Illiteracy Will Kill You.

We will not believe more than we know, and we will not live higher than our beliefs. The many fronts of Christian compromise in this generation can be directly traced to biblical illiteracy in the pews and the absence of biblical preaching and teaching in our homes and churches.
This generation must get deadly serious about the problem of biblical illiteracy, or a frighteningly large number of Americans–Christians included–will go on thinking that Sodom and Gomorrah lived happily ever after.

–Albert Mohler

Forms of Knowledge

According to El-Arabi, there are three forms of knowledge: 1) intellectual knowledge, which is “only information and the collection of facts”; 2) the “emotionalism” that consists of getting in touch with and expressing your feelings; and 3) “real knowledge, which is called the Knowledge of Reality. In this form man can perceive what is right, what is true” (Shah 1968, p. 85). The first two forms–the false forms–of knowledge outlined by El-Arabi are the forms that dominate the current confusion surrounding issues in education. They can be seen in the talk about technological innovation and feeling good about one’s self.

–David Patterson, 36

Knowledge is Power?

Knowledge is power, so the pitch goes. Therefore, education is the key to success, the passport to the future, the door to a career. Bow down to us, and we shall give you the objective science, the value-free technology, and the business savvy to plunder the world of its goods. Enter the fold, and we shall give you the capacity and the skills to surround yourself with nice things. You will be respected, admired, and envied. Thus administrators, teachers, and above all students have been placed on a market of exchange, where the things bought and sold are not only the idols we pass off as consumer goods but also human souls. All too often the schools deemed to be the “good” ones are those that are good for the economy, attracting industry, grant money, and droves of bodies. The more numbers we have entered into our computers–indeed, the greater the number of the computers we have–the better we think we are. Hence we have fallen into a terrible confusion between quantity and quality: numbers mean everything. “Successful” programs are those that demonstrate “growth,” and growth is nearly always measured quantitatively. And so the numbers numb us into the sleeping sickness of complacency, where we bask in the illusion of knowing something for having increased our stores of information.

–David Patterson

Pursuing the Tree of Knowledge vs. the Tree of Life

I am rooted in the Tree of Knowledge
I want to know my pleasures
I want to know my rights
I want to find myself
I want to know of evils in the world–and fixate–
I want to know myself as god
I balk at the Tree of Life
at Truth
at absolutes
at repenting
at renewing my mind
at submitting
at Christ himself
I’d rather know evil and die
than believe the Truth and Live

Oh my soul, AWAKE!