Wednesday, October 27, 2021

A Place At The Table: Hospitality At Our Christian School



I have a childhood memory of Sunday visits between two church services. For about half the day between and morning and afternoon worship services on a Sunday, I would have the chance to “swap families” and be a guest in different home. I recall that as being a time that I was not only visiting with a friend, but actually being welcomed as a guest of the entire family since it involved two car rides, a meal or two, and being included in the family’s devotion patterns. It was a chance to be a guest of honor.

Later in life I was also invited into homes as a university student as part of a travelling choir. Usually for a late evening snack after a concert, an overnight sleep, and then a morning breakfast routine – I was invited with no context, no previous relationship, and no understanding on either side of what the experience might feel like to be guest and host. They were almost always very warm and memorable times of being welcomed as strangers, and then leaving as someone known and loved. (Except for the time someone’s basement flooded, but that is a story for another time.)

Teachers will be participating this Thursday in a Edvance Christian School convention for educators. We will focus on hospitality in communities. I’ll share two sentences here the presenter gave us in advance:

Start from the image of God as banquet host, of Jesus as the one declaring the arrival of God’s hospitality, God’s welcome. How might this shape the way you imagine what makes your school or your classroom or your curriculum Christian (Christ-following)?

I’m looking forward to a reflective time of encouragement with the LCES team as we link in virtually to this event. I’m thankful for the chance for our teachers to continue to grow in their beautiful craft of Christian Teaching for two days. Pray we are blessed as we gather.

SJ

Friday, October 8, 2021

Multi-Grade Learing At Our Christian School


“Happiness is not found within us, but rather between us.” 

The last time that an in-person educator convention was held (October 2019) in Ancaster, nearly 1000 Christian educators explored this concept from a British researcher, Rob Loe. (Hard to imagine 1000 maskless people in one auditorium today!) 

Depending only on self-help books, mindfulness to find your inner “you”, and other such activities is not the route to happiness, he proposed. His interesting research of measuring relationships in organizations indicate that people flourish when strong connecting relationships exist. The most vulnerable are taken care of best in communities were connecting relationships are strongest. He presented some “threats” to relationship health in our culture and context. Bees in a bee hive with unique but connected roles was offered as a visual to ponder. The hive thrives when relationships between the bees is healthy. 

At LCES, we believe relationship is the foundation of learning. Jesus showed us this in the way in which he announced a new covenant and the coming kingdom. He lived and taught in an intensely relational setting with his disciples. Can you imagine the talking on long walks, mealtime conversations, and lingering campfire debates?

This is why students and teachers at LCES begin the day with deliberate greetings, listen to each other about silly things and serious things, and spend time restoring relationships when they are struggling. This is why we have reading buddies, bus buddies, and STEM friends (grade 7&8 and kindergarten). We strive to have students who are seen, known, and loved every day they come to school learn of God’s truth.

 It’s great to be in the hive at LCES every day. 

SJ