by Renee Sereno

Jesus said, "Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these." Matthew 19:14
“Mom, we had a lockdown drill at school today,” Lance informed me matter-of-factly.
This conversation took place two years ago, but it feels like yesterday to me.
“What’s a lockdown drill?” I asked my son. It was the first time I had come across the phrase, but its sinister connotations didn’t escape me.
“It’s when you lock all the doors and close all the windows and turn off the lights and find some place to hide so the bad guys can’t find you.”
Now that was already a disturbing sentence to begin with, but believe me, it’s even more disquieting to hear it being spoken in a singsong manner by a four-year-old. In kindergarten, no less.
I couldn’t help but feel sorry for my little boy, whose very innocence was now tainted by this sad, but necessary, exercise. What an unfortunate introduction to this sinful world, where even the smallest of schoolchildren are exposed to the sordid wretchedness of human nature. I guess it’s to be expected. After all, the nation went through a collective shudder after Columbine, and it was only a matter of time before the ripple effects were felt at my son’s elementary school.
But it’s ripples like these that rock a parent’s sense of well-being, and once again, I found myself wishing that we could afford to send our children to a Christian school.
When my husband, Lorenzo and I lived in the Bay Area, some of our church members sent their kids to Milpitas Christian School, and we could see the difference in their demeanor compared to other children their age.
We also observed the same qualities in the students we have encountered here in Modesto Central, most of whom attend Central Valley Christian Academy (CVCA). Whether they are teenagers assisting in cradle roll, middle school kids in uniform during Pathfinder weekend, or little tikes sharing crayons with Lance and Troy in Adventurers Club or Sabbath School, they all exhibit a wholesome quality sorely lacking in most public school populations these days.
And what accounts for this difference? Both educational systems teach the basics: the Three R’s, which form the foundation upon which learning is built. But Christian Education goes one notch higher, by providing the Fourth “R”, which most schools sadly shy from, in an age when it is needed all the more. And it is this key ingredient which sets students in schools like CVCA apart from the general population.
Now, people might think this Fourth R that I am referring to is Religion. It is not. Indeed, I hesitate to even say the word because it has gotten to be quite a minefield through the ages. No, the Fourth “R” which I am referring to is Relationship. A personal relationship with Jesus, our Lord and Savior.
I used to live in Canada, and I remember being very impressed with the French-speaking kids of some of my friends there. Most of these young children came from English-speaking backgrounds, but they attended French “Immersion Schools”, where most of, if not the whole curriculum was taught in French, and students were encouraged to converse, and even think, in French. It didn’t take long before it was second nature for even the youngest students to speak fluently in French.
How very interesting that the word they use is “Immersion”. Because there lies the difference between Christian schools and public schools like the one my children attend. Just as we are baptized by immersion, students in Christian schools like Central Valley Christian Academy are steeped and immersed in an atmosphere where God is the center of all learning. Where faith is integrated into life lessons taught by teachers and mentors who are believers themselves. In contrast, my sons, who attend public school, just get their “sprinkling” of the Fourth R when they are at home or in church.
These days, I find myself driving through Central Avenue in Ceres more often. And every time I pass that short stretch between Ceres SDA church and the open field by KADV, I find myself saying a short prayer to the Lord. And although nothing much has changed for us financially, a lot has happened to us spiritually since we moved from Milpitas. And now, even though our minds still tell us we can’t afford it, our hearts are filled with new-found hope. A hope born of faith.
I know that in His perfect time, my children, too, will be in Central Valley Christian Academy, God’s “Immersion School”, where the Fourth “R” is an integral part of the educational equation!

(This article was featured in the May 2006 edition of the "Central Clarion", the monthly newsletter of the Modesto Central Seventh-Day Adventist Church.)