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No
More Children's Crusades
by Christopher
J. Klicka
Historians disagree
about exactly what happened in 1212. But they all agree it was a
disaster for tens of thousands of young people.
As traditionally told, the "Children's Crusade" started
in that same year in two different countries. In France, a peasant
boy named Stephen and in Germany a boy named Nicholas both claimed
to have been told by Jesus Christ to go to the Holy Land, where
they would liberate Jerusalem from the Moors (Arab Muslims). These
boys told their followers that they had God's especial protection
for their mission, and that obstacles such as the Mediterranean
Sea would miraculously part before them. Eventually 30,000 children
followed Stephen and another 20,000 followed Nicholas, all with
hearts full of great dreams of glory.
This seemed
like a pipe dream, or something much worse, to most of the children's
parents. After all, grown men fully trained for battle and led by
kings and dukes had failed to reclaim the Holy Land. How could an
untrained, unsupplied band of children succeed where their fathers
and grandfathers had failed?
King Philip
of France told Stephen to call off his crusade. The Pope in Rome
told Nicholas and his remaining crowd of children (many had already
perished on the journey through the Alps from Germany to Italy)
they were too young for such an adventure. Nonetheless, both groups
pressed on.
When Stephen
and his group arrived at Marseilles, merchants provided seven ships
to take them to Palestine. Little was heard of them for years, until
a young priest who embarked with them returned to relate that two
ships had been wrecked and that a Saracen fleet surrounded the remaining
ships. At this time the children learned their intended destination
(and the reason why the merchants were so generous with their ships):
they were to be sold as slaves. Which is exactly what happened.
Nicholas's
group mostly attempted to return home, after the Pope told them
to go back and after the sea failed to part for them. However, few
made it back. As a chronicler of the time said, speaking of both
groups, "One thing is sure: that of the many thousands who
rose up, only a very few returned."
One final result
of the ill-fated Children's Crusade: the angry parents of children
who never returned persuaded the authorities to arrest and hang
Nicholas's father, who it appears had actually encouraged his son's
preaching pretensions out of personal vainglory.
A Losing
Crusade
We all know
the public schools today are not what they used to be thirty years
ago. The facts are conclusive. God and His Word have been removed
from the public schools. All subjects are taught without reference
to God, or to the fact that man has a soul.
Jeremiah 10:12
tells us to "Learn not the way of the heathen." Certainly,
the public schools are no longer teaching our children the way of
a Christian.
Nonetheless,
many Christian parents rationalize that they are sending their children
to the public school as crusaders to evangelize unsaved children.
I am convinced
that sending our children to be potentially have their hearts, minds,
or even souls "martyred" in the school system is much
like the ill-fated Children's Crusade in the Middle Ages. Unlike
the medieval parents, who at least tried to stop their children
from joining the Children's Crusade, Christians today all too often
insist on sending their children -- who are untrained, unequipped,
and unorganized -- into battle with a trained, equipped, organized,
ruthless, and mature foe.
The foe our
children battle in the public schools is the subtle (and sometimes
not-so-subtle) secularism, humanism, and (more recently) non-Western
religious thinking that currently engulfs the public school curriculum
and environment. Your local government school is waiting and ready
to mold and shape each of our children into its image.
Adults,
Not Children, Need to Lead the Crusade to Reclaim the Public Schools
There are no
biblical examples of children being used as missionaries or crusaders.
Rather, the Scripture shows adults acting as missionaries and evangelists.
Do not misunderstand
me. By no means do I want to abandon the public schools. We need
Christian adults -- not children -- to be salt and
light in the public schools as teachers and administrators, school
board members, truant officers, and social workers.
When our children
grow up, then we can send them to public school --
as adults whose jobs give them a measure of authority. But while
they are young, we should not send them to be taught and discipled
by a godless educational system in which they have no power or authority.
God Commands
Parents to Train Their Children in the Lord
God commands
us to provide our children with a comprehensive education based
on His principles. For instance, Ephesians 6:4 tells fathers to
"Not provoke our children unto wrath, but bring them up in
the nurture and admonition of the Lord." Are we provoking our
children to wrath by sending them to a school system where they
learn the opposite of what they learn at home? Are we creating intellectual
schizophrenics? Are we playing Russian roulette with their tender
souls?
Sending our
children to public schools to save souls while they receive six
or more hours of secular brainwashing is not a good way to win a
battle. Disobeying Ephesians 6:4 by doing something in the name
of God does not justify our sin.
Deuteronomy
6 tells us that we are to teach our children God's principles: to
love the Lord their God with all their heart, soul, and mind. It
also says, "You shall teach them [God's commandments] diligently
to your sons and shall talk of them when you sit in your house,
when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, when you rise up.
You shall bind them as a sign on your hand, and they shall be as
frontlets on your forehead. You shall write them on the doorposts
of your house and your gates."
In other words,
God's commands and truths must be taught to children by their parents,
and they must be taught diligently. Our children are to be brought
up in the instruction of the Lord. How can this be achieved if a
child spends six or more hours a day receiving a public education
that teaches him Christianity is irrelevant and that many vital
Christian principles (such as the sanctity of innocent human life
and the importance of faithful, monogamous, heterosexual marriage)
are downright bigoted and bad?
If It Walks
Like a Duck…
Proverbs 23:7
states, "For as a man thinks within himself, so he is."
If our children, who are sent to the schools to save souls, are
trained to think like New Agers (in Earth Day ceremonies of Gaia
worship), like Muslims (in compulsory classes that have them reciting
the Muslim confession of faith and praying towards Mecca), like
Wiccans (teacher resources based on the incredibly popular "Harry
Potter" series often use the books as a springboard for introducing
kids to the history and practices of witchcraft, complete with websites
to visit), like animistic pagans (art activities and even religious
ceremonies based on Native American shamanism and African animism
are common in elementary-level curriculum), and like humanists (as
their science, literature, and history courses ignore God or treat
Him as a passing phase the human race has thankfully outgrown),
our children will tend to act and live like a strange blend of New
Agers, Muslims, Wiccans, animists, and humanists. Meanwhile, an
entire generation of kids already has received the message: even
Christmas itself better not include any references to Jesus Christ.
The common theme here: being an atheist or agnostic is cool, and
so is following any religion except traditional forms of Judaism
or Christianity.
Kids taught
this way won't know what they believe. They will end up following
the crowd or their changing feelings. They'll strongly believe that
everything is relative, what is true for you might not be for me,
and that the worst thing in the world is to tell other people God
has made rules for how we should live.
If you think
this sounds like what just about every college kid today now believes,
you're right. It shouldn't surprise us, because this is what they
were taught from kindergarten through twelfth grade, with our tax
dollars.
Moreover, Scripture
states, "Everyone after he has been fully trained will be like
his teacher" (Luke 6:40). This passage continues by describing
the blind that lead the blind to the pit. This is why it is so important
for parents to teach their children to think as Christians at home,
and to let only godly teachers teach those children. Christian parents
must not let their children to be conformed to the pattern of this
world, but they must be "transformed by the renewing of their
minds, that they may prove what is the good and acceptable and perfect
will of God" (Romans 12:2). Meanwhile the public schools are
working to conform our children's minds to the pattern of this world.
We have been
given a responsibility and authority before God to teach our children.
We can delegate the authority to the public schools, but we can
never delegate the responsibility. God will hold us responsible
for training our children in the Lord as He commands in Scripture.
God Would
Rather Have Obedience Than Sacrifice
Sending our
children as crusaders or missionaries to the public school sounds
like a noble idea, but it is clear from Scripture that in light
of what the public schools have become, it would be presumptuous
disobedience to God.
For instance,
in I Samuel 15:1-23, King Saul directly disobeyed God's command
to destroy all the Amalekite's animals. He spared the animals and
claimed it was only so they could be sacrificed to the Lord --
surely a noble goal! But God rebuked Saul through Samuel, saying
"Does the Lord have much delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices
as in obeying the voice of the Lord? Behold to obey is better than
sacrifice, and to heed than the fat of rams."
Are we trying
to make a "sacrifice" to God by sending our children to
public school on a crusade to "save souls" while disobeying
God's clear commands to us concerning raising our children in His
way? To obey God's clear Word is better than a "child sacrifice"
He never commanded.
High School
Students Aren't Trained Adults Yet
Christian parents
quote Psalm 127 and say we want our children to be "like arrows
in the hand of a warrior." Do we want our children to be homeschooled
part of the time, and then before the "arrow" is finished,
send them off to the public schools? Don't we want our "arrows"
to have a point to them? We do not want to shoot into the secular
world unfinished "arrows" that are not fully sharpened.
Such "arrows" will miss their target and make no impact.
The high school
years are the launching pad for the rest of our children's lives:
the final phase of training each child for adulthood so that he
or she thoroughly thinks like a Christian and applies and knows
biblical solutions to his or her future work, family, and community.
We should not send our children off too soon when they are not fully
trained or equipped.
Having been
blessed by God with a quiver full of seven children, I am convinced
that homeschooling is the best way that my wife Tracy and I can
fulfill God's commands to provide our children with a comprehensive
biblical education and train them to be well-equipped Christian
warriors, ready to stand up for God and His Truth even when it hurts.
Looking
Sharp
As your children
get into the high school years, some may express their desire to
enroll in the public schools. Their reasons will vary. Sometimes
it will be athletics, sometimes the reason will be friends. I urge
you to sit down with your child with the Word of God and go through
Ephesians 6:4 and Deuteronomy 6 and many other passages in Scripture.
Then look your child in the eye and say, "Son or daughter,
I don't want you to be mad at me. But as you can see from the Scripture,
God has given me clear commands on how to train you and I cannot
fulfill these commands if I send you to public school. So the bottom
line is that even though I love you, I would rather have you mad
at me than God mad at me!"
If Satan had
his choice, where would he want you to send your child to school?
I'm sure he loved the Children's Crusade because those children
either ended up dead or enslaved and their mission ended in defeat.
Our culture
is in need. The harvest is great and the workers are few. Let us
all make sure that we raise fully equipped, well-trained, and organized
young adults to go into the world -- including into the
public schools -- and make a difference there for Jesus Christ!
--
Christopher J. Klicka is Senior Counsel of the Home School Legal
Defense Association (HSLDA), and has successfully represented thousands
of homeschool families threatened by prosecutors, social workers,
and truant officers. He also works on drafting federal legislation
and lobbying on Capitol Hill. Chris is author of the popular book,
The Right Choice: Home Schooling, and his newest book, The Heart
of Home Schooling. He and his wife, Tracy, homeschool their seven
children. For information on how to join HSLDA, call (540) 338-5600
or visit www.hslda.org.
Copyright 2005
Home Life, Inc., PO Box 1190, Fenton, MO 63026-1190, (800) 346-6322,
http://www.home-school.com.
Originally published in Practical Homeschooling Sept/Oct 2005. A
Practical Homeschooling subscription is $19.95 for six issues. Used
by permission.
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