By: Joel Pearsall, NĀé¶¹Ō““ President
Habit: āA settled or regular tendency or practice, especially one that is hard to give upā¦ā Oxford Dictionary of English, Oxford Press 2010, 2017
I really love words! I am fascinated by words, their meaning(s), and their origins. Most of us use words to express our deepest thoughts and feelings. I have discovered that words also evoke emotions and feelings in each one of usāsometimes positive and sometimes negative. Thus, I am almost certain that the word āhabitā evokes feelings in each person who will read this brief note, and I would venture a guess that for most readers, the feeling is negative.
As indicated above, Oxford Dictionary begins to define āhabitā in a neutral sort of way. But then it turns to a negative connotation by referencing that a habit is āhard to give up.ā The assumption is that habits are always bad. However, here at NĀé¶¹Ō““, we believe that there are good and holy habits, and we intentionally seek to instill certain holy habits in each NĀé¶¹Ō““ student.
The NĀé¶¹Ō““ mission statement reads, in part: ā…the NĀé¶¹Ō““ education instills habits of heart, soul, mind and strengthā¦ā Those of you familiar with the Gospel of Mark likely recognize these words, for it is in Mark 12:28-34 where we read of Jesusā encounter with a teacher of the law and in response to the teacherās inquiry as to which is the most important commandment, Jesus replies: āThe most important oneā¦is this: āHear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one. Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.āā (Mark 12:29-30, NIV)
At NĀé¶¹Ō““, we believe that Jesusā response was not only relevant to one teacher of the law 2,000 years ago but to all of us today. Consequently, in all we do at NĀé¶¹Ō““, we seek to instill healthy and sacred habits of heart, soul, mind and strength in each one of our students because it is only then that the end of our mission statement can be realized: ā… to enable each student to become Godās creative and redemptive agent in the world.ā
Throughout this issue of The Messenger, you will read stories of alumni and students that tell of the habits of heart, soul, mind and strength that were instilled (or are being instilled) in them at NĀé¶¹Ō““. These habits opened their eyes to need in the world, reshaped their hearts to feel the compassion that Jesus felt as He looked at a broken world, and now compel them to serve others and, quite literally, make the world a better place. These sacred and holy habits cause students to follow the second commandment that Jesus spoke to the teacher in that passage from Markās Gospel: āThe second is this: āLove your neighbor as yourself.ā There is no commandment greater than these.ā (Mark 12:31, NIV)
So, grab a cup of coffee (one of my habits), settle in, maybe grab some tissues (I needed some as I read these stories of Godās work in the lives of NĀé¶¹Ō““ students and alums) and enjoy this issue of The Messenger. And may we all continue to form habits of heart, soul, mind and strength that enable each one of us to be a creative and redemptive agent for God.
Blessings,
Joel K. Pearsall, President








