Articles From The Classical Teacher
Why
Study the Pagans?
by
Cheryl Lowe (about
her)
A
classical education involves two things primarily: the study
of the classical languages, Latin and/or Greek, and the study
of the classical civilization of Greece and Rome.
In the last few years, there have been a number of articles
critical of the classical Christian education movement. The
objection goes something like this: Since all truth comes from God and the Bible,
what can Christians learn
from the pagans, who had neither? We should read the Bible and books written
by Christians and avoid the unsanctified pagan mind and its
temptations.
This objection to classical education reveals some confusion
about the nature and purpose of Scripture. The Bible is the
book about God. Its purpose is to reveal the nature of God
to man, a knowledge that man cannot discover for himself.
But most things man can discover for himself - geometry,
logic, the principles of history, government, literature,
the sciences, etc. These things were first discovered by the
Greeks. God did not reveal to man what he could discover for
himself through reason and experience. To do so would have
confused human reason with divine revelation.
But even if our Christian objector acknowledges that the
Greeks learned some things that are useful and true, is that
a good reason to focus on Greek and Roman culture? Why cant
we just take what they discovered and use it for our own purposes
and not waste too much time on a dead, pagan culture? This
is often expressed by the idea of spoiling the Egyptians. The Children of Israel took some loot from the Egyptians on
their journey to the Promised Land, so we Christians can take
some things we need from the pagans, too.
But the Greeks did not just discover some useful things that
we can lift out of their writings, hopefully without contaminating
ourselves in the process. Amazingly, the Greeks discovered
the foundations for almost all of human knowledge and wisdom.
Historians call this explosion of learning the Greek
miracle. This term expresses the wonder we feel when
we come to understand this sudden, extraordinary, and unexplainable
outpouring of philosophy, literature, art, and science by
this small number of people living in the poor, rocky land
of Greece. Its difficult to overstate the genius of
the Greek accomplishment. For me, John Cardinal Newman explained
it best in his great book on education, The Idea of
a University.
The world was to have certain intellectual teachers and
no others; Homer and Aristotle, and the poets and philosophers
who circle round them, were to be the schoolmasters of all
generations, and therefore the Latins
(Romans), falling into the law on which the worlds education
was to be carried, so added to the classical library as
not to reverse or interfere with what had already been determined.
So, classical civilization is more than just a good place
to pick up some useful information on our trip to the Holy
Land. The Greek and Roman classics are the basic textbooks
of human wisdom and knowledge. In His providence, God so ordained
the world that divine knowledge should come through the Hebrews
and human knowledge through the Greeks. The greater light
of revelation orders and commands the lesser light of human
wisdom, but it does not obliterate it. As for human wisdom,
we begin with the Greeks--the worlds first schoolmasters.
Cheryl Lowe is the co-author (with Leigh Lowe) of Memoria Press' Christian Studies program, as well as the author of the Latina Christiana program.
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