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Newsletter
Crossing the Line: The Sin of Androgyny PDF Print E-mail
Written by Jeremy Bickelhaupt   
Thursday, 16 February 2012 10:42
Puke, Vomit, Hurl. These are the best words I can bring up (pun intended) to describe my disgust for cultural androgyny – the societal blurring of the gender lines. We live in a culture where masculinity is criticized for its rough exterior and insensitivity, and feminism is elevated as the preferred trait among men. To succumb to this idea, it is now acceptable for parents buy their son girls’ jeans and allow him to grow his hair out long enough to make Rapunzel jealous. This same culture that belittles masculinity in men, promotes it for women. Our daughters are told that there are no barriers or rules for dress. Anything goes, even if that means looking the part of their male counterparts. Society warns that it would be an epic failure to ask individuals to don a gender-appropriate hairstyle or wear gender-appropriate attire because “you may damage their psyche” and you might “limit their opportunity to express individuality.” In the 1970s, Sandra Bem – the inventor of the Bem Sex-Role Inventory and a highly-motivated women’s rights activist – theorized that all humans can be classified by their traits: masculine (instrumental traits), feminine (expressive traits), androgynous (high masculine and feminine traits) or undifferentiated (low masculine and feminine traits). Bem’s study and theories of androgyny can be argued to have some validity in the sense of classifying traits, since it is true that both male and female bodies produce both testosterone (male hormone) and estrogen (female hormone) and the levels of these hormones vary greatly by individual. Scientifically, it is possible that a man might produce more estrogen than another, thus causing him to have a higher voice or less body hair or be more emotionally expressive than other men. But does this “feminine” classification permit him to behave and dress like a woman? Regardless of the hormone levels of an individual – whether they favor the masculine, feminine, androgynous or undifferentiated traits– God is specific in His creation. In nature, He has made male and female (Gen. 1:27). Hormones distinguish traits, not gender. Bem’s study is dangerous because it has done more than classify character traits; it tries to define gender based on those traits. Consequently, it has opened the door for people to justify the acceptability of crossing the gender line. Scripture instructs God’s people to draw a line between the genders. “The woman shall not wear that which pertaineth unto a man neither shall a man put on a woman’s garment: for all that do so are abomination unto the LORD thy God (Deut. 22:5).” “Doth not even nature itself teach you, that, if a man have long hair, it is a shame unto him? But if a woman have long hair, it is a glory to her: for her hair is given her for a covering (I Cor. 11:15).” Although these trends disgust me, I can’t say that I am surprised. The Bible warns us that in the last days, “men shall be lovers of their own selves (II Tim. 3:1-9).” Today’s culture is consumed with outward appearance, which is really a reflection of the inner self. The worldly man’s heart is filled with wickedness, so why should we be surprised when his sin spills out and alters his appearance? In a sense, this behavior is expected from the worldly crowd. Really, we should we expect nothing less when our entertainment industry (ie. TV, movies, music, fashion, etc.) bombards us with unisex propaganda. For example, the openly homosexual Ellen Degeneres flaunts her masculine fashion and behavior on her daily talk show. Most of her attire – from her haircut to her PF Flyers – screams masculinity. On the other end, you have the late Michael Jackson, whose long hair, soft-toned skin and effeminate voice warranted public speculation regarding his normalcy. But the public has not only accepted these oddities, they have embraced and mimicked it. Perhaps Christian parents don’t think androgyny to be a big deal. Perhaps they don’t care the effects of it on their children. What a sad state to disregard such an important issue. Androgyny has led to a plethora of societal problems including homosexuality, promiscuity and immorality. Christian parents have dropped the ball in this area, many claiming that they don’t want to interfere with their child’s freedom of expression. Some fear their children will rebel against them if they enforce strict dress standards. What they fail to realize is that fearing the child is evidence of who is in control! Take a stand and lead your children so they don’t fall victim to androgyny. The topic should disgust you. My choice of words in the introduction (puke, vomit, hurl) was chosen not to be crude, but because I believe God feels the same about us. No doubt, we are in the Laodicean church age and Christians are growing apathetic. We go to church and are instructed to be separate and Spirit-filled, yet many have no conviction of sin. The church-going majority are lukewarm and that makes God sick! He is ready to “spue” them out of his mouth (Rev. 3:14-15).” Androgynous philosophy is sinful and Christians should stand firm against it – even if it means squelching your child’s “freedom to express himself.” Remove the androgynous influences in your home. Replace movies, television and worldly music with more family-oriented activities that glorify God. You can’t alter their hormones or change their personality, but you can – as a parent – keep your children from crossing the gender line that God so distinctly created.?
 
It's A Wonderful Life PDF Print E-mail
Written by Pastor Richard Bickelhaupt   
Thursday, 16 February 2012 10:40
That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith; that ye, being rooted and grounded in love, May be able to comprehend with all saints what is the breadth, and length, and depth, and height; And to know the love of Christ, which passeth knowledge, that ye might be filled with all the fulness of God." (Eph 3:17-19) Every Christmas season one of my favorite movies –It’s A Wonderful Life– is televised. Jimmy Stewart plays George Bailey, the head of a small town building and loan. Underpaid, overworked and unappreciated, George Bailey comes to his wit’s end and is contemplating suicide. As he contemplates the attempt, he makes the statement, “I wish I’d never been born.” George Bailey thought his life was a waste and worthless. His current trial made him forget that he really did have a wonderful life. Throughout the film, George is shown what life would have been like had he not been born at all. The movie’s message conveyed the idea that each person’s life touches all those it comes into contact with. This same message is also true of each believer. We are saved from our sins the day we ask Christ to save us. Then we start living the Christian life. Many may look back at the “fun” sinful pleasures they left behind and begin to desire them once again. Like Lot, weak Christians “pitch their tent toward Sodom,” and long for the unfruitful, destructive desires of the flesh. Those in the world tell of the great time they are having and what Christians are missing. Christians who revert to their former life will soon discover that it really isn’t such a wonderful life. Unfortunately they realize this only after the world has used and abused them. I did not get saved until I was twenty years old. By that time, a lot of sin and regret had entered my life. The night my first born came into the world, I was drunk. I couldn’t drive my wife to the hospital. Her sister had to drive us; I rode in the back seat. As the delivery proceeded, I began to feel sick because of the liquor. The doctors kicked me out of the delivery room. The lost world may tell you that living a sinful life is “a wonderful life,” but it’s not! It is a life of shame and regret. It wasn’t long after that I trusted Christ. I regret and am ashamed of all of those sinful decisions. Thank God there is forgiveness and new life in Christ. When a person gets saved, the past is the past. I never want to go back! Please consider the worldly view of “a wonderful life.” With drinking, drugs and tobacco comes the wasting of necessary funds to provide for your family. It promotes the wrong values to all who come into contact with you. It creates sickness and premature death. Does this sound like a wonderful life? With a free sexual lifestyle comes broken homes, distrust, financial stress, STD’s and death! But the world says, “Oh, but it’s a wonderful life. Really? Examples of sin and their consequences are endless. All the world really has to offer is brokenness, heartache and regret – not “a wonderful life.” Now consider the life of the Christian who is living for the Lord. As a saved person he is forgiven and blessed. Since I’ve been saved, I have not had one drop of alcohol. No hangovers. No regrets of my drunken behavior. After nearly thirty-seven years of marriage, I can honestly say I have no regrets for being faithful to our marriage vows. Every night my wife and I pray together. We pray for our children and grandchildren. We pray for our church family and those in need. We pray for our lost friends. We do all of this with no regrets the next morning. We endeavor to walk in the Spirit of God each day, and as we do, it is with no regrets. Like George Bailey, many think they are missing out on a lot as a Christian, and they are. They miss out on hardships, heartache, sickness, and much regret. Jesus Christ said in John 10:10 that He came to give life and to give it more abundantly. In the passage above, the Apostle Paul wanted the Ephesian believers to understand the blessedness of a spirit-filled Christian life. He wanted them to be able to fully understand the fullness –“what is the breadth, and length, and depth, and height”– of the life of the Christian. Paul wanted them “to know the love of Christ, which passeth knowledge, that ye might be filled with all the fullness of God." Consider all that the Lord as done for you, the forgiveness that He offers, the healing that He gives, the strength He grants and His provisions. Certainly, you would have to admit the Godly Christian life is, “A Wonderful Life!”?
 
Reaping a Harvest PDF Print E-mail
Written by Richard Bickelhaupt   
Wednesday, 14 September 2011 10:28

The harvest season is a wonderful time of year. It is a time when we rejoice in God’s blessings. It should be a time of plenty, of joy, and of praise to our God. This was a special time for the children of Israel. It was during this time that the “feast of tabernacles” or the “feast of ingathering” took place. The feast of ingathering is named so because it took place after the gathering in or completion of the harvest. It was also called the feast of tabernacles, in commemoration of having dwelt forty years in tabernacles or tents in the wilderness. The feast was kept from the fourteenth to the twenty-first day of the month Tishri, which is equivalent to our latter part of September and early part of October. It was the seventh month of their ecclesiastical calendar, and the first of their civil year. (Lev. 23:34-36; Deut. 16:13-15). Much is said about the harvest in the Bible. Our Savior, and Master teacher expounded on the importance of the harvest many times throughout the Gospels. In John 4:35-36, Jesus says, “Say not ye, There are yet four months, and then cometh harvest? behold, I say unto you, Lift up your eyes, and look on the fields; for they are white already to harvest. And he that reapeth receiveth wages, and gathereth fruit unto life eternal: that both he that soweth and he that reapeth may rejoice together.” I believe if we would take a good look at this passage and really consider what our Lord is teaching, it would change our lives! Today, let’s consider this harvest that Jesus desires us to reap. Jesus said, “Say not ye, there are yet four months, and then cometh the harvest?” According to chronology of this passage, most believe it was about January 13 when Jesus spoke these words. In Adam Clarke’s Commentary on John, Clark stated: “the harvest did not begin till after the Passover, which was fixed on the fourteenth day of the month Nisan, which correlates to our March, and sometimes extends into April. The barley harvest was the first; after that the wheat; and both were finished by Pentecost. For, in the feast of Pentecost, the first fruits of all the harvest were carried to the temple, and waved before the Lord.” Accordingly, the time of Jesus’ statement was in the heart of winter. Our Lord did not refer to the reaping of grain or the fruit of the land, but of lost souls in desperate need of the Savior. Jesus continued to reinforce this statement and calls His disciples to action. First, He tells us to behold the harvest fields. The word behold, according to Strong’s Concordance, is in the imperative – a command. He then states, “Lift up your eyes, and look on the fields.” So what is the Lord commanding us to do? He is commanding us to “lift up our eyes,” (get our eyes off ourselves) and look closely at a world that is lost, and in desperate need of God’s saving grace. Just what would we see if we were to examine the harvest fields closely? Rebellion, drugs, adultery, violence, murders are all a part of a world that has forgotten God. To see the depravity of man, all you need to do is to read the local paper, or watch the local news. Every day the local news reports murder, sexual crimes, armed robberies, extortion, and the list goes on. Many think that the answer lies on electing the right candidate, but the moral, social and economic problems that we face are all tied to the fact that we have turned our back on God, and refused His Word as our final authority for our lives and our nation. God’s Word clearly states: “Blessed is the nation whose God is the LORD; and the people whom he hath chosen for his own inheritance (Ps. 33:12).” Will God bless a nation that uses its tax dollars to fund the murdering of our unborn through the means of abortion? Will He bless a nation that condones, promotes, glamorizes, and legalizes such wicked practices as homosexuality, sodomy, adultery and fornication? Will His blessings fall to a nation that has kicked His Word and prayer out of the school house? What about a nation that denies the existence of the Divine Creator and promotes the mindless theory of evolution? Will God bless a nation that has forsaken the House of God for the football field, soccer field, or the baseball diamond? Our country is in a mess, but what is the Christian to do? Jesus said we are to lift up our eyes and look on the fields (John 4:35). He tells us the harvest is now! It – the lost souls – are “white already unto harvest.” Jesus tells us that laboring in His fields “gathereth fruit unto life eternal.” What greater labor is there? There will be eternal rejoicing because of reaching souls for Christ (Jn 4:36). How then can we be effective in God’s harvest fields? Here are some thoughts: First, make sure you are His child. You will never be able to be the salt and light that you need to be until you are born again by His Spirit. Second, be a Bible-filled Christian. The ApostlePaul said, “Let the Word of Christ dwell in you richly (Col. 3:16).” The lost world needs Bible-filled Christians to point them to the Word of God and the God of the Word! Next, be sure you are walking in the Spirit, (Gal. 5:16, 25). To walk in the Spirit is to be directed by the Holy Spirit through the Word of God. It is to be sensitive to His leading, and to be in constant fellowship with Him through His Word. We will never be effective in God’s harvest fields serving God when we allow the world to creep in. We must serve and worship Him in Spirit and in truth (Jn 4:24). Finally, take steps to follow the Great Commission (Matt. 28:19-20). We are commanded to witness, win, and disciple those who come to Christ. It is not enough to know the gospel, we must communicate it, and do so under the influence and power of God’s Holy Spirit. Today, there are almost seven billion people on the earth. Wickedness is prevalent. The lost world will accommodate Satan’s devices! The Christian’s answer is Jesus Christ. The next time we watch the evening news and want to complain about how bad it is, maybe we need to listen to Jesus’ command and enter into His harvest fields. God help us to be an effective harvester of souls for the Lord.?

Last Updated on Thursday, 16 February 2012 10:37
 
Sowing on Good Ground PDF Print E-mail
Written by Jeremy Bickelhaupt   
Wednesday, 14 September 2011 10:25
By no means am I a farmer. As a matter of fact, I really don’t know a whole lot about agriculture. What I have learned is simply basic knowledge gained in a secondary-level science class: Put seed in dirt and water regularly. That’s it. For the most part, that usually has worked for me. But on occasion, my horticultural skills – or lack thereof – have been exposed in the form of a pathetic-looking plant. I remember a specific example, when my wife and I moved into our home a little over five years ago. One of the things we tried to do the first spring there was to add a flower bed in the front of the house. The project involved me mounding up some soil to elevate the bed higher than the grass level. I took dirt from the side of my home, where a rock bed would go, and moved it to the front where the flower bed would be. As I dug up the top soil, I noticed that it was grayish and very brittle and dusty. Beyond noticing this, I didn’t think much more about it. All was looking good – like a professional landscaping job if I do say so myself. The flowers that year didn’t seem to grow very well. It wasn’t until the next spring that I realized the problem. As I began planting the new plants, I saw what was left of the old roots from the preceding year. They were small and shallow and didn’t really grow outside of the pint of potting soil it was sold in. That old, nutrient-deprived soil that I had moved from the side of the house had compacted and had created an impasse. Watering it only made it worse. The soil needed air and nutrients and a little cultivation, something that had been lacking for years when it lay along side of my house. In my resolve, I added a fertilizer and mixed in some potting soil to the flower bed. It looked fluffy, dark and fertile when I was done. The flowers that year grew well – too well. They wound up spreading over the entire bed until the mulch had disappeared. Evidently, in my case, it was all about the soil. Jesus illustrates a very similar point to his disciples regarding soul-winning in Mark 4. He tells the parable of the sower. Take a minute and read verses 1-20 – I’ll wait for you. Several types of soil are mentioned in this passage, and each type receives the sown seed differently. The parable was confusing to the disciples, so Jesus had to explain it in verses 13-20. The very first clarification He gave them was that the seed is the Word (vs. 14). We now understand that Christians are to sow the Word of God – planting it in our hearts and souls. The question is: “How will you receive the seed? How’s your soil?” Let’s look at the soil types Jesus mentions in this chapter to see if you can identify with any of them. The way side (v.4, 15) The seed that is sown on the way side takes no root and is plucked up by Satan. Think of seeds that have fallen onto the ground – not planted in the ground. Birds (v. 4) and insects see it and consume it. The way side is a soil type that identifies the heart of a person who hears the word, but is not convinced due to Satan’s devices. Perhaps it is a sin he cannot part with or an attitude of rebellion. Whatever the device, the Word cannot take root. The stony ground (v. 5, 16-17) The seed that falls on stony ground takes root, but is unable to reach life-sustaining depth. When the sun appears, the root is scorched, for the root is shallow and unable to with stand the heat. This soil typifies the new Christian who immediately and gladly accepts the Word, but fails to do anything with it. When trials in life come and his faith is tested, this Christian gives up and dies spiritually. He does not receive the Word from which to draw his strength. If he does hear the Word, Jesus says that this person is offended. (Kind of like when you instruct someone to do right based on Biblical principles and he takes offense to what is offered). The end result is that this Christian is unable to bear the difficulties that arise from the Christian faith, and he is destroyed. The thorny ground (v. 7, 18-19) The seed that falls among the thorns will sprout, but they will soon be overtaken and choked out by the weeds and thorns. The roots of the thorn are aggressive and far-reaching. They rob the good seed from essential nutrients to grow. The thorny ground exemplifies the Christian who allows burdens and worldly pleasures (“deceitfulness of riches,” “lust of other things” – vs. 19) to overtake him. He gives the Word of God a chance, but values the things of the world more than that of the Word. Therefore, the Word is quickly overtaken by the cares of this world – making the Word of none effect. The good ground Seeds that fall on good ground are abundantly fruitful. Of all the other types of soil, Jesus is clear and concise in his explanation. He doesn’t expound on it like the other soil types, because the results of sowing on good ground are obvious. The good ground represents the heart of the believer who hears the Word and receives it. He accepts everything it has to offer him. He allows the Word to take root. Even more, he allows the root to penetrate the deepest part of his soul resulting in abundant Christian growth. His soil type is evident from fruit yielded in his life. Where has the Word fallen in your life? Is it able to take root in your life, or will it be destroyed? Jesus’ message is quite clear. Bad soil results in the destruction of the seed; Good soil will manifest abundant fruit. What kind of soil do you possess?
Last Updated on Thursday, 16 February 2012 10:38
 
What's Imperative: Education...A Christian Parent's Biblical Responsibility PDF Print E-mail
Written by Jeremy Bickelhaupt   
Monday, 26 April 2010 16:56

from The Earnest Contender, Winter 2010

By Jeremy Bickelhaupt


“Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old, he will not depart from it.”  The preceding verse is what we in the English language call an imperative sentence.  An imperative sentence gives a command or states a request.  The subject of an imperative sentence is always an understood you.  The command is implied to you.  Thankfully, this verse does not read, “Nations, train up a child…” implying that the government train our children; however, today’s parents act as though this is how it is read.  God did not constitute the government to educate your kids, He chose you, the parent.

Home-schooling should be the first choice for Christian families.  Unfortunately, we live in a society where both parents are forced to work to support our lavish lifestyles.  Children, their spirituality, and their educations have been sacrificed and deemed collateral damage for our choice to earn an extra paycheck. 

Thankfully, God has ordained the church to help the parent train up children.  The Christian school is a much-needed commodity today, but also a commodity many Christians refuse to utilize for whatever reason.

The purpose of the Christian school is to provide an environment that will reinforce morals and standards while achieving academic excellence to those unable to fulfill the Biblical command to educate the child themselves.  So, if that is the purpose of a Christian school, why do Christian parents fight so hard against the idea of Christian education?  Why wouldn’t a parent want the protection and security and uprightness that Christian schools offer?

Excuse one: My child’s social development might be hindered.  There is a greater chance that children who attend public schools will be more socially hindered than those attending Christian schools.  The reason for this is because publicly educated kids are classified, peer-pressured, and negatively influenced as opposed to kids attending Christian schools, who are positively edified and encouraged on a consistent basis by their peers and teachers.  There are so many ways in today’s society to socialize your children.  The public school should be the last choice for socialization, while the church should be the first.

Excuse two: Public schools aren’t that bad.  Having attended public school, I can tell you that they are worse than bad.  Just ten years ago, I was there.  Let me just list a few of the things that I endured as a Christian in the public high school.  I viewed inappropriate movies like Schindler’s List, Das Boat, Romeo and Juliet (each containing nudity and explicit sexual scenes), Austin Powers, and many more.  I had teachers who swore in class (my German teacher taught us all the cuss words first, because that’s what he wanted to know first when he first began studying the language.)  “Safe sex” was the politically correct thing to teach and the administration went as far as to pass out condoms after prom.  Perhaps the most vulgar and disturbing conversations took place in the locker rooms (especially after swim class with girls).  Since becoming a father, there is no way I would send my little girl to a school where the boys would think about her in such a vulgar manner.  During my sophomore year, drug dogs were brought in to raid lockers.  I experienced a bomb threat during my senior year.  The list continues.

Excuse three:  I went to public school, and I turned out just fine.  Fine is a relative term.  How much better could you have been if you were exempt from having to endure all the atrocities I listed in excuse number two?  Don’t settle for “fine.”  How much better than “fine” would you have been if you had not been subjected to all these negative influences?  Would your Christian walk be stronger?  Would you have a closer walk with the Lord?  Would you take stronger stands against immorality?  The truth is that your over-exposure to these improper behaviors has numbed your sense of what’s right and wrong, so you view it as “not that bad.”  Let’s remember, God is not relative. 

Excuse four:  I can’t afford private schooling.  OCCA’s tuition cost is well below the average fee of local daycare facilities.  Besides that, if you are truly interested in seeing your child enroll in a Christian school, it is very unlikely that a Christian school will prevent your child from attending due to financial hardships.  These schools work with families to make the education affordable and feasible.  Remember, a Christian school’s focus is not money; it’s your child.  Besides, the Treasurer of the Christian school owns it all and does not need your money to see that the school has the finances to operate.

Excuse five:  I want my child to be involved in sports and other extra-curricular activities.  Christian schools do offer sports, but is that what life is all about?  Currently our school has partnered with Temple Christian Academy (Fremont) and Harvest Baptist Academy (Clyde) to offer several sports, but we always encourage academics and spirituality first.  Sports can be a great tool to teach sportsmanship and healthy competition, but shouldn’t the focus of a school be academics?  It should sicken the taxpayer to see a large, successful athletic program while, at the same time, see the school system achieve a less than excellent academic status.  A Christian must prioritize.  Perhaps if more Christians would support their local church and its Christian school, then maybe there would be enough students and resources to hire on staff to teach other extra-curriculars like music, band, drama, and sports.

Excuse six:  Others may misjudge me if I send my child to private school.  Yes, there are those who look at parents who privately educate their children as being haughty and better than the average family.  They associate private education with upper class people, yet this is seldom the case.   In most cases, parents of Christian school children struggle and sacrifice for their children’s education because they want the best possible environment for them.  Outsiders may also associate private educators as being religious radicals who brainwash children.  Not so.  In fact, the secular philosophies and teachers in the public realm do more brainwashing.  In regards to being judged, let’s consider the source:  God or man.

Excuse seven:  Christian schools can’t measure up to their public counterparts; they are inferior.  Academically, most Christian schools, if administered properly, surpass the public schools.  Smaller classrooms result in more one-on-one attention.   There is more accountability to parents from the staff and teachers.  Research shows that Christian school students learn more in grades K-5 than public school children in grades K-8.  If tuition were not a factor in private education, secular parents would flock to the doors of Christian schools in order to enroll their children in the academically superior environment they have to offer.  Spiritually, there is no contest; public schools are inferior.  They instill very little, if any, moral or spiritual character in their students.  Who can’t measure up to whom? 

Excuse eight:  I already pay for public education, so I will send my child where I send my money.   We are unfortunate to be living in a time when we are forced as citizens to support the failing, immoral, government education system through taxation.  The bottom line is this:  you’re taxed to pay for a lot of products and services that you don’t support.  For example, just because I pay taxes to support the Welfare system doesn’t mean I am forced to agree with it.  In fact, I would not apply for Welfare regardless of the hardships life may throw at me, because I hold myself to a higher standard of “if a man doesn’t work, neither should he eat.”   Take a stand for your child’s education, even if that means a little taxation without representation.

Excuse nine:  I want my child to shine the light of Christ in the public schools.  Truthfully, one would think that one small light would stand out brightly in the dark confines of the public school, but in reality, this is very rarely the case.  The old adage says, “One bad apple spoils the bushel.”  Well, how much quicker will one good apple spoil if the whole bushel is rotten?  This excuse doesn’t even make sense for children under grade eight.  They, for the most part, are the ones impressionable, not the ones to make an impression.  Likewise, most high school-aged students will blend in with their environment, hoping no one will think of them as “that strange Christian kid.”  I know; I’ve been there.  As much as I knew of the Bible, and to much of my regret, I did very little let my light for Christ shine.

I’ve argued against nine common excuses Christians give for embracing public education.  The list of excuses could go on and on.   No doubt, there will be people who read this and roll their eyes in skepticism, but those rolling eyes will one day become tearful ones as they see a new, more wicked generation approach with their child defiantly leading the way.  My purpose in writing this is not to offend; rather, it  is to open the Christian parent’s eyes to an alternative to public education.  I plead with Christians to embrace the Word of God.  It commands you to train your own child.  If the primary option of home schooling is not workable, then let the Christian school help.  It is imperative that you obey God’s command to train up your children!

Last Updated on Monday, 26 April 2010 16:57
 
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