Learn to do right; seek justice. Defend the oppressed. Isaiah 1:17, NIV
As Christian teachers, we step into classrooms filled with tension, inequity, exhaustion, and pressure. And it’s easy to reflect whatever atmosphere we enter. But Dr. Martin Luther King reminds us in his Letter from a Birmingham Jail that we are called to be thermostats, not thermometers. Or in other words, changers of our environments, not reactors to it.
For us, this looks like:
- Standing up for students who feel unseen or unheard.
- Speaking truth with grace, even when it’s not popular.
- Offering dignity where the world offers dismissal.
- Bringing peace into chaos and hope into discouragement.
- Modeling Christlike courage, even when silence feels safer.
Dr. King wrote this from a jail cell, yet his words ignited change because he refused to wait for “the convenient time.” He believed that waiting for justice was itself a form of injustice. In the same way, we are called today—not someday—to reflect the character of Christ in the spaces we inhabit.
Like him, you may not see the impact immediately, and you may feel small against a giant system. But every moment you choose integrity over ease, compassion over apathy, and justice over comfort, you are living out the courageous call that Dr. King championed—and that Christ commands.
Lord, make me a thermostat in my school—someone who sets the temperature with Your love, justice, and courage. Help me stand for what is right, defend the vulnerable, and bring Your peace wherever I go. Amen.
Copyright Lara Busold.
Lara is a Communications Editor for Christian Educators.
One Response
This life with Jesus requires intentionality. I need to be reminded again and again to abide, and obey! Thanks for this reminder Lara!