Walt Garlington examines the dire shortcomings of public “education” in Louisiana, offering a most plausible course of correction!
There is something that will drive away these evils, but these school officials, and most other government officials in Louisiana from school boards to the Governor’s Mansion, seem afraid to name it: Christianity.
If there is faithfulness and love towards God, if there is constant remembrance of God, lawlessness in adults and children is much less likely to arise. A holy man we have mentioned before, St. Dimitri of Rostov, a native of the Ukraine, explains it this way:
In Paradise, to do and to keep was the first commandment given Adam, that is, to do with the mind2 in order to comprehend well, and to keep the commandment so as not to break it. But since he did not do with mindfulness, he did not keep the commandments, and because he did not practice mental action above all else, unbelief arose in Adam – disbelief in God, Who spoke and commanded; then from unbelief were born disobedience and transgression; from the transgression came the falling away from the Lord’s grace and estrangement from His Divine love.
If Adam had comprehend the Benefactor and reflected upon the commandment, and if he had believed, he would not have disobeyed the commandment; nor would he have eaten of the forbidden tree and been cast out of Paradise, and fallen into death and corruption . . . .
Unbelief is born from imprudence, and disobedience is born from unbelief, and every sin and transgression are born from disobedience. If someone comprehends nothing, how can he believe? How can a person devoid of faith, and thus he understands nothing, keep the commandments of the Lord? Further, how can he who does not keep the commandments of the Lord have trusting hope in God and love for Him? It is not at all possible.
Without constant reminders of God and his commandments, St. Dimitri is saying, all kinds of sins will be committed. We now have the fulfillment of that statement of his in our own schools.
Read the whole thing. At the end, Walt does the strangest thing: he recommends a novel:
Coda: For more illustrations of the numerous pitfalls that come about from relying on the bureaucratic professionalism mentioned earlier to improve the public school system, we recommend Perrin Lovett’s short James Bond-esque novel The Substitute, available from Shotwell Publishing.
Thanks, Walt!