Archive for the ‘ Marriage & Family ’ Category

What’s My Motivation?

I’m thinking today on the motivations a parent might have to send their child to school.  Some people have enslaved themselves to debt or demand a certain lifestyle that they feel it necessary to have both parents working & making money, which in turn leaves little time to educate (or even watch) their child — that’s a common problem in a life devoted to the American dream.

Others have doubts about their ability to properly teach their children, and that’s a separate post (but in short — God didn’t give you your children on accident, hoping that you’d find someone better suited for the task ASAP).

The most baffling (to me) are those believing parents who simply do not want to spend the time or take up the task of educating their children.  It is a burden that would interfere with a preferred daily lifestyle.  It is a belief that the possible difficulties facing a parent taking up the role of educator is just too much (we’d fight too often!) and therefore best if  the problem is placed in the lap of a dedicated teacher making far less money than they deserve.

Consider this by R.C. Sproul, Jr. -

…we should understand that teaching our children is our delight, our joy, our opportunity. When we see spending time with them as a burden, rather than a joy, we see further evidence of how encultured we have become.  Children, biblically speaking, are a blessing from God. And we ought to seek out time with blessings from God, not plot out ways to avoid them, or hand them over to others.

And yet, the mother portrayed in the comic above, though no religious convictions are attributed is just as easily the Christian mother as she is a pagan mother.  How did we get to this point?  We’ve reached a point where the daily routine of school-aged child is spent in a class, away from their parents.   Evenings are spent in a frantic rush to play sports, do homework, watch TV, play video games and get to bed in time to do it all again.  Weekends are much the same.  Seasonal vacations are short and the arrival of the routine is met rarely with gladness (save for Mom & Dad) but rather with glum fatalism.

Children desire to be with their parents because God has created them to be under their care until the time comes to “leave and cleave”.  That they prefer the company of their parents to that of their teachers, nursery workers, day care attendants, is clear.   That so many parents could make such a reality, could grab hold of this brief time God has blessed them with, but instead choose an empty home from morning until afternoon and an obstacle course filled with recitals, games, and practice, practice, practice makes me befuddled.  I don’t get it.  I see it as the primary driving force to have your children away from the home and it just doesn’t make sense to me.  Is this time truly so tedious?  Is the cost truly so high?

Paul’s Counter-Cultural Message to Women (and Men)

1 Timothy 2:11-15 is a passage of Scripture that has been picked up by all sorts of folks, abused, misused, and mishandled.  It’s justified all sorts of bad theology complete with lives that reflect Jesus poorly because of said theology.

Last Sunday, I preached on the issue showing that Paul’s words to women have been controversial (for different reasons) from the time he wrote them up to today.  Give it a listen if you have a chance and weigh in with what you think about the Women teaching & holding authority.

Sermon Link

Tomorrow: Some more thoughts on education.

Delegation

When is it allowable for a command from God saying “You shall do X” to be restated “You shall make sure that X gets done.”?

Deuteronomy 6:6-7 states “[6] And these words that I command you today shall be on your heart. [7] You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise.”

From a religious perspective, are parents justified in delegating the theological training of their children to Pastors, Sunday School teachers, and Youth Group Leaders?  Is it good enough to make sure that their children are diligently taught, even if it’s not by you.  I say no, God gave you these children and is commanding YOU (yes you) to instruct them.

But what about education in general?  Are we justified in making a distinction between religious education and “book smarts” education?  The majority of parents delegate their child’s “book education” to someone else.  They’re not involved.  Is there truly such a distinction between school & theology?  Does God say “That’s not mine.” in regards to book learnin’?

That’s the question I have in mind for next week.  I want to devote the whole time to the issue of home schooling & education because, quite frankly, I think I’m starting to look at it not as “best possible method of education” but rather as “clear command from God.”

I hope you’ll be along to work it out with me.  Also – preaching in Tacoma this Sunday AM — hope to see you there as well!

While We’re Talking About DW…

From Doug Wilson’s blog / book:

“A man should resolve before God that he will have no one-on-one friendships (or close working relationships) with women unless they are with his mother, grandmother, sister, or wife. Now, what is meant by ‘friends’? We have been taught ad nauseam by means of feminist propaganda that men and women are simply interchangeable units, and that we should work very hard to act as though this is so. The grand idea dictates that a man should be able to work with a woman and treat her like any of the other ‘guys’ at work. If he and another guy could go out for lunch, why not have the same standard for a female co-worker? The answer, and I hate to belabor the obvious, is that under the clothes, their bodies are different, and hers looks like it would be a lot more fun than some male co-worker’s body. In other words, one situation is sexually charged and the other one isn’t” (Fidelity, p. 62).

I’m in agreement.

Why We Home School: Children of Caesar

My wife & I had been leaning towards homeschooling when we realized that we couldn’t afford a private school.  As we studied the ins and outs of homeschooling and investigated the advantages and (perceived) disadvantages, we came across a DVD by Voddie Baucham called the Children of Caesar.  It seems to have been out of stock for a while, but Monergism Books has it available again.

I think this DVD does the single best job of debunking a number of home school myths along with laying out the case for the superiority of home school as a model of education & development in general.

Those Peter Pans

Mark Driscoll wrote an article on the predominant tendency of boys to just stop maturing and never become men.  They become guys instead.  Michael Kimmel wrote a book called Guyland about this very issue.  It’s worth reading if you’ve ever found yourself wondering how we reached a point where the High School graduates (regardless of whether they’re class of ’89 or ’09) still act like they never left.  A generation of Woodersons if you follow my meaning.

Driscoll talks about the various manifestations of the guys, paying some attention to guys (read: neither boys nor men) in church:

Men in the Church: Cowards and Complainers

What happens if you walk into the church and try to find out what a man looks like? First of all, you’re not going to find a lot of guys in most evangelical churches. The least likely person to see in church is a single, twenty-something male. He is as rare at church as a vegan at a steak house.

In the world, boys who can shave are children who are consumers. In the church, boys who can shave are cowards who are complainers.

A buddy of mine calls them evangellyfish because they have no backbone. They don’t declare a major, church, theology, or fiancé. They don’t want to fail and they think if they don’t try, then they can’t fail. And by definition, that’s a failure.

They are, however, endowed with the spiritual gift of complaining. They say, “I hate the church. The church just wants my money.” As if the church wants his futon, Xbox, light beer, and computer filled with free Internet porn.

Here’s the cold hard truth: it’s a lot harder to do something than it is to complain about those who are doing something. The notorious sin of Christian guys is complaining about guys who are doing something rather than doing something.

I know these guys.  They’re not exact replicas of the guy Driscoll is writing about, but there are similarities.  Especially the points about complaining and avoiding marriage.  You can read the entire article here.  Tell me what your elf-eyes see about this.

An Appeal of Homeschool (if not for it)

One of the things I most enjoy about homeschooling is the fact that we can give the arts the attention it deserves.  I remember the regular hacking & slashing of arts & music when I was in school… which is just too bad.  Anyhow, I’m playing the role of art & art history teacher this year.  This is the book we’re using, Discovering Great Artists.  It takes a look at art history & explains the processes used.  The student then imitates the methods employed by the original artists.  So to appreciate Giotto you not only look at his work, but then you make your own egg based paint and get to work on the style.  Even if you don’t home school, you may want to pick this book up just to use with your children on the weekends.  It’s that good.

Just Stop Talking! {Marriage Advice}

I began my 10th year of marriage on Wednesday the 11th.  That in & of itself doesn’t give me any special insight into having a marriage that glorifies God.  The Scriptures have already done that.  But, 10 years of marriage has my wife & I talking about the subject.  If we were to write a book about marriage, what would the chapters be about? (this is the kind of stuff we talk about in the evenings).  So here’s one thing we’d include in the book.

Stop me if you’ve heard this one.  A recently married couple is receiving advice from a more experienced married couple.  Maybe they asked for it.  Probably they didn’t.  The old routine goes something like this:

Advice giver turns to the husband and says; “These are the two most important words for your marriage: ‘Yes, dear.’”  The rim-shot is optional, as is the courtesy laugh usually offered to this modern day sage.  Of course, this is spectacularly bad advice.  Men who simply acquiesce to the every whim of defer to every tantrum their wife has without opposition are bad husbands, failing to fill the role set forth for them by God in marriage.  There’s a similar problem with wives who understand headship to mean that you do whatever your husband asks immediately and without discussion or question, regardless of the implications.  More on that another time, though.

Keeping quiet about your marriage isn’t necessarily bad advice.  You don’t want it to be a principle of the communication between husband and wife.  But in several cases, you absolutely do want it in the communications husbands and wives have outside the home.  What do I mean?

Stop me if you’ve heard this one.

Christian husband goes out with his buddies.

“Hey, glad (wife’s name) finally let you out!”

“No doubt.  It’s nice to be released from the ball & chain every once in a while.”

“I hear that.  (Other dude’s wife’s name) absolutely freaks whenever I say I want to go out.  She won’t even talk to me for like 15 minutes.”

“Don’t get me started on the cold shoulder thing.  Last week I…”

And the conversation continues.  The same scenario can involve a group of wives getting together and collectively lamenting the shortcomings of their husbands.  Or just an individual conversation (say between a parent & their married child) going over what they get annoyed about in their marriage.

It’s these conversations that needs to be killed.  This is where you need to just stop talking.   Making your spouse look bad in front of your friends or whoever else is not just making conversation or having a laugh.  It’s marital sabotage.

Why do I think so? A couple of reasons:

  1. People have itching ears for dirt.  Sites like TMZ exist only because people want to know and see the sin in other people’s lives. They love it.  They spend money to find out about it.  We’ll take 2 seconds looking at our own sin and 2 hours breaking down someone else’s.  So if someone seems willing to talk about the faults of their significant other, you can bet someone else is going to be there rooting them on to dig deeper and dish out more.
  2. We have a desire to be appreciated & liked.  If we’ve got some information that other people take an interest in hearing, we’re likely to offer more and more details all in exchange for a bigger laugh or more rapt attention.  The kind of people that desire this info, desire the attention that will come with passing it along.  So it won’t be long before everybody knows what you think sucks about your spouse.  This is a good thing?
  3. “The one who states his case first seems right, until the other comes and examines him.” (Proverbs 18:17).  That is to say, when you’re talking about all your spouse’s shortcomings with your friends, you’re inadvertently (I hope) painting a picture of your marriage with you as the victim, struggling through until the sweet release of death parts you.  So now everyone has a whacked out view of your marriage and it’ll only get worse if your spouse is equally willing to talk smack.

Those are just the problems that come from the outside perspective.  You effectively dishonor your spouse when you verbally drag them through the mud, and you teach others that such is a part of marriage and perfectly acceptable.  But it’s not.

Now you may say – “So what! Let them think that.  It doesn’t change how much I love him/her.”

Are you sure about that?

Ever have something come into your life that annoys you?  Then you start talking with someone about it and you go over it and over it and soon you’re filled with soul crushing rage for the former annoyance?  I’ve seen memos sent by a Boss turns into an affront against the recipient’s very being after the topic was kicked around the water cooler long enough.  The same thing applies to relationships.  ”Dude, my wife’s cooking is horrible.” easily turns into “Your cooking is awful! And you know what else?” // full disclosure – my wife’s cooking is THE BOMB.

More importantly, gossiping about your spouse in no way resembles the relationship between Christ and the church it is modeled after.  Jesus loves the church.  Fully. In spite of the blemishes and spots.  Jesus makes the church pure as snow through his sacrificial death.  He doesn’t sit back looking at the church and lament their sinfulness (Sorry to break it to any political cartoonists hoping to recycle the gag about Jesus looking down from a cloud and getting all bummed about His sheep).    Christ predestined his church because that’s what he chose to do – not because of how awesome we are.  Take that view to marriage – that the charge of the Christian husband is to love his wife like Christ loves the church… and then explain to me how exposing all the sins and shortcomings of your wife to whoever you’re talking to is an apt illustration of how Christ views you and your sins.  It’s not.  So just stop talking.