History
The History of the Christian Montessori Fellowship
Barbara and I started a
Christian Montessori Schoolin 1972 for own children. In the following
ten years we changed locations and names three times finally settling as
Lakemont
Academy
on four and a half acres of land in the middle of
Dallas,
TX
.
Like many programs, we started with preschool and eventually
added to both ends of the program ultimately going from Toddlers (eighteen months)
through twelfth grade. The program
included everything from formal dining rooms, to gardens, greenhouses, animals (a
horse, pony, donkey, goats, sheep, chickens, rabbits and a peacock).
Most importantly, it included a commitment to sharing Jesus with the children.
Having been among the early pioneers of Christian Montessori
it dawned on us that we couldn’t be the only ones interested in sharing Jesus with
their children in a Montessori manner. There must be other Christians who were involved
in Montessori so we set out to find them.
Using whatever directories and lists were available (where was the internet when
you really needed it?), we sent out over 1500 letters.
It was a joyous time to get the mail each day to find brothers and sisters
who shared these same great passions for Jesus and Montessori.
As our board chairman reminds us that in those days most of the Christians
were working in secular schools and now over twenty years later there are hundreds
of Christian Montessori schools.
Having spent over ten years discovering how wonderful
it was to nurture children in this most fantastic Montessori way we wanted to apply
this same technique to the teaching of Bible and the scriptures.
After we started the fellowship, we discovered that others had the same idea
and we were introduced to
Jerome
Berryman
and Godly Play and to the Catechesis of the Good Shepherd.
And to lots of wonderful Christian brothers and sisters.
We held our first conference on April 23rd,
1983 in
Dallas
. The Fellowship has held a three-day
conference each year since then, with Montessorians attending from each coast, from
North and South and even
Canada
.
In August of 2001, we closed our school after 29 years. Closing a labor of love and your calling,
under difficult circumstances, takes great faith in the sovereignty of God. You have to believe that God has better
ideas than even the one you thought was His idea to begin with.
The closing of the school did not dim the call of Montessori but allowed
us to concentrate full time on the Christian Montessori Fellowship.
The newsletter of the fellowship “The Cobbler” had been
an intermittent publication. In January
of 2002 “The Cobbler” began regular monthly publication.
Someone recently wrote and said, “I have a copy of “The Cobbler” from 1993
and the next issue I have is from 2002. Can you send me the ones in between?” We had to laugh.
As you all well know, running a school leaves little time for almost
anything else.
The inauguration of the first regional conference in March
2002 was held in
Washington
D.C.
. Montessorians attended from
New
York
,
New
Jersey
,
Virginia
and
South
Carolina
. In July 2002 the national conference
was held in
San
Antonio
right next to the
Alamo
. (However, we all survived.)
San
Antonio
is now the home for the Christian Montessori Fellowship and hosts the national conference
each summer.
Our grown Montessori children encouraged us to use the
internet to search for more Montessorians and Christian Montessori schools. (Montessori
training does make children smart.)
So we began prospecting on the internet.
There are thousands of sites with “Christian” and “Montessori” in them.
Many are lists of Christian schools and Montessori schools.
Some sites tease you – like the Montessori school on
Christian avenue
, or the Montessori school that held its auction at Christian Brothers Winery, or
the Montessori school with a little boy named Christian on their home page. But the internet has yielded a wonderful
harvest of a diverse assortment of Montessori schools interested in the Christian
spiritual nurturing of their children - not only in the
United
States
but in
Canada
, Europe, Africa and
Asia
.
Finding more Christian Montessori schools has led to an
ever-expanding list of regional conferences each year.
Recent conferences have been held in
Charlotte
,
Ann
Arbor
,
Seattle
,
Chicago
,
Boston
,
Shreveport
,
Houston
,
Corpus
Christi
,
St.
Paul
,
D.C.
,
Atlanta
,
New Jersey
and
Phoenix
.
Interestingly, the history of the Fellowship is directed
at the future. Everything that has
gone on before is only a prelude to the making of new history and the ability to
bless even more children by training more Montessori guides and starting even more
Christian Montessori schools.
The work we do today is tomorrow’s history.
The poet Kahlil Gibran wrote that children’s “souls dwell in the house of tomorrow”. And it is the efforts of all that have gone
before us and those that go with us now that will continue to write this wonderful
history. And then we can say about
these children, like Paul says about the Corinthians (2 Cor.3:3) “You show that
you are a letter from Christ, the result of our ministry, written not with ink but
with the Spirit of the living God, not on tablets of stone but on tablets of human
hearts.”
The ultimate history of the Christian Montessori Fellowship
will be written in heaven. As children pass through our doors and are introduced
to Jesus, His words of “Let the children come to
Me.
” will be fulfilled. And the significant
history of eternity will record their names in “the Lamb’s book of life.”
Of all the ways we can spend and pour out our lives, there
is no greater significance than to minister to our children and to help them become
all that God intended for them to be – both for time and eternity.
Help write the history.