Family Freedom
“But this shall be the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel; After those days, saith the LORD, I will put my law in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts; and will be their God, and they shall be my people.” Jeremiah 31:33Archive for August, 2008
Family Freedom, one year later!
We’re coming up on one full year of blogging on this site. Mrs. Mallory and I are truly humbled by the thousands of visitors who have come to the blog, read the material, and supported us through prayer. A faithful reformed publisher is now looking over the book I’ve written on what God’s Word really says about financial debt. It has been a bumpy road, with many slings and arrows, but as the economy begins to fail in this once great country, it seems that some churches are starting to rediscover the truth. Some are actually starting to refer to debt as a “curse”. They’re not ready to call it sin yet, but God willing, many faithful preachers will soon change their minds about that as well.
Even the secular world is catching up with the idea that debt is a curse. I haven’t seen it yet, and don’t know if I will, but there’s a new documentary out about the national financial crisis that is coming our way. I haven’t read any reviews of it yet, but a number of reformers are talking about the film, called “IOUSA”. I can’t recommend it one way or the other, but it does indicate that some people are starting to see the writing on the wall.
In addition to the book on debt, I’m now working on a historical fiction novel, and have plans for a second non-fiction project soon. We’re also going to be launching (Lord willing) a magazine in a few months, and we have plans for a business providing homeschool products in the Reformed tradition. It’s been frustrating to us as parents that there is very little “curriculum” available that actually lines up with Scripture, even from some of the seminaries, so we’re going to start publishing and providing as much as we can to help other faithful Christian parents.
Please be in prayer for the writing projects, the business, and that God’s church will be strengthened and blessed through the trying times that are coming soon.
Soli deo Gloria!
How To Fix Your ________
Remember madlibs? I got a kick out of madlibs for several weeks when I was about 9 years old. You fill in several blanks on a page: a noun here, a verb there, and voila! Turn the page and read your hilarious story! It seems that everything in the evangilical Disneyland that we call America now has a fill-in-the-blank answer for every problem.
Kids hate you? There’s a “Christian” book for that! Is your cat feeling particularly melancholy? There’s a “Christian” book for that! Do your co-workers think you’re incompetent? You can learn to fake your way through the work day with another “Christian” book! How convenient! It seems as if there’s a book for every single problem an evangelical could encounter, and there’s more coming off the presses every day. Read the rest of this entry »
The Curse of a Lighter Yoke
2Ch 10:1 And Rehoboam went to Shechem: for to Shechem were all Israel come to make him king.
2Ch 10:2 And it came to pass, when Jeroboam the son of Nebat, who was in Egypt, whither he had fled from the presence of Solomon the king, heard it, that Jeroboam returned out of Egypt.
2Ch 10:3 And they sent and called him. So Jeroboam and all Israel came and spoke to Rehoboam, saying,
2Ch 10:4 Thy father made our yoke grievous: now therefore ease thou somewhat the grievous servitude of thy father, and his heavy yoke that he put upon us, and we will serve thee.
2Ch 10:5 And he said unto them, Come again unto me after three days. And the people departed.
2Ch 10:6 And king Rehoboam took counsel with the old men that had stood before Solomon his father while he yet lived, saying, What counsel give ye me to return answer to this people?
2Ch 10:7 And they spoke unto him, saying, If thou be kind to this people, and please them, and speak good words to them, they will be thy servants forever.
What an indictment of the lazy and slothful church in America these verses are. How often have we heard men say, “I just want my kids to have it better than I did”? Following after the false idol of the ‘American Dream’, fathers and pastors for several generations now have let their children off the hook, lightening the yoke of the next generation.
As a husband and father, are you capable of doing the things that your grandfather could do?
My own grandfather, Willard, left school after the 8th grade. There was nothing left to teach him in that day and age, and he was ready to go to work. One of my favorite family photographs is of him in the 1920’s. He was on horseback, one of the last true cowboys at age 14, smiling down at his little cow-dog. He grew up without electricity, in a place where you grew it or killed it yourself, otherwise you didn’t eat. He was married to my grandmother at about age 21, and I had the good pleasure of attending their 60th wedding anniversary. Their five children went on to produce more than a dozen grandchildren, and now I’ve lost track of all the great-grandchildren that my generation has produced.
I suppose every generation asks for a lighter yoke than the one that came before it. Unfortunately, when men get old they sometimes advise lightening the yoke, and speaking kind words to us, in order to please us. We’re not better off for this. When I see a young man who has to call AAA (on his i-phone, of course) to change a flat tire for him, because he doesn’t know how, it makes me wonder how bad things are truly going to get when God judges this nation. Never mind encouraging and exhorting a young man like that. I’m probably going to have to feed him if everything collapses.
The yoke will get heavy once again, and most likely in my lifetime. I thank God that I was raised by men who knew how to work with their hands. They taught me to ride a horse, to kill an animal that’s larger than me (with a sharp stick, no less!), to change a tire, to put out a fire, to catch a fish, to grow food in the ground. Things that men are supposed to do, and supposed to know how to do. I’m wishing now that they had taught me more, that I hadn’t been so slothful in my youth, asking for my own lighter yoke.
I thank God that my wife and I are not going to make the same mistakes with our own children, that previous generations have made. We don’t have lower expectations, but higher ones, for our kids. They laugh and run and play, and they are a delight and blessing to me, and yet they will be trained up as a generation to glorify God. Most of the unsaved men who are my age would lose a debate on evolution vs. creation with my 9-year-old, so long as she puts her hula-hoop down first. (Forgive me, Father, for the sin of pride at this. It is YOUR work in her, not mine.)
Our society keeps putting a lighter yoke on every successive generation. I doubt that my grandfather would have known what to make of it. The words of Moses are true: Prosperity causes man to forget God.
Deu 8:12 Lest when thou hast eaten and art full, and hast built goodly houses, and dwelt therein;
Deu 8:13 And when thy herds and thy flocks multiply, and thy silver and thy gold is multiplied, and all that thou hast is multiplied;
Deu 8:14 Then thine heart be lifted up, and thou forget the LORD thy God, which brought thee forth out of the land of Egypt, from the house of bondage
Here come the eugenicists
A liberal talk radio host had an interesting conversation on 8/22 in regards to the demonic practice of eugenics. (I won’t bother linking to him.) Of course, they would never admit that this is what they were truly talking about. His conversation with a female guest centered around forced vasectomies for male children, as a possible solution to the abortion dilemma.
This guest, evidently an esteemed female professional in the field of psychology, was reasoning that since our children are going to have sex anyways, why not target vasectomies at boys who were in groups that would be likely to start fornicating at a young age? After all, if these teenage boys can’t get their girlfriends pregnant, there would be fewer abortions, right?
The host not only agreed with her, but suggested that rather than wait until the boys were 12, why not simply give them a vasectomy when they go in for their circumcision? Read the rest of this entry »
Teaching Through Proverbs
I began teaching through the book of Proverbs for our family worship about 13 months ago now. (We’re up to the 20th chapter.) I’ve often read that some fathers will read a CHAPTER of Proverbs per day and teach from that when they lead family worship. I suppose there is some worth in that, and yet I can’t help but imagine that such a shotgun approach has to leave much out. Read the rest of this entry »
Back to School
Our family watched the forum that Saddleback motivational speaker Rick Warren hosted with the presidential candidates last weekend. Warren said something that caught my interest at one point, as he was asking his questions:
“We’re 19th in the world in education, and yet we’re 1st in incarcerations.”
That statement reminded me, public school is about to start up again in our area. We don’t have any crops to harvest here in the middle of Anchorage, so we don’t take summers off from homeschooling. We go with a ten-weeks-on, two-weeks-off schedule year-round. That seems to offer us a lot more flexibility, and provides more learning time for our children. Read the rest of this entry »



