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Martin Luther on Education
“If I could leave the preaching office and my other duties, or had to do
so, there is no other office I would rather have than that of
schoolmaster or teacher ... for I know that next to that of preaching,
this is the best, greatest, and most useful office there is ... It
surely has to be one of the supreme virtues on earth faithfully to train
other people’s children....”
“I shall say
nothing here about the pure pleasure a [person] gets from having
studied, even though he never holds an office of any kind, how at home
by himself he can read all kinds of things, talk and associate with
educated people, and travel and do business in foreign lands....”
God "has not
given you your children and the means to support them simply so that you
may do with them as you please, or train them just to get ahead in the
world. You have been earnestly commanded to raise them for God's
service."
“You parents cannot
prepare a more dependable treasure for your children than an education in
the liberal arts. House and home burn down and disappear, but an
education is easy to carry off.”
“What do we older
folks live for if not for the care of the young, to teach and train
them? The prosperity of a city does not depend on the accumulation of
great riches, the building of walls and houses, many guns and armors.
Rather, a city’s greatest and best prosperity, salvation, and power is
this that it has many fine, learned, sensible, righteous, well-trained
Christian citizens.”
"You should also take pains to urge
governing authorities and parents to rule wisely and educate their
children. They must be shown that they are obliged to do so, and that
they are guilty of damnable sin if they do not do so, for by such
neglect they undermine and lay waste both to the kingdom of God and the
kingdom of the world and are the worst enemies of God and humanity."
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