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Child Discipline or Child Abuse? No Greater Tragedy in the Home Schooling Community

Posted by: virginiaknowles <virginiaknowles@...>

Dear Hope Chest friends,

 

Please permit me a rant.  You need to read this.

 

On February 6, seven year old Lydia Schatz, adopted from Liberia, was murdered.  Her 11 year old sister Zariah is in critical condition with severe kidney damage.  Who did it?  Their deeply religious (I can’t bring myself to say Christian) home schooling parents, who were attempting to “discipline” them.  The “offense” of the murdered child was that she mispronounced a word during her home school lesson.  She was beaten for hours with a plumbing supply line.  Another brother has been found with significant bruising.  Read the news story.  (I have linked some related blog posts at the bottom of this message -- please take the time to read them!)  The Schatz family had apparently been reading the child “discipline” advice by Michael and Debi Pearl, whose No Greater Joy books have unfortunately been rather popular in the conservative home schooling movement.  Perhaps they should be retitled No Greater Tragedy!   Four year old Sean Paddock’s death has also been attributed to Pearl style discipline.

 

I am heartsick.  I've been tracking news stories in the home school community for years, and these deaths are not the only ones. (This hits a little close to home for me.  A few years back, I was shocked to hear that another home schooling mom named Kimberly Forder, who had written an article about international adoption for the Hope Chest -- ouch! -- was convicted of murder in the abuse death of her son Christopher.)   Many horrible abuses that don’t happen to result in death are never even reported.  Much of this is the result of very misguided or overwhelmed parents trying to implement “Biblical” discipline in their homes. THIS IS NOT BIBLICAL DISCIPLINE AND IT MUST STOP!  As compassionate Christians and as a home schooling community, we must have ZERO tolerance for abusive parenting.  If we seriously want to preserve the abundant liberties we enjoy as home schooling families, we're going to have to make sure that our movement is not characterized by such aberrant behavior.  We need to start speaking out and educating one another about healthy family dynamics and child discipline.

 

I am not railing against reasonable corporal discipline, nor should we overreact to an occasional minor accidental injury related to this, but we do need to take a stand when we see any of these warning signs:

 

·       Parental action which results in bruising, bleeding, welts, burns, fractures, dislocations, or other injuries

·       Parents who neglect to seek appropriate medical care for an injury out of fear of being accused of abuse

·       Parents who withhold proper food, sleep, hygiene, or emotional nurture from the child as a form of punishment

·       Parents who force their children to have unnatural contact with urine, feces, or other unhygienic situations

·       Parents who lock their children up in a room for extended periods of time (I'm not talking about reasonable "time out"  -- see Bass case)
·       Parents who are “out of control” in their anger, and who are more interested in punishment and retribution than in sincerely and compassionately training their child

·       Parents who routinely resort to extended yelling, shaming, ridiculing, harsh accusation, and other forms of verbal abuse 

·       Parents who publicly advocate using discipline methods which seem abusive or excessively harsh, even if they are taught as being “biblical” or “godly”
·       Children who are cowering in fear from their parents, or who are unusually withdrawn, depressed, or aggressive

 

This may be you!  If so, stop now and get help!  Your child’s safety and emotional well-being is far more important than your reputation. Do we want to train our children that it’s OK for Mom and Dad to be violent bullies in the name of Jesus?  How can we ever teach them self-control if we aren’t setting the example?  Things can get better!  Things MUST get better!  Perhaps it is your husband who is doing this.  You may think that it would be unsubmissive to intervene in a “discipline” situation because your husband is supposed to be the spiritual leader of the home, or because if you were being a "better mom" your kids wouldn't behave badly enough for him to get that upset.  Sorry ladies, but these excuses just don't fly.  In Acts 5, Sapphira was punished just as harshly as her husband Ananias because she went along with his deceit and tried to cover for him.  So you don't get off the hook for your responsibilities just because you are "submitting" to your husband. If your husband is out of control to the point of abusing your children, you have the MORAL and LEGAL obligation to do whatever you can to put an end to this behavior.  If that means you need to physically restrain your husband and/or take your children to a safe place until he calms down, then do it.  If this is a pattern and your children are in continued danger, you NEED to get outside help.  Call a trusted friend, your pastor (unless he condones or ignores abusive discipline), a professional counselor, and/or your community’s family crisis center -- and keep going until you get the REAL help you need.  

 

In addition, husbands should never treat their wives like dirty doormats in the name of “Biblical submission.”  You do not need to passively accept physical or verbal abuse.  I've heard from some of you who are being subjected to this kind of degradation, even some who have been in danger.  This is not right!  You are not becoming a “liberal feminist” if you begin to draw healthy boundaries of respectful treatment around yourself.  But, remember, everything must be done in love - even when we have to draw safe boundaries.  Someone else's poor behavior is never an excuse for ours.   This blog post might help: Help for Hurting Marriages

 

You may know someone in your neighborhood, your extended family, your church, or your home school support group who is abusing their children or spouse. Don’t turn a blind eye. Do your best to discretely find out what is going on in the family by talking to the children and to the parents.  This is compassionate intervention, not gossip.  Offer support.  Encourage them to get help.  If they refuse to do this, and the situation is serious and continuing, you will need to call in outside intervention. (Be VERY careful about making accusations public, though, because it may not be abuse at all, and an unnecessary visit from the police or social worker can be quite traumatic for a child. Be sure of your facts before you call.) 

 

While we are on the topic of inappropriate parenting, I’d like to say a few things about over-authoritarian control in the Christian home schooling movement. I know most of us are taking the time and money and effort at this because we want our kids to turn out to be fine, upstanding, godly young adults.  We don’t want them to make the same mistakes we did.  We want to keep them out of trouble, out of harm’s way.   We don’t want them to “fall into sin.”  Fair enough!  But I think we need to take a SERIOUS look at how we view this and how we try to implement this in our homes.  (This is something I am reevaluating, too, so I'm preaching to myself.) I think some among us have become control freaks with our kids. We need to realize that we aren’t God, we don’t own our children, and we don’t need to dictate every last little detail of their lives or isolate them from all outside influences, especially as they move into the teen years.  We don’t need to use ridicule or guilt-trips to get them to behave according to our expectations.  Yes, we need to teach them as best we can, be wise "gatekeepers" over the influences in our homes, and certainly set a wholesome example -- but most of all we need to pray for them and trust God, who loves them so much more than we ever could.  We need to listen to our kids and not try to shut them down whenever they express disagreements.  They should have the freedom to share whatever is on their hearts (hopefully in a respectful manner!) without fear that we will react in shock, disapproval or rejection. We need to seek to inspire our children into such a warm relationship with their Heavenly Father that they will increasingly learn for themselves how to hear and follow his voice.   Home schooling should not be the means to unduly limit our children’s options in life, but to launch them into the Grand Adventure (risks and all!) which our loving Lord has planned for them!

 

Here are some blog posts about the Schatz abuse case (please note that I don't know the authors, I have not thoroughly explored their blogs, and I can't vouch for everything you might read there):   

Child Abuse in the Name of Jesus by Karen Campbell, who first told me about this story

 

Heartbroken. Angry. Again.  (this blog post by TulipGirl includes lots of links for further research)

I hope to write more about these topics sometime soon, but for now, these links will provide some food for thought on overauthoritaran parenting…  

“Christian Families on the Edge: Authoritarianism and Isolationism Among Us” by Rachel D. Ramer for the Christian Research Institute    

 

“Solving the Crisis in Home Schooling” by Reb Bradley (who used to be authoritarian and controlling but is now teaching about the dangers of that approach)

 

“Sweetness Comes Through Godly Wisdom, Part Two”

 In this audio presentation, Karen Campbell covers a lot of ground about over-authoritarian parenting, including why naturalist John Muir rejected his parents' Christian faith even after he had memorized all of the New Testament and 2/3 of the Old Testament

And, if you didn’t click on it earlier in my letter… 

News story on the Schatz family 

Please forward this e-mail along to your home schooling friends or give them the link to the same article here: Child Discipline or Child Abuse? on Come Weary Moms
 

Comments anyone?

 

For grace and mercy,

Virginia Knowles

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