A common form of this idolatry at school for the student and the teacher is grades. Both groups can get so caught up worrying about the test and how it will affect grades that they forget the goal is to learn and that learning comes to those who give their best effort. Just as Jesus did not say that food and clothing weren’t necessary, neither will I say that grades aren’t necessary on some level to get along with the rest of the world. Neither will I say grades are unimportant or that they don’t matter. But I will say that grades are secondary. What is primary is to go after learning with all the tools God gives you, to do it heartily as unto the Lord. When teachers encourage students to make this their primary focus and when students buy-in, the learning comes and the grades follow. That doesn’t mean everyone makes an A, but everyone makes what he or she is capable of.
Trinitas students are well-accustomed to hearing from their teachers that worldly markers of success such as grades on money do not comport with biblical definitions of success. The world says that being “smart” is often equated with the idea that you will make lots of money someday. The truth is that what smart people actually do is the thing they set their minds to—which could certainly be making lots of money. Just like people with great athletic ability and people who are born beautiful, smart people have been given their gifts by God for a reason. The only way to really meet God-given potential is not to set your mind to making a wad of cash, but to “seek first the kingdom of God” and everything meant for you will be added to you—everything God intended for you to do and to have will be yours for the good of His Kingdom.