Thursday, December 31, 2009

Another Year is Dawning

Another year is dawning, dear Father, let it be
In working or in waiting, another year with Thee.
Another year of progress, another year of praise,

Another year of proving Thy presence all the days.

Another year of mercies, of faithfulness and grace,
Another year of gladness in the shining of Thy face;
Another year of leaning upon Thy loving breast;
Another year of trusting, of quiet, happy rest.

Another year of service, of witness for Thy love,
Another year of training for holier work above.
Another year is dawning, dear Father, let it be
On earth, or else in Heaven, another year for Thee.

Frances R. Havergal, 1874.
She wrote these words as a poem for her New Year’s greeting cards. The hymn was subsequently included in her Under the Surface, 1874, and Life Chords, 1880.

Monday, December 14, 2009

Starting Something You Cannot Finish: Christian Ministry From Generation to Generation

Please take a few minutes to follow the link below and read the Commencement address and charge to graduates of The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, delivered December 11, 2009 by R. Albert Mohler, Jr., President.

While this address was given at a seminary - and most of us minister in elementary and/or high schools - there is much to be gained from the wisdom that Dr. Mohler passed along to his graduates regarding the "Unfinished Work of Christian Ministry."

In the context of "unfinished work", he reminds the graduates:

" . . . the biblical conception of the Christian ministry is, as we should not be surprised to find, radically at odds with worldly wisdom. According to the New Testament, one of the most important insights about the Christian ministry is this: We will not finish what we begin. This is not to say that we will never set goals and reach them or that we will never complete plans and programs. It does mean that the Christian ministry must be seen in the context of faithfulness extended from generation to generation until Christ returns to claim his Bride."

" . . . if you aim to finish what you start in ministry, you will aim too low or finish what is not Christ's. Go out to plant, but also to water. Sow the good seed of the Gospel, even as you cultivate and irrigate. Build faithfully upon the foundation laid by Christ and the apostles. Receive the stewardship of ministry that is passed on to you and give your all to this calling so long as you live. Then, pass this ministry to a generation yet unseen and unborn to continue this ministry and extend the reach of the Gospel until Jesus comes."

Finish this calendar year in faithfulness - and begin 2010 committed to the "Unfinished Work" of Christian Ministry in your school - for this time - to this generation - in anticipation of a time we can not see!


Saturday, December 12, 2009

Getting Ready for the New Year

It's still December - but, January's coming! Are you ready?

Take a few minutes to read this blog post by Tim Challies. It is his encouragement to begin (with intentionality) the New Year with a commitment to strengthening your devotional life. He concludes the blog post with a list of devotional books for you to consider for 2010 - and it's not too late to order them online for delivery by January 1 - but don't delay!

As we all know, we cannot give to our students what we do not possess ourselves - academically and spiritually! You are always (ok, mostly always) prepared for the academic "demands" of your students and classroom. The question - are you equally (or better) prepared to be the spiritual leader of your students!

From Tim Challies:
The end of the year is drawing close and, if you're like me, you're already beginning to think about what you'll do differently (and, hopefully, better) next year. When it comes to my daily devotions, I've been thinking about putting myself on some kind of a reading plan. I have only rarely done those in the past and don't know that I've ever really stuck with one all the way through to December. But next year I think I will give it a go. I have also been thinking about daily devotionals--something I could read either by myself or with the family. I've drawn up a list of a few notable devotionals. There are hundreds available so this is represents a drop in the proverbial bucket. But I think if you are considering a devotional, you are likely to find at least one here that would appeal. Do let me know if you know of others that would be worth investigating.

Friday, December 4, 2009

The New Gospel ~ A Call for Discernment

A note from MACSA President Dr. Tim Sierer:
Satan is tricky!! He is looking for anyway to gain a foothold both in our schools, homes and churches. One of the ways he will strive to accomplish this is in the watering-down of the Holy Scriptures. It is our responsibility to remain diligent in guarding against becoming a victim of the 'slippery slope.' Take a few minutes to read this very pertinent blog by Kevin DeYoung.

The Intro:
Have you heard the New Gospel? It’s not been codified. It’s not owned by any one person or movement. But it is increasingly common.

The Conclusion:
This is no small issue. And it is not just a matter of emphasis. The New Gospel will not sustain the church. It cannot change the heart. And it does not save. It is crucial, therefore, that our evangelical schools, camps, conferences, publishing houses, and churches can discern the new gospel from the old.

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Wagging the Dog

Challenging the Backward Thinking of Parental Surrender
By Jonathan Nazigian
The King's Christian School (Cherry Hill, NJ)


There is a reason we don’t let 12 year-olds vote.
There is a reason we don’t let 15 year-olds join the army.
There is a reason we don’t let 13 year-olds drive.

Children are an incredible blessing from God, and we love them, but let’s face it, they are not the pinnacle of sound judgment. Ask any parent who has seen that glazed, deer-in-the-headlights look staring back at them after they’ve asked, “What were you thinking?” and you’ll know. There is a reason God did not say, “Let the child train himself up in the way he thinks he should go…”

Why? Because God, who created and designed us, knows we come into the world under the curse of sin. We are born in ignorance with our hearts bent toward rebellion. We are not, because of our sin nature, naturally prone to seek out God’s best over our own selfish desires. Just like us, adolescents struggle with many things, but the difficulty of their struggle is compounded with a profound lack the maturity and an absence of real-world experience that helps put those struggles into a better perspective. A few things we know . . .

1. Adolescents have little idea who they are (their true identity).

2. Adolescents do not successfully delineate between what they want and what they truly need.

3. Adolescents have lots of energy but are flooded with hormones. Hormones do not make judgment clearer.

4. Adolescents often have dreams not based in reality.

5. Adolescents are perpetually ungrateful and think the grass is so much greener anywhere else but where they are at the time.

And yet, even knowing all of this, many Christian parents will take the one parental decision that will have the greatest bearing on their child’s future—the decision as to who, aside from them, will most shape the worldview of their impressionable, searching, and vulnerable children for 40+ hours every week—and hand that decision over to the child to make.

As someone who has been involved in Christian Education as a student, a teacher, and an administrator for 33 years I have seen what used to be a rare occurrence grow into an astounding trend. Christian parents who leave the ultimate decision for their child’s schooling in the hands of their child.

Some parents do this directly. “Johnny, where do you want to go to school next year?”

Others do it indirectly; they cave in to their child’s constant complaining often directed at “the school” when, ultimately, the school is not the real issue, just the easiest target.

Others, who want to move their children from the public school system into Christian school, take an approach that is sabotaged from the start, “Susie, let’s just try Christian school for a few months, and if you don’t like it, you can go back to public school.”

It seems the tail is wagging the dog.

Where are the Christian parents who will make a decision in the best interest of their children and then fight for it, despite the external pressures and internal doubts that inevitably come? Where are the Christian parents who will stand their ground and fight for their children’s best future, even if it means fighting with their children in the short term?

Where is the Christian parent who will sit down with their child, look them in the eye, and say,..

…To the child who’s being picked on…

“Susie, I love you. And I know you do not like school right now. I know your friends are being mean, but just changing schools will not resolve the real issue. Mean girls are everywhere and you will face unkind people throughout your life. The best place to learn how to deal with them is in a school where the Biblical truths of peacemaking and reconciliation are taught.”

…To the child who has dreams of playing sports at the local public school…

“Tommy, I love you. And I know you want to play football. But much more important in your life is your spiritual and academic future. I cannot sacrifice that for anything. I love you too much to put you under the influence of teachers, coaches, and friends who have other agendas and do not have your best interest in mind. We can explore township football, but when it comes to your schooling, Christian Education is a non-negotiable.”

…To the child doesn’t like the rules…

“Mary, I love you. And I know you would prefer to wear other clothes and that you don’t like some of the rules at school. But your true character and integrity aren’t revealed by how well you obey rules you like. True character is revealed by how you respond to authorities and rules you don’t like. No place is perfect, but your spiritual formation is not something I’m willing to sacrifice to a public school.”

…To the child whose friends are leaving for public school…

“Eddie. I love you. And I know several of your friends might be leaving for public school. But God does not hold me responsible for the choices other parents make. God holds me accountable for you. And I know that Christian school is the best thing for you. And I also know what real faith means. It means that despite how it feels right now, choosing to be obedient and to live God’s way will bring blessing, and that God probably has other and newer school friendships waiting for you.”

In the end, it all comes down to how we view what’s most important in the battle for the hearts and minds of our children.

Some parents view Christian Education like Karate classes or swim lessons—a nice little “extra” in their child’s life, so long as it is affordable and the child enjoys it. But if the finances get tough, or the child begins to complain, Christian school can be replaced with cheaper alternatives. Why pay so much for something my child doesn’t seem to like?

I choose to view Christian Education like food or immunizations. These are necessities to my family. I don’t care how much my children complain about having to eat balanced, healthy meals or the momentary prick of the doctor’s needle; my decision is firm, and it is for their best interest. And I will take a third job, do without vacation, or sell my furniture before I place my child in the furnace of an educational system centered on humanism, relativism, and cultural idolatry. You see, God did not call me to a life of comfort, free from struggle. God called me to train up my children in the most Biblical way possible and to give them every opportunity to turn their hearts toward Him.

I refuse to surrender in this war.

Jonathan Nazigian is Minister of Spiritual Life at The King’s Christian School in Cherry Hill, New Jersey. He is the undeserving husband to a beautiful wife and the proud father of three wonderful sons. He may be contacted at jnazigian@tkcs.org.

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

We Gather Together

Thanksgiving is tomorrow! Many of you will be traveling "over the river and through the woods" to be with family and friends - while others may be just headed "up the road apiece" as my grandmother says.

Prayers for safe travels and a blessed time of family and fellowship -and thanksgiving - during the Thanksgiving holiday! Amen (and pass the creamed onions!)


We Gather Together

Text: Nederlandtsch Gedencklanck; trans. by Theodore Baker
Music: 16th cent. Dutch melody; arr. by Edward Kremser (1838-1914)

Click here to listen an arrangment by pianist Michael Faircloth
used with permission of MDF Music

We gather together
to ask the Lord's blessing;
he chastens and hastens
his will to make known.
The wicked oppressing
now cease from distressing.
Sing praises to his name,
he forgets not his own.

Beside us to guide us,
our God with us joining,
ordaining, maintaining
his kingdom divine;
so from the beginning
the fight we were winning;
thou, Lord, wast at our side,
all glory be thine!

We all do extol thee,
thou leader triumphant,
and pray that thou still
our defender wilt be.
Let thy congregation
escape tribulation;
thy name be ever praised!
O Lord, make us free!

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Sing to the Lord of Harvest

Words: John S. B. Monsell, 1866
Music: St. Edith, Justin H. Knecht, 1799, and Edward Husband, 1871
Alternate Tunes: Blairgowrie, John B. Dykes, 1872 or Lancashire, Henry T. Smart, 1835


Sing to the Lord of harvest,
Sing songs of love and praise;
With joyful hearts and voices
Your alleluias raise.
By Him the rolling seasons
In fruitful order move;
Sing to the Lord of harvest,
A joyous song of love.

By Him the clouds drop fatness,
The deserts bloom and spring,
The hills leap up in gladness,
The valleys laugh and sing.
He filleth with His fullness
All things with large increase,
He crowns the year with goodness,
With plenty and with peace.

Bring to His sacred altar
The gifts His goodness gave,
The golden sheaves of harvest,
The souls He died to save.
Your hearts lay down before Him
When at His feet you fall,
And with your lives adore Him,
Who gave His life for all.

To God the gracious Father,
Who made us “very good,”
To Christ, who, when we wandered,
Restored us with His blood,
And to the Holy Spirit,
Who doth upon us pour
His blessèd dews and sunshine,
Be praise forevermore!

Monday, November 23, 2009

Now Thank We All Our God

Words: Mar tin Rink art, cir ca 1636; trans lat ed from German to English by Cather­ine Winkworth, 1856.
Music: Nun Danket, attributed to Jo hann Crü ger, 1647; harmony by Felix Men­dels sohn, 1840


Click here to listen.


Now thank we all our God, with heart and hands and voices,
Who wondrous things has done, in Whom this world rejoices;
Who from our mothers’ arms has blessed us on our way
With countless gifts of love, and still is ours today.


O may this bounteous God through all our life be near us,
With ever joyful hearts and blessèd peace to cheer us;
And keep us in His grace, and guide us when perplexed;
And free us from all ills, in this world and the next!


All praise and thanks to God the Father now be given;
The Son and Him Who reigns with Them in highest Heaven;
The one eternal God, whom earth and Heaven adore;
For thus it was, is now, and shall be evermore.

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Come, Ye Thankful People, Come

Words: Henry Alford, 1844.
Music: George J. El vey, St. George’s Wind sor 1858



Come, ye thankful people, come, raise the song of harvest home;
All is safely gathered in, ere the winter storms begin.
God our Maker doth provide for our wants to be supplied;
Come to God’s own temple, come, raise the song of harvest home.

All the world is God’s own field, fruit unto His praise to yield;
Wheat and tares together sown unto joy or sorrow grown.
First the blade and then the ear, then the full corn shall appear;
Lord of harvest, grant that we wholesome grain and pure may be.

For the Lord our God shall come, and shall take His harvest home;
From His field shall in that day all offenses purge away,
Giving angels charge at last in the fire the tares to cast;
But the fruitful ears to store in His garner evermore.

Even so, Lord, quickly come, bring Thy final harvest home;
Gather Thou Thy people in, free from sorrow, free from sin,
There, forever purified, in Thy garner to abide;
Come, with all Thine angels come, raise the glorious harvest home.

Friday, November 20, 2009

For the Beauty of the Earth

Words: Fol li ot S. Pier point
Music: Con rad Koch er

Click here to listen an arrangment by pianist Michael Faircloth
used with permission of MDF Music

For the beauty of the earth
For the glory of the skies,
For the love which from our birth
Over and around us lies.

Refrain
Lord of all, to Thee we raise,This our hymn of grateful praise.

For the beauty of each hour,
Of the day and of the night,
Hill and vale, and tree and flower,
Sun and moon, and stars of light.
Refrain

For the joy of ear and eye,
For the heart and mind’s delight,
For the mystic harmony
Linking sense to sound and sight.
Refrain

For the joy of human love,
Brother, sister, parent, child,
Friends on earth and friends above,
For all gentle thoughts and mild.
Refrain

For Thy Church, that evermore
Lifteth holy hands above,
Offering up on every shore
Her pure sacrifice of love.
Refrain

For each perfect gift of Thine,
To our race so freely given,
Graces human and divine,
Flowers of earth and buds of Heaven.
Refrain

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Let All Things Now Living

Words: Katherine K. Davis, 1892-1980
Music: "The Ash Grove", a traditional Welsh melody.


Let all things now living a song of thanksgiving
To God the creator triumphantly raise.
Who fashioned and made us, protected and stayed us,
Who still guides us on to the end of our days.
God's banners are o'er us, His light goes before us,
A pillar of fire shining forth in the night.
Till shadows have vanished and darkness is banished
As forward we travel from light into light.

His law he enforces, the stars in their courses
And sun in its orbit obediently shine;
The hills and the mountains, the rivers and fountains,
The deeps of the ocean proclaim him divine.
We too should be voicing our love and rejoicing;
With glad adoration a Song let us raise
Till all things now living unite in thanksgiving:
"To God in the highest, Hosanna and praise!"

Click here to watch/listen

Keeping “Thanks” in Thanksgiving

It’s almost Thanksgiving!

In just a few short days – your classroom will be empty, the hallways quiet and the construction paper Thanksgiving decorations (doesn’t every classroom have a “cartoon” turkey abounding with colorful “I am thankful for . . .” feathers?) will be hanging on for just a few more days!

Once you return to school after the Thanksgiving break – it becomes “All Christmas . . all the time!” You will be busy helping your students make gifts for their parents (and trying to keep them a “secret”), planning the classroom party and replacing the brown and orange fall decorations with the red and green of Christmas. During the month of December, you will be intentional about keeping “Christ in Christmas” and teaching your students that “Jesus is the Reason for the Season.”

In the few remaining days before Thanksgiving, I would like to challenge you to be intentional about keeping “Thanks in Thanksgiving.”

  • As you teach the story of the First Thanksgiving, help your students understand the need for DAILY thanksgiving and “thanks-living.”
  • As you teach about God’s provision and protection for the early settlers, help your students understand God’s DAILY provision and protection in their lives.
  • As you teach about Thanksgiving (the event), let your students see you living a life of thanksgiving (the attitude)!
Each day between now and Thanksgiving, we will be posting a Thanksgiving hymn/song for you to use in your classroom! Sing it, read it, display it!

Why hymns? Because . . .

Hymns are “ . . . statements of faith, testimonies of struggle, failure and success, and confident declarations of hope. Carefully and lovingly crafted by their creators, they’ve been used by God’s Holy Spirit to challenge and encourage the souls of generations of believers. Some consider them antiquated and irrelevant to contemporary culture, but I’m confident these cherished expressions of our Christian faith – these hymns of grateful praise – will speak fervently for years to come.” (Michael Faircloth as written on the jacket of the album Grateful Praise: Hymns for Piano).

Enjoy the hymns and let’s keep the THANKS in THANKSGIVING!

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Log In and Listen!

No Greater Joy
2009 MACSA Convention
Keynote Sessions by Dr. Richard Swenson

Click here to download/listen to the three keynote addresses:
Please let me know if you have trouble with the downloads. All files are in MP3 format!

Monday, October 26, 2009

What You'd Like to Say to Parents but Can't & Extreme Makeover--New CSJ Blog Articles

From the Christian School Journal
Three important CSJ blog announcements:

1. The blog has been completely redesigned—take a look!

2. There is a new Christian School Journal Facebook Fan Page for with discussion board—see the CSJ Blog for details.

3. We have new articles:

  • Extreme Makeover! Take a Look
  • What You’d Like to Say to Parents but Can’t
  • Remarkable Times, Remarkable Blessings
  • They Are Coming After Your Students and Said So!
  • Take a Break: Time for a Laugh!
  • Charter Schools Pass a Major Test!
  • Fl. Virtual School Enrollment Up at Least 50 Percent
  • Jesus, Save Us From Your Followers
  • For Good or Bad: Email No Longer Rules
  • What is Google Wave and Why Should You Care?
  • Not So Fast: Is Technology Diminishing Our Quality of Life?
  • Do Our Schools Need to Become Less Uptight?
  • A Gardener’s Tale
  • Is Perception Reality?
  • Where is Your School in the Organizational Life Cycle? Why Does it Matter?
  • Your High School Students and Staff Need to See This
  • Have You Seen This Outstanding Resource?-OER Commons

Let me know what you think of the new look and features of the CSJ blog. And, submit an article! I am always looking for good articles that will inform and bless others.

Barrett Mosbacker
Publisher, Christian School Journal Blog

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Remarkable Times, Remarkable Blessings

Zach Clark, Westminster Christian Academy (St. Louis) as origially posted on The Christian School Journal.

Remarkable Times, Remarkable Blessings

Read about the struggles encountered and the actions taken by the leadership staff at Westminster Christian Academy - and be encouraged!

Zach writes, "Ultimately, it is God’s mercies and provision, by His grace, that sustains us. But, I also know that God works through people, their decisions, and their strengths and weaknesses. Many schools are facing far more difficult times than we have. We do not pretend to fully understand all of what has happened or what is happening now. But, I do challenge you to join us in the day-to-day discipline of asking questions and digging deeper down and climbing higher up in the understanding of this calling of serving in a Christian school in today’s times. 2009 is indeed a remarkable year, and remarkable times remain ahead. Let us go forward together."



MACSA Convention - UPDATE

MACSA Convention Registration: EARLY registration is now CLOSED! It's not too late to attend, just bring your registration forms and payment TO THE CONVENTION!
SPECIAL NOTE: There is a CHANGE to the previous post regarding the Technology Track. Due to a family emergency, Dr. Mossbacker is unable to stay through Friday, therefore, the FIRST workshop on Friday will be moved to the last session on Thursday and the Q&A session has been cancelled. Please check with the MACSA registration desk at the convention for the location of the last seminar on Thursday. Thank you for your understanding.
Thursday, November 5
  • 112 - Economic, Global, and Academic Context for Technology Integration
  • 150 - Implications for the Curriculum: 21st Century Skills and Technology Integration Defined
  • 175 - Technology Planning and Budgeting
  • 211 - Staff Development, Overcoming Resistance, and Technology Implementation
Friday, November 6
  • 211 - Moved to THURSDAY afternoon
  • 246 - Cancelled

Thursday, October 22, 2009

MACSA Convention

The MACSA convention is less than 2 weeks away! If you haven't registered, please send your registration information to Marie Young at the MACSA office ASAP.

SPECIAL NOTE: There will be a 5 workshop track for Technology Teachers/Coordinators. The Tech Track will be led by Dr. Barrett Mosbacker (Briarwood Christian School in Birmingham, AL). These workshops were not listed in the preview booklet, but were listed on the insert that accompanied that mailing. The workshops are:

Thursday, November 5
  • 112 - Economic, Global, and Academic Context for Technology Integration
  • 150 - Implications for the Curriculum: 21st Century Skills and Technology Integration Defined
  • 175 - Technology Planning and Budgeting

Friday, November 6
  • 211 - Staff Development, Overcoming Resistance, and Technology Implementation
  • 246 - Questions and Answers
Click HERE for Convention registration information!

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

A Note from Janet Nason - Asia Director for ASCI

Many of you are aware that on Saturday, September 26 a devastating storm struck the Manila area leaving a month's worth of rain in 6 hours. According to current news reports there are 162 confirmed deaths and the number is expected to increase as waters recede. Our ACSI office has been in the field and is in the process of documenting damage and conducting a needs assessment.

The human side of the story is that many of our schools were holding make up Saturday classes due to swine flu. Dr. Tan of Grace Christian said water rose quickly totally surrounding the school building. They fed lunch and dinner to 300 stranded teachers and students with many spending the night. Mrs. Helen Villanueva at MGC New Life school had a similar story with minor damage, but students stranded during the night and her being unable to return home until the following morning. St. Stephens school had water pour into first floor offices and they've lost some student records. It strikes me that our schools were literal "arks" for many during the floods.

Our ACSI secretary Ofelia had 5 feet of water rush into the first floor of her home when the area dam released water to avoid breaking. She lost her stove and refrigerator but was praising God today because the house she moved from a year ago had entire back wall washed out. Yesterday, our country director, Dr. Beth Bullecer found our former Early Ed director, Rosie Rico covered with mud shoveling out her home with her husband. They lost everything and we were able to give them food, water and some basic supplies. Rosie said the price of rice in the area is now 10 times what it was.

We are in the process of determining the extent of the water damage and if ACSI should set up relief funds as we did with schools in Indonesia impacted by the tsunami. What I do know now is that your brothers and sisters here need your immediate prayers. Pray specifically for ACSI's office staff we deal with this crisis in the middle of preparing for our 3 October Teacher's conferences. This is typhoon season and as I write two more storms lined up in the Pacific headed towards the Philippines. Please pray these would be turned away and that God will give wisdom and grace to all.

"The Christian school is at its best in times of crisis," Dad often said and I've had that going over and over in my mind. That being said, remember us.

In Him Alone,

Janet

Janet Lowrie Nason, Ed.D.
Asia Director, ACSI

Friday, September 25, 2009

A Challenge to "Love One Another Deeply - From the Heart"

This week, Mr. Glenn Clement challenged the Bridgeton Christian School (NJ) faculty, staff, students and families to "love one another deeply from the heart." With his permission, we share that challenge with all of our MACSA schools!

"Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind...and love your neighbor as yourself." Matthew 22:37

As Christians, we face challenges every day. One of the greatest is to love one another deeply from the heart - but that is my challenge this year to myself, our faculty and staff and our students. Throughout the coming months we will be studying the principles of servanthood. Part of our mission here at BCS is to prepare our students to be servants of Christ. Please encourage your children to practice the following principles of servanthood:
Love
Submission
Generosity
Trust
Encouragement
Obedience

We want to serve others without thought of ourselves or gain. We want a spirit of cheerful obedience to authority. We want to be sensitive to the needs of others and to show compassion. We want to face suffering and disappointment with a sincere faith and positive attitude. We want to look for opportunities to do good and help each other. We want a genuine excitement about sharing the Gospel of Jesus Christ and His teachings.

This is a challenging time to be alive and to possess an authentic faith that hopes in Christ's promises. The Holy Spirit will give to us all that we need and more. As we have heard before from the beginning, Jesus's command is that we walk in love. Let's walk together down that pilgrim road this year and devote our lives and all that we have to Jesus for all that he has done for us. As Saint John recorded in the third chapter of his first epistle, "let us love not in word or speech but in truth and deed."

Sincerely,
Glenn Clement
Administrator

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Lancaster – Here We Come!

The MACSA convention is just 7 weeks away - and it will be here before we know it! The MACSA Convention Committee has been working hard since January to plan the convention and they are excited about the keynote speaker and the workshops offered at this convention!

Convention Preview Booklets have been mailed to MACSA member schools - and the information is also available on the MACSA website. Click here for Convention Registration Information.

Keynote Speaker
Richard A. Swenson, M.D., received his B.S. in physics from Denison University and his M.D. from the University of Illinois School of Medicine. Following five years of private practice, in 1982 he accepted a teaching position within the University of Wisconsin Medical School, Department of Family Medicine where he taught for fifteen years. He currently is a full-time futurist, physician-researcher, author, and educator. He has written six books including the best-selling Margin and The Overload Syndrome, both award-winning. He has presented widely, including national and international settings, on the themes of margin, stress, overload, life balance, complexity, societal change, health care, faith, and future trends. A representative listing of presentations include a wide variety of medical, professional, educational, governmental and management groups, most major church denominations and organizations, members of the United Nations, Congress, NASA and the Pentagon. In 2003 he was awarded Educator of the Year Award by Christian Medical and Dental Associations. Dr. Swenson and his wife, Linda, live in Menomonie, Wisconsin. They have two sons, Matthew and Adam, a daughter-in-law Maureen, and a granddaughter Katja.

New This Year: A track of three workshops for your business manager presented by Marlin G. Groff, Assistant Superintendent – Finance and Business Affairs, Lancaster Mennonite School, Lancaster, PA. The track will include workshops: Compensation and Benefits, Tuition, Financial Aid, and Balancing the Budget, and Business Managers Roundtable.

CEUs and Graduate Credit

Workshops

The Convention Committee has planned over 100 workshops during the two-day convention. There is something for everyone! Take a good look at the preview booklet and plan now to attend the 2009 MACSA Teachers' Convention!

See you there!

Another Year of Blogging

Welcome to another year of blogging with MACSA. Our desire is to post articles and information that will be helpful to you. The goal is to post twice a week - information, inspiration, encouragement! Please feel free to comment on our posts - we would love to have your feedback.

MACSA Teachers and Administrators - this is YOUR blog!

  • Administrators - do you have a word of encouragement to share? A devotional you shared with your faculty/staff that would encourage other MACSA schools?
  • Teachers - do you have an idea,thought, encouragement that you would like to share with other teachers?
Please contact Nancy DeHaan (ndehaan@macsaonline.org ) if you have something that you would like to submit.

One last thing - please use the Update Subscription link at the bottom of the "New Post" email that you receive from FeedBlitz. This is the best way to keep your email up to date!

Thanks for blogging with us - and encourage others to subscribe!

Monday, September 14, 2009

How to Apologize

Dr. Barrett Mosbacker
Superintendent: Briarwood Christian School, Birmingham, AL
Author: The Christian School Journal


One of the mistakes we are prone to make when challenged by parents, staff, or board members is to become defensive. This is an unfortunate tendency of fallen humans dating back to the Garden of Eden. Our sinful pride and our fragile self-images propel us to make excuses, to explain away, or to protect ourselves.

While it is right to defend ourselves against false accusations and misinformation, too often we become defensive rather than listening to what may be valid criticism of ourselves or of our schools. Young teachers and administrators are particularly prone to make the mistake of being defensive, which inevitably damages their credibility.

Click here to read the full post!

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

What Did You Write Today?

Nancy R. DeHaan
MACSA Executive Director

When was the last time you wrote a letter? Not a quick note to a parent or an email to a colleague or a “note” on your Facebook page – but a real honest-to-goodness letter – on paper, with ink, in your own handwriting?

I am a big fan of electronic media. I appreciate the “almost” instant communication of email and instant messaging – and I am learning how to text message, too! But getting an email is not the same as getting a letter – there is something “missing” in the electronic communication.

This concept hit home for me several years ago when my son returned from an 11 month deployment to “The Sandbox” in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. He had pretty regular Internet access during his deployment and we were able to exchange email and IM – a great way to keep in touch while he was half a world away. When he returned home, he hadn’t printed out and saved any of my emails, but . . . he brought home a packet of letters – handwritten by his great-grandmother (who was 100+ years old at the time). She wrote to him every week – for the entire deployment. The letters had been opened and read – and re-opened and reread – many times over. Letters have a sense of permanence that electronic communications do not.

In his second letter to the church at Corinth, Paul refers to the Corinthian Christians as “his letter of recommendation . . . to be known and read by all.” It was a letter written “not with ink but with the Spirit of the living God, not on tablets of stone but on tablets of human hearts.” (2 Corinthians 3:3) The changed lives of the Corinthians testified to the work of the Spirit in their lives (individually and as a church) as a result of Paul’s ministry.

Back to the opening question – When was the last time you wrote a letter?

· Every day in your classroom, you are writing a letter – not with ink or crayon, but with the Spirit of the living God.

· Every day in your classroom, you are writing a letter – not on the back of the lunch memo or the bottom of the spelling paper, but on the hearts of your students – individually and as a class.

· And . . . every evening at home, the parents are reading your letter.

So . . .

What did you write today? Was it a letter of recommendation – to be known and read by all? Was it a letter dictated by the Spirit of God and written on the hearts of your students? Was it a letter worth reading today – and tomorrow – and for many years to come?

May God bless you this year with 180 days of great letter writing!

And . . . sometime soon, recover the lost art of letter writing. Sit down with pen and paper and write a letter to a loved one – fold it, seal it and mail it – and know that your time and effort will be appreciated.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

A Back to School Prayer

I Offer Myself
Words and music by Steve Green and Phil Naish
Copyright 1999 Birdwing Music, Steve Green Music, Meadowgreen Music Co., and Davaub Music. Admin. by EMI-CMP. All rights reserved.

I offer myself to you,
Presenting every part,
Pure and holy, set apart, I offer myself to you.

I offer my hands to you, may labors great or small be done in answer to Your call.
I offer my hands to you.

To be holy, holy, holy like you.
To be holy, holy, holy like you.

I offer my words to you. May everything I say be pleasing in your sight, I pray,
I offer my words to you.

To be holy, holy, holy like you.
To be holy, holy, holy, holy like you.

I offer my life, my praise to you, O Lord, for endless days.
To be holy, holy, holy like you.
To be holy, holy, holy like you.
Oh to be holy, holy, holy like you.

Let me be holy, holy, holy like you, holy like you.
Holy, to be holy.

Lord take my hands, my feet, take every word I speak.
May it be holy, holy to you, O Lord, holy like you.


http://www.stevegreenministries.org/lyrics/index.php?song=61

Monday, August 24, 2009

It's Back to School Time!

A note from MACSA President, Dr. Timothy Sierer

"We are about to embark on another year that is shaping up to be full of challenges in light of the current economic atmosphere in our country. Yet we are able to take heart because we know that we serve an awesome God who has not been caught off guard by current circumstances. I wanted to take this opportunity to share this article with you as a means of encouragement as we seek to train our students in a manner pleasing to the Lord. May God richly bless your efforts during the coming year."

Things are Different This Year
Bruce Etter

It's that time of year...the time of year when we all start to think of going back to school. Teachers are thinking of setting up classrooms, home-schooling families are planning their year, parents are buying supplies, and students, well, some are getting excited and others are desperately wishing for more time. This year is different, though. We are starting this year with a burden.

When the recession hit around October 2008 the school year had already begun. Most people could finish out the year without worrying about how it affected our children's education in the long term. Things have changed drastically for many people for this coming year. Schools have had to downsize or even close, families have had to begin home-schooling because they cannot afford tuition, mothers have had to go to work and cannot be as involved in their children's education. Things are different. Several men who are close to our family have lost their jobs.

How does this affect the education of our children? First, this does not change the calling God has given us to provide our children a Christian education. Second, as we observe the reaction of our government to the recession-a reaction that appears more and more socialist-it is more important than ever to educate our children in such a way that enables them to be the generation who can bring about godly change. Whether you are a teacher in a school or a home-schooling parent, never forget the importance of giving your children a distinctive Christian worldview.

When asked how he could afford to spend several hours a day in prayer, a wise theologian responded, "I cannot afford to NOT spend these hours in prayer." We can apply this well-known story to education. These times tempt us to conclude that we cannot afford a Christian education. The question we must entertain is, "Can we afford to NOT give our children a classical and Christian education?" The hard reality is we have to think about the future. Our nation is a mess, and if we are not producing committed, Christian-thinking students, where will we be in twenty years? Riddled with both fiscal and moral dilemmas, more than ever we need thinking minds which are submissive to the Word of God. Let me encourage you, regardless of your situation, to continue to find creative ways to inculcate your children with a thoroughly Christian mindset.

But, you might say, we are living in an economy that has taken its toll on many families. You can't get blood out of a turnip, as my father used to say. If there's no money, there's no money and a quality education is not cheap. Let me respond to this valid concern with a few thoughts. First, the truth is, we tend to find creative ways to get what we want. We spend money on the things we truly desire. When it comes to providing enriching and educational experiences for our children, we often conclude that something else less important has to go. It's simply a matter of weighing priorities and choosing to spend money on things that have eternal consequences as opposed to luxuries that we can do without.

Second, I know that many are blessed to have grandparents who are involved in the process. I have talked to homeschoolers who make a point of getting grandpa and grandma in on the teaching of their children. What a wonderful way to experience the multi-generational nature of education! But it doesn't have to stop there. I challenge grandparents to recognize the struggles that their children are having in this economy and step up to lend financial aid as they are able to do so. I cannot think of a better gift that a grandparent can give than to play a role in providing a Christian education for their grandchildren. Now would be a great time to commit to paying for a portion of your grandchildren's tuition and school uniforms or curriculum if they are homeschooled. All grandparents are not in a position to do so, but many are and should consider the value of assisting in this way.

Finally, education should not be viewed as something that takes place only in the 8:00-3:00 time slot, Monday through Friday. There are activities that we should be doing with our children that do not cost anything (or very little) that get to the heart of what it means to provide them with a Christian worldview. Are we having a regular time of family worship? Are we praying together as a family? When you see a TV commercial or any type of advertising do you use it as a teachable moment to challenge worldly, illogical thinking? When you are having family movie night do you discuss worldviews that fall short of being thoroughly Christian? When you observe ungodly behavior by others in public do you discuss what causes and perpetuates these kinds of actions? Are you taking opportunities daily to provide your children with a mindset that is distinctly Christian?

Remember the words of Deuteronomy 6:6-9: "And these words which I command you today shall be in your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, when you walk by the way, when you lie down, and when you rise up. You shall bind them as a sign on your hand, and they shall be as frontlets between your eyes. You shall write them on the doorposts of your house and on your gates."

This economy has affected us all in one way or another. Whether it is our common plight of paying more for groceries or gas, a great loss in the stock market, or the loss of a job, you are in the minority if you are not affected by these stressful times. My prayer is that despite the tough circumstances God would allow us to see the fruit of our labors and sacrifices in the hearts and minds of the next generation.


Bruce Etter is the head administrator and teaches online with Veritas Press Scholars Academy. He lives in Lancaster, Pa., with his wife Julie and their five children.

Friday, August 7, 2009

2009 MACSA Scholarships Announced

Barbara Williams
MACSA Vice President and Chair of the MACSA Scholarship Committee
Lehigh Christian Academy ~ Allentown, PA

Each year MACSA awards several scholarships to educators (teachers and/or principals) in Christian schools who will be taking graduate courses during the summer months. The Lord has continued to bless this effort and each year we award a scholarship to several candidates.

This year we had many applicants and awarded eight scholarships. The educators chosen answered questions about their educational background, current responsibilities, future plans, and the impact that the coursework would have on their professional growth.

We trust that we will be able to continue to offer these scholarships to teachers and administrators dedicated to Christian education and the students they serve.

Tim Connor
Summit Christian Academy

Michael Stell
Lancaster Christian School

Jane Seaman
Keystone Christian School

Deborah Thomas
Carlisle Christian Academy

Brenda Leibundgut
Carlisle Christian Academy

Cheryl Bogardus
Greater Grace Christian Academy

Andrea Graybill
Christian School of York

Alice Latour
Calvary Academy

Monday, August 3, 2009

Dealing with Difficult People and Dealing with Criticism

At we prepare for another school year, take a few minutes to read these posts by Dr. Barrett Mosbacker as orginally posted on his blog, The Christian School Journal.

How To Deal Effectively with Conflict and Difficult People
How Not to Be Offended When Criticized

Great reminders for teachers and administrators!

Enjoy the rest of your summer and prayers for a smooth opening of the 2009-2010 school year!

Monday, June 15, 2009

Lead On, O King Eternal

Nancy R. DeHaan
MACSA Executive Director

Friday night was high school graduation at the Christian school where I serve. All in all – the graduation was pretty traditional and fairly typical.
  • Processional
  • Opening Hymn
  • Student Speeches
  • Student Awards
  • Graduation Speaker
  • Granting of Diplomas
  • Moving of the Tassel
  • Closing Prayer
  • Recessional

Our graduating class was 27 students – leaving us and embarking on a new chapter in their lives. Of those 27 young men and women, 13 had been at the school since Kindergarten with another 2 joining them in First Grade! That’s over HALF of the class! The graduation speaker (a pastor dad of one of the graduates) commended this group of parents for the sacrificial commitment they made in order to provide a Christian education for their children.

At our school, the processional, opening hymn and recessional are the same each year – a tradition. Pomp and Circumstance for the processional, O Worship the King for the opening hymn and Lead On, O King Eternal for the recessional. (I heard whispers in the Teachers’ Room that perhaps THIS year, we should break with tradition and play the Hallelujah Chorus as the recessional! Just kidding!)

I have attended many graduations at the school – and each year, something different solidifies for me why those of us who minister in Christian schools are SO committed to Christian education. The “moment” might be a tidbit from one of the student speeches, a truth from the graduation speaker, or a heartfelt “Amen” as the class is prayed over by one of our faculty members. This year, it was the recessional.

At the end of the ceremony, the students move their tassels and are officially graduated! They are no longer students – they are now alumni. We - Moms and Dad, teachers, staff members, everyone in the audience - have invested much time and prayer into the lives of these young men and women. Now, tassels moved, they leave the stage, leave the gym, leave our school - and we pray that the spiritual and academic lessons we have taught and modeled will “stick” and we pray with all our hearts that they will continue to follow God and trust Him “in all their ways.” It is our prayer that our newest graduates will say with boldness:

Lead on, O King eternal,
The day of march has come;
Henceforth in fields of conquest
Thy tents shall be our home.
Through days of preparation
Thy grace has made us strong;
And now, O King eternal,
We lift our battle song.

Lead on, O King eternal,
Till sin’s fierce war shall cease,
And holiness shall whisper
The sweet amen of peace.
For not with swords’ loud clashing,
Nor roll of stirring drums;
With deeds of love and mercy
The heavenly kingdom comes.

Lead on, O King eternal,
We follow, not with fears,
For gladness breaks like morning
Where’er Thy face appears.
Thy cross is lifted over us,
We journey in its light;
The crown awaits the conquest;
Lead on, O God of might.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Hang in There!

Dr. Tim Sierer
MACSA President
Headmaster, The Christian Academy



“Do you not know?
Have you not heard?
The Lord is the everlasting God,
The Creator of the ends of the earth.
He will not grow tired or weary,
And His understanding no one can fathom.
He gives strength to the weary
And increases the power of the weak.” Isaiah 40:28-29


Growing ‘tired or weary’ as we draw close to the end of another school year is not uncommon nor an indicator that we are somehow sub-par or sub-standard. It is simply an unpleasant fact and part of the teaching profession. Come mid-May we are physically, and in some cases emotionally, spent from a year of investing ourselves into the lives of our students. Frankly, I would be more concerned if you as a classroom teacher had reached this point in the year and were not feeling that way. I would then ask, “What have you been doing?”

As we drag ourselves out of bed each morning to face another day, we can do so knowing that our strength comes not from ourselves but from the very Creator of the universe. We can face the day knowing that He will provide the strength, energy and wisdom to deal with whatever lies before us. Because of Him, we are able to finish this year strong knowing that He has enabled us for each task that we encounter. What better way to end a school year than to know that we are spent, physically and emotionally, because of investing ourselves into the lives of our students.

HANG IN THERE - the blood, sweat and tears of today will result in great joy when we see what God has done with those seeds planted into your students during this year!

Thursday, May 21, 2009

An end of the year check-up – looking back, looking forward

As originally posted on Nuturing Faith blog (May 19, 2009)
Click here to view the original post.

For most of us it’s time to put things back in the cupboards and close the book on this school year. As a school leader, it is good to reflect back on the school year, and worthwhile to ask yourself some reflective questions:
  1. Did I move my school closer to meeting our mission this year? What evidence do I have? How do I know?
  2. How did I as a leader improve the school this year? Did my words and actions encourage faith and motivation to learn in my staff and students?
  3. Did I settle for only visible improvements of bricks and bucks or did I also improve the less visible aspects such as the quality of instruction, the distinctiveness of the curriculum, the quality of instruction, and the bondedness of the staff and parent community?
  4. Was my focus on how successful my school was or how much students and staff understood how to be bringers of shalom?
  5. What must I commit to in the next school year?

Recently McKinsey & Company put out an interesting report “How the World’s Best-Performing School Systems Come Out on Top.” In the report they make this summative statement: “The available evidence suggests that the main driver of the variation in student learning at school is the quality of the teachers.” They go on to say that high-performing schools consistently do three things well:

  • Hire the right teachers – “The quality of an education system cannot exceed the quality of its teachers.”
  • Develop teachers into effective instructors.
  • Put in place systems and targeted support to make sure that each child benefits from excellent instruction.

According to their synthesis of research, each principal’s time in effective schools is focused on instructional leadership. In our schools spiritual leadership is even more important. What implications does this have as you make plans to foster spiritual and instructional leadership growth in your school next year?

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Summer Break at the Philadelphia Zoo

Did you know . . . the Philadelphia Zoo offers a FREE Summer Break pass to CLASSROOM TEACHERS (public and private)?

Get Your Summer Break Pass!
Register online before June 30, 2009.

This pass, along with a teacher ID, union card, or school district pay stub, entitles teachers to receive FREE Zoo admission anytime from June 1 through August 31, 2009, Monday - Friday only. Come as many times as you’d like all summer long!

Click here
to register. Registration is online only, and ends on June 30, 2009. (Please allow 2-3 weeks to receive your pass.)

Teacher Passes are available for classroom teachers only, and are not transferable.

Please note: In order to receive free admission, you must show your Teacher Pass, along with your teacher ID, union card, or school district pay stub, every time you visit the Zoo.

Your Summer 2009 Teacher Pass is valid for your Zoo admission only. There are no discounts or parking privileges associated with this program.

Your Summer Break Teacher Pass can help you plan your fall field trips and see all the new animals and adventures your students will encounter. As America’s first zoo, and one of the region’s foremost conservation education organizations, we are sure that your students will enjoy an enriching and fun-filled experience that they will remember for years to come. Thank you for your support of the Philadelphia Zoo. Enjoy your visit!