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Nausheen Husain

Nausheen Husain

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The Importance Of Teaching Religion Well

Posted: 05/15/11 09:33 AM ET

According to a Pew Forum report, entitled "Faith in Flux," most people who decide to leave their childhood religion say they did so before the age of 24. This indicates that development in understanding of religion and religious practices is a key factor in determining whether or not young adults will stick to their religion, switch religions or simply distance themselves from religion in general, like approximately 16 percent of Americans today. This makes it clear that the role of a religious education teacher is crucial in a young adult's life.

In the Holy Quran, which addresses itself to humankind, not just Muslims, the importance of learning is emphasized in the angel Gabriel's first words to Prophet Muhammad, iqra, meaning "read/recite." His first command to the Prophet was to educate himself about his Creator, and one of his first descriptions of God was "the Most Generous, who taught by the Pen, taught Man that he knew not" (96: 3-5). Learning is integral in a person's life in order to fulfill his or her purpose in life, which is to worship God. Indeed, learning and using one's knowledge to better the condition of humanity is a form of worship. The Quran is definitely not the first text to emphasize this, and this belief is not one that is held only by Muslims.

When I was in the second grade at our mosque's Religious Education Center (REC) in Northlake, Ill., I thought I saw God. It was just another Saturday morning at REC and my class was talking about prayer. Our teacher told us that if we closed our eyes and prayed with enough concentration and faith, we would be able to see and talk to God. She said we should try it right then and there. So we, as a class, being as obedient as we were in our innocent youth (that would change later), closed our eyes and prayed.

Being the absolute geek I was, I knew that it was my responsibility, as a good student, to see God. That would be like the equivalent of getting an A for this particular assignment. So with my eyes closed, I conjured up an image of an old man in my mind's eye. He had a long white beard and wise eyes, and he held a staff (I take full credit for inventing Professor Dumbledore at the tender age of 7). He smiled at me kindly.

When we all opened our eyes, I made sure my hand was the first one to be in the air. When my teacher called on me, I proudly declared, "I saw God! He has glasses!" My teacher observed me. I waited for her to dispute me, call me ridiculous and explain that it was just a metaphor. But she didn't. She smiled at me kindly. "Excellent!" she said. "See? It just takes faith."

At a time when half of the adult U.S. population has changed religions at some point in life, it is this kind of encouragement and acceptance that keeps kids believing. My teacher could have easily explained what she meant and rejected the notion that I could actually see a being that I would believe to be God in my mind. But she chose not to, and by doing that, she retained some of the magic that kids can experience in faith, the magic that is often drowned out by rules and rituals.

Though many people attend REC, Sunday school, Hebrew school, Bal Vikas (term for Hindu religious education, literally "blossoming of the child"), etc., we tend to forget the hard work of the teachers involved in these institutions. At a time when the unemployment rate is at 9 percent, these people take out time to volunteer to pass on their knowledge to younger generations, usually getting nothing more than a free snack during break time and the rowdiness of their classes in return. So in honor of Teacher Appreciation Week, which was May 2-6, I'd like to recognize and remember those people in my childhood that made Islam more than a list of rules for me. Thank you to all those who turned my Saturdays into adventures and my Dumbledores into God.

 

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According to a Pew Forum report, entitled "Faith in Flux," most people who decide to leave their childhood religion say they did so before the age of 24. This indicates that development in understandi...
According to a Pew Forum report, entitled "Faith in Flux," most people who decide to leave their childhood religion say they did so before the age of 24. This indicates that development in understandi...
 
 
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brooklyncitizen
Soror quaerens lucem
11:17 AM on 05/22/2011
When I look at my own religious and spiritual trajectory I certainly dodged a couple of bullets. Having both an atheist parent and a Christian parent was a blessing.All I can say is that the example set by each influenced my choice as an adult to return to a church. God and religion shored up my life when I understood it is about BEING and less about beliefs and ideas.
12:33 PM on 05/17/2011
I teach my boys religion to inoculate them from the assault of religion conversion attempts they will face throughout their life. One day I left my 7 year old son for an hour in a store’s childkeeping area. I later found out that one of the girls playing with him had attempted to “witness” him. When we were alone, he asked me if I believed in heaven. When I responded no he stated that I cannot go there and that when I die I will be judged. My concern was lifted when he further told me that the judge is Zeus. Both he and I love all myths and this turned out to another opportunity for him to learn.
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Bobrobert
Go God... Jesus rocks... the Spirit is very cool..
08:05 AM on 05/17/2011
Proof that God exists is everywhere.

Get real with the myth excuse for not believing.

I am just saying...

:-)
08:23 PM on 05/17/2011
I have a feeling that our definitions of "proof" are very different. I see no evidence for a god let alone proof. When people claim that there is proof for god they tend to use arguments from ignorance or appeals to emotion. I'll believe in a god when there is irrefutable evidence and not a second sooner.
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Bobrobert
Go God... Jesus rocks... the Spirit is very cool..
08:02 AM on 05/17/2011
Teachers needed...

:-)
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12:47 AM on 05/17/2011
"In the Holy Quran, which addresses itself to humankind, not just Muslims," As a point of courtesy and a need for truth, I must tell other readers that the statement is an untruth.

"..turned my... Dumbledore­s into God." This is an example of what used to be called a, "that is truer than you may ever know?" statement.

Of great importance, "the purpose of your life" is NOT to worship a psychotic god. It is to live.
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brooklyncitizen
Soror quaerens lucem
11:12 AM on 05/22/2011
living and worship is not mutually exclusive.
maybe folks are confused about what worship looks like
11:01 PM on 05/16/2011
We also have to teach our children, there is no way to tell what religion God follows.
11:00 PM on 05/16/2011
Teaching your children about religion is good provided you also teach them that each religion chosen by different people have the same rights and that there is no absolutes about which one the "True one".
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10:02 PM on 05/16/2011
It's going to be very difficult to progress mankind to the next level if we we hold it back by teaching bronze age folk tales as truth
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Bobrobert
Go God... Jesus rocks... the Spirit is very cool..
08:03 AM on 05/17/2011
:-)
06:48 PM on 05/16/2011
I ask do people leave their religion but are not leaving God thou? Why do people leave their religion? What is it that people leave their church religion? Instead of teaching a religion why can we, not just teach our children about our living God personally, who God is etc?
07:15 PM on 05/16/2011
And who is god? Can you demonstrate the existence of this being? Of course not.
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Bobrobert
Go God... Jesus rocks... the Spirit is very cool..
08:04 AM on 05/17/2011
Sure we can...

I am just saying...

All the proof is there... so many just pretend not to see it.

I am just saying...

:-)
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brooklyncitizen
Soror quaerens lucem
11:20 AM on 05/22/2011
Love.
If you experience love you experience God.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
01:28 PM on 05/16/2011
Arthur C. Clarke I would defend the liberty of consenting adult creationists to practice whatever intellectual perversions they like in the privacy of their own homes; but it is also necessary to protect the young and innocent.
06:52 PM on 05/16/2011
One does know King David loved Jonathon right and  written in OT and interesting God chose King David. King David was punished not because of his long relationship with Jonathon whom King David loved dearly, but because he m*rder his mistress husband. Interesting.
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Gregory Marshall
11:59 AM on 05/16/2011
Teach your children about ALL of the religions you can, then they can decide for themselves if they are bunk are not (like I did).
New Yorker
Roman Catholic, Anti-DEATH, Combat Vet, Sinner
11:16 AM on 05/16/2011
The human race needs to be told of its source. The source of all that is good, the source of love, the source of life, the source of all knowledge, which is Almighty God. The wisdom of God is more precious than gold, more valuable than ones life, and it will last forever. The ruler of this world is known as the father of all lies, and lying is what he does best. His instructors abound here on the atheist forms of Huffington Post. They peddle the lie that God is a myth, that hell is a myth, that you should do what you want with your God given life, not what God who loves you tells you is best for you. They pretend that life is better without God, another lie, and that teaching your child how to fear God is wrong. Lies are satan's stock in trade, it is all he has, and he makes those who believe him comfortable in their lies. Don't become his patsy. It always ends badly.
12:52 PM on 05/16/2011
At the risk of incurring your wrath, you cannot prove any of this. Being told a religion is true by one's parents or pastor does not necessarily make it so. People derive comfort from "hedging their bets" and parents and pastors no doubt feel the same and feel easier about their own fate when they win new adherents.
02:34 PM on 05/16/2011
Natuska: Don't worry about incurring New Yorker's wrath. He will just threaten you with eternity in a lake of fire. Which you know and I know, is fiction.
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Gretchen Watson
By the way, that dress you are wearing is green.
12:55 PM on 05/16/2011
From your writing, I assume you believe that "God" is omniscient, omnipotent and omnipresent. That being the case, "He's" already planned our life for us, including our choices - which includes the choice to reject or accept God.

Now, why would an all-powerful, all-knowing deity choose to have people not believe in "Him" if that's the only way to salvation?

The concept makes absolutely no sense.
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Bob Wood
A.T.C.G...(sigh)
02:14 PM on 05/16/2011
Nicely said Gretchen...F & F...(sigh)
02:36 PM on 05/16/2011
Gretchen:

You are exactly right, but these guys will argue black is white when it comes to God's omniscience. according to them, although God knows the past present and future, we still have free will. Strange that.
08:27 AM on 05/16/2011
i would rather teach the kids and the rest of the people the real meaning and value of HUMANITY and SPIRITUALITY than religion, itself. love and respect to other human beings and other living things are more important than following a blind belief.
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David Silvey
Writer/Bleeding Heart Liberal
10:54 AM on 05/16/2011
Hear, Hear!!! I cannot add anything to that.
07:32 PM on 05/16/2011
Then some one will consider what you are teaching is a religion and rally against it. I believe in the value of humanity, I just wish I could trust it's individual motives more.
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07:24 AM on 05/16/2011
Increasingly, humanity needs nothing more than it needs to see itself as a single cohesive entity. The continued religious indoctrination of children serves only to push that already remote possibility even further into an ever more distant future.