LOSING OUR CHILDREN
September 18, 2001
We Are Losing Our
Children
Remarks to the
Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee, Nashville, Tenn.
By T.C. Pinckney
The events of a week ago
today were a terrible tragedy. The nation is rightly aroused, and we need to
take effective action. We mourn for the slain and we pray for their families.
Yet having said that, evaluated as a long-term threat and in numbers of lives
destroyed, the tragedy I want to discuss with you dwarfs, literally dwarfs, the
attacks on the World Trade Center towers and the Pentagon.
We are losing our
children. Research indicates that 70% of teens who are involved in a church
youth group will stop attending church within two years of their high school
graduation. Think about that statement. It addresses only teenagers who attend
church and participate in the youth group. What does that suggest about those
teens who may attend church but do not take part in the youth group, or who do
not go to church at all?
In a talk at Southwestern
Seminary Josh McDowell noted that less than 1/3 of today's youth attend church.
If he is right and 67% do not go to church and then we lose 70% of those who do,
that means that within two years of finishing high school only 10% of young
Americans will attend church.
We are losing our youth.
Why is this happening?
Many strands go into weaving a tapestry, and surely there are many reasons this
tragic departure of our youth from Christ is taking place. However, I believe
the evidence clearly indicates that the primary reasons are, first, our failure
as Christian parents and churches and, second, the intentional, persistent, and
highly effective effort by anti-theists to use public schools to lead children
away from their parents and from the church.
A Bit of History
About 1830 a group of
wealthy Unitarians in Boston became unhappy with the locally controlled,
parent-run, church-influenced schools then prevalent. They decided to try to
establish a system of state-run, secular schools. They sent two young scholars
abroad to study the main European school systems in order to decide which system
to use as a model. After a two-year study the team recommended and their
sponsors adopted the Prussian system as their model. Why? Because in that system
the state had complete control, parents had no influence, and children were
entered at the earliest age.
With that decision made,
the group designed a three part plan: (1) compulsory attendance, (2) a state
teacher's college degree prerequisite to certification as a teacher, and (3)
state owned and operated schools. This was the plan they proposed to the
Massachusetts' legislature.
Among themselves they
agreed that if they could not at first get all three elements approved, the most
important part was the required teacher's college. This was their priority
because they agreed that "If we teach them what to teach, they will teach
what they have been taught."
The first year's cost to
establish the teacher's college was $50,000. The Massachusetts legislature
balked, saying the cost was too high. So the wealthy Unitarians made them an
offer they could not refuse; they put up $25,000 if the state would match it.
They did, and in 1837 the first state public school system in the United States
was established. Soon other states followed suit.
The Philosophical
Foundation of Governmental Schools
Just 14 years after the
Massachusetts state school system was established, Auguste Comte wrote the
following in his System of Positive Polity, vol. I, 1851, pp. 35-6.
"The object of our philosophy is to direct the
spiritual reorganization of the civilized world. ...
[W]e may begin at once to construct that system of
morality under which the final regeneration of
Humanity will proceed."
His "spiritual
reorganization" was a long-term plan, and it has been steadily progressing
right up till today.
And you will recall that
Darwin's great mythology, Origin of Species, was published in 1859.
Of course Comte was not
alone in this vision of a future without God, of humanity without individuality,
of rule by the self-defined most capable over the less capable. In 1918 Benjamin
Kidd published in London a book, The Science of Power. On p. 309 he wrote:
"Oh you blind leaders who seek to convert the
world by labored disputations. Step out of the
way or the world must fling you aside. GIVE US THE
YOUNG. GIVE US THE YOUNG and we will create a new
mind and a new earth in a single generation."
Ten years later in 1928
Ross L. Finney, Ph. D., published in the United States A Sociological Philosophy
of Education. On p. 118 Finney wrote, "Everything depends on passing out
the expert opinions of the social scientists to the masses of the people; and
the schools, particularly the high schools, are the only adequate agency
available for this function."
And on p. 117 he had just
said, "It is the business of teachers to run not merely the school, but the
world; and the world will never be truly civilized until they assume that
responsibility."
Another interesting quote
comes from The Reconstruction of Religion by Charles A. Ellwood, Ph. D.,
Professor of Sociology, U. Of Missouri, 1923, p. 177: "Human institutions,
sociology shows, are in every case learned adjustments. As such, they can be
modified provided we can obtain control of the learning process."
And the American Humanist
Association understands the importance of capturing the children for they have
written: "In order to capture this nation, one has to totally remove moral
and spiritual values and absolutes from the thinking of the child. The child has
to think that there is no standard of right and wrong, that truth is relative,
and that diversity is the only absolute to be gained."
Everyone has a worldview,
a perspective of the world around him. Bob Reccord referred to this as a
"reference point." He may not think of it in these terms. Indeed, he
may not think of it consciously at all, but you cannot exist without a framework
within which you place events and individuals, which determines your values,
which values in turn guide your actions and reactions to events and people.
Although there are many
worldviews designated by many exotic or not so exotic terms, they all boil down
to just two types: Your worldview will be man-centered or God-centered.
We are all familiar with
Deuteronomy 6:7-9: "And thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children,
and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine house, and when thou walkest
by the way, and when thou liest down, and when thou risest up. And thou shalt
bind them for a sign upon thine hand, and they shall be as frontlets between
thine eyes. And thou shalt write them upon the posts of thy house, and on thy
gates."
Yet we seem to have
forgotten or ignored God's commands about education:
* Luke 6:40 (NASB) "A
pupil is not above his teacher; but everyone, after he has been fully trained,
will be like his teacher." Do we want our children to adopt the
anti-Christian, socialistic, pro-homosexual, no absolute right and wrong beliefs
promulgated in government schools?
* Colossians 2:8
"Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit, after
the tradition of men, after the rudiments of the world, and not after
Christ." This is exactly what is happening to our children. They are being
spoiled by philosophies and deceits "after the tradition of men."
* II Corinthians 6:14
"Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbelievers: for what fellowship
hath righteousness with unrighteousness? And what communion hath light with
darkness?" But this is exactly what we do when we send our children to
government schools.
Most Southern Baptists and
most Southern Baptist churches are failing to obey God's commands regarding our
children. Yes, we take them to Sunday worship and Sunday School. Yes, they may
also attend AWANAs or another church-centered youth program. They may even have
Bible study at home.
But two or three hours on
Sunday and 20 minutes or so of Bible study at home are overpowered by 30 or more
hours a week in anti-Christian government schools and the constant pagan media
bombardment which may add up to another 10, 20, 30, or more hours per week.
Now of course many
schoolteachers are Christians. And may God bless them as they do what they can.
But they are strictly limited by school policy, humanist textbooks, programs
teaching the validity of homosexuality, "make up your own minds"
approaches to morality, "safe sex" instruction, and on and on.
Why have we failed our God
in this critically important responsibility?
We have failed because we
have been willfully, blissfully ignorant ... and satisfied in our ignorance.
We have failed because the
great majority of us have not made the effort to inform ourselves of the facts
... even though there are books and articles galore readily available.
We have failed because -
even when we have known the facts - we have not had the courage to point them
out to our people.
We have failed because we
have been afraid to offend people. So we have chosen to offend God rather than
men.
What Should We Do?
The ideal, most biblical
solution is for parents to teach their children, to be homeschoolers. All our
churches should welcome and openly encourage home-schoolers. But clearly many
parents cannot or will not home-school. For their children we need to start
large numbers of Christian schools. And these schools need to be truly
Christian:
* Christian
in the sincere faith of the teachers and all other staff,
* Christian
in textbooks carefully chosen,
* Christian
in their entire worldview.
Note that they should also
teach about evolution, about humanism, about post-modernism ... but in a
balanced way, giving the evolutionists' arguments fully and fairly, but also
demonstrating their weaknesses, the mythological presuppositions upon which
these lies are based, and the disastrous consequences for those who choose to
live without God. Our children must be prepared to live among, confront when
necessary, and triumph in debate with secularists. This is one area where
ignorance is NOT bliss.
You may ask, "Haven't
we done anything about this problem?" Yes, we have done a little:
* A relatively few
Southern Baptist churches do actively encourage homeschooling.
* Some of our churches
have fine Christian schools (although some church schools are Christian in name
and prayer only, using the same texts as secular schools).
* Bob Reccord gave us some
impressive results of summer youth ministries.
* Under the Covenant for a
New Century Jimmy Draper at LifeWay has established the Church Resources
Division specifically charged with helping home-schooling and Christian schools.
The man to contact for help is Glen Schultz. Just call LifeWay and ask for Glen.
* And Article XII of the
2000 Baptist Faith and Message notes that, "... the cause of education in
the Kingdom of Christ is coordinate with the causes of missions and general
benevolence, and should receive along with these the liberal support of the
churches. An adequate system of Christian education is necessary to a complete
spiritual program for Christ's people." While it is good that we have
acknowledged the need, we must now do much more to establish this "adequate
system of Christian education."
So that you can further
inform yourselves, I have three handouts for you: an excellent, brief book by
Glen Schultz, Kingdom Education, courtesy of LifeWay; a booklet, Teachers,
Curriculum, Control, by Daniel Smithwick of the Nehemiah Institute; and a
summary of Josh McDowell's points when he spoke at Southwestern.
Together these handouts
make a strong case for the urgency of the need.
It has been a privilege to
be with you today. As Executive Committee members you fill a critically
important role in Southern Baptist life, and indeed in Christian life throughout
the United States and the entire world. I pray the Lord will lay a burden on
your hearts for our children and their Christian education. And I pray that He
will lead you to encourage home-schooling and the establishment of more and more
truly Christian schools.
Oh God! We are losing our
children!
T.C. Pinkney retired from
U.S. Air Force as a Brig. General. In June 2001, he was elected 2nd Vice
President of Southern Baptist Convention. He lives in Alexandria, Va., is the
editor of The Baptist Banner, and can be reached at (703) 780-1566 or TCP@TheBaptistBanner.com.
This copy of Mr.
Pinckney's presentation has been distributed, with his permission, by Marshall
Fritz, President, Alliance for the Separation of School & State, Fresno,
Calif. Mr. Pinckney is a signatory of the Proclamation for the Separation of
School and State.