Genesis 1 is the basis for our desire to develop creativity into students’ academic life. The nature of God as a creator means that, as His people created to be like Him, we glorify His nature when we act creatively. Moving just two chapters later in the book, however, we find Genesis 3 and the ugly ramifications of the fall of man. It is this chapter that forms the basis of the necessity of students to be challenged in school.
The actions of our progenitors in Genesis 3 have caused each of us to have a very different engagement with the world around us than God had originally intended. Instead of the fullness and shalom of the original creation, we deal in the thorns and thistles of the fall (Genesis 3:18). Even as redeemed people we do not escape these consequences. Every day we must persist in working through the challenges of thorns and thistles in our personal lives, in our relationships, in our cultural engagements, and in our vocations; and if you happen to be a student, in your learning and academic life.
A classroom or a performance stage or an athletic field is an excellent laboratory for students to learn to identify challenges and solutions to them. Honing a craft, committing to the discipline of work, developing grit and determination, accepting the risk of not succeeding, and building spiritual fortitude are critically important skills that will be used the rest of their lives because the challenges continue well after their schooling ends. As parents and teachers, we give our students a gift when we strategically place appropriate challenges before them and cheer them on as they overcome them.