Inside Story: Pink Hair and God
Pink Hair and God
By Andrew McChesney
Days before the start of the school year, a mother called the principal of a Seventh-day Adventist elementary school for help in Ukraine.
“I don’t understand anything about religion, and I don’t know anything about religious denominations,“ the mother said. ”I just saw the sign outside your school reading, ‘Christian school,’ and I’m absolutely certain that this is what I have been looking for.”
The principal was intrigued by the call and asked for more information. She learned that the caller was the mother of a little girl named Natasha.
The mother said that when she had been pregnant with Natasha, she had often thought about sending her child to a church school one day. The persistent idea puzzled her because she was an atheist. When Natasha reached school age, the mother enrolled her in a private school that promised to nurture creativity in an atmosphere of complete freedom and no discipline. Natasha’s mother became alarmed when the girl announced in the second grade that she wanted to dye her hair pink. That summer, she worried that the lack of discipline might hurt her daughter’s future. Then she saw the sign for the Adventist school, remembered her thoughts when she was pregnant, and thought, “I want my child to go to this school.”
On the first day of school, Natasha started third grade in a class with five other children, all from Adventist families. She struggled at first to catch up with the other children, but she quickly gained ground. Reading the Bible and participating in morning devotions were new experiences for her. Wide-eyed, she eagerly absorbed everything she learned about God.
Several weeks into the school year, her mother called the principal to say she was delighted with the changes that had come over her daughter.
“She loves your Bible lessons, and she has fallen in love with the school,“ she said. ”She tells us everything that goes on there and has us pray before meals. I am so happy I brought her to your school!”
Not long ago, the mother contacted the principal to ask for information about Adventist beliefs. “Natasha wants to become an Adventist, and I would like to know what changes need to be made in our lives,” she said. “I also want to become an Adventist.”
The family’s story has not ended. “Their path with God is just beginning,” said Ivan Riapolov (pictured), education director of the Euro-Asia Division, whose territory includes Ukraine.
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Produced by the General Conference Office of Adventist Mission. Find more mission stories at adventistmission[dot]org
This is an amazing story. Liberal parents often assume that children feel favoured when allowed all the casual freedom that is mistaken for love. The truth is that children prefer to have discipline and boundaries; they develop greater respect for parents who give them a sense of direction. As a father and educator, I have personally found this to be true. No wonder this little girl was so receptive to the orderliness of her new school. We must also remember the Lord's injunction to "Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not part from it." Proverbs 22:6