Considering Homeschooling: Raising Children Who Vote Biblically

By: Kathy R. Lowers
Saturday, November 29, 2008 13:54

Part One of a Series by Kathy Lowers, Founder of Considering Homeschooling

If you are like me, you are in recovery mode from this painful election.  To see voters, including so many Christians, not care that their candidate intends to "spread the wealth around" or more likely they could not recognize communist rhetoric when it was slapping them in the face... is disturbing. 

To watch voters not blink an eye that their guy had his career launched by someone who had bombed the Pentagon or maybe they just were not tuned in to the tiny sliver of the media that actually reported this... is disconcerting. 

To observe that half the nation did not hold it against their candidate that he is so pro-abortion that he is off the charts or perhaps they got so excited about "making history" they forgot that murder is wrong... is disheartening.

Further, to see that these voters did not mind that their candidate opposed efforts to stop the perversion of marriage by homosexuals or very likely they believed his rhetoric about being Christian... is alarming. 

And, to realize that all these voters did not seem bothered in the least that he was endorsed by a top Hamas leader, Fidel Castro, and other horrifying figures or obviously his Hollywood endorsements were all that mattered... invites commentary.

As for those of us who have been given children by God at this time in history, it also invites serious thought on how we can raise up Christian voters who understand, with unshakable conviction, what type of economic system and moral laws are in line with God's Word.  We need to train our children to screen candidates for biblical values rather than be swayed by the utopian visions of man-made messiahs. 

This election highlighted that the view held by many American churches that evangelism alone will transform the culture is not true.  The people in the churches, including some self-appointed leaders in Christianity, are messed up voters, too.  Masses of Christians voted for the most pro-abortion, most pro-homosexual, most openly socialist president in U.S. history.  What in the rearing of these voters, in the discipleship of these Christians, guided them to vote for image, race or getting something free from the government over biblical values?

The fact is, there is something seriously wrong in the upbringing of Christian children, as quite a lot of them grow up to vote like pagans.  Could it be that the two main sources of training for most American Christian minds are the public schools and the media -- instead of their parents and the church?  Those families that remove the grip of the media from their children's lives by cutting out TV are doing a noble deed.  But getting rid of the TV, as hard as that is for the average Joe Christian, is still a lot easier than giving up his dependence on freebie government schools.

Having many kids and making sure they have a rigorous Christian education is a tough sacrifice.  Yet if Christians had (or adopted) more children and gave them a solid Christian upbringing, the result of future elections would be much different than what we just encountered.  I know most Christians either cannot afford Christian school or they live in an area devoid of solid Christian schools.  That leaves homeschooling as the most viable option in Christian education for families who can create a safe, loving, educational, Christ-centered home.  But most people do not homeschool because, quite frankly, it is the uphill path.  So why take that path?  We believe, based on the fruit we see in others' lives, that homeschooling in the Lord will give us a better chance at having children who will be loyal to Jesus.

Taking the public school route is free and easy -- at least in the short run.  But, you get what you pay for, so to speak, and the jails, abortion clinics, and political positions in our communities are filled with the natural consequences of secular schooling.

Weekday mornings are seen as time of deliverance for the moms in most neighborhoods around the country.  You can almost hear a collective sigh of relief at 8am or so, as the state takes on the expense and the bother of the children all day.  But at the same time in the morning as most mothers are being relieved of their responsibility, homeschoolers like me are just rolling up our sleeves and getting to work at educating our children.  With four young kids and two toddlers in my house, that is an energetic undertaking.  The typical mom and I are worlds apart regarding what happens in our day during those next six hours (or longer, if they sign up for after school care).  I don't get to go to the mall, spa, watch TV or make money at a job.  Homeschooling six children on a shoe string is a juggling act -- a really interesting, fun challenge most of the time, but a struggle at other times.  But, I know I am sowing towards the future -- that is what keeps me optimistic, keeps me chugging on despite whatever roadblocks Satan throws in family's way.  We know God would have us bring up the children this way. What God has ordained, what His will is, no man or circumstance can stop.

I was convinced to homeschool before I ever even met my husband.  And, he was sure he would homeschool before he ever met me.  Active in the pro-life movement, I met all these wonderful children and teens who were homeschooled.  They were polite, sincerely pro-life, and really seemed to know the Lord.  Nothing wins over people to home education more effectively than the living testimony of well-raised homeschooled children.

I cannot tell you how many dear Christian friends I have known over the years in pro-family grass roots activism who have been shipwrecked from letting their children learn from the world's schools.  To picket Planned Parenthood for years and then to discover their own children frequent the place, is so devastating for them.   The image became clear to me -- did I want a child who one day would try to save babies as a teen or a teen who would be a client of Planned Parenthood?  I know that homeschooled children sometimes choose the world too, but statistically, it is much less than the public school children.  And that makes sense -- the teacher that spends the most time with the student... well, Jesus said it best:  "A student is not above his teacher, but everyone who is fully trained will be like his teacher." (Luke 6:40)

Whoever schools your children sets the stage for what your kids do when they get old enough to "dis" you.  And whoever schools your children controls their vote because they teach them in what manner to think.  Trying to undo the damage every night, like some Christians think they can, is nearly impossible.  There is too much homework to do and too many activities to establish yourself as a force greater than the teachers in their life.  Parents with children in any school really are giving up much more sway with their youngsters than they realize.  Your nights and weekends with your child cannot counteract what they have learned from secular sources the bulk of the week.

I know so many beautiful Christian sisters who tell me they pray for their children who are enrolled in public school, that they tell them to witness to their friends, etc.  But, ultimately, as the Lord says, the student is not above his teacher.  The child was placed by the parent under the authority of those teachers, to get wisdom.  But the false wisdom of the world is in direct conflict with the real wisdom of God.  The child, in his heart, is forced to make the ultimate choice between the false gods and way of thinking of his or her teachers and the true God and way of thinking of his or her parents.

I believe that if you are a God-fearing parent who can create a safe, loving learning environment for children in your home, that you should be considering homeschooling right now if you aren't already homeschooling.  Homeschooling your child is not a guarantee they will not forsake the values you have instilled, but they have a fighting chance at comprehending the significance of having godly leaders, not to mention they will have a better chance at receiving and following the Lord Jesus.

While this election shocked me, I have to say I have more hope than I have ever had for our country, in part because of what God is doing through homeschooling.  Look at how homeschoolers, still a small fraction of total students in this country, have already been recognized as a political force in several notable local and state elections.  Just imagine if a thousands, tens of thousands, millions more Christian families homeschooled.

The thought I will leave you with is this... whoever schools the children impacts the future.  If every Christian child received a sold Christian education, there would be real change in the course this country is taking.  And since the United States is still the most powerful country in the world, whoever schools the children ultimately influences a lot in the world, too.  Sacrificing to homeschool holds such hope in these trying times... consider making that sacrifice.

An Inverse Thanksgiving

By: Charles B. Lowers
Saturday, November 22, 2008 16:18

Imagine an approaching bountiful harvest, fields teeming with crops, branches hanging low with fruit... winter comes, but the harvest never comes... no one is left alive bring in the harvest; all the farmers have starved to death.

In the Ukraine no imagination is necessary and November 22nd is kept in remembrance of the dark tragedies of 1932-1933.  It's called the Holodomor or, roughly translated, "murder by hunger".


This was one of those "excesses" in Soviet policy that your liberal public school teachers glossed over while praising the "concept of communism" if it could only be practiced as envisioned by Marx.  But, only the Godless perversions of socialist thought could take the "breadbasket of Europe" and starve to death 7-14 million of its inhabitants.

That's just what the communists did, confiscated all food from the farmers to feed their powerbase in the cities.  Anyone who withheld food to feed their own family was summarily executed.  Then, with the excess of their ill gotten gain, the murdering dictators exported grain to gain hard foreign currency and to prove to the world that no famine existed in the great communist experiment... while the enslaved multitudes of Ukraine starved to death.

Some believe these policies were intentional acts of genocide to suppress Ukrainian nationalism.  And, if history shows us anything, it is that collectivists will stop at nothing, including genocide, to retain their power.

With the darkest days of communism hidden or forgotten in the west, a new wave of socialism is sweeping over us -- aided, not unwittingly, by leftist politicians, liberal advocacy groups, extremist environmentalists, abortionists, homosexuals, and hitherto "conservatives" who have signed on to the newest round of nationalizing our economy.

Holodomor is the natural result of collectivism.  Homeschooling is the inverse of collectivism and something to truly be thankful for this Thanksgiving Day.

YUI vs. jQuery

By: Webmaster
Thursday, November 20, 2008 00:16

I'm relatively new to JavaScript libraries, having been content to indulge in ASP.NET postbacks, managed code, and a let them eat bandwidth mentality of backoffice development these last few years.  Now that I'm back into the high stakes, high visibility of consumer facing, high volume, ecommerce web development... those lovely Telerik RadControls and Microsoft AJAX Controls that play so nicely with Visual Studio intellisense and the whole ASP.NET code behind, postback paradigm are just too heavy.  I needed something lightweight and SEO friendly.

I had thought client side development was dead and was happy for it.  Remember writing JavaScript compatible with Netscape Navigator 4 and Internet Explorer 3?  I fell in love with the idea of ignoring the client and doing everything the right way and writing it once on the server.  So, I hadn't been paying attention to the evolving of all these competitive JavaScript libraries.  Now Mozilla Firefox is doing justice to W3C standards and Microsoft is playing compatibility nice, although IE6 still lives.

Enter the question of which library to choose?!?  Here I will expose my ultimate bias and acknowledge the choice has been made in my mind with Microsoft's recent embracing of jQuery.  Nevertheless, my grand experiment started with YUI...

I actually first looked at jQuery and questioned the thoroughness of the documentation, availability of real world samples, and the scope/openness of its community.  YUI seemed on first glance to beat jQuery hands down.  So, my first implementation was with YUI.

Here is the project:  A completely client-side data table, with JSON data source, that sorts and filters based on multiple criteria from sliders, checkboxes, etc. as the input, with complex formatting.  (Because of trade secrets, I can not reveal the code or project details yet, but I will post some generic examples in later posts.)

The implementation with YUI went well and the results are impressive with two major exceptions: library size and IE performance. 

Since building this application, Microsoft has fully embraced jQuery and promises redistribution with ASP.NET.  So, it seemed natural for me to rebuild the project in jQuery and compare YUI to jQuery.  I am almost done with the jQuery implementation and will post the results soon.  (I am posting now to bump the blog, sorry.)  But, here are my observations so far:

YUI seems much larger then jQuery, both in its core and associated UI elements.  jQuery has a much more straight forward way of looking at life and code.  Finally, the community is rapidly expanding by way of the Microsoft's developer support community machine, that is unmatched by any socialist open source community.

The ultimate test will be the JavaScript performance in IE.  (Sadly, it looks like IE8 will not improve much on IE7's JavaScript performance.)  I will be posting the performance differences between YUI and jQuery shortly with code samples.

Categories: Programming

Veterans: Thank You

By: Charles B. Lowers
Tuesday, November 11, 2008 13:17

Categories: General

Considering Homeschooling

Welcome to the home of the original "Considering Homeschooling" ministry, founded in 2001 by Charles and Kathy Lowers. We serve to recruit and train Christian families with babies, toddlers, and preschoolers in biblical home education.

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