January 2017
Hey, want to spend an evening with John Piper?
Hey, want to spend an evening with John Piper?
I got that question the other day at a particularly low point for me. Continue Reading »
Discipleship: Part 4
January 20, 2017 01:26 PM
Filed in: Building Character/Discipleship · Child Training/Equipping · Teens · Family Relationship · Ministry · Culture
Filed in: Building Character/Discipleship · Child Training/Equipping · Teens · Family Relationship · Ministry · Culture
Discipleship as it relates to the stages of development
The Rhetoric Stage
In this series, we’ve taken a deeper look at discipleship in regard to the different stages of your child’s development. We have discussed what it looks like in the grammar stage (preschool-young elementary ages) and the logic stage (5th-9th grades). Now we will look at what discipleship looks like in the rhetoric stage (14 - 18+year olds).
Continue Reading »
Discipleship: Part 3
January 13, 2017 01:10 PM
Filed in: Building Character/Discipleship · Child Training/Equipping · Family Relationship · Ministry
Filed in: Building Character/Discipleship · Child Training/Equipping · Family Relationship · Ministry
Discipleship as it relates to stages of development
The Logic Stage
In our previous posts we discussed what discipleship is, and what it looks like in the early pre-school and elementary years.
Today, we are going to take a deeper look at discipleship in the tween years or the Logic Stage of discipleship (5th - 9th grades). We’ll discuss practical, effective ways you can help disciple your child in this stage. Continue Reading »
Discipleship: Part 2
January 06, 2017 01:03 AM
Filed in: Building Character/Discipleship · Child Training/Equipping · Family Relationship · Ministry
Filed in: Building Character/Discipleship · Child Training/Equipping · Family Relationship · Ministry
Discipleship as it relates to stages of development
The “Grammar” Stage
In Parts 2-4 of our discipleship series we will provide practical and helpful ways to equip you in the faithful discipleship of your children.
Having raised and educated our own eight children we have become believers in the trivium model of the classical approach to learning. Continue Reading »