As I contemplated the next post in this series, in which I wanted to discuss whether college or careers is a valid path for young women, I remembered that I already covered this topic a couple of years ago. My opinion on the matter hasn?t changed, and neither has my husbands, so I decided to simply update and re-run my original thoughts.
A thoughtful commenter once asked for my thoughts on college for girls given the expense incurred on what is often a poor return on?the investment. Her question is one we think about often as we have?four daughters who will?be college-aged in the space of one short year. Actually, we haven?t thought about it in terms of agonizing over?if they?ll attend college or not.?We have deliberated about what obtaining a college degree will look like for them; the fact that they will live at home, that we won?t go into debt, etc. ?Whether or not they will be college educated has always been something we?ve felt is a?good decision, so long as it?s done in a? wise and discerning way.
Being the parents of all girls changes the way you approach the task at hand. If my husband dies at a relatively young age, there are no brothers on whom our daughters can depend.?Any brothers that may come?from this point will certainly not be available to help our daughters who are already?very near womanhood.?Our extended families?are not?those where adults of either gender would be tolerated to live without producing an income and I don?t know of very many churches that bother to take on the responsibility of caring for women who are capable of providing an income for themselves. My husband is emphatic on this point, and I agree: we want our girls to be self-sufficient. Not self-dependent; we are teaching them their help comes from the Lord. Ideally, they will be entrepeneurs as we have taught them that this is the best way to help their husbands generate more income if it is needed, and is also the best way to avoid the drudgery and bondage of corporate life if they don?t marry.
I work diligently to try and?impart to them the skills they?ll need and the attitude required to be good wives to their future husbands, able homemakers, and excellent mothers.? We teach them to be open to marriage at a young age, and not waste time pursuing a career during their most fertile and energetic years. We raise them to understand that should the Lord?bless them with a family, their first and most important calling is to be present and not outsource the training of their children to?third-party hirelings. It is the norm for?women to become wives and mothers and?it?is a sad indictment?of our society, and especially the church that we cranking out young adults less able in this arena with each successive generation.
One reality of the?21st century that is often overlooked in the conservative Christian blogosphere, but one?we have to contend with nonetheless, is that it is becoming increasingly uncommon for marriage and family to be the norm for?many women (and not always by choice), and certainly for?most black women. I?was?blessed last week to be able to catch up and converse with an old family friend that I hadn?t spoken to in a couple of years. 51 years old and still very attractive, she has never been married. Unlike the average never married black woman, my friend is childless, has been walking with the Lord for 30 years, and has been open to the prospect of marriage and family for every day of the past 30 years. She is not a rarity. This further underscores the need for?parents of daughters to raise feminine,?grounded, capable women rather than??princesses languishing as they wait for a prince who may never come.
Even as I type this, I am aware of how faithless and worldly it must?sound to some. Particularly?to those who have invested fully in the ?truth? that woman was created for marriage and the home is?her sole?sphere of influence.? It is not that I don?t believe in the ideal. It?s? that I know the prospect of an ideal world this side of heaven died in the garden of Eden. Anyone who has read here for even a short while?knows my passion for homemaking?and the zeal I feel for women to?leave the rat race and?come home to their families. It is?not that I don?t have the?faith that God will send?husbands for my daughters. Besides, as one eloquent young sister so aptly pointed out?in a recent post, these statistics become far less daunting when viewed in light of the fact?for every woman, all that is needed is for?the one right guy to come along,??and the rest don?t matter.?It?s not that I am training my daughters to hedge their bets. It?s that I am an optimistic realist.
There are reasons directly related to their futures as homemakers that are incentive for my girls to obtain college degrees as well. One reason I think a college degree is possibly?a good investment is?that I foresee a future when the option to home school, should my daughters choose it, will be highly regulated on a national level and a college degree will most certainly be a minimum requirement for families who would educate their children at home. I also want to give them the opportunity to cultivate their interests,? and?hear different points of view.?I had a grand time defending my positions in a few of my college classes as I finished my degree a bit in later in life than I originally planned. It was refreshing to have the Lord put the words in my mouth or translate them to a page in ways that quickly put to death the notion that faith is inherently illogical.
We want our daughters to be open to the direction of the Lord in their lives, and whatever that might look like.? While I hope that it means a dedication to home and family, I realize there is possibility that for at least one of them, it may not. However that need not mean a life less than full. It need not mean a life devoid of ministry, as the Bible record includes women who walked with Jesus and were sent by the apostles on missionary journeys.? As much as I desire for my daughters to be wives and mothers, it is incumbent upon me to remember that God?s plan for their lives is not about my desires, but His will, and our job as parents is?to prepare them for whatever the future may hold. If it becomes clear that His will for any of them is to NOT earn a? college degree, we are truly open to that as well. We simply do not believe that shunning a college degree is a Biblical principle.
Ultimately, our position is one of openness. Openness to wherever the Lord leads and awareness that while we are to guide our children, they are to follow after Him.
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