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Walk in Truth Newsletter October 2010
In This Issue
Featured Article
Question of the Month
Baucham Family News
Event Update
Family Discipleship Corner
Special Offer
Featured Article: Joyfully at Home, by Jasmine Baucham
FDF

"So, how old are you?" the young lady asked.

She, along with her family and two others, had come to our home for dinner the same week I was wrapping up the last edits for my book.

"I'm twenty," I replied, smiling. I'd been told I looked fifteen all night, and was prepared for the runaround. What I wasn't prepared for was her next comment:

"Twenty? Are you serious? I thought twenty year olds would be out doing something with their lives, going to college, and getting a career, not living at home with their parents."

It's a common sentiment, but it took my thirteen-year-old houseguest to put it bluntly. I just smiled and shrugged. "I am doing something with my life," I maintained, "and I am in college online. I'll be graduating within the next year, I start tutoring English students next week, I enjoy being part of my family unit, and I just finished my first book."

She looked so shocked that the other young lady standing with us grinned. "I guess she told you."

We shared a laugh, and the conversation eased to other things.

I no longer mind telling people that I still live at home. It is something that used to bother me -I hated the strained silences that followed when I revealed that I wasn't going off to a brick and mortar university, and that I was planning on living at home with my family until I was married!? I dreaded the inevitable questions that followed: Why aren't you going to college? What if you don't get married for ten years? Don't you want to have some freedom? What if you never get married at all? What's so good about living at home?

Nowadays, though, I've learned that a disarming smile does the trick as I respond in turn: I'm not going to off college because this is a critical time in my life, and I think it is so much more precious to spend that time being discipled and protected in my parents' household than anywhere else. Whether I get married in ten years or ten months, I plan to suck every ounce of joy and industry out of all of the time I have at home. I don't want to be free from the responsibilities and ties of my home, nor do I desire independence -I enjoy fostering an identity within the family unit. If I should never marry, I do pray that the Lord would continue to direct me down avenues of industry and service. And the most wonderful thing about living at home is that it's Christian character bootcamp: Phillipians 2:1-11 comes to life in the family unit (especially with all of the little people we have running around!)

I could say that I'm training to be a wife. Certainly, I have a bevy of household experience in my back pocket, and certainly, I would love to be married someday... but my desire to be near my family goes a bit deeper than that: at the root of my decision to stay at home was a desire to serve the Lord full-heartedly in the sphere where he had deemed fit to place me. It was a desire not to alter what I took as an ideal situation: why would I -a Christian young woman blessed with a home full to the brim of love for Christ -choose to remove myself from a situation where I could receive protection, discipleship, support, and accountability? Because the thirteen-year-old girls of the West would look at me and say: "I thought you would be doing something better with your life?"

Staying at home has taught me to have a thicker skin than that: I chose to do what I knew was best -I chose to follow where the Lord was leading me -I chose to have those uncomfortable questions thrown at me at every turn -and I chose to seek to answer them.


JB

Question of the Month
FDF

Newsletter Question of the Month

Each month we receive dozens of questions. Some I answer in my blog, but some require much shorter responses. We try to answer one of those questions each month in the Newsletter.

This month's question is:

"What is the appropriate way for a Christian to be involved in the pro-life movement? Ironically I was deeply involved in the pro-life movement before I was truly saved because it was easier than evangelizing. Now I realize that the Gospel has supremacy and yet we must still take a stand against abortion. Particularly I am disturbed by the ecumenical nature of every public pro-life activity. I was recently invited to meet with other Christians to hold signs in front of our local abortion clinic. The photos that accompanied the invitation were full of Catholic priests performing rituals, women and children holding giant pictures of Mary and clutching rosary beads with the occasional non-Catholic individual in there who is oblivious to the fact that theology does not take a back seat to political gain. I can't stand it. How can I hold hands with folks that are involved in a false religion and not be concerned about their souls? How can I take a stand for life AND for the Gospel?"


I have been involved in the pro-life movement for a long time. In fact, our five adoptions are all expressions of our pro-life convictions. I also speak at pro-life events for groups like Crisis Pregnancy Centers, Adoption Ministries, and Right to Life groups. And yes, many (if not most) of my co-laborers at some of these events are Roman Catholic. And I do believe that Roman Catholicism preaches "a different gospel." (Gal 1:6) How, then, do I continue to participate in pro-life events?


First, it is important to realize that public activity is not the heart of the Pro-Life movement. Abortion is a worldview issue. It is also a spiritual warfare issue (Gen. 3:15, cf. Rev. 12:1-6). And ultimately, it is a sin issue. Public rallies neither change worldviews, nor defeat our spiritual adversary. That battle is won through the power of the proclamation of the gospel (Rom 1:16,17). Thus, while it may be helpful at times to unite with people on the pro-life issue, there is a fatal flaw in the idea that public activity will ultimately win the day.

Second, we mustn't be hypocritical. If I am pro-life, but I am also unwilling to participate in any event with people who are not like-minded theologically, what are my alternatives? 1) I could stay home and boast about the fact that my associations are pure, 2) I could duplicate their efforts and hold 'alternative' events where I invite only like-minded people to do virtually the same thing that the not-so-like-minded people are doing, but do it in a different location so as to make sure that the people killing babies know that I am not with that other group who doesn't want them to kill babies, or 3) I could give up on the public side of the fight altogether, opting instead to limit myself to private discussions/interventions (which is not necessarily a bad thing).

Let me make one thing clear. When I participate in public events, my goal is to preach the gospel. I want people to know that abortion is a spiritual matter; a sin issue. I want them to know that the Christ is the only answer to the problem, and that my hope is not in politics, or political solutions. If asked to compromise on this point for the sake of ecumenism, simply I decline (trust me, I have enough to keep me busy without being hamstrung by those who don't want to 'offend').

For example, I agree with Alistair Begg (see here) and John MacArthur (read here or see YouTube here) on the Manhattan Declaration issue. While virtually every Evangelical known to man was running to sign this document, these two men (both of whom oppose abortion publicly and forcefully) pointed out the one sticky little issue that they could not overlook... THE GOSPEL. Therefore, while I am always ready to stand with those who desire to protect life, I am never willing to lay down my shoes, sword and shield (Eph. 6:10ff) in the process. To do so would mean abandoning our only hope.

VB

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Greetings!

FDF

Welcome to the October 2010 VBM News-
letter.

This is a monthly newsletter designed to help keep you informed, inspired, and equipped. We want to inform you about the work of the ministry, while offering tidbits to equip you in the area of cultural apologetics and family discipleship.

We decided to move the newsletter to the middle of the month in order to space out our periodic emails. Of course, we were a bit delayed this month due to unexpected family events (read on). Nevertheless, as always, we are here to encourage you to "Walk in Truth."

Soli Deo Gloria!

Dr. Voddie Baucham, Jr.
Founder/President
VBM


Baucham Family News
Welcome Home Safya

Safya Newborn
Last August we got a phone call from Covenant Care Services in Macon, GA. informing us about a little boy who needed a home. Shortly thereafter, we flew home from Georgia with Micah Alexander Baucham (baby number six)! Now, just fourteen months later, we are headed to Georgia to pick up another baby. However, this time... IT'S A GIRL!

Read the rest here

VB

Event Update
A Family Driven Fall

FDFThis fall is filled with Family Driven Faith events. As we try to bring our travel days down, we've tried to schedule more VBM conferences.

This means fewer travel days, more focused ministry, and synergy between preaching and resources that allows the message to be heard again and again.


You can view the complete October Preaching Shedule here.

VB

Family Discipleship Corner
Don't Pick the Fruit too Soon

WHMBOne of the greatest mistakes we can make as parents is to expect mastery form our children when they are not capable of more than occasional flashes of brilliance. This is true in potty training as well as self sufficiency.

In the potty training arena, it is easy to get angry with a child who wets his pants after he has gone to the potty consistently for a few days. Instead of realizing that what we see is to be expected, we get sucked in by the 'success,' and try to pick the fruit before it's ripe.

With older children, we may become frustrated when they act less-than-responsibly in an area that we know they can handle. Of course, if we're honest, we, too, occasionally fail in some of these 'basic' responsibilities.

In any case, we have to learn the difference between a child's understandable failure in what to them is a difficult task, and irresponsibility on the part of someone who should know better.

While I can't tell you which is which in your child, I can tell you that my wife and I frequently remind one another that we tend to expect a bit much. Sometimes you need your spouse to look at you and say, "He's only two... I'm sure he'll stop wetting his pants before he gets married."

Remember,
"Better is the end of a thing than its beginning, and the patient in spirit is better than the proud in spirit." (Eccl 7:8)


VB

September Special Offer

Joyfully At Home

JB JoyfullyThis month's special offer is Jasmine Baucham's new book, Joyfully at Home. Jasmine has written a number of fictional novels, but her first published work is anything but. If you enjoyed Jasmine's blog, you'll love Joyfully at Home.

Of course, I am quite biased, but I believe this is the most outstanding book ever written. Well, maybe in the top five. At any rate, I think you'll enjoy getting to know Jasmine, and it will definitely be an encouragement to young women trying to navigate the treacherous waters of feminism.

Order here


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Thank you for your continued prayerful support of this ministry.

VBM, Inc.
8765 Spring Cypress Rd
Suite L, Box 165
Spring, Texas 77379

Phone 281-404-9368
Toll Free 1-877-TRUTH-58
Email: Info@voddiebaucham.org


For Booking or Media/Interview Requests:

Contact Jasmine at
1-877-TRUTH-58 x702