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The Home Schooled Girl
Elijah Company Newsletter ^ | September 22, 2004 | Chris Davis

Posted on 09/23/2004 7:04:45 PM PDT by SLB

She lives in a small town in Tennessee, or in a subdivision in North Carolina, or on a ranch in Montana .

She may be 15. Or, she may have graduated from college. Either way, the odds are no boy has ever paid much attention to her. She may wonder if she will ever get married. She is lonely.

What’s her problem? The answer is simple: She is different.

She doesn’t particularly like being different. She may tell you that she doesn’t care; but she does.

Her peers think she is a snob. Her mom says the reason other girls don’t want to be around her is because they are jealous. That doesn’t help much. So she tries to be friendly and kind but that doesn’t help much, either. She may be shunned by other girls and ignored by boys.

She is different. And who wants to be different? Nobody likes others who are different and nobody likes being different.

I have met hundreds of homeschooled girls like this around the world. Each girl thinks she is the only one who is having these experiences. But, there are thousands just like her. If they ever find one another, there would be a huge group hug. And, yes, probably lots of tears. They would finally have found others like themselves who aren’t interested in what girls normally think or talk about. Their talk wouldn’t center around boys or movies or how stupid some other girl is. They would talk about their families and about what interests them and about God and about Jesus. They would pray together and for one another.

That girl from Tennessee who is 15. She’s actually 15 going on 21. She seems to have skipped the teenage years altogether. The girl who has graduated from college without meeting her future husband has been told many times not to worry. “Mister right” is just waiting somewhere in the future. She struggles to believe it and to trust God for her future family.

These girls are different. Not because they wear Christian hairdos or clothing. It really has little to do with externals. But it has everything to do with their Father and what He has done inside them. They are just different, whether they like being different or not. Everyone can tell.

One day I was trying to understand this regarding a young girl who was a friend of my son. All at once the Lord showed me a kind of vision about this girl. Here’s what I saw:

The girl was in her Baptist Sunday school class. All the kids were sitting in a circle. Just then I saw Jesus open the door to the room. He walked directly to this girl and held out His hand to her. She took His hand and got up from her chair. Then Jesus took her out of the class and closed the door. I understood Him to be saying, “This girl doesn’t belong in the same way other people belong. I have made her exclusively Mine.”

I knew this didn’t mean she would never have a family or always be by herself. But the Lord made me understand that He is using the home schooling movement because it is the easiest context in which to raise young people who can be truly “different.”

Why do I keep using the word, “Different”? It is because of the origin of that word. The word “different” is the most exact translation of the Greek work, HOLY (hagios). These kids are different in that the Lord has placed in them something which makes them holy unto Him. They are not really trying to be this way. It’s something He has done. He has separated them from the kind of things normal young people find important. They may struggle with what God has done. They may be terribly lonely. But they ARE different and it is the work of God, Himself.

It is not easy to encourage these girls. Loneliness is no fun and being different can be a real bummer, too. Telling someone to “have faith” can sound pretty shallow, even though it’s the truth. The girl who graduated from college and never had a boy who was a friend ended up meeting “the man of God” she had always dreamed about. They are married now. Another is still waiting, praying for faith to believe it will all turn out as her heart hopes it will.

This is a holy generation. It is a generation set apart unto Him. It is a generation of young people the world has not seen in so long it doesn’t remember what real holiness looks like. The purposes of God rest on our children being willing to walk “in the world” but, at the same time, separated from it. The world waits for a people to show them that a relationship with Jesus isn’t a religious put-on, but is worth giving their lives to, too.

Our girls have been created by the Lord to show everyone what the Bride of Christ looks like, sounds like, acts like, believes like. It can be a burden, but it is precious. We need to deeply respect our girls for what they have been called to be. They need to be encouraged to understand who they are to a world (and, yes, even to a Church) who desperately needs to see the kind of “Lady” Jesus is returning for. We need to give them a vision for who they are that is deeper than simply saying to them, “the other girls are jealous of you.”


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Front Page News; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: homeschool
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To: Cowgirl

You are so right!


101 posted on 09/23/2004 9:59:35 PM PDT by Boazo
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To: JenB
Hey JenB;
Thanks for your kind response, and I totally agree with you. You mentioned courtship in one of your posts, have you ever heard about Biblical Betrothal, the example of romance that Christ gave us in His life here on earth, and in heaven. If you look closely, being the "Church", the ChurchBride for our GroomChrist, we are living a Biblical betrothal awaiting our Perfect Saviors return. And afterso, He takes us unto the marriage feast!

This is Gods example to us of Biblical Romance and marriage.. it's really spectacular!

102 posted on 09/23/2004 10:01:34 PM PDT by CourtneyLeigh (Why can't all of America be Commonwealth?)
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To: JenB
Um... this article is insanely depressing, IMO. This is basically the stereotype I've been fighting for years... the girls I know who fit this little pattern are married or engaged. I'm the one who doesn't fit in - in homeschool circles because I was too into science, fantasy, that sort of thing.

It's funny because NONE of the homeschool kids I know fit this profile. My daughter is growing into something along the lines of a "South Park Republican" and my son is turning into the Great White Hunter.

Last month my daughter (12) entered public school for the first time in 6 years. She's one grade level ahead of her age group, the smallest one in her class and fits in with the other kids socially just fine. She growls at the boys for swearing in front of the little kids, sits giggling with friends at lunch and grumbles over homework. All-in-all, she's a normal, good kid.

Next year she'll be back home to start highschool (she doesn't want to "piddle around" with it) and she'll have friends that she'll meet at the mall or the pool. Homeschool kids are not "freaks". Most of them are normal kids who have access to a better-than-average education and aren't subjected to the Lord of the Flies environment quite as much.

(I don't want to repeat what she had to say about this article! lol!)

103 posted on 09/23/2004 10:02:24 PM PDT by Marie (~shhhhh...~ The liberals are sleeping....)
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To: HairOfTheDog

I found it depressing and uplifting at the same time. Depressing because it touts only the home schooling Christian. Uplifting because home schooled kids are magnificently different.

I have home schooled for 12 years. My eldest at home wanted to go to public high school. We let her. She’s an honor roll student and different—she thinks her peers are idiots. We don’t go to church. I believe in God and her father is an agnostic.


104 posted on 09/23/2004 10:04:38 PM PDT by paix
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To: SLB

Hi,

Would you help me post this and notify the ping list again, I'd like to share an example of Biblical Romance, of two Christians, who both support the homeschool movement, and Gods spiritual leading of individual lives.

Here's part of it, and a link to the rest!

Matthew & Maranatha Chapman were married in 1988. They consciously purposed to offer their lives and wedding as a demonstration of their understanding of the relationship of the Lord Jesus and His bride. For them, being made ready themselves for the Lord as members of His bride, and helping other Christians in doing the same, is what they believe their calling in life and ministry to the body of Christ to be, and they wanted this expressed and demonstrated in the way they approached their marriage.


http://www.boldchristianliving.com/index.php?option=content&task=view&id=9

Thanks,
your sister in Christ,
CourtneyLeigh




105 posted on 09/23/2004 10:06:42 PM PDT by CourtneyLeigh (Why can't all of America be Commonwealth?)
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To: Bob Mc
"And I firmly support the local school districts mind their own business. I am insulted that some petty bureaucrat (a total stranger no less) feels the need to approve the raising of my family."

My sentiments exactly! Besides: Those of us who were educated in the public schools, know just how well the teachers and bureaucrats are at intervening on behalf of their underprivileged and possibly abused students within their own systems don't we?
We've all known some unfortunate kid living in terrible circumstances, who is not learning,with no one at home who cares, and no one(Principle, teacher, or secretary) seems to ever notice.
In other words, if they are so unconcerned about the wellbeing of their own students, what makes anyone think they'd give a rip about the well being of those who are not, except to say that those kids should be in the system too.
106 posted on 09/23/2004 10:08:32 PM PDT by Hillarys nightmare (Being a Democrat requires nothing more than the ability to point, accuse, and whine loudly.)
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To: SLB; Havoc; JenB; RonPaulLives; cyborg; Grig; hiredhand; HairOfTheDog; Styria; jude24; ...
The Broken-Heart Syndrome But contemporary American dating practices preclude such emotional self-denial. The essence of dating is flirting. Dating is recreational romance in which each party intentionally endeavors to cultivate the other's desire, while recognizing the relationship is most likely temporary. Even in the church today most cannot imagine proceeding from singleness to marriage without the institutional flirting of dating. Most Christians have assumed that it is normal and healthy for young people to experience several dating relationships prior to selecting a spouse. These recreational romances are assumed to be emotional preparation for marriage. Let's ponder this assumption, though. Are temporary romantic relationships really God's ideal? As a young couple become romantically involved with one another they begin to bond emotionally. They increasingly share their hearts with one another. Their thoughts and imaginations are focused on their partner. They begin the God-designed process of becoming "one" even if there is virtually no physical relationship. They become one heart long before they become "one flesh." They both understand, however, that the dating relationship does not involve any permanent commitments and that either party is free to break up the romance at any time, for any reason. They likely both dread the prospect of breaking up and hope that perhaps this is the relationship that will stick. In most cases, however, even Christian young people proceed through a number of serial romances before their marriage. So in breaking up these two hearts that have begun bonding are ripped apart. They each leave the relationship with at least some degree of heart-break. They might either display varying degrees of emotional devastation or simply toughen their feelings. Either way they leave the relationship emotionally wounded or scarred. But soon the pain of breaking up is forgotten as they develop a new romance with a different partner. In time, however, this relationship results in another heart-break and more emotional wounds that leave scars. Over a period of several years a young person will experience a number of such emotional bonds being severed. Some of the romances are serious and others admittedly so casual that breaking up is hardly painful at all. Yet the cumulative effect is that the young people's hearts are becoming increasingly calloused. Some young people respond to this sequence by developing strategies to play the game in such a way as to always be the heart-breaker rather than the heart-broken. Even for Christian youth such flirtatious manipulation of others' emotions sometimes becomes a source of increasing arrogance with each conquest. Finally the young person finds the one they will eventually marry. But the memories of past romances, the pattern of jilting partners when they lose their initial intense appeal or to avoid being vulnerable to being left oneself, the insecurity from fear of being dropped again, and the callouses cultivated to protect from further pain all become barriers to emotional (and later physical) unity. Yet we still insist that dating is somehow healthy preparation for marriage. Isn't such emotional promiscuity more likely preparation for divorce than for marriage?
107 posted on 09/23/2004 10:09:55 PM PDT by CourtneyLeigh (Why can't all of America be Commonwealth?)
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To: SLB

I think the idea painted that most homeschooled girls are lonely and outcast is wrong.. and what the heck is a "christian hairdo" ??


108 posted on 09/23/2004 10:14:01 PM PDT by Awestruck (The artist formerly known as Goodie D)
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To: Maigret
It is just such superior arrogant attitudes that tolerate no question or criticism that leads to the type of situation to which I'm referring.

I forget, are you talking about homeschools or public schools?

Get over it. It's human nature to feel like your way is the right way and everyone else is just stupid for not seeing it. Nobody has the market cornered on arrogance, there is enough for everyone.

109 posted on 09/23/2004 10:14:18 PM PDT by hopespringseternal
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To: Maigret

Well, I'm genuinely curious, what is your point, then? If you don't approve of public schools and are now not confident in homeschoolers, what alternative do you support as being synonomous with quality education, i.e., private schools?

The case you cite is indeed sad, I'm sure all here would agree. However, as I said, problems will be found anywhere in life. Some parents are just flat-out bad parents, regardless of method of schooling. However, with standardized tests, stats on community involvement as adults, etc., increasingly pointing to the majority of homeschoolers being successful, I'm not sure why you would argue that home schooling is not necessarily synonomous with quality education. Of course it will not be in every case. Nor will every private or public school education be excellent. 100% success is unlikely in any educational arena. Comparing apples to apples, however, overall home schooling is looking to be quite a success. I honestly think we're talking more, in the case you cite, about flat-out bad parenting, which can happen no matter what the method of schooling.

With best wishes --


110 posted on 09/23/2004 10:18:01 PM PDT by GOPrincess
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To: CourtneyLeigh

Yeah, but your "Biblical Romance" analogy can go waaaay too far. I've heard girls whose testimonies basically amount to "my boyfriend ditched me and I'm lonely, but it turns out Jesus is like, the best boyfriend ever!!" Most of them weren't homeschoolers, but we need to remember that it's the church that's the bride of Christ, not individuals.

As to your other post - I have no intention of entering into a relationship unless I think marriage is at least a possible outcome. But criticizing kids for losing their hearts - which are hard to control - while maintaining physical and moral purity, is wrong.

Please don't take any of my words critically. I do not mean to attack you or your positions, merely to bring up points which I think should be at least mentioned.


111 posted on 09/23/2004 10:22:55 PM PDT by JenB
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To: Eagle Eye
However most of the homeschooling freepers come across as defensive and extremely snobbishly arrogant.

Defensive... yup. I don't know of a homeschooler that hasn't been attacked either by relatives and/or strangers for HSing. Sometimes it's only a gentle question of our judgment and an implication that we're screwing up our kids. Sometimes it's an out-and-out accusation of child abuse. It's scary to homeschool in this environment.

Arrogant? Possibly. It's probably more along the lines of righteous. Subtle difference. With the constant feeling that you're about to be gouged (yet again) at any moment, you tend to look for validation where ever you can. After a few years of this pattern, you do feel righteous. And don?t forget the HSing is HARD. If we didn?t feel strongly that it was the right thing to do, we?d give up after a few years.

112 posted on 09/23/2004 10:22:56 PM PDT by Marie (~shhhhh...~ The liberals are sleeping....)
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To: Awestruck
According to both the old and new testament, women are given hair as a covering of prayer. When they aren't with their husbands/fathers, their hair is like a covering before God sharing with Him their purity and loyalty in constant PRAYER!

.It is biblical, and is not just something to take as a story. It's mentioned in the Bible more than once, and before the 18th century, most women would've been ashamed to have had even collar bone length hair.

113 posted on 09/23/2004 10:23:18 PM PDT by CourtneyLeigh (Why can't all of America be Commonwealth?)
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To: SLB

****The girl was in her Baptist Sunday school class. All the kids were sitting in a circle. Just then I saw Jesus open the door to the room. He walked directly to this girl and held out His hand to her. She took His hand and got up from her chair. Then Jesus took her out of the class and closed the door. I understood Him to be saying, “This girl doesn’t belong in the same way other people belong. I have made her exclusively Mine.”****

This person is insane or posessed. He is the same person in Utah who tells his daughters that Polygamy is God's way as he sells them to his cousin down the road in return for some fresh new meat to carve from one of his other 'godly' buddies.

ANYONE who tells you that Jesus talks to them directly is a false prophet. I guarantee it.

I went through several churces where Jesus spoke directly to members of the church. Madness and all manner of evil tore through the body in every case and destroyed that church. Even killing some of the members. (Women who married 'ex' gay men because Jesus spoke to them and told them to do it.)

Jesus spoke directly to the Apostles and that was IT. The rest of us must die before we know him as they did.

(I think home schooling is just fine if managed by rational godly people.)


114 posted on 09/23/2004 10:23:58 PM PDT by mercy
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To: CourtneyLeigh

so I'm still a little confused..what are we supposed to do with our hair??? I've got fairly long hair... how should I wear it or should I cover it?


115 posted on 09/23/2004 10:26:56 PM PDT by Awestruck (The artist formerly known as Goodie D)
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To: JenB
As to your other post - I have no intention of entering into a relationship unless I think marriage is at least a possible outcome. But criticizing kids for losing their hearts - which are hard to control - while maintaining physical and moral purity, is wrong. Please don't take any of my words critically. I do not mean to attack you or your positions, merely to bring up points which I think should be at least mentioned.

:o(
When did I criticize kids? I was never criticized. It is hard to keep our hearts, which is moral purity. And also keep physical purity. Especially when the Bible says what we think in our hearts is as much a sin as acting it out.

But I never criticized anyone.

Jen,It's not an analogy, it's Gods word!

Jesus isn't my boyfriend, lady, He's my father in Heaven, and He holds the key to my heart, any man who wants me, must pray to the Lord about whether or not, we are to have relations outside of Christian Brotherhood.

And no, most of them weren't homeschoolers, I wasn't.

116 posted on 09/23/2004 10:29:30 PM PDT by CourtneyLeigh (Why can't all of America be Commonwealth?)
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To: CourtneyLeigh

I don't really know how to respond to the self-righteous hostility in your posting.

My contention is that somebody who thinks there is a "Christian" hairstyle is already too far gone for reason to reach. They demand tolerance for their views, but the implication in this statement is that other people's views are less than acceptable. They hint at their own intolerance while decrying someone else's intolerance.

The only comment the Bible makes on hair is that men should keep theirs shorter (I Cor. 11:14) and that women shouldn't show off with fancy braids, etc. (I Tim 2:9, I Peter 3:3). The only rule mentioned about dress is an admonition against extravagant displays of wealth (I Tim 2:9, I Peter 3:3).

My "antennae go up" (as Ann Coulter is so fond of saying) whenever I hear someone state or imply that God has made a special revelation to them. And I prefer my Christianity to be rooted in fact and reason, rather than emotionalism and mysticism, thank you.

As far as your "Damaged Goods" line goes - get over yourself. "For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God." There's no one in the fold that isn't damaged. Most of us don't get into public displays of self-flagellation over it.


117 posted on 09/23/2004 10:34:46 PM PDT by TwoWolves (The only kind of control the liberals don't want is self control.)
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To: SLB

We are indeed a strange and peculiar people. Some may even say...different?

I would be thrilled if my two homeschooled young men would court and marry a young lady like the woman mentioned in the article.


118 posted on 09/23/2004 10:35:50 PM PDT by andie74 (W stands for Women)
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To: Awestruck
Many Christian women, have a symbolic way of covering. However, we aren't to be ritualistic as Christian's. You need to know that your hair, in good length, is Gods gift to you, to share with God your status of Constant prayer.

It isn't for anyone else, except your husband. The New Testament says long hair is for women, for the head of the family is the Man, and the head of man is Christ. However, when we venture alone at times, with just our children, or out shopping or something, it is often practiced to have a hair barrette or cloth on a small pony tail as a symbol of coverage.

My family and I didn't feel God asked this of us, so I only keep the pony tail, unless I'm with a Christian brother(immediate family).

And really, it's between you and the Lord, how you will covet His communication with you as a woman.

A Christian elder once said, this is what I believe God would have my family to do. It may seem extreme, but I've seen more extreme, and less extreme acts amongst my Brothers and Sisters in Christ!

And just like many cultures find it vain to perform full body baptism, (which is a symbolic act of salvation), many find this act of "christian hairdo" also vain. However, it's really no one elses business, it's just Gods business!

119 posted on 09/23/2004 10:36:31 PM PDT by CourtneyLeigh (Why can't all of America be Commonwealth?)
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To: TwoWolves
You are right, My rantings of Damaged Goods isn't just relevant of my life. We've all sinned,,, I guess I did get a little emotional, I apologize.

There are other scriptures other than the ones you mentioned, in the New Testament:

It's in 1 Corinthians chapter 11:1-16 "1Imitate me, just as I also imitate Christ. Head Coverings 2Now I praise you, brethren, that you remember me in all things and keep the traditions just as I delivered them to you. 3But I want you to know that the head of every man is Christ, the head of woman is man, and the head of Christ is God. 4Every man praying or prophesying, having his head covered, dishonors his head. 5But every woman who prays or prophesies with her head uncovered dishonors her head, for that is one and the same as if her head were shaved. 6For if a woman is not covered, let her also be shorn. But if it is shameful for a woman to be shorn or shaved, let her be covered. 7For a man indeed ought not to cover his head, since he is the image and glory of God; but woman is the glory of man. 8For man is not from woman, but woman from man. 9Nor was man created for the woman, but woman for the man. 10For this reason the woman ought to have a symbol of authority on her head, because of the angels. 11Nevertheless, neither is man independent of woman, nor woman independent of man, in the Lord. 12For as woman came from man, even so man also comes through woman; but all things are from God. 13Judge among yourselves. Is it proper for a woman to pray to God with her head uncovered? 14Does not even nature itself teach you that if a man has long hair, it is a dishonor to him? 15But if a woman has long hair, it is a glory to her; for her hair is given to her F35 for a covering. 16But if anyone seems to be contentious, we have no such custom, nor do the churches of God. "

120 posted on 09/23/2004 10:42:02 PM PDT by CourtneyLeigh (Why can't all of America be Commonwealth?)
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