Sunday, September 27, 2009

Thoughts on homeschooling

This post is in response to a query from a correspondent. I’m going to throw out some random, perhaps somewhat rambling, thoughts on homeschooling. I’m sure that other people’s mileage may vary but I hope these thoughts are found to be of some help.

  • No-brainer: homeschooling not for everyone, but for most it beats government schools handily

I don’t think homeschooling is a panacea; almost everyone I know who has done homeschooling has been successful with it, but I do remember meeting one family doing homeschooling where I thought the kids were likely to turn out messed up. However, I never did any follow-up with them so I can’t say for sure. Even if the children of that one family did turn out messed up, my personal experience and observations tell me that the success rate with homeschooling is extremely high -- close to 100% (depending on how you define success) -- and statistically speaking it is a far better bet than gambling your kids’ future on government schooling. Part of that may simply be a reflection of the fact that parents who homeschool are a "self-selected" group which tends to have attributes that give their kids an advantage where educational matters are concerned. I think there is that aspect but I think there is also more to it than that. I think that generally speaking the homeschooling environment is inherently healthier for children than the kind of environment a child is likely to encounter in the government-run schools.

(I’m talking primarily with Christians in mind because I don’t have any non-Christian acquaintances who homeschool. I’m sure the number is growing but I have not had a chance to get to know any of them yet.)

  • Every educational system has as its aim the creation of a certain kind of adult. What kind of an adult do you want your child to become?

For the Christian the primary objective of education is to pass on the faith to the next generation. For the Christian, if we fail in that department then everything else is pretty irrelevant. (For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?) Of course, the modern American government school is just about the worst environment for a Christian to put his kids in if he wants to see them educated from a Christian perspective. Here in Japan, where I live, the government-run schools are not nearly as bad academically as America’s have become, but the main problem from the Christian parent’s perspective remains the same: the schools have a very insidious ability to undermine a child’s Christian faith.

The reason for this insidious ability is not because the schools openly attack the God of the Bible. Rather, it is because they simply ignore God. In ignoring God they claim to be preserving religious neutrality. However, the Christian faith itself is largely irrelevant if it is even possible to give a child a proper education without continually bringing God into the picture. There ought to be distinctly Christian perspectives on every aspect of learning, and when a Christian child goes through the government school system where just about everything is taught without any reference to God, the child is powerfully imprinted with an unspoken message that is seriously harmful to maintenance of the Christian faith: "Child, your religion is for the most part irrelevant to living in this world – see, we can do ALL THIS STUFF without God!" As a result of going though such an education, almost all Christian children become CINOs -- Christians in name only -- at least as far as their thinking and activity on a day-to-day basis in this world is concerned. I have seen numerous reports over the years all giving jaw-dropping numbers on the rate at which children of evangelical Christians fall away from the faith by the time they reach adulthood. Some have said the number is as high as 80% -- nearly eight out of ten Christian children turn away from the faith by the time they become adults. Such things are not entirely unheard of among homeschoolers, but the rate is far lower.

That’s the main reason why my wife and I decided to homeschool our children in Japan, even though the academic level of Japanese schools is not bad and the language was not a problem for us (I’m American and my wife is Korean but Japanese is her first language and my Japanese ability is near native speaker level.) Other, secondary factors entering into our decision included 1) the fact that by homeschooling we could give them a more bilingual education than would have been possible in most schools, and 2) by homeschooling we would be able to afford to raise a larger family.

  • Homeschooling without government interference: grateful for relative freedom in Japan

Because we are foreigners, the Japanese government could care less how we educate our kids. Total freedom! Believe me, every time I read about how homeschoolers around the world are abused by their local governments I thank God that we were able to "fall through the cracks." (Anyone with an opportunity to fall through the cracks should do so. Get in that crack and stay there! Happy is the man who lives beneath the government’s radar.) Despite the fact that homeschooling is technically illegal in Japan, my Japanese friends who homeschool have had experiences with local school and government officials that range from "only mildly annoying" to "totally cool." I think one of the worse cases was that of one of my friends who is fined 1,000 yen per child per year for failing to send them to an approved school. 1,000 yen is roughly US$10, so it is basically a symbolic slap on the wrist. I have no idea how that was decided; I think it was an entirely discretionary, arbitrary act on the part of some petty local official. A typically Japanese solution . . . whilst American bureaucrats might be sticklers for enforcing the letter of the law, Japanese bureaucrats are often happy to treat rules with some flexibility and as long as nobody loses face in the process, people will be left with a considerable degree of freedom to go their own way.

  • The United Nations and hostility to homeschooling

Governments are weird -- Japan is a country where homeschooling is technically illegal and yet apparently just about anyone can do it with only minor annoyances; contrast that with the situation of the Johannson family in Sweden, whose son was taken away by the police despite the fact that homeschooling is supposedly legal there. Generally speaking, Japanese police and bureaucrats are not nearly as noxious in the way they deal with individual people in the society as their Western counterparts are. (I used to own several guns in Japan -- legally -- and when I decided to relinquish my firearms license a few years ago the local police argued with me, trying to get me to change my mind and continue owning guns!)

Because the legal situation surrounding homeschooling in each area can vary, anyone contemplating homeschooling should familiarize himself with the current legal status of homeschooling in their area. One might decide to homeschool even if it is technically illegal, as here in Japan, but one needs to make an informed decision based on the circumstances that actually apply in his own situation.

Some United Nations’ documents that might be of interest:

Convention on the Rights of the Child (especially articles 28 and 29)

Convention against Discrimination in Education

I’m not a legal expert, but it is my understanding that in Japan, the concept of compulsory education is such that THE GOVERNMENT is seen as having an obligation to provide every child with an education (up to the age of 16). In other words, every child under the age of 16 has a legal claim on the government whereby he can demand that the government provide him with an education at no charge. The implications of this for the homeschooling parent include the fact that if the parent decides to homeschool a child even though the child WANTS to be attending a conventional school, the government’s position is that the parent is violating the child’s right to avail himself of the government’s educational services.

The flip side of this, however, is that if it is the child who rejects the government’s educational services (preferring instead to do homeschooling), the parents cannot be said to be violating the child’s rights by doing homeschooling.

In other words, it is my understanding that in Japan the "compulsion" in "compulsory education" is on the government rather than on the child. Up to the age of 16, the child has a right to avail himself of government schooling but no obligation to do so. The state has an obligation to make government schooling available to the child but no right to demand that the child partake of it.

I heard the above from Japanese homeschooling parents who were trying to legally adopt a child who had been placed in their care after his Chinese parents decided not to take the child (then just a baby) back with them to China because China’s one-child policy meant they would be subject to severe penalties upon returning to China from overseas with a second child. The family court judge in charge of the family’s case advised them to withdraw their request to adopt the boy until he became older, and the reason given was the fact that they had decided to homeschool the boy. The judge told them that if he was forced to issue a judgment he would have to judge against them because the fact that THEY rather than the CHILD had opted to do homeschooling, the parents were violating the child’s rights. He added that if it had been the child who refused to go to school and insisted on doing homeschooling, he would be able to judge in the family’s favor and grant the adoption because they could not be said to be in violation of the child’s rights.

I mention that because the judge in question was apparently basing his views upon the way Japan interprets the two United Nations’ conventions referred to above, and since the USA is a signatory of those conventions as well, this perspective may be relevant.

I take it as self-evident that homeschooling will be more likely to succeed and less likely to run into trouble with the local authorities if not only both parents but also the children involved are unanimous in their support of the decision to homeschool.

By the way, I have never met a homeschooled child who struck me as lacking in social skills or "socialization" or whatever people care to call their worry that homeschooled children might somehow lose the ability to function effectively as members of a group, on account of having been homeschooled. I can cheerfully confirm that that is a myth and not something that anyone needs to worry about. Numerous studies have been done and none of them found any difficulties in that department. (The single family whose future prospects for success with homeschooling that I worried about had kids with pretty atrocious social skills, but I suspect they would have been no better in that department if they had been attending conventional schools. Some people are just like that.)

  • Major approaches: "Enrolled distance learning," independent use of pre-packaged curricula, "roll your own," local/online tutors, self-study . . .

For the most part, a would-be homeschooler in the USA has numerous advantages over homeschoolers in Japan. There is now a full-fledged homeschooling industry in the USA with many curricula from which to choose. In fact I think the range of materials and options available to homeschoolers in the USA can be rather daunting. Japan does not have that yet, but that lack is partially offset by Japan’s cram school industry. Basically, these schools serve as tutors to help students pass standardized tests and the entrance exams for various schools and universities. There are many nationwide chains as well as smaller local operations and probably every student in Japan is within an easy commute of such a school. Many of the schools have correspondence courses where the student studies on his own and answers the assigned questions which are emailed or faxed to the school for grading. There are also many video and DVD courses, and even Japan’s government-run television station, NHK, has numerous educational television programs to augment conventional school courses. Every major bookstore in Japan has a section where the texts for the private-sector and public sector "cram school" materials are sold. So basically there are numerous ways for the Japanese homeschooler to skin the cat of getting an education. Some make heavy use of curricula in English from overseas, some make heavy use of the materials available in Japanese, and some combine the two.

  • For the Christian homeschooler, the Bible is the starting point of all education

My wife and I decided to just "wing it." For us as Christians, we felt very strongly that homeschooling is a very "natural" and "organic" extension of family devotions, whereby we pray and sing and study the word of God together as a family each day. The Bible gives us our basic frame of reference for pretty much everything else so it formed the core and starting point of our education.

Deuteronomy chapter 6 provides what I consider to be the most fundamental verses in the Bible concerning education of children.

The whole chapter, from beginning to end, is relevant. It is not long. It is rich in insights into education, from various angles. Note who is doing the saving -- God, and God alone -- and there is no mention of the State as savior anywhere. Indeed, God is presented as saving His people FROM the divinized State in the form of Pharaoh. There is no mention of the State as having a legitimate role to play in education -- none at all. Now in case anyone might be inclined to dismiss that by saying something like "Well of course not -- the ancient world had yet not been enlightened enough to see that the State has an important role to play in education, and as a pre-industrial society they didn’t need much in the way of an education in any case," let me refer such a reader to Daniel chapter 1 which disproves that entirely. The major step in enslaving any people is the enslavement of their minds.

Indeed, in the ancient world, the divinized State, or its god-king, was seen not only as the source of education but of all sorts of social welfare, as represented by the image of Daniel chapter 4 of the god-king as a great tree beneath which all the creatures under heaven gather for shade and to receive sustenance from the fruit therof:

And yet that same chapter shows the one true living God revealing that god-king to be "beastly." And this is affirmed again in Daniel chapter 7; what the god-king Nebuchadnezzar had seen in Daniel chapter 2 as a glorious vision of a mighty man is seen from the biblical perspective in chapter 7: the divinized State is presented as a series of beasts emerging from the sea to ravage the inhabitants of the earth, until they are finally defeated by the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords, who establishes His never-ending kingdom based on His personal righteousness.

History, and hence education, is largely a war of competing stories. True stories versus false stories, our stories versus their stories. There is power in our stories; God is the ultimate story-teller; He is the one that everyone else has to imitate, and to the extent that their false stories are able to wield influence, it reflects the degree to which they have managed to imitate Him. As a Christian parent, it is hard to imagine any little kid coming up to me, tugging at my sleeve and saying, "Tell me again the story of how we emerged from the primordial slime." In my opinion, that is a great story to tell if you want to destroy your children’s future.

Here is a great quote from Allan Bloom (writing, ironically, as an unbeliever) from The Closing of the American Mind where he explains the role of the Bible in maintaining cultural cohesion over time:

"My grandparents were ignorant people by our standards, and my grandfather held only lowly jobs. But their home was spiritually rich because all the things done in it, not only what was specifically ritual, found their origin in the Bible's commandments, and their explanation in the Bible's stories and the commentaries on them, and had their imaginative counterparts in the deeds of the myriad of exemplary heroes. My grandparents found reasons for the existence of their family and the fulfillment of their duties in serious writings, and they interpreted their special sufferings with respect to a great and ennobling past. Their simple faith and practices linked them to great scholars and thinkers who dealt with the same material, not from outside or from an alien perspective, but believing as they did, while simply going deeper and providing guidance. There was a respect for real learning, because it had a felt connection with their lives. This is what a community and a history mean, a common experience inviting high and low into a single body of belief.

"I do not believe that my generation, my cousins who have been educated in the American way, all of whom are M.D.s or Ph.D.s, have any comparable learning. When they talk about heaven and earth, the relations between men and women, parents and children, the human condition, I hear nothing but cliches, superficialities, the material of satire. I am not saying anything so trite as that life is fuller when people have myths to live by. I mean rather that a life based on the Book is closer to the truth, that it provides the material for deeper research in and access to the real nature of things. Without the great revelations, epics and philosophies as part of our natural vision, there is nothing to see out there, and eventually little left inside. The Bible is not the only means to furnish a mind, but without a book of similar gravity, read with the gravity of the potential believer, it will remain unfurnished."

  • High-quality K.I.S.S.

And this brings me to an important point. You don’t need a large number of books to get a good education. A small number of books will do just fine if they are the right books and they are used properly. The library of Harvard University began with just 400 volumes, three-fourths of which were theological works. I’m sure that in many respects, those first students at Harvard, in the late 1630s and 1640s, were better educated than the vast majority of us today. Whilst they could think very clearly, many ostensibly highly educated people today suffer from extremely muddled thinking, despite having access to far more books as well as information through other media.

At its largest point my personal library was about 5,000 volumes but I have downsized it considerably and now I doubt I have more than 2,000 volumes. But actually only a few hundred books have been directly important to our homeschooling.

Each family’s homeschooling is going to be different. I would not be so presumptuous as to suggest to anyone that they must do homeschooling in a certain way, except to point out that for the Christian the Bible must be the most fundamental book in the children’s educational life.

  • How we were led to an approach heavy on self-study, with some assistance from tutors

We drew a great deal of inspiration from the family of Dr. Arthur Robinson, and anyone interested in homeschooling would find his website to be a valuable resource.

Basically, he stressed the fact that all learning is ultimately a self-teaching process, even if supervised by a teacher. The sudden and totally unanticipated death of his wife left Dr. Robinson with a large family of kids needing to be homeschooled, but he was in no position to spoon-feed them so he decided to have his kids study mostly on their own. The approach worked just fine and he decided to share his approach and his curriculum with other people interested in doing homeschooling.

We purchased his curriculum but ended up using very little of it. What we did use was his basic methodology and for that alone the curriculum would have been worth many times the purchase price, at least for us.

We chose not to use most of his curriculum for a few reasons. First, English is the second language of my children, not their first, and we were able to find some materials in Japanese that were of higher quality than their English-language counterparts. (The English materials would have been just fine if we had not had the Japanese materials available.) Also, as Dr. Robinson is a scientist, his curriculum tends to be better for people interested in getting an education geared toward a career in science and engineering. However, all seven of my children are strongly interested in careers as performing artists (classical music), so we decided to gear their educations accordingly.

  • Sometimes, go with the flow: your life circumstances may indicate the best approach for your family

That brings me to another point: in many families the children will, due to hereditary factors or life circumstances, tend more naturally toward certain types of education than toward others. Don’t ask me why my kids all turned out to have a penchant for music; there are musicians in both our families but neither my wife nor I are particularly musical. (Especially me. My wife does have a very good ear and "sense" for music, and I think that with the right education she might have been able to do a lot musically.) But be that as it may, living in a city like Tokyo, if one gets bitten by the bug to pursue musical studies, the opportunities to study music are truly vast. There are many excellent teachers of virtually every instrument in the orchestra within commuting distance for a child, as well as for voice and instruments associated with early music such as the harpsichord, lute, viola da gamba, recorder, etc. I’m sure this is a characteristic of the larger metropolises in the advanced countries of the world. Probably one could find situations of comparable or maybe even greater musical richness in and around major American cities like New York and Chicago, but for someone like me, having grown up in a small town in the USA, the superabundance of good music teachers came as a very pleasant surprise. Life in the city lends itself very well to certain types of education, while other educations are better suited to life in the country. So the kind of education that you can give to your kids will depend a lot on your particular life circumstances. I am firmly convinced that almost any parent, anywhere, can give his or her kids a good education of some sort or another through homeschooling.

  • Even people from disadvantaged backgrounds can successfully homeschool !

If you come from what might be considered (either by your self or by others) to be a disadvantaged background, you might be tempted to think that in your case, government schools are a better choice than homeschooling. After all, they are "free." (Hah!) I'm reminded of a Japanese saying: "The most expensive things in life are 'free'." The last thing a person coming from a disadvantaged background needs is to further compound that disadvantage with government-run education.

I remember 12 years ago we took in a Japanese woman with four children whose husband had abandoned them; while they lived under our roof for one year I helped her get set up as a translator (I have my own translation company) and after they moved out one year later she was not only able to support her family as a translator and English teacher, working out of her home, she was able to successfully homeschool all four of her kids. Today one child works for a major international real estate company, helping foreign companies locate appropriate office and retail space around Japan; one maintains the computers and computer network for an American company in Japan, one is in medical school preparing to become a doctor, and one is majoring in economics at a leading Japanese university.

I mention her case because I think it shows that at least some people can successfully homeschool even under extremely disadvantaged circumstances. This is especially true if one remembers that homeschooling is not necessarily about you sitting there spoon-feeding your kids a complete education all day long. There are also many very successful homeschoolers basing their approach around self-teaching.

My blog post of the other day recommended that South African students plagued by a serious shortage of good teachers should turn to self-study using the Khan Academy, and I am convinced that if a student was eager to learn and had access to the Internet, through Khan Academy virtually anyone anywhere in the world could get an excellent education (or at least a large part of one -- the Bible study would still need to be done separately) free of charge.

Americans considering homeschooling might be interested to learn that I know several Japanese families that have opted to homeschool their children using English curricula, so far with apparent success. In fact, one family, despite the fact that the parents have limited English ability, decided to ban the use of Japanese in their home (although they made sure the kids kept up in their Japanese studies and gave the kids opportunities to speak Japanese outside the home). I lost contact with that family for a few years but a couple months ago I ran into them at a concert and was absolutely stunned by the children’s competence in English. Meeting them for the first time, never in a million years would you suspect that they were not high-level native speakers of English. The two oldest kids are now attending college in the USA and I bet they will both graduate at or near the top of their class.

Perhaps many people worry that they might not be able to homeschool their kids, due to a lack of academic credentials. Homeschooling does require that the parent invest time, but as long as a parent has the willingness and ability to invest that time, even a parent who knows next to nothing about the subjects to be taught can lead children in homeschooling. The sole requirement for a homeschooling parent to teach his or her kids is that the parent learn the same material that the kids are learning, staying one step ahead of them the whole time. Basically, that’s it in a nutshell! This means that even if you’re an unedjumacated ignoramus due to being a product of American government-run education (i.e., if you are a typical modern American), you can still homeschool. Not only that, it means that you can finally give yourself a decent education at the same time!

  • But what if . . . ?

The previous paragraph notwithstanding, it must be admitted that if your kids advance far enough in their education, sooner or later they are going to reach a point where you can no longer teach them. For example, most people who got good grades in calculus class in high school will not be able to teach their own kids calculus. That’s because you tend to forget calculus pretty quickly if you don’t use it. Don’t let that dissuade you from beginning. There is always a solution. Always. Don’t worry about it; just cross that bridge when you come to it. You can use Kahn Academy, or hire a tutor for the "tough" subjects, or even put your kids in a conventional government-run high school. Mind you, I do not like the conventional government-run high schools one bit, and I think it would be preferable to avoid them completely, but even homeschooling just through the elementary and junior high school levels is definitely preferable to enrolling the kids in a conventional government school from day one. I think homeschooling through the junior high school level is within the technical capacity of the vast majority of parents out there.

(By the way, if a parent happens to be able to afford conventional PRIVATE schools, I certainly do not object to the parent considering them -- with the caveat that private schools taking fundamentally anti-Christian approaches to education should not be an option for Christians, any more than the government-run schools are.)

There have been times with all seven of our kids when they were lagging behind in a certain area. It is hard to make generalizations but I think that PROVIDED THE CHILD HAS A CLEAR IDEA OF WHAT HE WANTS TO DO IN THE FUTURE, in most cases even a fairly large learning gap in a particular subject area can be overcome in a relatively short time because the child has a clear idea of what needs to be done to get to where he wants to be. Not that all children have a clear idea of what they want to do in the future, of course. All of my kids did have a clear sense of career calling by the time they were in their early teens -- which makes everything a lot simpler for the parent -- but even among homeschoolers it is not uncommon for children to lack such a clear sense of calling and it's not something to worry about.

  • You can lose battles and still win the war

Anyone contemplating homeschooling needs to come to grips with the fact that even successful homeschooling has plenty of little failures. Homeschooling is a form of warfare (primarily warfare that we wage against ourselves), and you don’t need to win every single battle to win the war. Space would fail me if I tried to share all the anecdotes about the ways in which our homeschooling and the homeschooling of people we know has experienced minor breakdowns and setbacks, and everyone experiences their share of worries and doubts. Every homeschooling "expert" started off as a rank amateur and made plenty of mistakes along the way, I can assure you.

  • Real-world education through work, and through observing a working parent

If a parent is able to work out of the home, or is able to bring his children into his work situation, that is ideal. It is even better if the children are able to be directly involved in the family business! Anyone working out of their home or running a family business should be seriously considering homeschooling as these are a natural match, complementing and augmenting each other very well.

Kids learn most by observing their parents. Even single-parent families can consider homeschooling, but certainly one of the most valuable educational experiences for any child is to be able to see than his mother and father love one another. Children need to be loved, but even more than that they need to see that their parents love one another. Additionally, if the parents manifest a life-long enthusiasm for learning (and in the case of Christians this includes learning God’s word), that example will impact the children powerfully. And finally, children who are able to observe their parents working will be greatly blessed thereby, especially if they can work alongside their parents. (Although work can actually provide a child with some of the best educational experiences of his life, parents who put their children to work need to be careful to do so in a way that avoids leaving the parents open to charges that they are economically exploiting their own children in a way that interferes with the children’s education.)

  • Happy discovery: the other generation is NOT the "enemy" !

Teenage rebelliousness is not unheard of among homeschooled childrern; however, as a societal phenomenon it is not nearly so serious a problem as among children going to government-run schools. The government-run schools tend to drive wedges between children and parents, and expose the children to unhealthy peer pressures. Homeschooling families tend to realize much more intergenerational harmony and more faithful continuity of received traditions, beliefs and values. It is sometimes said that the society which cuts itself off from its past has no future, and we can see that what Allan Bloom described above in The Closing of the American Mind is a process of societal self-disinheritance. The government-run schools have played a huge role in this disinheritance process. However, through the simple act of withdrawing one's kids from the government schools (or never sending them there in the first place) and educating them at home, any parent can make a meaningful contribution to the reversal of this process.The government either has not caught on, or has caught on but does not know how to stop it, but homeschoolers are already engaging in a form of guerrilla warfare against Leviathan. May Leviathan die the death of 10 million cuts!

For the person who is concerned about the government’s constant encroachments on our liberty, it is important to remember that in a very good way, homeschooling is one of the most subversive things that anyone can do. The divinized State is monolithic. If we can defeat the monolith decisively at the point of education, we can defeat it entirely because the myth of its divinity and omnipotence are destroyed through the widespread success of non-government alternatives -- even as the government-run schools continue to fail. People come to realize, "Yes, we can! -- without the State." Homeschooling is one of the great hopes for the future of freedom from government because this is the easiest and most natural area for us to launch a successful attack. Leviathan wants to inherit our children, but we can prevent that. We can inherit our own children, and they can inherit all that we have received from God and from our forebears for millennia, in turn passing it on to the next generation as a legacy . . . all without any help from the State, thank you.

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Two very different perspectives

Speaking of schism and the divisive use of insulting language, here are two very different views on these with regard to how God's covenant people are to relate to each other:

I will not employ sarcasm, dismissiveness, meanness, or insult toward those who do not identify as Christian . . . [b]ut what I believe is the prophetic . . . nature of my writings is, by definition and intent, to be directed toward the Church.
-- Keely Emerine Mix

[Confronting Wilson] is an exercise in endurance and self control -- a baptism of filth, no less necessary for the horror it stirs in me.
-- Keely Emerine Mix

Wilson, et al, are the objects of scorn because Wilson, et al, behave badly in the public square, and any other community, not just a community of "washed up hippies," would learn to despise a man who delights in offering it a stiff middle finger.
-- Keely Emerine-Mix

While I don't see a lot of love for his congregation gushing out of Wilson, I do see a font of a different sort poured out in contempt or indifference when it comes to the great unwashed outside his doors.
-- Keely Emerine-Mix

Behold, how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity! It is like the precious ointment upon the head, that ran down upon the beard, even Aaron's beard: that went down to the skirts of his garments; as the dew of Hermon, and as the dew that descended upon the mountains of Zion: for there Yahweh commanded the blessing, even life for evermore.
-- Psalm 133

These six things doth Yahweh hate: yea, seven are an abomination unto Him: a proud look, a lying tongue, and hands that shed innocent blood, an heart that deviseth wicked imaginations, feet that be swift in running to mischief, a false witness that speaketh lies, and he that soweth discord among brethren.
-- Proverbs 6:12-19

Hatred stirreth up strifes: but love covereth all sins.
-- Proverbs 10:12

A froward man soweth strife: and a whisperer separateth chief friends.
-- Proverbs 16:28
So we, being many, are one body in Christ, and every one members one of another . . . be kindly affectioned one to another with brotherly love . . .
-- Romans 12:5,10

For He is our peace, Who hath made both one, and hath broken down the middle wall of partition between us; having abolished in His flesh the enmity, even the law of commandments contained in ordinances; for to make in Himself of twain one new man, so making peace; and that He might reconcile both unto God in one body by the cross, having slain the enmity thereby: and came and preached peace to you which were afar off, and to them that were nigh. For through Him we both have access by one Spirit unto the Father. Now therefore ye are no more strangers and foreigners, but fellowcitizens with the saints, and of the household of God; and are built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ Himself being the chief corner stone; in whom all the building fitly framed together groweth unto an holy temple in the Lord: in whom ye also are builded together for an habitation of God through the Spirit.
-- Ephesians 2:14-22

Let all bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and clamour, and evil speaking, be put away from you, with all malice: and be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God for Christ's sake hath forgiven you.
-- Ephesians 4:29-32

Fulfil ye my joy, that ye be likeminded, having the same love, being of one accord, of one mind.
-- Phillipians 2:2

Gene Robinson is not just any gay guy

Keely Emerine-Mix does not like it when Doug Wilson refers to apostate dog (to use biblically accurate terminology) Gene Robinson as a "poofter." Her rationale, in part at least, is that such language immediately alienates the very people that the church needs to be reaching out to.

Okay, I concur that we do not want to give unnecessary offense to people outside the church. The gospel is plenty offensive enough to the man outside of Christ, and if someone -- anyone -- leading a life of gross wickedness is interested in learning more about the Christian faith, or expresses an interest in coming to church, that person is definitely not somebody that we want to drive away by referring to them in insulting terms. And we should want to share the gospel with such people at every opportunity. After all, such were some of us: but we are washed, but we are sanctified, but we are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus, and by the Spirit of our God. And one thing that we can cheerfully affirm is that none of us who are in the church and currently unencumbered by gross sexual sin are where we are because of anything inherently deserving in us. We can cheerfully and gratefully affirm that if God dealt with us solely with strict justice, we would be looking forward to an eternity in the Lake of Fire. We have found salvation purely by grace, entirely on account of Christ. In fact, without going into any details, I never lose sight of the fact that prior to being brought to faith in Christ, I did some things that God excoriates in the Bible using language hardly less harsh than some of the things said in the Bible about homosexuals.

But Gene Robinson is not one of the two young men living in sin in an apartment down the hall. He is one of the people spearheading the drive to transform the church into a harlot. Gene Robinson is the ECUSA's willing "strap-on tool" being driven forcefully into the Bride of Christ with the intention of defiling her and making her say, "Yes! this is how I like it." And they don't care if they split the church in the process.

Dante would not have put them in the seventh circle of Hell with the sodomites. He would have put them in ninth Bolge of the eighth circle together with Mohammed and the other schismatics.

So when we consider people in the grip of homosexuality, we really do need to draw two distinctions. First we need to distinguish between those whose consciences are troubled by their own behavior and those who are defiantly unrepentant. And even more importantly we need to distinguish between both of the first two groups and those who insist that unrepentant homosexuals are welcome just as they are at the Lord's table, that they should be able to get married in the church and that they should be able to lead the church.

It is to be expected that people outside the church will act the way that they do. But we inside the church are to be washed, sanctified and justified in the name of the Lord Jesus, and by the Spirit of our God. When those of us who lay claim to the name of Christ are clearly involved in any sin, and we refuse to repent of it, the rule is discipline, which means denying access to the Lord's Table (excommunication) and, in the case of church leaders and teachers, stripping them of all authority in the church.

If Gene Robinson dies without repenting of his sins, when he goes to stand before our Lord's judgment seat he will hear things said that are much harder to bear than "poofter."

Mrs. Mix criticizes the notion that "one's homosexuality is about all you need to know of someone before you attack them." Not necessarily. If the person is an unrepentant homosexual activist in clerical garb, there is not much more that one needs to know. The Bible says that a man like Gene Robinson is worthy of death on multiple counts.

"Take away the wicked from before the king, and his throne shall be established in righteousness." Gene Robinson represents an example of one of the first men that should be taken away in any society concerned with righteousness.

Guitar licks make strange bedfellows

Whoda thunk? I wonder if this means Keely Emerine-Mix is a racist? You know, six degrees of separation and all that . . .

Thursday, September 24, 2009

The New 21st Century Multicultural Translation of the Bible

Since Mrs. Mix and I share a passion for Indian and Thai food, an experience at breakfast this morning inspired me to revise Proverbs 25:16 for the 21st century:

"Hast thou found bhut jolokia peppers? Eat so many as are sufficient for thee, lest thou be filled therewith, and vomit them."

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

These Kids need Khan, not a NYT pity party

This sad story suggests (to me, not to the story's author, who apparently has failed to see the obvious solution) that future generations of South Africans will see things go from bad to worse unless they stop waiting for the government to come bail them out. These kids don't need a teacher to teach them in the classroom, especially since the average level of teachers in South Africa seems to be even lower than that of teachers in America's government schools (if such a thing is possible).

No, these kids already have all the teacher they need in the form of Salman Khan. If they can get onto the Internet, they can get a great education for the investment of their time -- and the time is something they would need to invest even at a conventional school.

And then they can even go on to study at MIT, again entirely for free.

Most of them probably don't even know that things like these exist, but if they did know, any of them serious about getting an education could get a very good one without waiting for the government to come and spoon-feed it to them.

And for that matter, so could grossly under-achieving blacks in America's inner cities, as well as kids at the many other government schools all over the USA that are seeing performance continue to slide year after year.

Ironically, by providing seriously substandard education at an exceedingly high price, America's government schools are all too often contributing to the perpetuation of poverty and disempowerment rather than their elimination.

I agree with Keely Emerine-Mix that education is crucial to overcoming poverty. Although schools definitely have their place and attending a good school can be a wonderful experience, we don't need the government to make education happen. We don't even need a school!* There are so many things that can be done right now toward achieving genuine solutions to society's problems that don't require government involvement at all. These are things that we should be actively encouraging.

(*UPDATE: There is one thing for which a government school is still indispensable: teaching children to worship the State as their savior.)

South Africa's online population is still not high -- less than 11% of the population as of 2008, although that is apparently expected to rapidly increase. However, even at current levels of Internet access, it might be possible to make extensive and effective use of the Internet to help kids who want an education obtain a very good one.

Back in 2005 there was a push to develop cheap computers for developing regions, and this tells me some progress is being made (the incidental vulnerability to cybercriminals notwithstanding). So the educational future for these people does not have to be bleak -- if they find solutions that they can implement largely on their own, without requiring government assistance.

Education is largely a process of self-study anyway, even if you attend elite schools built around small classes, such as Exeter or Harvard.

Bringing It Back to . . . Well, Her.

Let's look at some of Keely Emerine-Mix's rather uncharitable views regarding Libertarians and conservative Christians.

She does not name any names, so before we get into it, we should admit that what she has to say about these groups can probably be applied to someone, somewhere. I'm glad to say that I don't know any of them personally. She tells us,

'I am not a Libertarian. In fact, I think that many of our local Libertarians are, unlike my son, "Libertarians" who rest in that particular philosophy because in it they find abundant comfort in their disregard for the poor, a disregard that manifests as a Christian mandate to stand against any non-military taxation from the State.'

As I said, I don't doubt there are probably some people who call themselves libertarians who fit that description. However, such a position is hardly characteristic of Libertarians in the United States.

The Libertarian Party clearly states in its platform, "The United States should both abandon its attempts to act as policeman for the world and avoid entangling alliances. We oppose any form of compulsory national service . . . American foreign policy should seek an America at peace with the world and its defense against attack from abroad. We would end the current U.S. government policy of foreign intervention, including military and economic aid. We recognize the right of all people to resist tyranny and defend themselves and their rights. We condemn the use of force, and especially the use of terrorism, against the innocent, regardless of whether such acts are committed by governments or by political or revolutionary groups."

Here is a link to a representative article at the Cato Institute about the dangers of American military dominance.

The Ludwig von Mises Institute and its sister news and opinion portal LewRockwell.com are very strongly against America's huge standing military and its network of hundreds of military bases around the world, and current levels of military spending are typically viewed as grossly unnecesary and, in view of of the immorality of the way America's military is abused, obscene.

Almost all of Ron Paul's many followers -- although it is not selling as well has his No. 1 bestseller The Revolution: A Manifesto, his book End the Fed is currently ranked 49th overall in books at Amazon and earlier it was ranked at No. 2 among nonfiction books -- are strongly in favor of drastically downsizing America's military.

Bringing up the rear of the most influential Libertarian organizations, The Acton Institute and Reason Magazine are far more supportive of the military than any of the above.

Those are currently the most influential Libertarian organizations, by a large margin, and among them support for military taxation is a definite minority position. The majority sees the military as something that needs to be cut back considerably -- even reduced to a tiny fraction of its current size.

"I've learned that not all Libertarian economic thought is malicious in both origin and intent."

Well that's a mighty charitable thing of Mrs. Mix to say.

Ahem. Let's get one thing out of the way -- there is an ugly perspective, called Objectivism, closely affiliated in many observers' minds with Libertarianism. It was founded by Ayn Rand and it behooves us to consider what she had to say about charity: "My views on charity are very simple. I do not consider it a major virtue and, above all, I do not consider it a moral duty. There is nothing wrong in helping other people, if and when they are worthy of the help and you can afford to help them. I regard charity as a marginal issue. What I am fighting is the idea that charity is a moral duty and a primary virtue."

Now Ayn Rand's views expressed above are clearly hostile to the Christian faith. Her hostility should come as no surprise given that her life was characterized by what the Bible would describe as gross sexual immorality. She equated Christian charity with Communism. (Maybe she had learned about Christianity through the writings of Keely Emerine-Mix?)

It is important to distinguish clearly between Libertarianism and Ayn Rand's Objectivism. In End the Fed, Ron Paul says,

Although Ayn Rand never spoke kindly of libertarians and I never contemplated becoming a supporter of objectivism as a total philosophy, I did read all her novels and received her objectivist newsletter essentially the whole time it was published. She challenged many of my beliefs that I had taken for granted and forced me to understand and defend them better. However, she never convinced me of her definition and application of altruism. Equating voluntary Christian charities with Communism made no sense to me. But she also built up my excitement for championing freedom."

Now if there is any group that is likely to resist accepting the thinking of Ayn Rand, it is Christians. So if you are talking about Christians who also happen to be Libertarians, the likelihood that they will lean toward Ayn Rand's thinking regarding charity and the poor will be very small indeed.

Now we get to the point where Mrs. Mix differs clearly with my thinking, with Libertarianism, and with the Bible.

"I lean strongly toward a democratic social safety net provided by government for the interest of the poor; in fact, how something affects "the least of these" is the lens through which I view any socio-political issue. Poverty and the socio-economic structures that ensure it is, to me, the defining problem of this age, a problem that begins when good Christians are fed "Biblical" exegesis that excuses them from considering the righteousness of Christ toward the poor, manifested in governmental policy, as a legitimate exercise of power. For me, it's all about caring for the poor, and I believe Christians are called to expect from the State attitudes and actions that aid them."

This perspective is jam-packed with errors. The Bible definitely teaches the need for a "social safety net" for the interests of the poor, but it is definitely not one provided by the civil magistrate. In fact, when the civil magistrate attempts to provide such a safety net, it brings disaster upon society.

We have a great example of this in 2 Samuel 24. David's taking of a census of the people was enough to anger God so that He brought a plague upon the land that killed 70,000 people. That should tell us what God thinks of the Welfare-Warfare State.

There is one thing I particularly want to stress to Mrs. Mix with regard to how we as Christians are to manifest our love for the poor:

GOVERNMENT WELFARE PROGRAMS ARE TO THE POOR WHAT CARBON CREDITS ARE TO GLOBAL WARMING: THE ONLY DIFFERENCE THEY MAKE TO THE PROBLEM IS THAT THE POLITICIANS AND BUREAUCRATS BEHIND THE PROGRAM GET FATTER, AND THE WHOLE SOCIETY BECOMES POORER.

In the case of global warming, it is not such a big deal -- after all, the problem only exists only in the fantasies and goosed-up computer programs of some scientists with vested interests in proving that the Hockey Stick From Hell is real. However, the poor are real and they will be with us always, so we had better find ways of helping them that are actually going to help them and not just serve as a superficial band-aid to appease our guilty consciences.

For Mrs. Mix, if it really is all about caring for the poor, we can happily affirm that her heart is in the right place. But that does not alter the truth that her anti-biblical, Hegelian perspective ends up nourishing only the State.

Sadly, Mrs. Mix is living in a fantasy world, one in which we can go into debt to the tune of a hundred trillion dollars (and counting), spending our way to the realization of God's kingdom on earth. We have already virtually condemned our children and grandchildren to joining the ranks of the poor, and if the kinds of social policies that she supports are implemented things will only become worse.

There is also a great irony in that the expansion of government welfare programs in America has always gone hand-in-hand with the expansion of government warfare programs. The wars that we wage are resulting in the death and impoverishment of millions of innocent people around the world for no good reason except to fatten the merchants of death. FDR did it, LBJ did it, and Bush-Obama are doing it.

And for the life of me I cannot fathom how getting a faceless government bureaucracy to substitute for direct Christian action qualifies as fulfilling God's commandments regarding the poor.

The degree of confusion and gross distortions that Mrs. Mix gives us in the next paragraph is astounding.

"Put another way, if the Church spent as much energy in advocating for and serving the poor, through taxes as well as their own efforts, as it does in scouring the Old Testament for proof-texts that government is evil and the poor always complicit in their poverty, we would have the kind of revival here and abroad that truly shows the light of Christ working within us. But a cottage industry of "Christian" works promoting blame, insouciance, comfort and entitlement has sprung up, books and speeches and ministries that assure affluent believers that the poor are to be judged, feared, and ultimately ignored. In the name of Christ, of course."

Let's get one thing very clear: to the extent that we are taxed by the government, our ability to serve the poor with our money is accordingly reduced. Currently we work about half of each year just to pay taxes. The total debt burden of the United States amounts to about one-third of a million dollars per person. And the situation is continually worsening. This is an impossible situation and cannot go on indefinitely. Sooner or later -- probably sooner rather than later -- the entire house of cards is going to come crashing down. Furthermore, the last sentence in the previous paragraph is a slander of Christians. Essentially Mrs. Mix is saying that if left to our own devices we would indeed just sit by and let people starve to death. That's why we need to have the government hold a gun to our heads. I don't know about Mrs. Mix, but I have faith that the Holy Spirit actually does indwell Christians.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Proper form for male Calvinists to receive criticism from Intoleristas

Apparently some people are upset by the thought that a conservative Christian would actually quote an Intolerista's own statements -- in context -- analyze them, and reply to them in public. Sorry, apparently I never got the memo! Anyway, I looked into it and found some instruction materials online showing the proper way for a male Calvinist to receive criticism from Intoleristas, and just in case anyone else had, like me, failed to understand how these things are to be done, here is a link that pretty well summarizes proper etiquette. Just so there is no misunderstanding, the male Calvinist is on the left, and the Intolerista delivering her criticism is on the right.

Keely Emerine-Mix raises gerbils so she can enjoy biting their heads off

There, I've gone and done it -- I have made a public accusation about Keely Emerine-Mix for which I am now obligated to provide a real name in order to take full accountability. So here it is (drum roll please):

Sheri W. Chimpretort

That was for the benefit of Keely Emerine-Mix's friend Rose Huskey.

My personal identity is hardly a secret to Keely-Emerine Mix. However, I intend to continue going by Eimy Reekenxlime on this blog because I intend to faithfully reflect the truth about Mrs. Mix and her statements that are a matter of public record. As regards her I have and shall continue to confine myself to analyzing and rebutting things that she has said. I am dealing with objectively verifiable content. This is not about who we are so much as what we are. Or rather, "what we are" is "who we are." In that sense, this entire blog is an exercise in revealing true identities.

What's in a name anyway?

Thou shalt not take the name of Yahweh thy God in vain; for Yahweh will not hold him guiltless that taketh His name in vain.

And all people of the earth shall see that thou art called by the name of Yahweh; and they shall be afraid of thee.

And they shall put my name upon the children of Israel, and I will bless them.

If My people, which are called by My name, shall humble themselves, and pray, and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways; then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land.

Lord, who shall abide in Thy tabernacle? Who shall dwell in Thy holy hill? He that walketh uprightly, and worketh righteousness, and speaketh the truth in his heart. He that backbiteth not with his tongue, nor doeth evil to his neighbour, nor taketh up a reproach against his neighbour. In whose eyes a vile person is contemned; but he honoureth them that fear Yahweh.

A good name is more desirable than great riches; to be esteemed is better than silver or gold.

O Lord, hear; O Lord, forgive; O Lord, hearken and do; defer not, for Thine own sake, O my God: for Thy city and Thy people are called by Thy name.

Yes, a person's name and reputation are important. That is why it is particularly appropriate that Mrs. Mix's hypocritical distortions, slanders, and false accusations against godly Christians be revealed for what they are.

"Ye shall know them by their fruits." By the grace of God, Douglas Wilson, Christ Church and the CREC are in fact bearing good fruit, in the form of healthy, godly families, growing ministries of all sorts (including mercy ministries), missions and expanding influence in the culture at large. By God's grace they are ambassadors of life in a culture of death. While the idols of man continue to crumble and come tumbling down all about us, these people, and the godly remnant of others like them across America, point to the only way forward out of the deepening crisis that threatens America's continued survival as a nation: a return to Jesus Christ as the only name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved.

The text of Rose's complaint is reproduced in full below. By the way, I am not under the authority of any church on the Palouse, so if you want to pour out a glass of whine, please don't ask Doug Wilson or Peter Leithart to drink it. Ever heard of the World Wide Web?

Just in case you don’t read v2020, and I imagine you do, I’m forwarding my recent 2020 contribution. Your shame is not that you disagree with Keely but that you lack the balls to sign your own name. And, just on the remote chance that you are a woman, you are also a traitor to your sex. Jenny Geddes would turn in her grave. Anonymity is, was, and always will be the cloak of a coward.

Rose Huskey

What a wonderful opportunity for Doug Wilson, Peter Leithart, the assorted elders, deacons, and gentlemen in waiting of Christ Church and Trinity Reformed, to prove that they do indeed have some influence on the less than Christian behavior of their flock. Yes, Keely does disagree with Doug et al on doctrinal matters, so what? Here’s one of the differences between the Faux Keely and Real Keely – she signs her name and he doesn’t. This pathetic modus operandi is a favorite of Kirkers proving that while anatomy assigns them a male gender, it confers neither maturity nor honor. Did Future Men omit the chapter on taking responsibility for sneaky behavior?

So, Doug, why not get on your church email list and suggest that whoever is pretending to be a woman (rather telling isn’t it?) knock it off, apologize publicly to Keely and Vision 2020.

Rose Huskey.

Ahh, the sweet joys of celebrating Chauvinism

UPDATE: Apparently I was a bit too "erudite" for my own good and forgot that many people are not aware of the fact that "Chauvin" is an alternate spelling for "Calvin" . . . the play on words was intended to tweak the noses of feminists -- remember back in the day when "male chauvinist pig" was a popular phrase among the bra-burners? -- but there was no intent to imply that Calvin was a chauvinist in the sense of "excessive nationalistic fervor." (That chauvinism derives from a different person, Nicolas Chauvin.) The fervor of Jean Chauvin (Calvin) was not for the glorification of any earthly nation, but rather for the glorification of God and the coming of His Kingdom -- and with regard to those two things, especially the former, it is hard to imagine what might constitute "excessive fervor." Be that as it may, I'll try to confine myself to humor and sarcasm that is self-explanatory . . . memo to self: avoid jokes that require their own leather-bound commentary to be properly understood. I may as well add that everything Jean Calvin stood for was pretty nearly diametrically opposed to the Napoleonic hero-worship, warmongering and imperialism associated with Nicolas Chauvin (who may have been a legendary personage, by the way.)

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

John Lofton and Joe Morecraft discuss Chauvinism in this year commemorating 500 years since Chauvin's birth. They offer evidence against some of the oft-repeated myths about this great man and his doctrines -- including some perpetuated by Keely Emerine-Mix.

Among other things, I was happy to hear about his personal zeal for evangelism. That fact is something that needs to be publicized more. At the same time, even R. J. Rushdoony commented on the fact that historically the Presbyterians lagged behind such groups as the Methodists and the Baptists in missions work. I remember hearing him joking about how the Methodist evangelists went West on foot, the Baptists on horseback, and the Presbyterians by train. On the other hand, Presbyterian and the Reformed missions were very active in East Asia, as evidenced by the fact that South Korea is today one of the world's leading bastions of Presbyterianism.

Be that as it may, Morecraft's comments on the place of evangelism within the context of predestination are quite helpful, in my opinion, and serve as an antidote to some of the common misrepresentations.

The Apostle Paul vs Biblical Feminists

After listening to this interview, The Pauline Doctrine of Male Headship: The Apostle Versus Biblical Feminists sounds like a book that I'd like to read. John Lofton says that Rev. Bordwine "makes the rubble bounce." (A reference to Curtis LeMay's statement, "We should bomb 'em back to the Stone Age, and then make the rubble bounce.)

I have seen some less-than-convincing exegesis and reasoning in the arguments of some Reformed writers opposing "biblical feminism." But good arguments against "biblical feminism" can be made from the Bible so I hope this book really does "make the rubble bounce."

(I use scare quotes because since feminism is not biblical, the phrase is an oxymoron; however, the Bible does hold an exceedingly high view of women, seeing women as the equals of men, and it highly esteems the legitimate roles and functions of women in society. Ironically feminism -- even the "biblical" variety -- tends to disparage the most important roles of women in society and therefore is anti-woman in its basic orientation.)

Of course, one might also be able to make the case that Lofton and Bordwine oppose "biblical feminism" because they are butt-kissers who need to be infused with the Holy Ghost.

Seriously, Here is Dr. R. C. Sproul's foreword to the new second edition of this book.

Dale Courtney, snotty-faced heap of parrot droppings & vacuous toffee-nosed malodorous pervert

Yes, he too gets his fair share of abuse at the pen of Keely Emerine-Mix, who apparently thinks that the very concept of "reprobation" has no legitimate usage in the English language and should be banned as a detestable heresy. (Except perhaps when used with reference to Christ Church elders and other Calvinists.)

Seriously, nobody can presume to know God's eternal decree with regard to any particular individual, but the use of the word "reprobate" does not have to presume such knowledge. The word can be and frequently is used in a provisional sense. Every Christian is aware that a person who has for all his adult life rejected the Triune God as nothing more than a fiction, a fantasy and a crutch might be led by the Holy Spirit today, tomorrow or the next day to repent and believe in that very same God. At the same time, there is a path which, if it is not repented of, leads to eternal damnation, and anyone who follows that path to the very end is definitely reprobate. Accordingly, there is nothing wrong with using the word to refer to a person who is currently on that path and who has been very doggedly and self-consciously following it for a long time -- even though by tomorrow morning he might no longer be on that path.

In this context it is kind of ironic to see an expression like "arrogance, belligerence, and combativeness" being tossed out by Mrs. Mix . . . pot, kettle, black? Anyway, it's good to know that she can always find gainful employment using her skills in Room 12.

Monday, September 21, 2009

Missing the Missed Point, part 3

Now we get to the part of Keely Emerine-Mix's post where she says something that is halfway sensible -- the church has too often tended to shun sinners as unworthy of our charitable attentions. There is definitely a real and present danger of that in churches, and it is heinous in part because it implies that if they are left outside the church because they are unworthy, we are inside the church because we were somehow found worthy. And of course that is both atrocious theology and a denial of God's abundant grace toward us.

(Since that is about the only decent point she makes in this post, maybe Mrs. Mix could have substituted a link to John Ford's Stagecoach, as that movie has just about the same perspective and points as her post, but in a much more entertaining format.)

There is a great irony, however, in Mrs. Mix's charge that the great sin of the post-World War II church has been the deliberate neglect and avoidance of sinners, because one of the chief causes -- if not the number one cause -- of all the problems that she rightly points out in the latter part of the second paragraph and in subsequent paragraphs is -- you guessed it: the rise of the government welfare State. That's right, the government welfare State that Mrs. Mix so loves and wishes to see grow ever larger and stronger and more involved in all areas of life, as the foremost agency of God in promoting the well-being of people on this earth, is the primary isolator of the "prim and proper people" (the "haves") from what Mrs. Mix likes to refer to as the comfortable middle-class white church's "great unwashed" (the "have-nots").

So at least as regards the final part of the post in question, I have to congratulate Mrs. Mix on pointing to a very serious problem. Unfortunately for her, she and her fellow pantywaist liberal Christians are largely responsible for causing this problem, and just about everything that she proposes as solutions will only make this problem worse. The more the Welfare State grows, the greater will become the chasm dividing people according to economic class and race in this country. The resentment across this divide is mutual: people on the receiving end of government hand-outs think they are entitled to them, and they resent the middle and upper class, and the middle class resents the poor people who are seen as leeches and as dragging down the overall level of the entire society. The only solution is a return to biblical blueprints for welfare, getting the government out of these activities and returning them to the family and the church.

Liberals love the Welfare State in part because it creates the illusion that everybody's needs are being adequately met WITHOUT any liberal actually having to go out and get his or her hands dirty. And of course that also applies to a lot of people who would not self-identify as liberals but for whom, nevertheless, the existence of the Welfare State is found to be mighty convenient.

Fortunately for the Gospel, however, such approaches are bound to FAIL and sooner or later (probably after the whole house of cards comes tumbling down) everyone is going to be forced to resume doing thing's God's way. Of course, by that time we will all be much poorer but from that point forward things will start to look up.

Missing the Missed Point, part 2

Putting behind us the disaster that was Keely Emerine-Mix's first paragraph in this post, let us hope for better things in the second. Here she informs us that the greatest error of the post-World War II church is "the idea that the object of, the greatest realization of, Christian faith is avoidance of sin. The idea that the essence of the believer's walk with Christ is to not sin has caused the Body of Christ to wither on its Vine."

Now this is an interesting assertion in several respects. First, to put it mildly, I think it is highly debatable whether the church in our lifetimes has been preoccupied with avoidance of sin. Second, the idea that dedicating one's self to avoidance of sin could cause the church to wither on its Vine is at least equally debatable.

What is sin, anyway? The Bible presents sin to us as any want of conformity unto, or transgression of God's Law-Word given as a rule to man.

Among other purposes, God's law was given to us for our blessing. The law is good for us because God knows what it takes for man, created in His image, to flourish under His good and gracious rule as King. God's law has been given to us so that we can more fully enjoy Him and His good gifts to us, and enjoy personal relationships with fellow bearers of God's image. In Psalm 19:7-11 David speaks for every mature Christian when he expresses great pleasure in the law of God. The flip side of the expression "avoidance of sin" is "conformity to God." How on earth can a desire to be in conformity with God be identified as the church's greatest error? Such a notion is totally bananas.

The Book of Job opens with a presentation of Job as a man deeply concerned with avoidance of sin: "Job sent and sanctified [his children], and rose up early in the morning, and offered burnt offerings according to the number of them all: for Job said, It may be that my sons have sinned, and cursed God in their hearts. Thus did Job continually." And then just a few sentences later God gives us his personal estimation of Job: "Hast thou considered my servant Job, that there is none like him in the earth, a perfect and an upright man, one that feareth God, and escheweth evil?"

Of course, Job was a type of Christ. Another type of Christ was Joseph, whose reward for preoccupation with avoiding sin was to be thrown into prison on account of the perjury of Potiphar's wife. Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego were blessed by God for refusing to sin by committing idolatry. The Bible is full of people who are praised for their preoccupation with avoidance of sin. And of course Jesus Himself said repeatedly that He came to do His Father's will and that He delighted in doing so. So there really is nothing at all to be critical of concerning a desire to avoid sin (or, to turn it around, a desire to live a life that is in conformity with God).

It can be seen as the very imitation of Christ.

However, the notion that the American church since the end of World War II has been preoccupied with avoidance of sin is really preposterous. O would that we had been preoccupied with avoidance of sin! The person who wishes to avoid sin must first of all find out what God's Law-Word says. Yet Christians as a rule do not know what God's Law-Word says and to the extent that we do know, we certainly have not wanted to take it as the authoritative rule for every area of our lives. Not only the post-World War II era but the past century (at least) have been an era of studious neglect of God's Law-Word for the church in America, as a whole.

If that had not been the case, how could we have allowed the murder of more than 50 million children to take place? How could we have allowed millions of tons of bombs to be dropped on far-off countries that never did anything to us and never posed any threat to us? Time and space would fail us if we were to attempt to fully recite the litany of evils that have been perpetrated by our supposedly Christian country since the end of World War II -- and NONE of that would have been allowed if we had indeed been deeply concerned with the avoidance of sin and all that such a stance implies.

And as to what causes the church to "wither on its Vine," I'll let Jesus have the last word for this post:

I am the vine, ye are the branches: he that abideth in me, and I in him, the same bringeth forth much fruit: for without Me ye can do nothing. If a man abide not in Me, he is cast forth as a branch, and is withered; and men gather them, and cast them into the fire, and they are burned. If ye abide in Me, and My words abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done unto you. Herein is My Father glorified, that ye bear much fruit; so shall ye be My disciples. As the Father hath loved me, so have I loved you: continue ye in My love. If ye keep My commandments, ye shall abide in My love; even as I have kept My Father's commandments, and abide in His love. These things have I spoken unto you, that My joy might remain in you, and that your joy might be full. This is My commandment, That ye love one another, as I have loved you.

Missing the Missed Point, part 1

Keely Emerine-Mix makes some good points in What's the Point, Anyway? but she also offers too many huge targets for me to resist the urge to blast away at some of the more egregious problems, so here goes --

First, before moving on to point out what she considers to be the deepest problem of all, she gives examples of things that she feels represent some of the most serious errors of American Christianity in the past half century:
  • Slowness in getting on the Civil Rights bandwagon
  • Giving too much influence to folks like Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson
  • Equating of Republican Party politics with God's politics
  • Failure to address materialism, greed, bigotry, indifference to the poor, accommodation of the culture, and militarism
  • Focus on fighting "sins of the bedroom" such as abortion and gay rights

Okay, from my perspective that's a mixed bag of grievances but regarding that last one, pardon me? Since when has abortion been a "sin of the bedroom"? The sin of the bedroom was fornication. The phenomenon of abortion that we are looking at here is murder, plain and simple. And as a societal phenomenon it is mass murder, to the tune of more than 50 million dead (and counting). To call it a sin of the bedroom is to lie. The idea is that sins of the bedroom are between two consenting parties and as "victimless crimes" they really should be nobody's business, but nobody asked any of the babies if they wanted to be murdered. For a Christian to talk that way is particularly disgusting. Some champion of the poor, the weak, the downtrodden, and the disenfranchised! Talk about accommodation of the culture!

She describes the opposition to abortion as "horrific" and says it manifests a "lack of Christlike love" and results in "very real, very painful blows inflicted on society in Christ's name."

Wow.

Okay, I'm going to have to stop there for now and resume in the next post, but just think about that for a while. To my ears those sound like the words of a moral monster. I suppose I shouldn't be, but I can't help being amazed that she could think such things, let alone say them, but if people were incapable of thinking like that, we wouldn't have the blood of 50 million babies on our hands, would we? It just goes to show how much inhumanity to man we become able to tolerate once we deny the full humanity of any group of people. It's scary -- in a fallen world, this is the human condition.

Gresham's Law and men of fine mettle

From the opening of the final chapter of Ron Paul's excellent new book, End the Fed:

I'll tell you what I think about the way
This city treats her soundest men today:
By a coincidence more sad than funny,
It's very like the way we treat our money.

The noble silver drachma that of old we were
So proud of, and the recent gold coins that
Rang true, clean-stamped and worth their weight
Throughout the world, have ceased to circulate.

Instead, the purses of Athenian shoppers
Are full of shoddy silver-plated coppers
Just so, when men are needed by the nation,
The best have been withdrawn from circulation.

(From The Frogs by Aristophanes, about 400 B. C.)

Dr. Ron Paul's Rx for health insurance and more

Ron Paul on NPR: Leave Government Out of Insurance Plan (length of audio segment 8:26)

And the transcript is here.

This provides an extremely important and valuable perspective for Christians. We need to be stimulating CHURCH involvement in welfare, not STATE.

Trouble is, most people today -- including most Christians, I'm afraid -- are incapable of taking God at his word and instead feel that we must look to the State to be the vehicle for salvation in this world. This ties right into the other, even larger issue taken up in the second part of the NPR interview; namely, the evil Federal Reserve System that Ron Paul wants to see eliminated.

The vast majority of the Octopus State's tentacles would shrivel up and disappear if the Federal Reserve System was eliminated and free competition in the realm of money was restored. Gresham's Law is succinctly explained in the first sentence of this article: Bad money drives out good under legal tender laws. The corollary, of course is that when legal tender laws are eliminated and people have the freedom to enter into contracts using any method of settlement that they like, good money drives out bad. Anyone who really wants to strike at the root of the Welfare-Warfare State needs to push for the end of the Fed.

That the Fed is going to end seems almost a certainty, but the question is whether it will be ended as an act of political willpower driven by angry Tea Partyers* -- in which case perhaps the United States itself will survive -- or whether its end will coincide more or less with the split-up of the United States. Regardless of which direction things go in, Christians will need to take a larger role in the provision of welfare through works of charity, so we had better prepare for that day by redoubling our involvement with works of charity now. (Rev. Wilson's recent sermon is highly recommended in this context.)

* I am convinced that the Tea Partyers represent much more of an independent, emerging third party than they represent the interests of the Republican Party establishment. They are far more Libertarian, Conservative and Populist than Republican. Obama is feeling their heat but they're not nostalgic for Bush by any means.

Sitting ducks for fascist government "health care"

Sitting ducks for fascist government "health care" -- by that I mean any and all people who fail to get this information tucked between their ears before the government comes along and forces them to receive unnecessary and potentially very dangerous swine flu vaccinations.

Please note not only the video clips but also the written information that follows beneath them.

See also this excellent video about similar moves afoot in Europe.

(I'm a bit leery about Burgermeister's recommendations for the use of colloidal silver, because despite its antimicrobial properties a small percentage of people will exhibit allergic reactions and even in people who don't it can be harmful if overdone, but supplementing with nutritional supplements -- especially vitamin D3 -- is definitely a good idea.)

If warfare can be called the health of the State, then government "health care" should be recognized as all too often taking the form of warfare that is "health" only to giant corporations in bed with the politicians and bureaucrats. With this sort of fiasco in the process of being foisted on the public, it amazes me that any thinking person can seriously continue to expect any good to come from government health care. I hope we get plenty of vigorous anti-forced-vaccination Tea Parties on both sides of the Atlantic if the authorities try to impose this on us.

As for defensive measures we can take right now at the personal level, Bill Sardi's timely The Healthcare Insurance Debate: The Elephant in the Room is an excellent place to start, and Jane Burgermeister's The Flu Case provides an excellent clearing house of information regarding the swine flu pandemic.
(HT: Chris W., Shu S.)