Have you hugged a teacher
today?
By
JUSTIN KOLLMEYER
Religion Columnist
|
Back to school.
Wow!
We blinked and the summer is now gone.
Our kids seem to be excited to be back in school, though, dont they?
Theres always something wonderful and good about a fresh start and
a new year. Im sure most of our students will thrive and grow and
advance in marvelous ways.
But lets remember that its not only the students who are back
in school. Its also the teachers!
Ah, the teachers.
Champions among us they are! Teachers, principals, administrators and
staff. Theyre all to be thanked and blessed and lifted up. And even
hugged. If not physically hugged, at least symbolically.
Teaching. Its a calling, you know. Not just a job. Oh, there may
be a few in their number who milk the system and look out for number one.
But those rare exceptions quickly move on from the rigors of education,
Im sure.
After all, who would want to be a teacher if it werent for something
deep inside driving and demanding it and blinding the eyes and heart to
the hassles, problems, workloads and responsibilities?
Teaching is defined in the dictionary as the task of imparting knowledge.
I like that term imparting. It demands so much more than presenting.
Show me a teacher who is loved and respected, and Ill show you a
teacher who does not simply present the material, but who works and schemes
and goes every extra mile to impart the desired knowledge to the student.
Imparting means that the student gets it. And
the teacher works and slaves long past when the brightest and best students
have gotten it. The teacher perseveres and re-forms the material over
and over again until even the slower students are imparted
with the knowledge!
Champions, I tell you!
We honor you, teachers. We thank God for you. We bless you. We commend
you. We acknowledge your good work. We encourage you to continue your
never-ending quest to impart knowledge.
To all you teachers, principals, administrators and staff we say, Have
a good year. In fact, Have a GREAT year!
Remember the truth spoken by an anonymous author long ago:
A hundred years from now
it will not matter
what my bank account was,
the sort of house I lived in
or the kind of clothes I wore,
but the world may be
much different
because I was important
in the life of a child.
To the rest of us I say, Have you hugged a teacher today?
(Kollmeyer is senior pastor of Prince of Peace Lutheran Church in Fayetteville.)
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