Lee Duigon
September 21, 2004
Homeschooling has suddenly become a hot
topic among Southern Baptists.
"It's amazing what God does," said
Elizabeth Watkins, founder of the Southern
Baptist Church and Home Education Association
(SBCHEA). "We tried and tried for two
years; we just couldn't make headway — and
suddenly, wham! Now we're getting tons of
email from pastors and families all over
the country."
This June the national Southern Baptist
Convention rejected a proposal to urge its
members to pull their children out of the
public schools. As the largest Protestant
denomination in the United States, a Southern
Baptist walkout would have removed millions
of children from the government schools (see "An
'Exodus' from Public Schools,” archive,
July 1, 2004: http://www.chalcedon.edu/articles/0407/040701-2duigon.php).
Bruce Shortt, a Houston lawyer and homeschooling
father, who presented the resolution to the
convention on the floor, predicted that the
homeschooling movement would grow.
"We all have to start becoming evangelists
for homeschooling," he said. "Then
we'll see more change."
Mrs. Watkins, who has homeschooled her
two daughters, has asked the Southern Baptists
of Texas Convention (SBTC) to endorse her
group as an official Southern Baptist ministry.
"My world has changed," she said. "I
got a nice letter from the executive director
of the SBTC, Dr. Jim Richards, saying he
would present my request to the appropriate
authority and personally explore how we can
work together."
The group has already been invited to attend
the North Texas Southern Baptist Convention
meeting on October 30. Recognition by the
SBTC will allow it to participate in any
Southern Baptist meeting or convention.
"We'd be able to exhibit at the annual
national convention," Mrs. Watkins said.
A Close-Up
Elizabeth and
Curt Watkins decided to homeschool their
eldest daughter, now 14, when she was midway
through fifth grade.
"She just was not reading at grade
level," Mrs. Watkins said. "We
had to remediate her at home. Now she's taking
honors courses [via homeschooling 'packages'
produced by colleges, available online]."
The Watkinses removed their younger daughter,
now 10, from first grade for similar reasons.
Mrs. Watkins worked in the insurance business
until her children were born. She has also
owned and operated a shop. Currently, however,
she teaches Latin to children in her neighborhood
homeschooling cooperative. Her younger daughter,
a fifth-grade student in the cooperative,
is studying Plutarch's Lives — once
a universal staple of Western education,
but long since abandoned by the public schools
as too advanced.
"Homeschooling is much less expensive
than you'd think," Mrs. Watkins said. "A
lot of the online materials are free, and
others don't cost much at all. And there's
the free public library as a valuable resource."
Mrs. Watkins' homeschooling group has grown
to 35 families. Most of them have joined
cooperatives, permitting parents to specialize
in various subjects.
The group hopes to set up a network of
retired Christian teachers, coaches, and
musicians to serve homeschooling families.
Why Homeschool?
The purpose
of homeschooling, Mrs. Watkins said in an
essay, is "to impact our
culture for Christ."
"We are living in an age of intense
spiritual warfare," she wrote, "and
like the prophet Daniel and the Apostle Paul,
Christian youth need to be the best educated,
[most] thoroughly grounded, intensely disciplined
citizens in the country .…"
"The things that go on in public schools
today," Bruce Shortt said, "are
so outrageous that people think you have
to be making it up."
"Homeschoolers for years have been
under siege, having to explain themselves," Shortt
said. "That's why people like Elizabeth
Watkins are so important. She has a way of
winning people over."
Shortt plans to attend the next national
Southern Baptist Convention and re-submit
his proposal.
"I'll be back," he said.
"Most Christians send their children
to public schools because that's the way
we've always done it," Mrs. Watkins
said. "But that's not what God wants
us to do. We are never to do anything by
default, especially when it comes to our
children."
The Southern Baptist Church and Home Education
Association has its own website, sbchea.org,
which provides contact information, a mission
statement, essays by leaders in the homeschooling
movement, and information on accredited Christian
colleges where homeschooled students are
welcome.
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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