- September 24th, 2020, 7:20 pm
#610555
He has his own legal issues with the SEC to address right now.
Moderators: jcmanson, Sly Fox, BuryYourDuke
paradox wrote: ↑September 24th, 2020, 9:39 pm A few more names to keep an eye on: Jensen Huang, Daniel Ek, and Reed Hastings. Huang is in on the verge on making a major aquisition. However, if that falls through, he may be available. Hastings has had his share of controversy recently, but would be an interesting candidate nonetheless. Ek, in my opinion, has tremendous upside, with his best days ahead of him.Paul Tribble from Christopher Newport? Believer, led the state Home School organization in it's early years, and has a solid academic record at CNU.
rogers3 wrote: ↑September 25th, 2020, 6:57 amI mean we did win our only Naty back thenparadox wrote: ↑September 24th, 2020, 9:39 pm A few more names to keep an eye on: Jensen Huang, Daniel Ek, and Reed Hastings. Huang is in on the verge on making a major aquisition. However, if that falls through, he may be available. Hastings has had his share of controversy recently, but would be an interesting candidate nonetheless. Ek, in my opinion, has tremendous upside, with his best days ahead of him.Paul Tribble from Christopher Newport? Believer, led the state Home School organization in it's early years, and has a solid academic record at CNU.
The pastor idea comes from a nostalgic idea of what Liberty should be. While we're considering a pastor, how about rejoining the NCCAA. I'm sure that some of the old school folks on here remember those days fondly.
mlschubert wrote: ↑October 4th, 2020, 6:28 pm My brother-in-law is a pastor that has has served with him. Dr. Bauchum has the heart, vision, intellect & passion for leading a University & training Champions for Christ - he would be a phenomenal choice.I agree and he's a leader in homeschooling as well.
“Remember, your child has a disease.”
“We don’t ask police officers to change hearts, but to restrain evildoers! And that’s precisely what parents are charged to do. ... Family shepherds do not engage in corrective discipline because we believe it’s efficacious,” Baucham claims, but rather because fathers “have a duty to restrain our children.”
Formative discipline begins with the reality that our children’s greatest need is regeneration…Johnny doesn’t disobey because he’s cranky, tired, or hungry… He does it because he’s a descendant of Adam.
A police officer doesn’t watch a criminal commit a crime and refuse to act due to his inability to change a man’s heart. No, he does what he can to resist the criminal and restrain him, knowing that his duty—while limited in its ultimate effectiveness—is necessary. It’s the same for parents.
“The next time those two daughters of yours quarrel, don’t ask them what happened; tell them! Remind them of the essential reason for their disagreement, and that God knows exactly why they don’t get along: ‘What causes quarrels and what causes fights among you? Is it not this, that your passions are at war within you? You desire and do not have, so you murder. You covet and cannot obtain, so you fight and quarrel… (James 4:1-3).’ And what’s the solution? Is it that they need to learn to share? Perhaps. But there’s a deeper issue, one that gets to our need for repentance and dependence on God: ‘Submit yourselves therefore to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you…Cleanse your hands, you sinners, and purify your hearts, you double-minded. Be wretched and mourn and weep… (James 4:7-10).’”
“Tell them what God threatens to those who so behave. Let your child know that God is serious about what they’ve done, and show them what his Word threatens for those who continue to do it. This may seem like manipulation, but it isn’t. If God has warned us against something in his Word, we owe it to our children to point out the warning. If our neighbor has a sign up that says, ‘Beware of Dog,’ we certainly have no qualms about warning our children to stay off of his property. So why should we feel the slightest apprehension about telling them that God says, ‘But as for the cowardly, the faithless, the detestable, as for murderers, the sexually immoral, sorcerers, idolaters, and all liars, their portion will be in the lake that burns with fire and sulfur, which is the second death’ (Rev. 21:8)?”
Physical punishment is “the authoritative response that reminds the child the parent, under God, has the final word.” And children only become “too old” to be physically hit by their parents when they are “twenty or twenty-one,” Baucham says. Until then, because “your child has a disease,” “we must train our children. Just like an athlete training for a big game, our children need multiple repetitions in order to master their discipline.”Source
JK37 wrote: ↑October 4th, 2020, 7:55 pm Based solely on what you wrote and quoted, why can he not lead an institution of higher learning training doctors, educators and the like? Despite being “a great man, incredible speaker/writer, and strong follower of Jesus”, is he also incapable of distinguishing between the role of a parent and the appropriate protocols for public servants?He’s written entire books on his views on parenting and the family. Within those books he has railed against behavioral psychology and many of the things that are imperative to training up teachers, doctors, and social workers. Even if he could distinguish between the two arenas - having someone who is known for those views will have an impact on the types of students we attract and the amount of students we attract.