Wednesday, February 19, 2025

Why I am thankful my kids attended HCA

 


Raising children is hard.  Parenting might be the most consequential thing we ever do in life because the direct result of it is the formation and transformation of a human heart, soul, and mind that will have effects for 80 years.  As someone who has raised six children, I speak from experience, but limited authority, because after all, for Gayle and I to be successful in our parenting, it required a total surrender more than careful planning.  Just like all of you, we had our own personal hopes and dreams for our kids.  We had preferences for their friend groups, the movies and music they were exposed to, the indoctrination of their minds from the outside world, their athletic teams, their college choices and even their hobbies and how they would spend down time. 

But, as we, and our children, got older, we began to realize that all the efforts we were making were inconsequential without the presence of God in our home and in the lives of our kids.  We could go through the motions of attending church every Sunday, having them memorize scripture, being involved in youth group, and even sending them to Christian school, only to see them struggle and fall prey to sin in their lives.  In reality, this should be no big surprise.  They have a sin nature…and guess who they inherited that from.  If we believe the scriptures to be true (I do), we quickly understand that all of humanity is desperately lost and wicked in the eyes of a holy God.  So, I shouldn’t ever be shocked if my children, my wife, or I act on that sin nature.  It is what is naturally inside me. 

When Jesus came to the world in the form of a man, He experienced all the same temptations and worldly influences that you and I face each day, but without sin.  Therefore, when He died on the cross, his sinless sacrifice was the only solution to the daily struggle my family faced on earth.  I can’t stop sinning.  My kids can’t stop sinning.  But, Jesus did become the solution to that endless problem, and in Him alone my children have hope.  But if they ever get to a point where they feel they can forge their own path and fix their own problems apart from Christ, they are doomed to live in darkness.

Hickory Christian Academy is far from perfect because it is filled with imperfect people.  The guy writing this is the best example of this point.  I would be foolish to believe that my children would be rescued from their sin nature simply by attending this school, or any school.  The presence of Christ must be the difference.  Therefore, HCA has been formed not to be the stand-alone magic formula to overcome a secular life, but a partnership between parents who invite the Holy Spirit into their homes and a school who does the same. 

Likewise, the partnership between like-minded families has been priceless. Our kids spent many hours with their school friends in the classrooms, lunch tables, athletic events, field trips, and even at the homes of other HCA families.  The consistency of spiritual values in each of those homes was refreshing and encouraging to us.  Of course, there were conflicts with others from time to time, but when a biblical worldview is central to both homes, there is always an avenue for peace, joy, and trust, and a chance to learn to handle life situations the right way. 

Even as the Head of School, my dad side would never send my kids here if it didn’t have eternal value for them.  For 25 years, we watched our kids struggle with friendships, get frustrated with homework, win and lose sporting events, and have bad attitudes about Monday mornings.  Similar things they could get at any school, and honestly things that garnered a lot of attention at the time.  But, what locked us in was the knowledge that a dedicated pursuit of God’s Word would be a daily part of their routine, and as a result, the presence of Christ would permeate their lives far beyond Sunday mornings. 

Our kids were raised well and given clear boundaries.    Our priority in placing them in a Christian school was not because we were worried about them drinking or doing drugs.  We didn’t worry about them using vulgar language or listening to music that contained it.  We didn’t worry about them questioning their gender or embracing godless ideals.  We had some control over those things.  What we did worry about was our kids growing up believing they were self-sufficient apart from a relationship with Christ.  We worried that they would just become comfortable in a sinful world and not separate themselves from its subtle draw.  We worried they might one day get married and have children, and not choose to point our grandkids to a Savior, but to be accepting of other religions, ideals and false teachings.  These are things that, apart from the daily presence of God are prevalent and powerful, and any young person will fall prey to them in the wrong environment. 

Christmas at the Robinson house
with six HCA alums and a
classically trained son-in-law!
Gayle and I chose HCA because the Word that we hold true is consistent in our home and in the school.  There is not a conflict.  We were never put in a position to say, “don’t believe what your teachers are telling you at school.”, which can cause conflict in a young mind.  Our adherence to an environment that attempts to know the Lord, understand His Word, and embrace the Holy Spirit gave our children a clear message.  Christ is King in our home and we won’t water Him down for any other pursuits you may be tempted to follow. 

Again, this school is far from perfect, but the imperfect teachers and administrators at HCA partnered well with the imperfect parents of my kids to point them to a perfect Savior, Who is their only hope.  That partnership has produced fruit in our family, but Jesus gets all the credit.  We must point our kids to Christ 24/7 in today’s world or they will bite the first forbidden fruit offered them, and regardless of how good it tastes in the moment, the lasting effects will never be worth it.  That is why my kids attended HCA, and as I watch my young adults navigate this crazy world, it was all worthwhile. 

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