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By Rebecca
Grace | AFA Journal Staff Writer
Despite the media attention garnered from a
resolution urging Southern Baptists to "remove their children
from the government schools," messengers to the 2004 Annual
Meeting of the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) failed to back
the controversial initiative. However, the conventions lack
of support did not blind evangelicals to concerns brought to the
forefront by this proposed resolution.
According to AgapePress, in 2002 the SBCs
Council on Family Life reported that approximately 88% of evangelical
children leave the church soon after high school graduation. Due
to such a high percentage of loss in combination with other devastating
factors, T. C. Pinckney, a retired Air Force brigadier general and
former second-vice president of the SBC, and Bruce Shortt, a Texas
attorney, decided it was past time to take action.
With the support of E. Ray Moore, founder of
The Exodus Mandate Project (www.Exodusmandate.org),
Shortt and Pinckney drafted the resolution to be submitted to the
annual meeting of the SBC prior to its convening June 15-16, 2004,
in Indianapolis, Indiana
As set forth by www.sbc.net,
"A resolution has traditionally been defined as an expression
of opinion or concern, as compared to a motion, which calls for
action. A resolution is not used to direct an entity of the Southern
Baptist Convention to specific action other than to communicate
the opinion or concern expressed."
In its final form, the resolution intended to
bring all parents to the realization that educating their children
is their personal Biblical responsibility.
"You cannot read the Bible and tell me
with a straight face that God assigns responsibility for educating
the children to the government. It just does not appear in the Bible,"
Pinckney said.
The resolution also recognized government schools
as "godless" and "anti-Christian" and proposed
home schooling and "truly" Christian schooling as the
only viable alternatives. However, the resolution did commend and
encourage Christian teachers and administrators to be "salt
and light" in a decaying system.
"It would be devastating to the [public]
schools to remove Christian public school teachers and students,"
said Jane Robertson, a former public school teacher and wife of
a Southern Baptist preacher.
Robertsons daughter, Danielle Eldridge,
is also a pastors wife, former private Christian school teacher,
and presently a public school teacher.
Eldridge knows from experience how beneficial
it is to have Christian students in her classroom. She recalls one
student who wanted to be either an astronaut or a preacher. He chose
her public school classroom as his "congregation" and
took what opportunities he could, usually holidays, to share with
his classmates about Christ.
"He shared the whole plan of salvation,"
Eldridge said. "It was exactly what I wanted shared in my classroom."
Eldridge, like other Christian public school
teachers, is restricted when it comes to sharing her faith in the
classroom. However, she explained how holidays are just one way
that Christian teachers can work with their Christian students when
it comes to sharing the gospel in government schools.
"Holidays call for glimpses of Christianity.
If it were not for Christian students in schools, then we wouldnt
see those."
And without Christian students, there would
be an absence of Christian parents who provide vital support for
Christian teachers, as Eldridge knows from experience.
"Its more challenging in public
schools, for me personally. But I think it is good [sometimes] to
surround yourself with non-Christians," Eldridge explained,
as a means of being salt and light to non-believing students and
teachers.
The issue of being "salt and light"
in a dying world is a significant argument surrounding the thought
of removing evangelical children from the public school system.
"We dont send our eight-year-olds
off to war. The idea that some Christians have is that theyre
going to send their Christian kids out to witness in the public
schools, which is like sending the Christians out in the first,
second, and third century to witness to the lions in the arena,"
argued Dr. D. James Kennedy, senior minister of Coral Ridge Presbyterian
Church, in an interview with American Family Radio (AFR).
"Theyre in no way able to deal with
adult teachers that eat them for lunch," he said.
"If the United States gets into war where
we have to draft soldiers, we do not draft soldiers one day and
put them into combat the next. Theyre not ready for it. They
have not been trained," Pinckney further explained.
"But it comes back to the fundamental point.
We have an obligation to provide our children with a Christian education,"
Shortt reiterated.
Still, many question the practicality of such
a resolution since many parents are not able financially to provide
their children with a Christian education.
While Pinckney sees Christian education as the
only option, Dr. James Dobson, founder of Focus on the Family, rationalized
the alternatives differently in a radio interview with AFR.
As a former public school teacher, counselor,
and administrator, Dobson said he does not like being critical of
the public schools "especially since many parents cant
afford to take their kids out and put them in private education.
"Private education is very expensive today,
and furthermore, there are some circumstances in some states that
are not so contradictory to the Judeo-Christian ethic and system
of values where I might be willing to leave my kids there,"
he explained.
While Dobson did not feel at liberty to comment
specifically on the SBC resolution having not read it, he did say,
"I do believe, under all circumstances, parents need to monitor
everything being taught because the educational system, as a whole,
is . . . failing our kids academically and morally."
Therefore, Moore, who endorses only Christian
education, said there are three warning signs Christian parents
should look for as deterrents to placing their children in public
schools: secular curriculum, non-Christian teachers and peer pressure.
In addition to being aware of negative factors
in government schools, supporters of the resolution also point out
the significance of distinguishing between Christian schools and
"truly" Christian schools.
"There are schools that have Christian
in their name or perhaps some denomination in their name, and perhaps
they open the school day over the intercom [with prayer] and close
it with prayer over the intercom. But they use exactly the same
materials and have the exact same academic perspective that government
schools do," Pinckney said.
He explained that if parents want to send their
children to Christian schools, they need to go into the schools
and "examine the textbooks, sit in on some of the classes,
observe the teachers, talk to the principal, [and] observe the students."
Parents should also pay attention to the type
of dress and language of the school.
To Moore, failing to adhere to these warning
signs and others indicates a compartmentalization of faith by Christian
parents.
"Several times [in the Bible], it is very
obvious God is assigning the responsibility of educating the children
to the parents," Pinckney explained.
According to an article by SBC Writer Tom Strode,
Calvin Wittman, chairman of the SBC Resolutions Committee, said
" this is a responsibility that God has given to the
parents of each individual child and we encourage parents to exercise
that God-given responsibility over their children. "
Despite the differing views, Pinckney continued
his efforts by attempting to attach a very similar amendment to
a "secularization of culture" resolution prior to its
approval by the SBC messengers.
However, "it seemed the convention wanted
choices, wanted to be the salt and light in public schools,"
Robertson explained.
After what Robertson described as a short but
spirited debate of the amendment by both supporters and opponents,
the SBC messengers overwhelmingly decided against anything related
to an exodus from the public schools, as expected by Dr. Jack Graham,
2002-2004 SBC president.
Prior to the convention, Graham told The Dallas
Morning News that the "resolution will never see the light
of day."
While the light of day seems dim for the authors
and supporters of the resolution, they are hopeful that the resolution
took them one step closer to informing Americas parents of
what they believe it is going to take to save Americas children.
"If we save our children, we may save our
churches. And having saved our churches, we still, at this late
hour, may have saved our nation. So we feel this is an agenda for
revival and renewal and the re-Christianization of America,"
Moore said.

SALT
AND LIGHT ONE STUDENTS VIEW
Tenth-grader
and avid athlete, Miles Backstrom, admits there is a lack of freedom
to share the love of Jesus Christ in a public school.
"[But] to be truthful,
I would not be very happy if my parents took me out
and
put me into a private school."
"This year I was
chosen to be an FCA [Fellowship of Christian Athletes] officer
for the next school year and the opportunity to share with my
peers the gift of Jesus Christ is so awesome," Miles said.
He believes that if
Christian students leave the public school system, then his non-believing
friends and classmates "would have a negative perception
of Christians.
"If I dont
lead by example and be a light for God, some may not know of the
gift of salvation. I know that I am human and may fail at times
in my attempts to be the salt and light for God, but God gives
me a new day every day."

RECOMMENDED
RESOURCE
Expressing
Gods Love At School is a 25-page booklet from Gateways
to Better Education. It offers "52 successful ways to bring
a godly influence to your childrens school and classroom."
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