Lee Duigon
June 11, 2004
"The great missionary requirement
of the days ahead is Christian schools and
institutions," wrote R. J. Rushdoony.1
Chalcedon's founder, R. J. Rushdoony, devoted
much of his time and effort to help launch
the homeschooling movement in America. Twenty
years later, we might ask what ought to be
the next step for Christian homeschooling.
To train homeschool graduates to become
the leaders of a new America — answers
Ned Ryun, director of Generation Joshua,
a project aimed at doing just that.
"Send Them Out"
The Home School Legal Defense Association
( Washington, D.C.) created Generation Joshua
to train homeschooled students in civics
and “then send them out to impact their
world for Christ," Ryun said.
Today, he said, 2 1/2 to 3 million American
girls and boys are being homeschooled. (The
U.S. Department of Education estimates 2
million.) This is up from some 1 million
ten years ago. Homeschooling has been growing
at a steady 10 percent a year since then.
"I’d say 75 to 85 percent of
the parents are doing it because they want
to give their children a Christian education," Ryun
said. "They have rejected the amorality
of the public schools."
Homeschoolers aged fourteen to nineteen
can enroll in Generation Joshua for $10 a
year, a nominal fee required by federal regulations.
They receive online instruction in civics
year-round, featuring courses on the Founding
Fathers and their ideals, constitutional
law, and Blackstone's commentaries on English
law, taught by professors at Patrick Henry
College, Virginia.
In the summer, students may participate
in seminars and conferences.
"The end point of the program is to
build teams of young volunteers who will
then be assigned to work in election campaigns
for strong Christian candidates," Ryun
said. "We hope to mobilize 4,000 to
5,000 volunteers by the fall of this year."
In 2002, seven teams of young Christian
volunteers worked on Congressional races
in several states, manning phone banks, distributing
literature, and campaigning for pro-life,
pro-family Christian candidates.
Of the seven races they worked in, six
were winners.
Tomorrow's Leaders
"A lot of newly elected leaders come to Washington, D.C., with high ideals," Ryun
said, "and they just get sucked into the system."
Ryun knows D.C. politics and culture better
than most. His father is Kansas Congressman
Jim Ryun, once an Olympic track star, now
a long-time conservative stalwart on Capitol
Hill.
"We need to elect more people who
will stick to their principles," Ned
Ryun said. "Look how quickly this country
abandoned its Judeo-Christian roots — just
in the last forty years.
"It could take ten, twenty, or even
thirty years to turn this country around,
but we've got to do it. We've got to have
pro-life, pro-family leaders in Washington."
As Rushdoony wrote in 1977, "It is teaching” — that
is, Christian homeschooling — "which
alone can create a godly civil government….2
That's where Generation Joshua hopes to
play a role.
"Great movements begin from the grass
roots, from the bottom up," Ryun said. "With
the homeschooling movement, we've only seen
the tip of the iceberg so far. In another
ten or fifteen years, we may see a disproportionate
number of homeschoolers in positions of highest
leadership."
For the time being, teams of fifty to 150
teenage volunteers will be sent out during
this election year. Some 500 are signed up
so far, Ryun said, with 2,000 expected by
July and up to 5,000 before November.
"Christian homeschooling is giving
this next generation of Americans a vision," Ryun
said. "Eventually it'll make a big difference
in what kind of country this is."
For more information on Generation Joshua,
or to enroll, visit GenerationJoshua.org
or telephone 202-547-9222.
Notes
1. R. J. Rushdoony, Institutes of Biblical
Law, Vol. II (Vallecito, Ca: Ross
House Books, 2001), p. 117.
2. Ibid., p. 117.
Lee Duigon is a Christian free-lance writer and contributing editor for the
Chalcedon Report. He has been a newspaper editor and reporter and a
published novelist.
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