Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Updates of all kinds

It seems like I have been pretty quiet here, because I have been!  And I have been busy in real life.  I arrived back from Arizona last week, after being gone for about 5 weeks to Tucson, had an eye appointment, and have lots to share.  Drum roll please...

Update #1: Babies:  Baby Ezra is safely still safe within his mama at 37.5 weeks gestation.  We hit 38 weeks this Friday.  We are SO grateful to God for his blessing in allowing Ezra the time to develop where he can do it best. We hope to return for his birth in another week or so.


Baby Carys is plugging along safely and uneventfully, due around June 17 to Ben and Elsa.  We can't wait to meet these two little people.

Update # 2: Grand daughters: I loved spending the last 5 weeks in Arizona.  All this time has made great relationships with my little girls, the Pixies, Emma (age 3.5) and Ada (age 2).  I am really grateful for all the time I've had with them this winter.  It has been a privilege to be part of their families!  I have, however, missed my husband, and am happy he will make the next trip with me.




Update #3: The Folks: As some of you know, we had a scare with my father recently, which has resolved well.  A biopsy done to determine whether cancer was present came back negative.  For this we are extremely grateful, and praising God for His good gift to us of my dad, Jack. (I have a more current photo than this Christmas shot, but I left my camera at their house last week.  :-()


Update #4; The eyes have it: Last Friday I had my first set of tests and visit with my eye specialist since starting on remicade.  It was full of promising, good news!  My left eye is completely quiet and back to seeing 20/20.  My right eye still has a small area of activity that we can see around the cataract.  But the doc feels we can get that under control with further treatments. I will have a treatment tomorrow, then see my doc before my next scheduled treatment in 8 weeks.  If it has cleared, we will stay on an 8-week schedule.  If not, she will check on me in 6 weeks, and move up my treatment to every 6 weeks if the insurance will allow it, or up the dosage a bit to compensate.  She is hopeful my right eye will be quiet in the next couple monthe, and then we can talk about cataract surgery before the end of the year.  It can't be attempted until I've been in remission several months.  And once I hit remission, I will stay on the daily cellcept and every-other-month remicade infusions for about 2 years, and then try to wean off and see if i stay in remission.  

But perhaps the best news of all was in my blood work.  Not only have my creatinine levels returned to their pre-treatment range, but my sed rate has gone down for the first time in years.  Whatever unnamed inflammatory process I had going on seems to be also treated by the remicade. Isn't God good to me to give me such encouragement?

I find myself in a place of deep gratitude to my heavenly Father: for friends who have been prayer warriors on my behalf, for family that is a blessing, for a sweet, dear husband who is the best and closest friend a person could have in this life, and for a home elsewhere, where there is no sickness or death, no tears or separation, only fellowship and rest.  To Him be the glory now and forever!

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

An article about classical education

Some friends recently asked for a concise apology for why a classical Christian education is something of worth.  I offered to share this article, written by me many years ago now, that lays out why I think a classical education is a great education for Christians in particular, though of course a good education is good for everyone, Christian or not.  If nothing else, it is short, and hopefully sweet. Hope it is helpful, Corrine and Linda!

Classical Education: A Godly Foundation by Chris Finnegan

As homeschoolers, we live in a blessed time.  The Lord has provided freedom, abundant curriculum choices, and many avenues of support for our endeavors: this is a far cry from the days many remember of fighting for basic rights.  But even in a time of such blessing, homeschooling is an intense job, requiring parents to work hard and tirelessly in order to provide the best possible Christian education for their children.  Why in the world would an already harried homeschool parent consider a teaching method as teacher-intensive as “classical education”?  And, more importantly, why would a Christian, who understands our most important job is to equip our children to glorify God and enjoy Him forever[i], choose such a method?


First, let’s begin with a definition of “classical education”.  Indeed, defining just what “classical education” is presents a challenge in itself. It is a methodology and movement that has grown, changed and altered over the centuries.  It continues to be adapted today as many of us seek to reclaim the “lost tools of learning”[ii].  It is all too easy to caricature instead of accurately representing this educational method.  Classical Christian education, according to Andrew Kerns,[iii] is “the cultivation of wisdom and virtue by nourishing the soul on truth, goodness, and beauty by means of the liberal arts so that, in Christ, the student is better able to know and enjoy God.”  Classical education is that method of instruction which is the legacy of the Christian middle ages, Christian Europe, and early America.  Its roots lie in both the Greco-Roman and Hebrew cultures.  It is word-centered, rigorous, and has as its goal the practice of Christian virtue--not just the pursuit of knowledge for its own sake.[iv]  The mentoring of the pupil by the instruction and example of the teacher is its characteristic ingredient, and together, teacher and pupil move towards study of the “queen of the sciences”, theology. 

Classical education is occasionally characterized as the emulation of pagan authors and philosophies.  While study of all of history is important, “classical” education, in its broader historical sense does not necessarily imply that we admire and revere Roman or Greek or pagan theology.  While classical education may include some careful study of the ancient period, it would be inaccurate to characterize it as focused on pagan beliefs.

Many compelling reasons exist to pursue a classical Christian education.

1.      For Christians, the basis of all knowledge in life and godliness is the Word: either God’s general, creative word written in nature, His specific word written in Scripture, or His Incarnate Word written in the person and work of Jesus Christ. Classical education is also based upon the written word.  The sciences and arts of language and logic are tools given by God to communicate Himself to His creation and to endow man with the dignity of communicating with his Creator.  Therefore, a method of instruction that emphasizes the written word-- understanding it, analyzing it, and creating with it-- seems uniquely fitting for Christians.  It gives man the capacity to think some of God’s thoughts after Him.

2.      Classical education is about the pursuit of truth, not just the pursuit of knowledge.  The idea of objective truth is a basic component of classical Christian education.  As such, it is uniquely suited to help students understand that all truth is God’s truth, and to train students not only to identify what is true as measured by God’s plumb line, but to embrace truth wherever it is found and reject error. Classical education thus provides the perfect training ground for the defense of the Faith.  The early Church Fathers were schooled in the classical tradition that, built on Paul’s example, met heresy with well thought out, logical and concise canons, creeds and arguments.  These documents have helped the Church to navigate rough waters over many centuries as it seeks to defend the faith against the world.  And such training will prove invaluable to our children as they navigate the waters of a lost and fallen world.

3.      Classical education begins with the premise that there is such a thing as virtue against which vice can be seen clearly.  Its goal is not only head-knowledge of such virtue, but practical, experiential virtue in action. As Christians, we know that Christ is the embodiment of godly virtue-- and that the end of all education ought to be greater knowledge of Christ, greater conformity to Christ, and greater appreciation of Him.  This motivates us to work vigorously and thoroughly to attain these goals in increasing measure, both as individuals and as teachers who bear responsibility for our students.  Classical education provides an avenue by which we can diligently add virtue to faith, and continue adding knowledge, self-control, perseverance, godliness, brotherly kindness, and love.[v] This goal of virtue in classical education moves our learning from “head knowledge” to “heart action”.

4.      Classical education is built on the model of imitation.  It assumes there is a body of knowledge and wisdom that ought to be passed on from one generation to the next.      Classical education assumes some are teachers and some are learners.   In assuming that certain skills and certain persons are worth imitating, classical education provides the perfect vehicle for the discipleship of students by their teachers, and resonates with the models of imitation found in Scripture. [vi]

5.      Classical education is grounded in the idea that the world is an orderly, logical place and that it can be understood.  The laws of logic and principles of right reasoning are foundational to all instruction.  Early Christians understood that the orderly nature of the universe and the rational nature of thought reflected the mind of the Maker.  While God is certainly much more than a merely rational being, right reasoning and logical principles flow from His very nature.  Thinking is not an option for Christian:  it is simply a question of whether we will think rightly or wrongly.[vii]  Logis is putting our thoughts in order, and thinking God’s thoughts after Him.  Accordingly, understanding the rules of clear and correct reasoning is more than an academic exercise; it is a spiritual discipline whether we classically educate or not.  It is also the legacy of the Christian West through the means of classical Christian education.


6.      As Christians, we believe that all of history is, indeed, His Story; the details of God at work in time and space.  Classical education, with its emphasis on the study of history, gives us a framework from which to study the Great Conversation of human history—both its man-to-man dialogue about the nature of God and man and its God-to-man component found in divine revelation.  It prepares our students to enter this great conversation by giving them its context.  A sweeping understanding of man’s quest for God, his lostness without God, God’s divine moving in time and space, and the ideas that have shaped the men and women and cultures around us, are all integral components necessary for Christians to impact their culture effectively for Christ. The pursuit of truth provides a “safe” way to view the world through the lenses of the Scriptures.  If we can embrace what is true, wherever it is found, sifting it through the Scriptures, and placing it in historical context, we are prepared to meet a dark and broken world.  It gives us the confidence to attack what is wrong and stand by what is right.

7.      Historically, classical education is the legacy of the Christian West to the world.  It was the Christians of the Middle Ages who viewed the Greco-Roman world as providentially brought into being at the right moment in time to cross paths with Christ.   It was they who took the truth found around them as God’s truth, filtered it through the worldview of the Scriptures, and laid a firm foundation of how to educate in a way consistent with the Scriptures.  In this sense, classical education is Christian education.

8.      Pragmatically, classical education has produced the best and brightest minds of every age where it has existed.  Even in its pre-Christian incarnation, its method of careful, logical thought and training produced the minds that led to Western Civilization, and paved the way for Christ (even though they were unaware of their divinely ordained role.) In the Middle Ages, it produced the great patriarchs of the early church, and preserved the Word even through Barbarian incursion and plague and disaster.  In Europe it educated the men who would be led by God to search His Word and spark the fire that became the Reformation.  In England and America, it produced the Founding Fathers of this nation.  Any method of education used by God to accomplish so much should not be easily dismissed.

Classical education provides a methodology that is not only compatible with Christianity, but has been blessed by God in this capacity in the past.  If this is so, why have Christians failed to embrace it in our time?  The answer to this is the ignorance of our current age.  For the last century, our nation has built with the lumber left over from our classical, Christian worldview and heritage.  But it has been so undermined in the public education system that we have lost our foundation and our way. Since the classical model was in place through the entire history of Christianity (until the last 100-150 years), and succeeded in raising up the great saints of the Church in the past, the burden of proof that it is insufficient actually rests with those who make that claim.

However, home school educators are left in the uncomfortable position of trying to rediscover exactly what a classical educational method entails, without the training that we need to accomplish it.  That means a lot of hard work for the instructor who has to learn before he can teach.  But this is a familiar kind of territory for homeschoolers! The recovery of the ideals of classical education may well be the next step in our quest to regain a godly foundation for ou


[i]  Westminster Shorter Catechism, Question 1, “What is the chief end of man?  Man’s chief end is to glorify God and enjoy Him forever.”
[ii] Wislon, Douglas. Recovering the Lost Tools of Learning: An Approach to Distinctively Christian Education. Wheaton, Illinois: Crossway Books, 1991.
[iii] Andrew Kerns is author of  Classical Education: Towards a Revival of American Schooling and director of Circe Ministries.
[iv] “True learning is revealed in character; it is not a matter of courses or degrees or preparation for a job...True learning makes affirmation and acknowledges limitation; it begets honesty and humility, compassion towards man and reverence towards God... True learning knows what is good, serves it above self, reproduces it, and recognizes that in knowledge lies responsibility.”  From Norms and Nobility: A treatise on Education” by Hicks, David. New York: University of America Press, 1999.
[v] II Peter 1:5-7
[vi] I Thessalonians 3:7-9, 1 Peter 2:21
[vii] For more on the place of logic in the life of the Christian, see Hawkins, Craig S. “The Nature and Necessity of Logic”, Apologetics Information Ministry, http://aplogeticsinfo.org/papers/naturenecessity.html

 A select bibliography on classical education

Bauer, Susan Wise and Jesse Wise. The Well-Trained Mind: A Guide to Classical Education at Home. New York: Norton and Company, Inc., 1999.

Hicks, David. Norms and Nobility: A Treatise on Education. New York: University of Marica Press, 1999.

Veith, Gene Edward, Jr. and Andrew Kern. Classical Education: Towards a Revival of American Schooling. Capitol Research Center, 1997.

Wilson, Doug. Recovering the Lost Tools of Learning: An Approach to Distinctively Christian Education. Wheaton, Illinois: Crossway Books, 1991.

Websites on Classical Education:
http://www.gbt.org/res.html


Monday, February 10, 2014

An Update and some pictures

Gentle Readers, I appologize for neglecting you of late.  Life is busy and full, and I always prefer to live the real one in preference of recording the virtual one, so I have neglected this blog.  Here is a short update as of today (February 10, 2014), and a few photos of recent events...

Mt final "uploading dose" of remicade is behind me, and while I am tired, I get an 8-week break before another treatment.  Hurray!  I should be in ABQ for eye tests and evaluations on March 21, and then receive my next infusion on March 26, Lord willing.

In the meantime, I am heading for a long 5-week+ stretch to Tucson.  Nikki is still on bed rest, and passed the 31-week mark, so we are making progress!  Please continue to pray with us that Ezra will stay put until at least 37 weeks.  So far, Nikki is being a real trooper, and the family is all pulling together to keep him there.  I will stay until my next eye stuff, so we have no idea how everything will work out, but we are trusting that our amazing God has a good plan that will be perfect (whether or not it is the way we want it to be...)

I hope to visit with Ben and Elsa and Ada at some point, and receive a visit from Dave as well.  All that remains to be seen!  So before I am off again, I will leave you with a few photos from my last stint in AZ, and ask you to continue to pray for our growing family!

With Emma at the Reid Park Zoo:


A moment of contemplation:


The super-girls with their super-hero capes on.  Ada says she has a super power that you turn on by pressing her belly button.  Who am I to argue?


The super-girls (and Elmo) riding Ada's rocking horse that Pampa made for her:


Decorating mouse cupcakes to celebrate Ada's second birthday:


Ada trying to call Pampa and find out why he's not at the party:


The Ben Finnegan family:


The Tim Finnegan family:

 

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

New Year Updates

As I write this, I am waiting for Dave to arrive home from work so we can hit the road to ABQ, where we will have a date over-night before I head to Tucson in the morning.  Maybe a couple of updates are in order:

My infusions are going well.  The second one gave me a couple days of headache and about a week of extreme fatigue, but now I am back to what passes for my perky self.  I still have to watch not to get over-tired, but this drug makes me feel less horrible, and I am enjoying having days that are pretty good.  I am grateful to Jehovah Jirah for providing, and I continue to pray the new drug combo will be effective.  My third infusion will come on January 31st, and then my eyes will be tested on March 21, with my next infusion on March 26.

Baby Ezra is continuing to grow and seems healthy and strong.  However, he acts like he wants to enter the world whenever his mommy has to be up on her feet for more than a shower or a bathroom run.  Nikki is tolerating the prospect (and reality) or many months of bed rest very well.  Their church is serving them wonderfully.  But this is all vexing at time.  Please keep them in your prayers.

My travel agenda is currently home for infusion and rest following it, then back to Tucson to play with Emma until I need to be back for the doctors visits before infusions or the infusions themselves.  This time I will go for a little over two weeks, and without my sweet husband.  Pray for the travel and the time apart, for life in Tim and Nikki's home with me around all the time, and for Emma to feel a senseof security and schedule with me there.  What a blessing it is to feel well enough to be of some use to them!  And this trip will include an over-night visit from Ben, Elsa, Ada, and Femto-- their new arrival due on the scene sometime in June.  I am so grateful to see them all!

A year of renewal: My sweet husband considers what our theme for each year should be, as he shepherds our family through this weary world.  He has decided that this is to be a year of renewal: renewal of our first love for Christ, renewal of our tenderness for one another, renewal of health, renewal of fire for God's kingdom, renewal of our vision (physical and otherwise).  I am finding this idea refreshing and challenging, and I am so thankful for this godly husband who serves me and leads me and is my best friend.

So, Gentle Reader, I am busy and rejoicing.  God is so good.  And where would we rather be than in the center of His will in this world?  I would love to hear how your new year is shaping up

Monday, December 23, 2013

The never-ending Christmas, projects, health updates, and waiting

Today's post is a four-parter.  I am clearing my mental clip board of things I want to say here before we head out on our next great adventure.

1.  The never-ending Christmas: We celebrated our first Christmas this year over Thanksgiving.  With both of our boys and their families here, we exchanged our gifts and enjoyed being together in the opening of them.  Then, little Ezra started causing problems, meaning Tim and Nikki's long-anticipated trip to Canada needed to be canceled, and we decided to go hang out with them over the holiday (what a hardship for us!)  So yesterday we had our home Christmas with Marilyn.  Tonight we have our Christmas with the Hansons in Rio Rancho.  And by Christmas Eve we will be back in Tucson for another Arizona Christmas.  What a wonderful, drawn-put season of celebrating for us!




2.  Projects: I am posting a few more Christmas project photos below.I made picnic quilts for both the boys and their families.  The first is "Canadian Picnic" for Tim and Nikki.  The second is "Gateway to a Picnic" for Ben and Elsa.






3. Health updates: My first remicade injection went off without a hitch, and the combo of being off the cyclosporine and on the remicade looks like a winner-- at least concerning how I feel.  There has been a marked return of energy for which I am very grateful to God.  I am not waking up every morning (as I have for the last 2 years) and wondering how I can possibly make it through the day, and that is something to celebrate.  It remains to be seen if it is doing the job of getting my eye disease into remission.  My next infusion is scheduled for January 3, and then one for January 31.  After that I should see my eye doc and be re-tested some time in March, and set up a recurring treatment schedule based on that outcome. Thanks so much for your prayers, Gentle Reader!

And down in Tucson, Ezra is staying put for the time being.  Mommy, Nikki, is a trooper on full bed rest and medication, and Ezra appears to be doing well.  He has passed the 24-week mark, which is considered the point of viability, but has a long way to go.  Please join me in praying for him to stay put at least 35 weeks-- or 37 or 38 would be even better!



4. Waiting: This is advent.  We wait for our redemption in the unlikely birth of a real baby boy, born to a real girl who was still a virgin.  What an unlikely source for redemption.  I am reminded this year in particular of the poignancy of that story. Of a young girl who trusted God, and a kind man who thought he would put her away quietly to spare her scandal, but believed God instead, and named that baby Jesus.

As we look at our spring with so much up-in-the-air that we cannot really plan any of it,  I am often tempted to despair over my lack of control.  What a beautiful reminder Advent is that God is always in control, and I can wait on Him with patience.  He will be good and true to His word, and send redemption in His perfect timing.  I can wait in confidence, though I can't see how everything will work out.  I can rest because He is sure while nothing else appears to be so.

As you wait this advent season, Gentle Reader, may your mind be fixed on the source of our great redemption, and find rest there.

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Merry Christmas, 2013!

Well, the Christmas postcards are being addressed, which means it is time to update everyone here on all the Lord has done this year, and the ways He continues to go before us. So here is a snapshot of the Finnegans as 2013 comes to a close.

It is always special and fitting in this season of waiting to be waiting for a baby ourselves.  Tim and nikki and Emma, in Tucson, are awaiting the arrival of Baby Ezra, our first grandson!  Ezra is trying to make an early appearance, but Nikki and her doctors are working to keep him where he is until closer to his due date in April, and the rest of us are doing what we can to support that! The church family at Rincon Mountain are serving and supporting them well. Emma turned 3 in August, and is always bright and busy, and Pampa is her favorite.  She'll make a fabulous big sister. Tim continues to enjoy working as an electrical engineer for Raytheon.


Ben, Elsa, and Ada continue to reside in Peoria, AZ, north of Phoenix.  Ben continues to enjoy both teaching Latin and coaching flag football at the Basis school there, and Elsa cares well for him and Ada.  Ada keeps us laughing with her funny sayings and facial expressions.  And Pampa is her favorite.  Do we see a pattern here?


All the New Mexico extended family are also doing well here at the turning of the year.  Marilyn continues to volunteer at the nursing home, walk with a friend several times a week, and participate in a  Silver Sneakers exercise class at the YMCA, along with being our church librarian.   Chris' parents, Jack and Shirley Hanson, had a rough fall- illness, roof problems, and plumbing problems, are now settled down, and we hope the New year brings quiet and calm.  And we enjoy seeing Gwen, Chris' sister, and her family from Edgewood when we can work it out.  Hallie is getting ready to graduate from high school, and it's hard to believe Atalie will be heading into high school!  The years are flying by! Below, we met up with the whole contingent for a day in Los Alamos, playing putt-putt and hanging out.


This year has been a year of both struggle and blessing for us.  We have watched God go before us and prepare the way where we didn't think there was a way, and enjoyed rich blessings. To Him be all the honor and glory this season and always!  As this year closes, I continue to fight my eye disease and will begin anew medication later this week, and we both deal with aging and post-cancer-treatment problems.  But we still love each other, rejoice in our family and friends, and look forward to the adventures ahead.


May God be with you in all your new adventures in the coming year, Gentle Reader!  He continues to be with us in ours!