70 percent of them now believe fornication is morally ok. In fact, they are as sexually active as non-Christians. Over 60 percent suport same-sex marriage (thanks to the "values clarification" process taught in American schools since the early 1980s. A good book on the subject is Child Abuse in the Classroom from 1985).
"They value the sense of community provided by their church, but are tired of being told how they should live their life," writes Kinnaman.
Oh, it's way more than that, my friend. They've been indoctrinated in values clarification since elementary school. It's like a dormant bomb designed to explode with their hormones. An example from Laura Stepp, the CNN editorialist who also opines on the book:
Brittany, a 24-year-old veterinary technician, is an example of the newly disaffected. In high school, she attended a conservative Episcopal church in northern Virginia. She enrolled in college thinking of herself as a conservative and not wanting to have sex until she was married. Her views changed when she met her boyfriend. She began to question the theology of her home church on a number of social issues.This anectode leaves a lot out. Let's give it some flesh.
Brittany said she believed in biblical values until she got alone with her boyfriend for the first time, got passionately aroused, had no accountability, and had sex. Then she needed a new values system to justify her desire to continue premarital sex and help her not feel guilty.How's that sound? Read the last sentence again because that's the crux of the matter.
This is why we homeschool. Not because we parents are the better teachers, but because the public school system has let us down. In fact, it has become the most powerful indoctrination tool bent on reshaping the values of the masses from a very early age, when it's easier to mold their worldview. As humanist Charles Francis Potter wrote in 1930:
Education is thus a most powerful ally of humanism, and every American school is a school of humanism. What can a theistic Sunday school’s meeting for an hour once a week and teaching only a fraction of the children do to stem the tide of the five-day program of humanistic teaching?Exactly. Humanist have mastered the art of having parents finance the spiritual destruction of their own children, in the name of education.
But what is education, anyway? And what does Mary, the mother of Jesus, have to do with it?
Everything.
Education (from the Latin "e ducere" to lead out) is a holistic process meant to mold the formation of the child as a whole: a sort of Jedi knight, a soldier of the body, of the mind, and of the spirit. A person trained in the classics, yes, but also on compassion, self-sacrifice, and spiritual warfare against the principalities that rule this groaning world.
Children belong not to the state, as Hegel believed, and not to the parents, as some Christians believe. Children belong to God, who entrusts the parents with their education.
This is true today, as was true at the time of Mary, the mother of Jesus. Her parents could also have entrusted her education to the "state," the scholarly doctrines of the Greeks, of the Egyptians, and of the Romans. How cool would she have been when reciting the verses of Catullus in the Synagogue.
Odi et amo; quare id faciam fortasse requiris. Nescio, sed fieri sentio, et excrucior.Alas, her parents knew better.
They forgot to fill her head with the humanistic knowledge of the time, and taught her the Scriptures instead; and when she was chosen by God to give birth to the Savior, upon being praised by her cousin Elizabeth for her faith, responded by singing the Magnificat (Luke 1:46-55), a song that quotes 17 Old Testament passages and puts praise Where it belongs. Not a small feast, considering she she did it on the spot, with no concordance, and was only 13 to 17 years old.
Notice the maturity, the humility, the knowledge of her traditions, the memorization skills, all combined in a stunning whole that would make every parent proud.
Now, this is education.