Mount Hermon Teachers
1 Chronicles 5:23 And the children of the half tribe of Manasseh dwelt in the land: they increased from Bashan unto Baalhermon and Senir, and unto mount Hermon.
I never went to Sunday school. Bible
classes in my Christian school were compulsory and taught once a week as a part
of regular curriculum. My first memory of this class is of sitting at the
back-bench and sneering at the teacher.
Today, I am among many of the
band of brothers and sisters. We are a family of siblings dotting ages and
places who have known Jesus through their Bible teacher. In school, we made a
directional and attitudinal change in our life’s goals and value systems. Most
of us have stayed on course and found school to be the best years of our lives and
the Bible the chief element of our foundation.
What made this remarkable change?
As I ponder on this question, I can
visualize several images from the past. A tall lady, clasping a set of books, a
jhola strung along her shoulder, walking on a well tread garden path towards the
school: a young school boy following her asking her questions on books, life
and problems of adolescence. A circle of children, different ages, girls and
boys, sitting on small chairs, flipping songbooks stuck with cyclostyled bits
of paper with familiar choruses! A clump of children in the playground, by the
swings; not playing during the school recess but huddled together in a brief
prayer!!
Our teachers influenced our lives
in more ways than one. Teachers who would get no extra pay to spend their evenings
with the children; while some would teach games, others would lead in singing
and drama and yet others would simply “hang around” and talk to the kids. Some
teachers would even spend their holidays with the children; a camping trip, a
picnic or a movie show.
No teacher was pushy, or
arrogant, or self centered!! They would always give the children their space,
make learning so much fun and encourage their holistic development. It was
never books and books; Biology classes meant an excursion for collecting leaves
and plants; Geography for collecting rocks and stones; English meant reciting
poems of nature in the garden and History a complete class play: Ballista!
Despite the fun environment,
there were also deep churnings. Dog-eared new testaments in the coat pocket; marked
and underlined several times over. An early morning spent facing the mountains with
a quiet prayer stirring in the heart; to lift up the mist of uncertainties and
childhood confusions.
My last day at school ended with
a realistic prayer. Life ahead would be different. The shelter and the warm
seclusion would be no more. Was Jesus just a passing fancy or could He be a
companion for life? “God”, I prayed, “if You mean business, give me something
that I can have for keeps!” A few days later, I invited Jesus in my heart and life;
I took the step of faith that despite the unknowing future ahead, I chose to begin my walk with Him.
It has been twenty five years
since, and I have found God to be faithful! Every day.
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