Julie Austin
January 22, 2003
I am often asked to help people in scheduling
their families. Because of this, I have written
out some things to consider when making a household
schedule.
Our over arching principle for life is: To live all of life for the glory
of God. All the things we do must therefore come under this heading or...we
shouldn't do it.
A Covenantal Family
A covenantal family is a unit, which works
together towards its purpose. It is not a group
of individuals who are pursuing their own goals
and who then come together at night to sleep under
the same roof.... like a hotel. A covenant family
is a place of purposeful living, mutual nurturing,
and beautiful worship to King Jesus, our reigning
Lord. Therefore, all that we do, we do under the
Biblical instruction for family.
The father is the head of the family as Christ
is the head of the church. The father, therefore,
is ultimately responsible for everything that occurs
in the life of his family. If a ship hits a rock,
the captain is the one who is responsible, even
if he was not at the helm at the time of the collision.
The father must make it his business to know what
his children are learning, whose care and guidance
they are under, what outside influences they are
experiencing, and what the set goals of achievement
are for each of his children. He is responsible
for training them in the ways of the Lord, reading
the Bible to them and discussing doctrine with
them daily. He must live the SHEMA (Deut. 6:4-9).
The mother is the helper to the father. Woman
was made for the man not the man for the woman.
She must show herself to be trustworthy in all
areas. She must live her life for her God and for
her husband. She must help in the education and
training of her children and keep her husband abreast
of all that her children are learning and areas
where they are weak and need help. Her job is for
the ultimate good for her husband and family, to
provide for their needs and make her husband look
good, not point out his weaknesses to others. Her
goal should never be separate from that of her
husband. Pursuing a career apart from the family
is absurd. Her husband and family are her career.
The children must be taught discipline and reverence
to God and to the authority He has placed above
them. Children are taught daily either in a positive
Biblical way, or in a way that will reinforce their
sin nature. When we do not discipline our children
and expect them to obey the first time they are
asked, we are training them that they can wait be
independent of the covenantal family appease
their own sinful natures, and, when they feel like
it, do what they please. Instead of living close
to disobedience and still "get away with it," they
need to be taught that their parents and their
God require their immediate and absolute obedience.
The Bible says the father who does not discipline
his children, hates them. Society has pushed
the feminist agenda of individualism to such a
degree that it permeates the church at large. We
are so feelings based that the concept of absolute
truth and absolute obedience is foreign to our
thinking. Some churches feel that teaching the
Ten Commandments can harm the child's psyche! As
the apostle Paul asked: How do we know what sin
is without the law? We need to understand why we
need a Savior from the sin we are born into. Subtle
or not so subtle teachings of "You can do
no wrong, my child," are harmful to the very
soul of the child. So, if discipline is not taught,
expected, and maintained, the parents are fighting
an uphill battle that cannot be won for without
the foundation, the house will not stand.
There is a wonderful video series on the topic
of covenantal families by RC Sproul, Jr. This is
a great starting place for us all. It is entitled: Bound
for Glory and can be purchased at Ligonier
Ministries or The Highlands Study Centerr.
Our Schedule
Why schedule? So that we actually accomplish things in an organized planned
way. Not a "just gettin' by" attitude. Let's go again to our ultimate
goal: To live all of life to the glory of God. This question has to
come up regularly: Does this glorify God? If the answer is no, or I'm not
sure, it needs to be looked into. Regarding homeschooling, if we remember
our ultimate goal and keep it in front of our eyes, how would that change
our activities?
Home Life
There are regular daily chores that need to
be done in the home. Every walking family member
can do something. Give a toddler a duster and have
him get into the regular practice of family work
(supervised by Mom or an older sibling). Regular
chores must be part of the schedule or the house
will be chaotic. Home life should take priority
over outside activities. There should be planned
meals together with the entire covenantal family...required.
This should be a joyous time of daily unity discussing
life as lead by the father.
Family Ministry
The family is the best missionary program
there is. What mutual joy and growth there can
be in a nursing home ministry, care of an elderly
neighbor, or whatever the father of the family
sets as the ministry for his family. This should
be part of the schedule.
Health or Physical Fitness
Yes, this too is important. We should take care of our bodies given to us by
God. But be careful. Sports, athletic clubs, and even recreational activities
can be a real house divider. If Johnny is in baseball, Suzy is in ballet, Mom
goes to the gym to workout, and Dad plays golf with the guys, this could eat
up much of the time each week in addition to potentially putting individual
family members in unprotected and ungodly situations. Wouldn't the better or
best thing to do, be to have a regular family activity (as well as money-saving)?
Taking family walks in the morning or evenings, a family tennis game on Saturday
mornings, family football in the backyard, badminton, even a game of tag these
types of activities keep the family together and build memories as well as
help condition the body. Invite another family or two over for a weekly game.
Also, it is a good idea to schedule in little bits of exercise time for the
children throughout the day and recess for them to run around. But it would
be a good idea to eliminate anything that doesn't promote our ultimate purpose: To
live all of life to the glory of God and our high purpose of being a
covenantal family working together to the glory of God, which includes raising
a godly offspring. (Here is something to remember: You can't train a child,
if you aren't there to train him if he spends most of his time with
his coaches, teachers, peers, etc. those are his influencers.)
Outside Activities
We've already touched on this. But let's
look into it a bit deeper. How does our goal
of living all of life to the glory of God,
and our high purpose of being a covenantal family
working together to the glory of God help us
to determine which outside activities we are
involved in? Here are a few questions we can
ask: Can we truly participate in this activity
to the glory of God? Does it in any way take
away from our responsibilities as a family? Does
it promote covenantal family unity? Does it take
away from covenantal family unity? Is it the
best activity to choose for this time slot, considering
our family goals? Is it worldly ?(friendship
with the world is enmity to God) Does it cause
undue stress? Is there a better way we could
be spending our time? Why do I want to participate
in this? Is that reason God honoring?
Family Altar
The family altar needs to be a daily part
of the schedule, not something that is kicked
in if there is time. Personally we find meals
are the best time to do this. Remember the Shema?
Pure Scripture is enough, we don't need devotional
books, we have the Bible! Sing hymns and spiritual
songs, pray and worship together our Sovereign
Lord who is over all.
School Time
This does need scheduling! We need to be
careful to balance exercise (recess), chores,
and upkeep responsibilities and allow enough
time for each topic we are studying. Don't exasperate
the children by cramming too much into one day.
But this should be a holistic view, not a segmented
approach. Education is part of life and our purpose,
not a separate thing.
I recommend daily recitation tapes. Tape the
things you want your children to memorize. This
is really important especially in the grammar stage
of the Trivium (for the wee ones). I tape hymns,
catechism questions, listing the states, verses,
language alphabets, reformation songs I made up,
listing the presidents, Latin songs, action songs,
etc. on cassette tapes. The children listen to
a different cassette tape together for each day
of the week. They follow the instructions given
on the tapes while doing penmanship writing practices.
This is how our children memorized the book of
James in the Bible.
Scheduling "school" can be tricky. First off, if there are too many
outside activities (personally two weekly would be my limit), you are setting
yourself up to fail. There will always be something that comes up, someone
who suggests a jaunt to the park, a conversation that extends way beyond the
time allotted, etc. This past semester we had choir and piano lessons which
all the children participated in. We scheduled those outside activities in
and they worked beautifully in the schedule. But if we would have added any
more, I believe it would have cut into things that are of a higher priority
to us. Consider piano and choir, for example. There are recitals, performances,
and practice all of which are time consuming. If we had added other
things that took us away from the home, our regular studies would have been
interrupted and the children would have been more likely to get behind on things,
get out of regular study habits, and are learning (because we are teaching
them in what we do!) that a busy, hectic life is what we do. Most likely they
would do the same with their children. Is that glorifying to God? And where
do you then have time to help others with a need?
All this does not mean that we never see anyone
nor go anywhere. We believe the best way to accomplish
our purposes is through family activities done
together. This includes regular interactions with
other like-minded families. Our children do not
go to sleep overs unless we are all going.
They do not go to youth camps, youth groups, or
other age segregating activities which break up
the covenantal family unit and promote individualism.
We plan our vacations as a family uniting time,
usually going to a Christian camp. But we even
have to pick and choose among these, as many have
the parents go to their meetings and the children
go to their X-treme adventures. Not things we are
seeking to promote.
Here is one that you are free to disagree with, but we (the parents) do not
go on "dates" or promote things for us that require us to regularly
leave our blessings and responsibilities. I am not saying that going somewhere
alone with your spouse is a sin so please don't read that into what
I am saying. We, for the most part, plan everything as a family unit. The reason
is, that it works toward our goal and we are not living in a wing-it way, but
purposefully to produce the fruit we are cultivating. If we can't wait to leave
our children "for a break from them" what does that teach them? Where
is that weekly get away in Scripture? What is the motivation behind it? I think
we need to be careful in making Christianized pop-psychology our way of thinking
and acting. I've heard conference shows on the radio say that if you don't
go out with your spouse once a week, then you're going to have marital problems.
Says who? Not Scripture. Where is our "truth" coming from? If you
are in a wonderful covenantal community and a trusted godly family helps care
for your children when there is need, I am in no way condemning that or attempting
to make anyone feel guilt. My point is, let all we do be based on Scripture
not someone's list of what we should or shouldn't do, and make sure that your "lists" are
Biblical, not license to sin nor to be pharisaical.
One additional point, is that while it is important
to, for the most part, plan things as a family we
do believe in all male or all female activities....men
just don't take well to tea parties. The reason
we believe in separating like this, is that in
scripture we see the older men teaching the younger
and the older women teaching the younger within
the church. There has to be time for this to occur.
While this can and does happen in the context of
families getting together , there are times when
that is not appropriate nor practical. It is important
for the men to discuss and debate doctrine and
for their sons to observe this. It is also important
for the women to learn the things the Bible teaches,
such as are mentioned in Proverbs 31. Where we
would not age-segregate, we would sex segregate.....again,
because it promotes our over arching purpose: To
live all of life to the Glory of God. May almighty
God be honored in our obedience to His ways according
to His word.
Ephesians 6:24 Grace be with all those who love
our Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity. Amen.
solus Christus! sola scriptura ! sola gratia ! sola fide ! soli Deo gloria
!
Christ alone ! scripture alone ! grace alone ! faith alone ! to God alone be
glory!
Julie Austin is the 40 year old happily blessed wife of John Austin. John has
been a pharmaceutical representative for the past 18 years. He is employed by
Aventis Pharmaceuticals. The Austins have been blessed with four children (so
far). Joshua is 13 years old, Jacob is 11 years old, Jessica is 10 years old
and Julia is 7 years old. They enjoy homeschooling using the classical approach.
They live in Hickman, California with their dog: Bilbo Baggins. She can be reached
at John4jul@afo.net.
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