different
generations;
from various Pentecostal and Charismatic move- ments).
My
interviews included five basic
questions,
which I will list below with summaries of the responses I received. These
questions
were meant to elicit
personal
reflection from Pentecostal educators about the
impact
of their Pentecostal
experience
and
theology
on their educational
thought
and practice.
Thus the
questions
were
open-ended,
and in my analysis of their responses
I try to let them
speak
for themselves. For each
question
I offer a major finding, sample responses,
and some elaboration.
Question
1: In what
ways
has
your
own education been a “Pentecostal education”?
Finding:
Pentecostal educators note a tremendous
Spirit- inspired dynamic
in their educational
experience
and
practice.
.
This
group
of Pentecostal educators is
impressive
both
academically Public school teachers – 3
‘ Private Sector Human Resources Trainer – I
Educational Consultant (focusing on Sunday Schools) – 1
. Professors at Pentecostal institutions of higher education (IHEs) in the U.S. – 13 3 Professors at Pentecostal IHEs outside the U.S. – 1
Professors at non-Pentecostal IHEs – 2
Administrators at Pentecostal IHEs in the U.S. – 3
Administrators at Pentecostal IHEs non-U.S. – 3
Administrators at non-Pentecostal IHEs – I
K-12 Christian school leaders – 2
I did not attempt to select a statistically representative sample of Pentecostal educators. Instead, I sought to interview Pentecostal educators who had a formal educational experience that would have exposed them to diverse philosophies of education, them to reflect on the rele- vance of their Pentecostal experience and theology for their educational causing
philosophy. Of my
seven are women, five live outside the United States, and three are citizens of nations other than the United States. They are of diverse ethnicities, with seven
sample,
either have
being non-Anglo.
completed or are completing doctoral degrees. Approximately 70 per cent attend Assemblies of God churches, with others scattered among other Pentecostal and Twenty-six
Charismatic churches.
222
6
and from the
point
of view of Christian service.
Many
in this
group
have obtained
graduate degrees
from
prestigious
universities in the United States and abroad.
They
are also
impressive
in terms of their commitment to the spiritual growth
of their students and their desire to be instruments of the Holy Spirit
in their
teaching.
Almost
three-quarters (73 per cent)
of these Pentecostal educators had experience
as undergraduate or graduate students in Pentecostal institutions of higher education
(IHEs). Though
most had attended Pentecostal IHEs for at least
part of their undergraduate experience,
most cited nonformal dimen- sions of their Pentecostal education
(through
mentors or family members) as more influential in their lives than the formal curriculum.
Examples
of their comments:
‘
I learned about the church and ministry from my grandfather and from
my father. They taught me, informally, the Christian ethics of
Pentecostalism. I also learned how to interpret the world and my reality
Pentecostally.
My Pentecostal education was enriched by the corporate model of the Ivoirian
[Cote d’ Ivoire] church, which experienced a sovereign, nation- wide move of God. I was intluenced by the model of African some
pastors,
well-educated, others not schooled.
Often when the formal education
experience
at a Pentecostal IHE was mentioned, the nonformal educational/spiritual
experiences
were
highlight- ed :
.
I attended an Assemblies of God school at the undergraduate level and in that sense I suppose you could say I had a Pentecostal education. It . was not so much what was taught, but the ethos that surrounded the com- ..
Belief that learning had to be enhanced by encounter with God. Belief that God
munity.
enriched the classroom that
fullest dimension to what we were always
by experiences gave
leaming. The belief that chapel was a central
experience, not because it was ‘more spiritual’ but because , there we actualized the relationship we had with God to include more than left brain activity. In that context there was the real expectation that God would regularly intrude into the humanly devised schedule that sur- rounds formal educational activity.
Several noted a
deepening
of their “Pentecostal education”
through influences not generally associated with classical Pentecostalism:
Exposure to Catholic and Anglican Charismatics has broadened and resensitized me to the Holy Spirit’s work both personally and corporate- ly.
‘
223
7
The great irony of my Pentecostal education is that I first
to learn about
seriously began
my tradition’s history and theology when I attended a non- Pentecostal institution: Fuller
Seminary!
Responses
to this
question suggest
that Pentecostal education has had a very strong mentoring orientation,
with
families, pastors,
and
faculty
mem- bers
personally engaging
with their
children/parishioners/students
and
pro- viding personal guidance
in their
spiritual growth.
Conversely, responses
to this
question suggest
that Pentecostal educa- tors have not been
thoroughly engaged
within their Pentecostal IHEs in reflection on the
implications
of their Pentecostal
experience
and
theology for their formal education,
per
se. That
is, none
mentioned that the formal curriculum in their Pentecostal IHEs had
engaged
them in asking the
ques- tion : “How does
my Pentecostal experience
and theology impact the
way
I understand
my discipline, my academic field, my professional
studies?”
Whether at the graduate or undergraduate level or at the K-12
level,
all those I interviewed, like most Pentecostal
educators,
have wrestled with their ideas about formal education in institutions
(whether
secular or affili- ated with other Christian
traditions)
whose
philosophies
of education were not informed
by
Pentecostal
experience
or
theology (and
which were, in some cases, hostile to Pentecostal
experience
and
theology).
Question
2: Describe a Pentecostal educator who had a particularly
sig- nificant influence on
your
life. If more than
one,
would
you pick
one and tell about their influence on you?
,
Finding:
Pentecostals have
experienced
Pentecostal education through
the
mentoring
of their
professors (as
well as
pastors, friends and
family members)
who modeled an
integration
of mind, spirit,
and life.
Responses
to this
question
tended to focus on the life
qualities
of influ- ential Pentecostal educators
(their relationship
with
God, integration of spir- it and
mind, personal integrity). Examples
of comments on the nature of their influence follow.
I could cite a number of very useful influences in my life, but I will sin-
out one: W. I. Evans. Evans was the academic dean at Central Bible Institute (now Central Bible College) when I was a student. His knowl- gle
edge
of the Scriptures, his obvious deep fellowship with the Lord, and
his leadership in the chapel services had a great effect on me. He embodied the best features of the Pentecostal revival, in my judg- particularly
‘
224
8
ment.
Professor Daniel E. Albrecht, Professor at Bethany College, was one of the first models I had that one could be/remain Pentecostal and still sue the life of the mind.
pur-
,
Dick Foth, Assemblies of God minister and former President of Bethany Bible College, represented a combination of passionate faith, joyful serv- ice, and an affirmation of the intellect integrated with the previous two disciplines.
Dr. James M. Beaty and his wife gave me a great example of what to be a Christian is all about. In their life and practice they lived the values of the Kingdom. Their spiritual disciplines and their faith with vision and their sense of mission impacted my life.
I had Murray Dempster for only one course. It was my senior year, a very important
moment in my life… It was a turning point in my life. He was just fantastic, so passionate, so animated. He was inspiring a vision, inspiring a passion.
‘
Pentecostal educators interviewed for this
study emphasized
the char- acter,
the
passion,
the embodiment of truth in the
professors
who
shaped their lives at Pentecostal IHEs. Their mentors
integrated
mind and
spirit
and led lives of
personal integrity
and
ministry.
Those who mentioned other Pentecostal mentors
emphasized
these same traits.
Question
3: As a Pentecostal
educator,
how does
your
Pentecostal
expe- rience and/or
theology shape
the
way your
teach?
Finding:
Pentecostal
experience
and
theology strongly
influ- ence the ideas of Pentecostal educators about
pedagogy,
orient- ing
instruction toward
inspiration, transformation,
and empowerment.
‘
In
reflecting
on their own
teaching,
Pentecostal educators described what
they try to do in their pedagogy.
Some of the contrasts
they drew were as follows:
Transformation rather than just information
Practice rather than just cerebral
knowledge
Experience
rather than just theory
Inspiration
rather than just information.
In describing their ideals for
teaching,
the
following
words were fre-
225
9
quently
used:
Vibrant
Gift
Mentoring
Empowerment
Power
Mission
Sensitivity
Dynamic
Expectation
Growth
‘
.
.
I have sought to pattern my teaching on I Thessalonians 1:4-10. In this passage,
Paul reviews the
object
of his
ministry among
the Thessalonians, but also the manner in which he ministered to them. I see in this the following: ( 1 ) “with words”-he was articulate in his com- munication ; (2) “with power”-not simply with ‘words,’ but also with the empowering of the Spirit; (3) “with the Holy would under- stand this to mean
exercising sensitivity
to the Spirit”-I
leading of the Spirit; (4) “with
deep conviction”-In this I see that the faculty person has an obli- share with the students
gation to [personal] convictions, although he must be careful not to insist that the students must
how we lived
agree with him; (5) “You know
among you”-I
see this as transparent model- ing
of a lifestyle, outside the classroom as well as inside.
‘
The idea that when you’re equipped with God’s power, nothing is
in the classroom. I have seen so many pessimistic teachers who can make a list of everything they can’t do. I had the genuine belief, impossible
based on my Pentecostal that God could move mountains, that this vessel could be used experience, by God. Marie Brown and my mother [my mentors] also emphasized that the vessel needed to be equipped.
God will use your talents. God works in history. Wonderful
things can in that classroom. You have to hap- pen equip yourself.
I teach from my own experience. I believe that is part of integrity. One should not teach something that isn’t part of her/his experience,
in that that is
particu- larly related to spiritual principles and values.
Some of the educators I interviewed
expressed
concern that often these principles
are not in
practice
in Pentecostal IHEs due at least in
part
to reliance
upon pedagogical
and
philosophical
models that are more Evangelical (or fundamentalist)
than Pentecostal.
Most of my ‘Pentecostal’ education could be characterized as classical
Most of the teachers and pastors who had the influence on me were Pentecostal but had
Evangelicalism. greatest
largely embraced a philosophy
.
226
10
and
lifestyle
that would
represent
more
Evangelicalism than Pentecostalism.
My ministry today has
been
shaped more ‘Charismatic’
theology and ecclesiology. This segment of
by has
Christianity
impacted me and allowed me to re-embrace the theology and tice of
prac-
early Pentecostalism, which is fundamentally different from the suburban, Bible College Pentecostalism of the 1980s and 1990s.
‘
. ‘
Pentecostals have mostly adopted the methods and modes of the
larger Evangelical
church. And that
adaptation
does not
only concern reli- gious, biblical,
or
theological education. This conformity to has its
Evangelicalism strengths and weaknesses. On the plus side it has more recent Pentecostal
taught generations to think, and to think criti- It has also
cally. taught the Pentecostals some degree of humility about their own tradition
(they
are
learning
to
appreciate
those who are unlike them). It has caused them to be less myopic about Christianity and them- selves… On the
negative side, Pentecostals have forsaken some of their own
dynamics. In their desire to appear rational, they forsook their to the
openness mystery of Christianity. In their desire to develop their minds,
that is
they adapted an overly rational, overly linear mode of thinking
gutting them of the dynamics that birthed their movement. In their uncritical embracing of Fundamentalist American
abandoned what to me was a natural
Christianity, they
byproduct of their ethos: an aes- thetic
awareness, appreciation, and creativity.
–
Question
Four: As a Pentecostal
educator,
how would
you
characterize your philosophy
of education? In what
ways might
a Pentecostal
phi- losophy
of education be distinct or have
emphases
different from other Christian
philosophies
of education?
Finding:
With
regard
to educational
philosophy,
Pentecostal educators note Pentecostal influences and distinctives at a number of
levels,
but indicate that a need exists to further explore
this
topic.
Without
exception,
the Pentecostal educators I interviewed
thought
that a Pentecostal
philosophy
of education could be
distinguished,
at least in its emphases,
from other Christian
philosophies
of education and certainly from secular
philosophies
of education. What is less clear is the meaning of a phi- losophy
of education. Pentecostal educators located the distinctives of Pentecostal educational
philosophy
at various levels.
Some
suggested
Pentecostal distinctives at the
metaphysical (ultimate reality)
level.
Pentecostals should have a worldview that informs their philosophy of education. This worldview includes an openness and embracing of the
.
227
11
mystery of God and life. God can and does surprise us. God is both frighteningly
transcendent and joyously immanent. We need to embrace a pre-Enlightenment scientific vista that sees God as present in the world.
Some
suggested
Pentecostal distinctives at the axiological
(value)
level.
The values of the Pentecostal experience are distinct and deeply rooted in our community: values of a devotion to God’s inerrant Word, to truth, to urgency, to the breadth of God’s people, to Christian
to Christian to the of
calling, to holi- ness, community, power the Holy Spirit. As we think back about these values, these ideals of Pentecostalism, we are bet- ter able to look forward.
.
Others see Pentecostal distinctives at the
epistemological (knowledge) level.
I take one of the hallmarks of Pentecostal theology to be its
which calls into
epistemolo- gy question any form of rationalism … think a distinct- Pentecostal
ly philosophy of education would be grounded in the non- rationalist, experiential epistemology, coupled with an emphasis on lib- erating practice.
.
Some
suggested
distinctives with
regard
to our view of the student.
It seems to me that Pentecostal education has to be holistic, all three of Bloom’s traditional taxonomies in the cultivation of mind and embracing spirit for the larger service of the Kingdom of God.
Others
emphasized
the difference in the role of the teacher.
A Pentecostal philosophy has to recognize the essential charismatic nature of the teaching gift, and cultivate that gift, realizing that the leads
Spirit
one, and energizes one, in the communication of truth and bonds the learner into a process of common discovery.
.
The role of the teacher is different from the role of expert pouring knowl- edge
into the uninformed. I want to learn about learning more than about teaching.
It’s a dynamic process, not a disengaged, content-driven
There is a
phi- losophy. dynamic between the content, the learner, and the educator. That’s where the role of the
Spirit comes in.
Others
emphasized
distinctives at the level of the curriculum.
Truly Christian discipleship (training for mission) must involve the of
acquisition spiritual skills: prayer, spiritual power, radical obedience to the
Spirit, etc.-all usually regarded as ‘extra-curricular’ or assumed
228
12
.
for the student rather than carefully taught as the core of the curriculum. The very method of teaching in Bible colleges and seminaries reflects a detached observation of the Christian phenomena ‘out there’
(a Western/Greek way of knowing) vs. the knowing-by-experience of nor- mative, New Testament Christianity.
Several
emphasized
distinctives in pedagogy, discussed above. Others emphasized
the nature and role of the school/educational
community.
.
Pentecostal education has to be holistic. It is tied to an inclusiveness that comes out of Acts. It is global and cross cultural, uniting bond and free, male and female. It has to remember the margins as well as the center. The field in a class is never level. How do I help those for whom this does not come playing
easily’? My philosophy of education focuses on stu- dent
learning for empowerment.
·
–
.
Many spoke
of the difference all this makes in practice.
My philosophy of education as a Pentecostal educator is impacted by a sense of
“present tenseness.” I am not so much wanting to characterize a
humanly devised system of to discern cognition. I am dealing with a process of learning implications of information. I am much more aware of a full orbed dimension of
education that includes both cognitive and affective and also a dimension of subsequent action.
.
.
Several mentioned the need for Pentecostals at this
stage
of our
history to give focused attention to the topic of educational
philosophy.
_
We have to learn from the rest of the church. They are centuries ahead
of us in terms of developing Christian character; thinking about church-
state issues; thinking about societal and ethical issues; thinking about the
human person… Too quickly, we are
embracing non-Christian
‘
approaches to these disciplines and questions and this will lead to our , demise.
.
Very little of the earlier approaches to Pentecostal pedagogy or
of education remains. It
philoso- phy probably is time once again (as the educational founders of our institutions had to original
do) to raise the ‘What is an
question,
appropriate Pentecostal educational pedagogy for our insti- tutions
today?’
It is useful to review the thoughts and educational philosophies
and practices of our founding educators themselves.
Question
Five: What resources have been
helpful
to you in
your
devel- opment
as a Pentecostal educator?
.
Finding:
Most Pentecostal educators
agreed
that we are still in
229
13
the early stages
of the work of bringing Pentecostal
experience and
theology
to bear on
explicitly
educational issues of philoso- phy
and
pedagogy.
Most of my respondents indicated that written resources on education- al
philosophy
and
pedagogy
authored
by
Pentecostals for Pentecostal edu- cators are lacking,
especially
for
higher
education. So what resources have been
helpful
to them in their
development
as Pentecostal educators?
Eight mentioned
colleagues
and mentors as their
primary
resources.
Eight
men- tioned Pentecostal
writers, leaders,
and
theologians,
with each of the fol- lowing
named at least once:
Gordon Fee, Steven Land, Cheryl Bridges Johns, Myer Pearlman,
Billie
Ralph Riggs, Davis, Miroslav Volf, Opal Reddin, Robert Menzies, Walter Hollenweger, Roger Stronstad, Mel Robeck, Russell Spittler, Vinson Synan, Lyle Lovett, Murray Dempster, J. Robert Ashcroft, and Robert Cooley.
Seven mentioned writers and thinkers not
generally
associated with
pente- costalism,
such as:
Watchman Nee, Brother Lawrence, Thomas a Kempis, Dallas Willard, Richard Foster, C.S. Lewis, John Wesley, John Piper, Gustavo Gonzalez, Andrew Murray, Madame Guyon, Arthur Holmes, Harry Blamires, Thomas Groome, Parker Palmer, Jean Piaget, George Marsden, and James Burtchaell.
Two mentioned “Third Wave” Pentecostal/Charismatic
writers,
such as:
C. Peter Wagner, Cindy Jacobs, John Arnott, Charles Kraft, and Guy Chevreau.
.
Two mentioned Pentecostal
periodicals,
such as Enrichment. Several men- tioned the
Holy Spirit
and
Scripture.
One mentioned
worship
music.
Few of the Pentecostals mentioned have written
specifically
on educa- tion.
Commenting
on one of the
challenges
faced
by Pentecostal educators within Pentecostal IHEs, one of the respondents wrote: “We have had limit- ed opportunity to study our own
experience
as Pentecostals because
[of what might happen]
if
you
don’t come
up
with the
accepted perspective (approved by the denomination).”
I conclude this section with a quote that summarizes much of the above:
230
14
‘
.
The creation of Christian higher education institutions outside of min- istry training
will no doubt encourage the growth of a professional teach- Pentecostal in the new setting remains to be seen, as the
ing
class within pentecost. Whether that teaching class can remain
roots of Augustinian
tradition (Catholic, Lutheran, and
Calvinist)
are much more deep context of professional pentecostal educators…Beyond creating institu- powerful
and
widespread, providing both the training and the continuing tional space for the
of Pentecostal
training
and
continuing
education and
employment
teachers, there needs to develop a flourishing interdisci- plinary
concentration on the nature and function of Pentecostal
a
peda- gogy, fellowship between teachers and pastors, and appropriate resources such as journals, internet sites, conventions, etc. As well as an institutional approach to
linked to
pedagogy, it is essential that Pentecostal teach- ers remain
strong local congregations where their gifting is both
and relativized by its setting amongst other gifts. There is no room in Pentecostal pedagogy for elitism or showmanship…To some appreciated
degree,
we are having to invent pentecostal higher education as we go!
.
The same
may likely
be said of other forms of Pentecostal education as well.
What Framework
Might
Allow Us to Formulate and
Compare
Philosophies of Education?
A Proposed Framework
Pentecostal educators
rarely
describe their ideas about education in terms of classical
philosophies
or contemporary educational theories. Their descriptions
of the
impact
of their Pentecostal
experience
and
theology
on their educational ideas and
practices
more often refer to intuitive connec- tions than to systematically defined
relationships.
While this intuitive sense is both
powerful
and consistent with Pentecostal
experience,
it translates with
difficulty
into formal educational settings,
where
strategies
for curriculum and instruction must be formulated in a systematic
way. Consequently,
Pentecostal educators often find them- selves
lacking
a specifically Pentecostal framework for educational
philoso- phy,
with the result that Pentecostals then borrow
heavily
from other educa- tional
philosophies
that do not fully capture the dynamic of the implicit edu- cational ideas
undergirding
Pentecostalism.
Daniels has described this dilemma within the Church of God in Christ (COGIC),
a
historically
African-American Pentecostal denomination. A system
of Bible
colleges
was launched within COGIC in 1972 with the pur- pose
of
preparing
ministers and missionaries.
However,
while successful numerically,
the Bible
colleges
found
themselves,
in Daniels’ view,
overly reliant
upon
curriculum and
pedagogy
insensitive to educational ideas and
231
15
practices implicit
within the COGIC Pentecostal
community. 13 3
Likewise,
Pentecostal educators across formal education
systems
have been reliant
upon books,
curricular materials, and instructional methods rooted in other Christian and secular
philosophies
of education. 14
It would be of value, then, to have a framework within which to com- pare
various
philosophies
of
education,
which would then allow Pentecostals to
intentionally integrate
their
experience
and
theology
with their educational ideas and
practices.
Thus we could draw on the wealth of ideas available to us within our own
history
and communion, as well as on other Christian traditions and other educational and philosophical schools of thought.
I suggest that our search for such a framework
might fruitfully begin with the
questions
that educators ask. What are some core
questions per- taining
to the educational
process?
I would
suggest
that the following ten questions
are universal educational concerns. While this is not intended to be an exhaustive list of core questions, it does
provide
a common framework for our discussion of educational
philosophies.
1. What is real?
2. What is true and how do we know?
3. What is of value?
13 David D. Daniels, Ill,
“‘Live So Can Use Me Anytime, Lord, Anywhere’: Theological Education in the Church of God in Christ, 1970 to 1997,” Asian Journal of Pentecostal Theology 3:2 (July 2000), 303. Daniels writes: “The mission of the
of the
System of Bible Colleges is admirable, although the uncritical appropriation Evangelical curriculum is problematic.. . What is the best pedagogy to transmit the COGIC message and experience? Does an implic- it COGIC pedagogy exist that could be employed? The System of Bible Colleges promoted a pedagogy
that was alien to the COGIC context. The pedagogy of the System of Bible Colleges mitigates against
COGIC’s informal education processes of Bible discussion and mentoring.”
14 See, e.g., Cheryl Bridges Johns, Pentecostal Formation: A Pedagogy Among the Oppressed (Sheffield, UK: Sheffield Academic Press, 1993), 7. Johns writes: “The area of Christian edu- cation reflects some of the best and most sincere attempts to fit in with more established churches. For many Pentecostals, the
schooling paradigm,
with its
closely graded classes, cog- nitive and deductive approach to faith formation, four-color curriculum materials and stream- lined organization, is the wished-for ideal. We point to our untrained teachers, poor facilities and lack of good pedagogy as sure signs of our sectarian backwardness, all the while over-
formational
processes
which have historically been part of our discipleship.” An example of this from
looking powerful
my own experience concerned the core textbook in the Basic Christianity
class at Evangel University, an Assemblies of God institution in Springfield, Missouri, when I attended there in the late 1970s and early 80s. An
book on edu- cational philosophy is entitled The Idea
of a
Christian
College, by
Arthur outstanding Holmes, a professor of philosophy
at Wheaton
College. Writing
from a Reformed
perspective,
Holmes
provided my classmates and me with a coherent and powerful evangelical philosophy of education, but we
to relate it to our Pentecostal experience and theology, and no
comparable philosophy of education from a Pentecostal Christian perspective was available.
struggled
232
16
4. What are
my goals
as an educator?
5. How does
my
contextual
setting
frame and constrain
my
educational
goals?
6. What is the nature of the student?
7. What is the role of a teacher?
8. What should be learned?
9. How should it be taught?
10. How do my ideas
shape my educational practice (and
vice versa)?
Put
simply, then,
an educational
philosophy
involves an educator’s
responses to, ideas about,
and assumptions
regarding
these ten essential and
mutually informing questions (and others).
Within each of these
questions
there are
sub-questions.
For
example,
within the
question
“What is real?” one will find
questions concerning
the
nature of the universe, the nature of God, the nature of human
beings.
These
are all
“metaphysical” questions, and,
when one asks about distinctives for
a Pentecostal
philosophy
of
education,
one
might
reflect on whether
Pentecostals would answer these
questions differently,
or with different emphases,
than others.
Insofar as one is an educator, I would
suggest,
one has ideas about each of these matters. These ideas
may
be richly or
slightly
considered.
They
may be honed by consistent practice
or relatively untried.
They may
be con-
sciously
related to a philosophical school of thought, a wisdom
tradition,
or .
an educational
theory,
or not related. One may be said to have a formal edu- cational
philosophy
if these ideas are made
explicit.
If these ideas remain implicit,
one
may
be said to have an informal
philosophy
of education. But educational
practice
is rooted in these
questions and,
in this sense,
every educator has an educational
philosophy. Often,
the
degree
of formality in a statement of educational
philosophy
is a function of the
formality
of the educational
setting,
with formal
systems demanding
more
explicit
articula- tion of an educational
philosophy
and nonformal
setting demanding
less explicit
articulation. 15 As for institutions, an institutional
philosophy
of edu-
15 Though we may not be explicitly aware of the labels and terminology of educational
we are in
phi
many ways the products of one or some combination of these educational ideas and their working out in practice. For example, few have read the writings of John losophy,
Dewey,
the foremost American philosopher of education and author of books like and
Democracy
Education, but virtually all of us are products, at least in part, of
reforms in American schools.
Deweyian progressive
Many Christian educators
Alan Bloomri The Closing
of the American Mind in the early 1980s, but just what enjoyed reading was the educational
Bloom’s
philosophy underlying thesis, and was it an educational philosophy that Pentecostal educators
233
17
cation
may
likewise be said to consist of the institution’s
responses
to these ten
questions,
with personal pronouns modified.
Toward the end of this discussion, I will suggest a model that draws on depictions
of a philosophy of education like the one below.
Knight’s model, while
lacking
a reciprocal dynamic, does have the virtue of depicting the various
components
of a philosophy of education.
Fig.
1.
Components
of a Philosophy of Education from
Theory
to Practicel6
The first three elements of Knight’s model are the classical
questions of philosophy,
organized
around
metaphysics (What
is ultimately
real?),
axi- ology (What
is of
value?),
and
epistemology (How
can we
know?). Educational
goals
follow from our worldview, and these
goals
are
shaped and reshaped
by contextual
factors, such
as political dynamics, social
forces, economic conditions, and the expectations of immediate
family
or commu- nity.
Our
goals
then find
expression
in the framework of
specifically
edu- cational issues, such as the nature of the student, the role of the teacher, appropriate
curricular
emphases
and
teaching methodologies,
and our ideas about the social functions of educational institutions. These ideas in turn underlie and
shape
our educational
practices.
Joldersma
depicts
that central
place
of Christian
perspective
for Christian educators below.
could fully resonate with? Likewise, Paulo Freire’s 1986 book The
Pedagogy
of the Oppressed touched a responsive chord with many Christians in its appeal for justice, but how cognizant are Pentecostal educators of the underlying educational philosophy? Thanks to
to
Cheryl Bridges Johns and others, Pentecostals are beginning engage Freirian thought in just this kind of dia- logue,
but overall we are in the early stages of this kind of reflection.
16 Knight, Issues and Alternatives, 34. –
234
18
Fig.
2: Influence Domains 17
of Christian
Perspective
on Various Educational
– –
Do Pentecostals have
anything
to add to Joldersma’s model? We will continue to explore this question below.
The
length
limitations of this
essay
do not allow for a discussion of each of the historic and
contemporary philosophies, ideologies,
and educa- tional theories that have
shaped
our educational
experiences.
For summaries of the
philosophies
and their educational
implications,
I would recommend Knight
and Gutek.lg In the next section, I provide a brief overview of the components
of several
contemporary
educational
philosophies
and discuss ways
in which
they
have been
adopted
and
adapted by
Pentecostal educa- tors.
How Do Pentecostal Educators
Adopt
and
Adapt
Various Educational
Philosophies?
Pentecostals do not hold a
single philosophy
of education. Some Pentecostal educators would
identify
with a form of Pentecostal
particular- ism. Others would tend to
agree
with essentialist
approaches.
Others are
17 Julia K. Stronks and Gloria Goris Stronks, Christian Teachers in Public Schools (Grand Rapids,
MI: Baker, 1999), 45.
1 See
Knight, Issues and Alternatives, and Gerald L. Gutek, Philosophical and Ideological on
Perspectives Education, 2d ed. (Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 1997).
235
19
inclined to speak of their educational ideas in terms that resonate with
peren- nialism. Some would consider themselves
progressive
educators. Still oth- ers are enthusiastic about educational
goals
and practices that correspond to reconstructionism. There are also Pentecostal educators who would identi- fy
with critical
pedagogy. They
would
typically
not use this
terminology, but I hope to show that the diverse ideas of Pentecostals about education res- onate with these
widely divergent
educational theories.
Drawing primarily upon
the history of Assemblies of God education in the United States, I suggest eight approaches to educational
philosophy
that have
emerged
in roughly chronological
order,
but that now coexist
among (and within)
diverse Pentecostal educators. All
eight may
be seen as adap- tations of philosophies of education that exist in the
larger culture,
and we will
explore
how
existing philosophies
of education have been
adopted
and adapted by
Pentecostal educators over time. The
eight approaches
to edu- cational
philosophy
to be explored in this section are:
1.
particularism
2. essentialism
3.
perennialism
,
4.
progressivism
5. reconstructionism
6. critical
pedagogy
.
7.
pragmatism
8. eclecticism.
The earliest educational
approaches among
American Pentecostals
may be described as “particularistic.” Particularism in education
is characterized by a withdrawal
from dominant and mainstream education
systems,
often a forced withdrawal made by minority groups whose values are
not
accepted in the dominant culture. Pentecostal
particularism
is related to forms of fun- damentalist and
minority
ethnic
(such
as Afrocentric) educational
philoso- phy,
in which
marginalized groups
embrace their
separateness
and distance themselves from the educational systems of mainstream (and oppressive) society.
This Pentecostal
separatism
was also expressed in a pacifist stance toward war, which was the official
position
of the U.S. Assemblies of God, for
example,
until 1967, and in a code of
personal piety
that avoided involvement in many social activities of mainstream culture
(e.g.,
movies, social
dancing,
involvement in party
politics).
Some of the characteristics of Pentecostal
particularism
are:
–
emphasis
on Bible
study
and ministry preparation
–
emphasis
on eschatological expectation that Jesus’ Second
Coming
236
20
–
may
occur at any time
–
flowing
from this
eschatological expectation,
an emphasis on short- term, intense,
and
practical training
for
–
ministry
likewise,
a suspicion of longer-term academic
pursuits
that seem the oretical and insensitive to the shortness of time
–
use of fundamentalist curricula and theological models, even when such models seem inconsistent with Pentecostal
experience
and the –
ology (e.g., dispensational theology
and the Scofield Reference
Bible) pragmatic emphasis
on
practical
skills for evangelistic and mission ary endeavors;
academic
subjects
are valued insofar as they give pragmatic
assistance for Pentecostal mission
(e.g., literacy
for preach –
ing, writing,
and Bible
study;
math for financial and logistical
efforts) formal
degrees
from academic institutions are considered
unimportant and even undesirable.
Pentecostal- education in its particularist form is often accused of being anti-intellectual,
and in some senses this is true.
Many young
Pentecostals have been
discouraged
from
“thinking
too much.” Pentecostals have some- times seen the mind as an enemy of the
spirit
and the
Spirit.
However,
as Jesse Miranda, Director of the Urban Studies and Ethnic
Leadership
Center at Vanguard
University,
stated in an interview,
“They
were
reacting against pseudo-education
and the lack of balance between the rational and the rela- tional.
They
wanted to go beyond the rational.”
The
hostility
of
early Pentecostals,
and some
contemporary Pentecostals,
was not toward intellect or formal education
per se,
but rather toward the intellectual status
systems
of formal education from which Pentecostals, largely
from lower social
strata,
had been excluded. Pentecostal anti-intellectualism, then, while sometimes an unbalanced
rejec- tion of the
mind,
more often
rejected
the rationalism of the late nineteenth and
early
twentieth centuries that
sought
to build
great
structures of truth upon
human reason alone. In this
sense,
Pentecostal
particularism
antici- pated
some of the postmodern critiques of both traditionalist and modernist education.
Pentecostal
particularism, then,
was the educational
approach
most characteristic of Pentecostal education in the United States in the first few decades of the twentieth
century, through
the
founding
of the
many
Bible institutes and Bible schools.
Beginning
in the late
1930s,
with the establishment of the first Assemblies of God
four-year degree-granting institution,
Southern California Bible
College,
and continuing into the
1940s, with the Pentecostal
.
237
21
rapprochement
with moderate
Evangelicals
in the various
agencies
related to the National Association of
Evangelicals (NAE),
Pentecostal educators began
to explore other
approaches
to formal education.
The
figure
below shows
key elements of five other educational theories mentioned above. Other educational
philosophers
would use
slightly
differ- ent terminology and even different
categorical labels,
but for the point I wish to make here about
diversity
of educational
opinion
within Pentecostalism, I draw
upon
the educational
theory taxonomy suggested by
Gutek.
(See Figure 3)
While most Pentecostals would not describe their educational ideas in terms of the labels above, one often hears the elements of these various the- ories in Pentecostal
descriptions
of educational ideas. The
following descriptions
are compilations of comments from
Pentecostals, past
and pres- ent,
that seem to resonate with core elements of these five educational theo- ries.
E.ssentialist orientation
‘
‘
In order to accomplish that Great
Commission,
we need to be prac-
tical and we need to be skilled. To that end, we need to teach our
young people
to read and write and to calculate, to be able to have
the academic skills
necessary
to
spread
the
gospel through
litera-
ture,
and
through
Bible
study, teaching,
and
preaching. People
without
literacy
skills cannot
really study
the Bible and are
prone
to error and
immaturity. Furthermore,
math skills are essential if
we are to use modem methods of construction,
technology,
and
other tools that allow us to take the
message
to all the world. In
addition to their Bible education, our
people
need these basic aca-
demic tools and we must make sure that they acquire these. These
skills are also
necessary
for good citizenship.
,
Perennialist orientation
God is the
giver
of gifts, and God’s
gifts
are of many
kinds; super- natural
gifts, leadership gifts,
service
gifts.
The
Body
of Christ is very
diverse and so must be the
preparation
of our
youth
for their unique callings.
In addition to our Great
Commission,
which impels
us to bring the
gospel
to all people, we have received a cul- tural mandate, which
compels
us to bring our Christian worldview to bear on all the activities of our lives. We must
integrate
our faith with our
learning
and with our lives. All truth is God’s truth. The Bible is wholly true, but it is not an encyclopedia of human knowl-
238
22
edge.
We must seek out and understand the truth wherever it is found. To this end, our young
people
need to study the great works of literature, must understand that science is not
opposed
to our faith but is compatible with it. The
Spirit
of God is to lead us into all truth and so our educational endeavors are a sacred
activity.
.
Progressive
orientation
Traditional education has been much too focused on abstract ideas of truth and too little focused on the child or the learner and her unique
needs. As Pentecostals, we prize the soul and spirit as much as the mind. The
outpouring
of the
Holy Spirit
touches
every aspect
of a person’s life. Jesus models that
compassionate
concern for the whole
person.
His teaching is not full of abstractions, but is rooted in people’s real life experiences. We need to recover his gra- cious concern for the whole
person. Moreover,
the Biblical model associates the work of the Holy
Spirit
with the formation of a com- munity.
The church in the book of Acts is a community of concern and love, which values each member,
recognizes
its
diversity
and treasures it, and seeks the full formation of each
person
within the context of the
body
of Christ. Our education should reflect this concern for
body, mind,
and spirit, so that we
may
reflect the love of Christ to the world. All our abstract ideas and
great pronounce- ments tend to alienate
people
from Christ rather than attract them to him.
Reconstructionist orientation
The
outpouring
of the
Holy Spirit
comes with
liberating power. When
Mary
learned from the
angel
of Jesus’
coming birth,
she exclaimed that God has sided with the
poor
and
brought
down the proud oppressors.
Jesus’ life modeled this identification with the outcast and his
judgment upon
their rich
oppressors.
When the Spirit
of God came at
Pentecost,
the
Spirit
came
upon
men and women,
slaves and
free,
Jew and
Gentile,
and most
notably upon those outside the structures of
political,
social, and economic power.
This
baptism
in the
Holy Spirit
lifted
up oppressed people and brought them into a community
empowered by
the
Holy Spirit to
speak prophetically against
their
oppressive
circumstances and for a
community
of
equality
before God. Our education should likewise
empower
the
oppressed
to receive God’s
power
and to
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23
build a new
society
based on inclusion,
gender equality,
and peace- making.
We should be involved in
transforming society,
not just seeking spiritual experiences
for our own satisfaction.
Critical
12edagogy orientation
Both traditional and modem forms of education have asserted an ability
to know and convey absolute truths about the world.
They have constructed rationalistic
systems
and
complex
theories to explain
the
world,
and then have
attempted
to force these
systems of thought on generations of students. In fact, we should be suspi- cious of all these claims. The Apostle Paul said that we see through a glass,
darkly.
In other words, our knowledge is very limited. We should be humble about our assertions. What concerns God more than our
epistemology
and our rationalistic
metaphysical systems are our
relationships,
our
authenticity,
our
advocacy
on behalf of the voiceless and the
marginalized.
We need to teach our children to do justice, to love mercy, and to walk
humbly
with our God. The Holy Spirit
comes with a power not rooted in rationalistic
systems, but with authentic,
personal,
intimate,
and
liberating power.
Each of these
expressions
of Pentecostal educational ideas
represents
a synthesis
of Pentecostal
experience
and
theology
with educational
philoso- phies
rooted in other intellectual traditions. That elements of these educa- tional theories should be attractive to Pentecostal educators should come as no
surprise,
since all of these theories are informed
by
elements
of
the Judeo-Christian tradition.
Many
of the
proponents
of these theories have been and are believers in God and in Jesus Christ, while many
other
propo- nents within the same
general philosophy
are not
(See Fig. 3).
Two other varieties of Pentecostal
philosophies
of education that merit comment here are Pentecostal
pragmatism
and Pentecostal eclecticism.
Pentecostal
pragmatism
would assert that the nature of the education system really
is not all that
important
because the
Spirit-filled
believer can function within
any of them, bearing
witness to Christ in a dynamic and suc- cessful
way, adjusting
to the circumstances as need be,
just
as he or she would
adapt
and function within
any
culture. This
pragmatism
is especially compelling
in cultures like the United States, in which the ultimate
justifi- cation for most actions is whether it “works.” ” In secular
society,
the criteri- on to measure whether
something
works is usually whether it allows one to attain one’s desired outcome,
usually
defined in materialistic terms. This emphasis
on ends can blur the worldview and ethical issues
pertaining
to the
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24
Fig.
3. Elements of Five
Major
Educational Theories
means
by
which those ends are to be
achieved, leaving people
in a frenetic competition
for wealth,
status,
and personal gratification. The same
danger exists for Pentecostal
pragmatists,
whether the desired end be a
growing
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25
church,
a successful
ministry,
or personal spiritual fulfillment.
Pentecostal eclecticism
may be the most common philosophy
of educa- tion
among
Pentecostals. The
general
American
public
tends to pick and choose elements of educational
philosophies
in an eclectic
way,
often with little
opportunity
to reflect on the
larger
issues of worldview. “Reflective” eclecticism makes
good
sense in that
good
ideas about education and worth- while
practices
come from a variety of sources and perspectives.
However, one must be cautious about what
George
Posner calls
“garbage-can
eclecti- cism,
in which
practices
based on
contradictory
or invalid
assumptions
are collected into a ‘bag of tricks.”‘ 19
9
Indeed, each of the educational
philosophies
discussed above has its merits. I believe, however, that Pentecostals are still in
relatively early stages
of reaching beyond these conventional or popular educational ideas to examine the educational
possibilities
inherent within Pentecostal
experi- ence and theology. The current
syntheses
have often been
forged
in a prag- matic
way
and need to be reexamined. Menzies’s
summary
of the state of Assemblies of God education in 1970 continues to hold true ‘
thirty years later:
‘
The changes seem to have been occasioned largely by economic and social pressures, not matched by an overarching philosophy of educa- tion. The result of unassimilated changes has produced a degree of uncertainty
and competition on the undergraduate level.20
A Possible Framework
for Exploring
the
Impact of Pentecostal Experience
and
Theology upon
Educational
Philosophy
and Practice
It is a crucial time for Pentecostals to re-examine our educational philosophies
in the
light
of our Pentecostal
experience
and
theology.
It is conceivable,
of
course,
that Pentecostals
may
have little that is
special
to contribute to the discussion of philosophies of education. Some would
argue that Pentecostalism
merely
reasserts orthodox Christian belief with a focus on practice and experience of those truths and not mere intellectual assent to them.
The results of this survey and literature review, however, would seem to suggest
otherwise.
Perhaps
Pentecostals do have
something
to contribute to retlection on educational
philosophy, beginning
with metaphysics, axiology,
19 George J. Posner, Analyzing the Curriculum, 2d ed. (New York: McGraw-Hill, Inc., 1995), 3.
20 Menzies, Anointed, 373.
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26
and
epistemology
and
extending
to the nature of the
student,
the role of the teacher,
pedagogy,
curricular
emphases,
and the
relationship
of
practice
to ideas.
Based on
my interviews,
comments
by
Pentecostal
writers,
as well as other Christian and secular writers and the biblical
text,
I offer the following draft framework for
envisioning
a Pentecostal
philosophy
of education in order to suggest
potential
areas of reflection and
study
for Pentecostal edu- cators in various domains of a comprehensive philosophy of education. I look forward to dialoguing with and learning from
my fellow educators
and fellow Pentecostals in this exploratory
process.
‘
Fig.
4. Draft Framework for
Envisioning
a Pentecostal
Philosophy
of Education
In this
model,
God’s
empowering presence
becomes the framework for the entire educational
process.
The
Holy Spirit
informs our reflection and
prac- tice. The
relationships among
worldview
formulation,
educational
goals, issues,
applications,
and educational
practice
are
dynamic
and
reciprocal. The Pentecostal
theologian
Gordon Fee
writes,
,
We are not left on our own as far as our relationship with God is con- cerned; neither are we left on our own to “slug it out in the trenches,” as it were, with regard to the Christian life. Life in the present is ered
empow-
by the God who dwells among us and in us. As the personal pres-
243
27
ence of God, the Spirit is not merely some “force” or “influence.” The living
God is a God of power; and by the Spirit the power of the
1
living God is present with us and for us.21
Like other Christians, Pentecostal educators draw on Scripture and the- ology
for their
perspectives,
and become
proficient
in contextualizing their educational
goals
and activities. In doing
so, Pentecostal educators
see God through
the Holy Spirit as One whose
presence
infuses one’s formulation of ideas, goals, strategies,
and who not only guides the process and
empowers the plan, but who might break into the process at any time to accomplish the unexpected.
The teacher and
learner, then,
find themselves
together
in the presence
of God, whatever the educational context. From this vantage point, one could
suggest
fresh
ways
in which Pentecostals
might
think and are thinking
about their educational
philosophy
and various
ways
in which
they may
continue to engage in powerful educational
practice.
21 Gordon Fee, God’s Empowering Presence (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers, 1994), 8.
244
28
Anonymous
gonna wanna getS one Philip Williams
Anonymous
Troy Day for true Pentecostals that is walking in the Spirit or following those who do.
Anonymous
Philip Williams history 101 on Noah is a MUST for you right now The spirit you follow may not be the HOLY GHOST Whom you do not know
Anonymous
Troy Day I know Jesus, the life-giving Spirit.
Anonymous
your knowing of the SPIRIT is not Pentecostal – it amounts and ends @ the annual Holy Ghost Winnie Roast … ohWell https://www.piratechristian.com/museum-of-idolatry/2016/10/holy-ghost-weiner-roast
Anonymous
No thanks. I’ll stick with an exegetical biblical one. I refuse to embrace man’s filters.
Anonymous
Duane L Burgess do you hold a baptist one? Ben Bottke Philip Williams