Integrating Christian Faith in a Religiously Diverse Classroom (2024)

Integrating Christian Faith in a Religiously Diverse Classroom (1)

by Brad Nassif | North Park University

North Park is a city-centered university in Chicago that warmly welcomes students of all backgrounds: Christians, Muslims, Jews, Buddhists, Hindus, agnostics, atheists, LGBTQ or none of the above. Our core values are “urban, inter-cultural, and Christian.” We belong to the Evangelical Covenant Church, whose university board has recently asked our faculty to partner with the church by “making disciples” of students without, of course, imposing the faith on anyone. This raises the question: How might a dedicated Christian teach the faith in the context of a religiously diverse population of students?

I want to suggest that the incarnation provides a foundation for integrating Christian faith with academic disciplines, even in a spiritually mixed classroom. Gregory of Nazianzus (c. 325–389) summarized the full extent of the saving work of Christ when he wrote, “Whatsoever has not been assumed has not been healed” (Letter to Cledonius, 101). For Gregory and virtually the entire Greek patristic tradition, if Christ did not take upon himself every single aspect of human nature (except sin) when God became human, then whatever has been left out cannot be saved. It’s a matter of cosmic salvation. The Son of God took unto his divine Person a human body, a human soul and a fully human mind (contra Apollinaris).

What does the God-filled humanity of Christ have to do with integrating Christian faith and academic disciplines? It tells us that the liberal arts cannot be all they were meant to be apart from the incarnation. Christ himself penetrates and transforms the liberal arts. This does not mean we should turn our lecterns into pulpits and our classrooms into Sunday school classes, nor does it mean we should ask non-Christian students to be hypocritical by adopting a perspective they do not presently embrace. It does mean, however, that a Christian professor working in a Christian school may model integration even for non-Christians.

The ways in which faculty members “make disciples” depend partly on their disciplinary location within the university. For example, those who teach liberal arts subjects might raise a different set of questions than those who teach in a biblical or theological department. A liberal arts professor may ask students to explore how the Christian faith might affect the way a believer deals with the fundamental questions of their particular discipline. Specifically, a business professor may ask students to evaluate competing economic theories with a Christian understanding of stewardship; a music teacher may ask students to write about the spiritual lives of great composers; an art teacher may give a lecture on the relation of creation and incarnation to art, and so on. If Jesus is Lord, then he is Lord over all knowledge, not just religious knowledge. There is no single way to integrate Christian faith with one’s academic discipline, but failure to do so in light of a historic Christian understanding of the Person and work of Christ (and not simply a generic “­values-based” faith) can result in an Apollinarian-like ­Christology that opposes the integration of divinity with the ­human mind.

An explicit Christian witness is at times a more risky and controversial liability for those of us who teach theological subjects to a religiously diverse group of students. This is true because we are called not only to integrate the Christian faith with our subject matter, but also to display the fullness and beauty of it to those who might adamantly oppose it. At North Park, the composition of our classrooms is virtually identical to the society in which we live. I regard that as a positive feature of our campus that offers opportunities for a sensitive Christian witness. I say “sensitive” because in nearly all our classes, only a small handful of students self-identify as committed Christians. Many others are religiously diverse, indifferent, unbelieving, or even hostile to Christianity. In my classroom, I affirm spiritual self-determination but invite everyone to “try on” the Christian faith (as much as they are able) for a semester. This encourages all students, with their unique starting points, to experience something more of the Christian faith than when they first entered the classroom.

Those faculty who seek to “make disciples” according to Jesus’ teachings know all too well the joys and tribulations of trying to implement that mandate amid such diversity. At times, some faculty members disagree with or even object to that goal. Here are three of the most common objections:

  1. Since there allegedly is no single, agreed-on “Christian perspective,” the Christian faith cannot be taught. This objection reflects an ignorance of Christian history, especially the common faith of the undivided church in its first thousand years. It also overlooks the fact that all academic disciplines involve competing theories. For instance, there is no single feminist, evolutionary or Freudian perspective. Yet no one argues that these views should not be taught simply because there is no single, agreed-on perspective. Rather, each of these subjects has common characteristics that form a unified center. The same holds true for Christianity.
  2. It would be wrong to teach a Christian perspective on our disciplines because that would present a biased view that is unfair to the other religious views of our students. This is religious relativism. The argument assumes that truth does not matter, or no religious perspective is true, or that all religious perspectives are equally false or equally true. A Christian college has every right to express its conviction that the world is better off with Christ than without him. Students who come to campus know we are a Christian school and should respect that stated identity as much as the teachers who uphold it in their classes.
  3. The integration of Christian faith with the liberal arts actually lowers the academic quality of the classroom. Nothing should be further from the truth. Seeking to understand ourselves and our world more fully ought to provide a powerful motivation to strive for excellence. Truth-seeking should raise the desire for knowledge and produce the highest quality of scholarship in faculty and students alike.

All the above raises many challenging problems in the classroom that I am unable to address here, though I hope others will advance this discussion in future issues of Didaktikos. As Parker Palmer reminds us in his book The Courage to Teach, the best teaching comes from the identity and integrity of the teacher. A genuine Christian who knowledgeably and sensitively integrates faith with their academic discipline bears witness to the supremacy of Christ over all creation.

In a recent class on Christian spirituality, I witnessed the intellectual transformation of a ­secular-minded psychology student who started out strongly opposing the integration of Christian faith with psychology. While acknowledging the appropriate restrictions of faith-integration in the public school, I challenged the student to think more holistically about faith in light of the creation narrative in Genesis 1. I proposed that since humans are made in the image of God (Gen 1:26) we cannot be fully human apart from a relationship with our Creator. The exclusion of God from the human makeup limits human potential for health and wholeness. About halfway through the semester, the student gave a class presentation and shared how her close friend had just experienced a third miscarriage in pregnancy. Through that devastating experience, the student discovered that no amount of psychological advice was adequate to relieve the tragic loss of a child. Christian faith offered a comfort that was simply unavailable in a psychological model devoid of hope in the afterlife. From that time on, the student began exploring ways to integrate her study of psychology with the hope of the gospel. This is just one of many examples that illustrate how the supremacy of Christ can speak to the various academic disciplines in a diverse classroom. I have seen similar “eureka” moments from students majoring in nursing, education, business, political science, and music.

“For God was pleased to have all his fullness dwell in him, and through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether things on earth or things in heaven” (Col 1:19–20 NIV).

Brad Nassif is professor of biblical and theological Studies at North Park University in Chicago. A specialist on the Eastern Orthodox tradition, his books include The Philokalia: A Classic Text of Orthodox Spirituality (co-editor with Brock Bingaman; Oxford University Press); Bringing Jesus to the Desert (Zondervan); and New Perspectives on Historical Theology (Eerdmans). He is currently working on a book focusing on the Gospel in the Eastern Orthodox tradition.

This essay was first published in the July issue of Didaktikos: Journal of Theological Education (DidaktikosJournal.com).

Tagged asbradchicagolecture hallnassifnorthparkuniversity

Integrating Christian Faith in a Religiously Diverse Classroom (2024)

FAQs

Why is it important to integrate faith and learning in an educational setting? ›

Faith in education has long-term effects on students.

A faith-based education can encourage critical thinking that not only seeks knowledge and understanding of the science that explains our world but also analyzes and questions how this knowledge could or should be used in the light of faith.

What is integration of faith and learning all about how do you define it? ›

The integration of faith and learning is a focus of many religious institutions of higher education. The broad concept encompasses the idea that the Christian worldview, faith, and practices of the student should be deeply connected within the learning experience.

How do you integrate religion into education? ›

How to Teach About World Religions in Schools
  1. Just observe on field trips. ...
  2. Pick someone neutral and knowledgeable for guest talks on religion. ...
  3. Be an active moderator of any guest speaker on religion, including parents. ...
  4. Avoid dress-up exercises in the classroom.
30 Sept 2016

What is an integrated faith and how do we develop and integrated faith? ›

“[Faith] integration is concerned with integral relationships between faith and knowledge, the relationships which inherently exist between the content of the faith and the subject-matter of this or that discipline; such connections do not have to be invented or manufactured.

How do you show faith in school? ›

You don't have to make loud displays of your faith.
...
For example:
  1. If people are gossiping, don't contribute to it.
  2. If someone shares a personal problem, quietly pray with them.
  3. Tell the truth.
  4. Be kind.
  5. Help people.
  6. Wear Catholic t-shirts.
  7. If someone asks about your weekend, don't be afraid to say you went to Confession.

Why is faith based education important? ›

A faith based education encourages a global worldview

A well-taught faith based education will give students a broader, healthier perspective on life than their peers. A worldview that is based on Biblical principals will be one of selflessness, acceptance, and love for their fellow man.

What is the relationship between faith and learning? ›

Faith is related to knowing and believing in something based on either supernatural or natural revelation. Learning is the acquiring of knowledge via faith, which brings about a change in behavior.

How does faith affect education? ›

Some scholars, however, hypothesize that higher levels of religious observance and engagement produce greater educational attainment. They posit that religious involvement enhances an individual's social capital in the form of family and peer networks, which promote educational success.

What is the actual meaning of integration? ›

1 : the act or process of uniting different things. 2 : the practice of uniting people from different races in an attempt to give people equal rights racial integration. integration. noun. in·​te·​gra·​tion | \ ˌint-ə-ˈgrā-shən \

What is the meaning of integration of faith and learning from SDA viewpoint of education? ›

Integration of Faith & Learning

In a Seventh-day Adventist setting, its aim is to ensure that, by the time students complete their studies, they will have freely internalized beliefs and values and a view of knowledge, life, and destiny that is Bible-based, Christ-centered, service-oriented, and kingdom-directed.

What is integration of a function? ›

integration, in mathematics, technique of finding a function g(x) the derivative of which, Dg(x), is equal to a given function f(x). This is indicated by the integral sign “∫,” as in ∫f(x), usually called the indefinite integral of the function.

What is religious diversity in the classroom? ›

As a teacher, you can prepare students to accept all types of diversity, including religion. Religious diversity is the coexistence of more than one religion in the same setting.

How do you accommodate different cultures and religions in the classroom? ›

How do you Manage Diversity in the Classroom?
  1. Get to Know Your Students. ...
  2. Maintain Consistent Communication. ...
  3. Acknowledge and Respect Every Student. ...
  4. Practice Cultural Sensitivity. ...
  5. Incorporate Diversity in the Lesson Plan. ...
  6. Give Students Freedom and Flexibility.

Why is religious diversity important? ›

Religious diversity brings awareness to the significant differences in religious belief and practice. In searching for a richer and deeper understanding of diverse cultures, one must embrace religious tolerance, understanding, acceptance and a willingness to move beyond our differences.

How do you integrate faith with life? ›

Healthy and Safe Ways to Live Out Your Faith Each Day
  1. Participate in Virtual Mass Every Sunday. ...
  2. Begin Each Day with Morning Prayer or Meditation. ...
  3. Read Bible Verses During Regular Nature Walks. ...
  4. Participate in Small Group Bible Study Sessions. ...
  5. Participate in Socially Distant Volunteer Opportunities.
30 Jul 2020

What does the Trinity doctrine say? ›

A Trinity doctrine is commonly expressed as the statement that the one God exists as or in three equally divine “Persons”, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Every term in this statement (God, exists, as or in, equally divine, Person) has been variously understood.

What is faith research? ›

At the core of academic research, and at the core of religious and spiritual disciplines, is a commitment to understand and to immerse oneself in what is real: to find meaningful explanations for important relationships, and to improve lives as a result.

How do you demonstrate faith? ›

5 Ways to Demonstrate Your Faith and Bring Miracles into Your...
  1. Follow the Lord's living prophet.
  2. Attend Sunday meetings.
  3. Participate in home-centered gospel learning.
  4. Pay tithes and offerings.
  5. Attend the temple.
29 Oct 2019

How do I share my faith with others? ›

How to Share Your Faith
  1. How to Share Your Faith in God With Others.
  2. Represent Jesus in the Best Possible Way.
  3. Be a Friend by Showing Love.
  4. Be a Good, Kind, and Godly Example.
  5. Submit to Authority and Obey God.
  6. Pray for God to Open a Door.
  7. More Practical Ways to Share Your Faith By Being an Example.
18 Feb 2019

Why do you wish to have your daughter attend a faith based high school? ›

Faith-based schools encourage spiritual maturity.

They also learn to develop social skills and to form good friendships and healthy relationships with others. Students are also taught leadership skills in order to build up their community and become role models to their peers.

How does Christianity influence education? ›

The community of church members, like the family, plays its part in advancing educational attainment. The strong social bonds of religious groups can supplement the resources available to children, especially those in large families, helping them to achieve higher levels of education.

What is the relationship between religion and religious education? ›

Studies indicate that teaching about religious and secular worldviews increases knowledge and awareness of different religions, enriches understanding of others, and assists integrating into multicultural societies (Miller & McKenna, 2011) .

What is the contribution of Christianity to the modern education? ›

Christians have been pioneering educational initiatives from pre independence time onwards and now has some 25000+ schools, colleges and universities even in very remote and rural areas, imparting quality education to all irrespective of caste, creed or language, contributing to the progress and development of the ...

Why is integration important? ›

Integration ensures that all systems work together and in harmony to increase productivity and data consistency. In addition, it aims to resolve the complexity associated with increased communication between systems, since they provide a reduction in the impacts of changes that these systems may have.

What is an example of integrate? ›

1 : to form into a whole : unite Her music integrates jazz and rock. 2 : to make a part of a larger unit They help integrate immigrants into the community. 3 : desegregate The schools are being integrated.

What is integration Short answer? ›

Integration is the act of bringing together smaller components into a single system that functions as one.

What is the main point of Adventist education? ›

The purpose of Adventist education is to help students reach their highest potential and to fulfill God's purpose for their lives. Student outcomes constitute a significant guiding criterion in assessing the health and effectiveness of the school.

What are the 4 cornerstones of Adventist education? ›

Seventh-day Adventist education is built on a firm foundation that incorporates four cornerstones. We must ensure critical placement of them.
...
Cornerstones of Adventist Education
  • We recognize that all truth is God's truth. ...
  • We foster whole-person development. ...
  • We nurture faith. ...
  • We educate for eternity.
21 Jan 2021

Where do characteristics of Adventist education originated? ›

Education in its broadest sense is a means of returning human beings to their original relationship with God. The distinctive characteristics of this Adventist worldview, built around creation, the fall, redemption, and re-creation, are derived from the Bible and the inspired writings of Ellen G. White.

What are the three methods of integration? ›

The different methods of integration include: Integration by Substitution. Integration by Parts. Integration Using Trigonometric Identities.

What is the meaning of integration in education? ›

Integration refers to exceptional students being partially taught in a mainstream classroom. Activities are adapted so the student can “fit in” with their mainstream peers while learning skills that may be better practiced in a room with more age-appropriate peers.

What is an example of religious diversity? ›

The Pervasiveness of Religious Diversity

Monotheistic religions such as Judaism, Christianity, and Islam agree that there is a sole God. Polytheistic religions such as Taoism, Japanese Shinto, and Chinese folk religion hold that there are multiple deities (gods).

How do you deal with religion in the classroom? ›

Religion in the Classroom: How to respond when a lesson takes an unexpected turn
  1. Start with where the young people are at. The question has been raised for a reason. ...
  2. Take a moment. Teachers are not omnipotent, nor should we want to be. ...
  3. Encourage critical thinking. ...
  4. Create a safe space. ...
  5. Don't feel that you must be neutral.
7 Aug 2018

How can you promote cultural integration in your classroom? ›

To incorporate cultural awareness into your classroom curriculum, you should:
  1. Express interest in the ethnic background of your students. ...
  2. Redirect your role in the classroom from instructor to facilitator. ...
  3. Maintain a strict level of sensitivity to language concerns. ...
  4. Maintain high expectations for student performance.
30 Nov 2014

How can teachers include diversity and culture in the classroom? ›

Including diverse learning and teaching material is one way to bring diversity into the classroom. Exposing children to material which represents multiple viewpoints and perspectives. Your materials should include different nationalities, races, languages, abilities, socio-economic backgrounds and current affairs.

How do you show respect for differences in religion? ›

The first way you can begin to respect different forms of spirituality is to learn about them. Even if you don't agree with someone's beliefs or practices, learning more about what they believe, and why, could help you respect their decision to make these beliefs an important part of their life.

Why do we need diversity? ›

1) Diversity drives creativity and innovation

Every culture, every nationality, every single person sees the world in a different way. Similarly, every culture, nationality, and person has different knowledge, perspectives, and points of view. When all of these different views are shared together, miracles can happen.

What are the 4 types of diversity? ›

There are generally four different types of diversity: internal, external, organizational, and worldview—and you should aim to understand and represent them all.
...
Here are some examples of internal diversity:
  • Race.
  • Ethnicity.
  • Age.
  • National origin.
  • Sexual orientation.
  • Cultural identity.
  • Assigned sex.
29 Nov 2020

What is biblical integration? ›

Biblical Worldview Integration is teaching a lesson objective and teaching it from a Christian perspective. It is not a class devoid of God, nor is it solely about God. It is a melding of the two. It is understanding the objective or lesson from the Christian point-of-view.

How does math relate to the Bible? ›

Math is also a reason to praise God for His faithfulness. The reason we can rely on math is because our faithful, all-powerful God is consistently holding our universe together (Colossians 1:17 ). He ensures that the principles of addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division will always result in clear answers.

What are the principles in the Bible? ›

These include: the Lordship of Christ over all our life and thoughts; the responsibility to love God with our whole being and to love our neighbor as ourselves; the responsibility to pursue righteousness and practice justice and mercy to everyone; and participation in the worship and activities of the church, which ...

What religion is BJU Press? ›

BJU Press is a publisher of textbooks for Christian schools and homeschools as well as trade and children's books.

Who is the father of maths? ›

The Father of Math is the great Greek mathematician and philosopher Archimedes. Perhaps you have heard the name before–the Archimedes' Principle is widely studied in Physics and is named after the great philosopher.

What is the God equation of mathematics? ›

The equality 𝒆𝝅𝒊 + 𝟏 = 𝟎 is called Euler's Identity, thanks to the 18th century mathematician, Leonhard Euler. In 1988 it was voted the most beautiful formula in mathematics.

Who came up with math? ›

The earliest evidence of written mathematics dates back to the ancient Sumerians, who built the earliest civilization in Mesopotamia. They developed a complex system of metrology from 3000 BC.

What are the core principles of Christianity? ›

This divine Godhead consists of three parts: the father (God himself), the son (Jesus Christ) and the Holy Spirit. The essence of Christianity revolves around the life, death and Christian beliefs on the resurrection of Jesus. Christians believe God sent his son Jesus, the messiah, to save the world.

What are God's promises for us? ›

10 Promises of God
  • God promises to strengthen you. ...
  • God promises to give you rest. ...
  • God promises to take care of all your needs. ...
  • God promises to answer your prayers. ...
  • God promises to work everything out for your good. ...
  • God promises to be with you. ...
  • God promises to protect you. ...
  • God promises freedom from sin.
9 Jun 2017

What are biblical moral teachings? ›

Jesus taught that people should act morally in life, not just to receive eternal life with God, but because humans should want to carry out good deeds for their own satisfaction and to help others.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Horacio Brakus JD

Last Updated:

Views: 6015

Rating: 4 / 5 (71 voted)

Reviews: 86% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Horacio Brakus JD

Birthday: 1999-08-21

Address: Apt. 524 43384 Minnie Prairie, South Edda, MA 62804

Phone: +5931039998219

Job: Sales Strategist

Hobby: Sculling, Kitesurfing, Orienteering, Painting, Computer programming, Creative writing, Scuba diving

Introduction: My name is Horacio Brakus JD, I am a lively, splendid, jolly, vivacious, vast, cheerful, agreeable person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.