And I would say that teaching children how to view a flexible medium in a wholesome manner is part of teaching them how they should go. If you simply drill into them never to visit the battle scene, they probably won’t know how to fight if, later in life, they are unavoidably faced with it.
[If you simply drill into them never to visit the battle scene, they probably wont know how to fight if, later in life, they are unavoidably faced with it.]
That’s the same myth espoused by some to justify children attending the public school system and to vilify private schools. The result: a huge shift in the acceptance of non-traditional family values.
By going to Disneyland/world you are funding their godless agenda to be entertained. It’s not a battlefield in a child’s perspective if you are there to derive pleasure from the enemy.
There are better options for family vacations. We’ve been to the Silver Dollar City parks in Branson and the Creation Museum in Kentucky. The life size ark opens there this July and even my cynical teen wants to see it.
We have allowed our kids to see various movies including some Disney films. The two I regret are Frozen and Brother Bear.