What if we shared with our children the vision of the family and home that God designed? What if we modeled and encouraged the old ways, the biblical ways, the Puritan ways, from the time our children were young?
Read MoreThere are many modern words that we don’t find in Scripture, but that doesn’t make them invalid. We know that abortion is murder, whether that exact term is found in the Bible. We use the internet, despite its absence in Scripture. A Republic is a superior form of government, even though Moses and Jesus didn’t mention it. We also don’t find pants, cars, smartphones, or government schools in the Bible, but here we are.
Read MoreThe following represents a select number of actual questions recently sent in to the ministry (lightly edited for brevity, clarity, and anonymity).
Read MoreWhen people want to be lied to, and look to use God’s name for that end, not only do they accumulate false teachers for themselves, but God is the one who provides them. When men give God false devotion, He gives them false direction. When they offer false piety, He offers false prophecy.
Read MoreThe world looks to motivate based on earthly success, which is ultimately fleeting. The Christian motivates based on a knowledge of God, which is eternal. Which one do you think is worth drudging through another language arts lesson? Your kids will recognize the same thing.
Read MoreYet, in spite of their sin, God had not forgotten about His people—nor His enemies (cf. Lam. 3:59-66). With such an exalted view of God, it’s no surprise that in 1925, Thomas Obadiah Chisholm (1866-1960) wrote the famous hymn “Great Is Thy Faithfulness,” based on the third lament in this book.
Read MoreThe following represents a select number of actual questions recently sent in to the ministry (lightly edited for brevity, clarity, and anonymity).
Read MoreAs one of his earliest hymns, written in 1523 (a mere six years after nailing the 95 Theses), the words express precisely the inner struggle—and subsequent peace of mind—felt by Luther after learning the truths of the Gospel that had been so thoroughly obscured by the Roman Catholic religion throughout his early life. In short, this psalm described Luther’s own journey in finding forgiveness.
Read MoreComing in at just under two hundred pages, Anyone Can Homeschool first addresses these common objections, and then finishes by equipping convinced parents with the information they need to get going.
Read MoreJust as a potter can reshape a spoiled jar, so too could God reshape the nation (cf. Jer. 18:6). And in fact, God promised He would do just that. There would indeed come a day in which God would provide a New Covenant, one that—unlike the Mosaic Covenant—would be permanent, personal, and perfect (cf. Jer. 31:31-37).
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