![]() |
|||
|
|
Welcome to Call to Decision 10 Big Reasons NOT to Send Christian Kids to Public Schools
-------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------
I love reading Bible commentaries and sermons almost as much as I love
reading the Bible. I especially enjoy gleaning insight from some
of the gifted teachers and theologians of the past. It was in
reading the old nineteenth-century preacher Spurgeon and his Spurgeon’s
Sermon Notes that I came across this quote: “As a rule, the
children of godly parents are godly. In cases where this is not
the case there is a reason. I have carefully observed and have
detected the absence of family prayer, gross inconsistency, harshness,
indulgence or neglect of admonition. If trained in God’s way,
they do not depart from them.”[1] The departure from godliness
by scores of young people who have been brought up in Christian homes
is cause for real alarm. What are well-meaning parents missing
in the training of their children? I think the answer lies in
these key words: God’s way.
Among the many problems within our culture is the downward spiral in
the hearts and minds of today’s youth. What many of us may not
realize is that among the biggest morality corrupters and worldview
warpers are the secular-humanistic public schools. A slew of
anti-God teachings within an unbiblical setting produce an enormous
list of stumbling blocks, proving that public schools are manifesting
the ideologies of their humanistic founders, Horace Mann and John
Dewey. To hone in on a few of these, here is my “top 10”
list of big reasons why Christian parents who are truly committed to
training up their children God’s way should not be sending
their kids to public schools.
1. Cookie cutter approach. Public
schools fail to train up each child according to his or her unique
gifts, learning needs, and future callings. When one teacher has
to manage a classroom full of children, many simply fall through the
cracks. It is no wonder that the number of tutoring programs and
learning centers is growing so rapidly, and it is no wonder that the
dropout rate is right around 1.2 million kids per year (7,000 every
school day).[2] Our children have a special purpose in God’s
plan, and no government institution that shuffles millions of children
through an efficiency-based system can come close to addressing this
the way parents can in the home.
2. Anemic academics. The latest
research reports that the U.S. spends well over a half-trillion tax
dollars a year (over $9,000 per student) on education.[3] One
would think that there would be a decent return for this amount of
spending, but as the Washington Post reported recently,
children who are government schooled consistently rank near the bottom
of all industrialized nations in math and science.[4] As our
taxes increase, literacy levels drop, and academic standards are being
dumbed down to cover up school ineptitude. Being smart just ain’t
what it used to be. In equipping our children for service to
their King, we should be giving them the highest quality education
possible.
3. Misplaced authority. By placing
their children in the school system, parents basically relinquish
their authority to teachers, coaches, counselors, administrators, and
local and state board members. State laws virtually say, “Moms
and dads, drop your kids off at the front door and let the
‘experts’ decide how and what they will learn.” Scarier
still is the statistic that about half of all parents cannot even name
their child’s teacher, making one wonder if they even know what
their child is actually learning in school.[5] We saw the public
schools boldly take away parent’s fundamental rights when the United
States Court of Appeals for the Ninth District ruled “no
fundamental rights of parents to be the exclusive provider of
information regarding sexual matters to their children.”[6]
There are similar cases going on right now in several other parts of
the country, so this is really just the beginning.
4. Family fragmentation. Students
spend an average of 1,100 hours a year in public school. This
does not include commutes, extended care hours, after-school
commitments, and the ever-increasing burden of homework and tutoring
programs. Very little time is left for meaningful family
interaction. Sadly enough, once those unhealthy appetites for
peer relationships have developed, parents and siblings learn to get
along without each other. God has designed the family for the
purpose of nurturing and training our children, a model that cannot be
replaced with inferior alternatives.
5. Peer dependency. A child left with
other kids for a minimum of five days a week, 180 days a year, will
learn to accept and do whatever is necessary in order to gain approval
by his peer group. He will learn how to talk, how to dress, how
to act, what music to listen to, and which TV shows and movies to
watch, and he will get a steady dose of pop culture. It’s
interesting that one of the main red flags raised by homeschool
skeptics is socialization. The Bible has already forewarned us
about what happens to “a companion of fools.” (Proverbs
13:20b)
6. Bad company. First Corinthians
15:33a warns us to not be deceived, telling us that bad company
corrupts good morals. Yet parents foolishly accept the norm of
grouping 25-30 children in a classroom for the majority of the day,
spanning twelve or more years of their lives, and expect their
children to rise above the folly. Add to this formula the
natural inability in young children to be confined to a desk for
hours, followed by all the angst that accompanies the raging-hormone
years. It’s no wonder schools are rampant with poor attitudes,
low self-esteem, hostility toward teachers, vandalism, bullying, drug
use, gun threats, fear, chaos. While it would be nice to think
that the “good kids” are being salt and light, in most cases, good
morals are grossly compromised.
7. Propagating promiscuity. The
Heritage Foundation reports, “Every day, 8,000 teenagers in the
United States become infected by a sexually transmitted disease.”[7]
Armed with condoms and explicit classroom demonstrations brought to
you by Planned Parenthood, it’s no surprise that the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention recommends the HPV vaccine for 11- and
12-year-old girls. A recent study shows that the Church is not
immune either; our children in youth groups are experimenting with sex
just as much as those outside the church.[8] Sadly, today’s
youth, along with their many parents, have forgotten the adage: “If
you play with fire your are going to get burned.” (See Proverbs
6:27)
8. Bye-bye Bible. The public schools
of today have succeeded in removing the Bible and are becoming more
and more openly hostile toward Christianity while maintaining a
politically correct stance toward other world religions and cults.
Just recently, a boy who dressed up as Jesus for Halloween was sent
home by the principal because his costume was deemed “too
offensive.” The poor handful of kids who attempt to make a
difference for the Kingdom are often ridiculed and told to be happy
that they can, at the very least, go outside and hold hands around a
flag pole once a year to pray.
9. Perishing generation. Public
schools are one of the leading reasons the next generation is falling
away from a solid Biblical worldview and a faith-based life.
Studies show that because of the intensive secular humanistic
indoctrination occurring in the public schools, it is approximated
that over 80-percent of children from Christian homes are walking away
from the Church by the time they reach college age.[9] Most
Christians in the United States, including many pastors and prominent
leaders, are asleep at the wheel on this cold, hard reality.
Thankfully, some have already woken up. One notable pastor,
Scott Brown, wrote, “If current trends in the belief systems and
practices of the younger generation continue, in ten years, church
attendance will be half the size it is today.”[10]
10. Scripturally unsound. My final
point may be the most controversial, but the fact is that public
education is causing millions of children to stumble in their walk
with our Lord.[11] Can we not logically conclude that it is
unbiblical for us to send our children there? Bold words, some
may say -- I would say they’re rather Biblical. Please open up
your Bible and read Matthew 18:1-6, 1 Corinthians 8 (focusing on
verses 11-13), and finally Romans 14:13-23 (focusing on verses 13 and
21). Do you see it? The Bible is making the following
facts clear to see:
1. Believers are no longer under the law.
2. Believers do have freedom in Christ.
3. A believer’s freedom (liberty) in Christ must never be used as a
license to sin and/or cause another weaker believer to stumble/sin.
Notice how the Bible speaks of the “weak.” Don’t our
developing children fall in the category of “the weak”? Are
they not still very much in their growing stages -- growing not only
physically and emotionally, but in their faith, knowledge, and
understanding of our Lord God? Since it is obvious that such a
high percentage of kids are abandoning the faith in their later years,
why would we want to keep them in a place that is clearly causing
serious harm to their minds, bodies and souls?
Please keep in mind that today, approximately 85-percent of
Christian parents send their children to public schools for their
“education.” Parents, we need to turn our hearts
toward our children now and lovingly labor to see Christ formed in
them. Yes, it is hard work, but doing the right thing usually
requires more effort, including moving out of our comfort zones.
The Church in centuries past rightly understood the importance of
training up the next generation. The great seventeenth-century
theologian and pastor, Jonathan Edwards, wrote the following
commentary on Galatians 4:19: “Here is an example to parents,
showing how they ought to labor and cry to God for the spiritual good
of their children. You see how Christ labored and strove and
cried to God for the salvation of His spiritual children; and will not
you earnestly seek and cry to God for your natural children?”[12]
If you truly care about your children’s spiritual good, then please
remove them from your local public school. Christ-centered,
parent-directed, home-based education works. Soli Deo
Gloria!
Endnotes:
1. Charles H. Spurgeon, Spurgeon’s Sermon Notes (Peabody,
MA, Hendrickson Publishers, Inc. 1997), 139.
2. www.americaspromise.org/PrintAPB.aspx?ID=10662 3. http://awesome.goodmagazine.com/goodsheet/goodsheet005education.html 4. www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/12/04/AR2007120400730.html 5. Brian D. Ray, Ph.D., 2004-2005, Worldwide Guide to Homeschooling (Nashville, TN, Broadman & Holman, 2004), 107. 6. http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=47195 7. www.heritage.org/Research/features/issues/issuesarea/Abstinence.cfm 8. www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/07/26/AR2007072601846.html 9. www.sbcannualmeeting.net/sbc02/newsroom/newspage.asp?ID=261 10. www.visionforumministries.org/issues/uniting_church_and_family/the_greatest_untapped_evangeli.aspx 11. www.dexios.info/culture_trends/pdf 12. Jonathan Edwards, Sermons of Jonathan Edwards (Peabody, MA, Hendrickson Publishers, Inc. 2005), 314. ================================================================== (*) David d’Escoto, member of CEANet, is a teaching elder and the co-author of The Little Book of Big Reasons to Homeschool (published by Broadman & Holman). He also co-hosted the radio program Homeschooling for Life. He and his bride, Kim, have homeschooled their five children for more than ten years. Please visit their website at www.dexios.info.
Copyright © The Old
Schoolhouse Magazine, LLC 2009. All Rights Reserved. No
part of this publication may be reproduced, copied, transmitted,
posted, duplicated, stored in a retrieval system, or otherwise used
without the express written approval of the publisher. For
reprint permission, contact our business office.
Phone: 1-888-718-HOME
=======================================
NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material is distributed without profit or payment to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for non-profit research and educational purposes only. =======================================
|
|