Author Archives: pastorrobin
VOTE
Vote Today!
Vota Hoy!
If you voted, then who did you vote for? Just kidding, please I don’t want to start that right now. Save it for later.
=robin
Jonnie Wilson
Friday, I went to a special luncheon honoring several women from Texas State. I was invited by Jonnie Wilson, who was one of 8 honorees. The president of the University was there, the mayor (both of whom are women). It was a huge deal!
I am so proud and honored to know Jonnie Wilson. I love her because
- she loves God
- she serves God
- she loves diversity
- she is a wonderful mother (and Grandmother)
- she is a hard worker
- she has overcome a stroke, severe asthma, and who knows what else
- she has a master’s degree
- she works at Texas State
- She loves me and my family
=robin
Survey Says…
a. I have voted early
b. I will vote on March 4th
c. I am unable to vote or do not want to vote
WOW
Please forgive my blogging delinquency yesterday. We had an action packed day around here on Tuesday.
For one thing: we had 146 new volunteers for Easter Weekend! That was incredible. We are trying to assimilate everyone effectively. I am heading to Austin this morning for a video shoot. I will post that when it is complete.
Talk to you soon!
robin
Stand Against Bullying
I have met four families in the last several months at PromiseLand that are victims of Bullying. In fact, I prayed with 2 of them this weekend. I found this article from Focus on the Family that might be of help.
From the seventh through the 12th grade, Josh dreaded going to school. Name-calling and cruel jokes from his peers undermined his self-esteem and his schoolwork. “It was impossible for me to learn,” he says.
But Josh handled the daily bullying better than 15-year-old Greg Doucette. When the taunting from his classmates became unbearable, Greg hung himself from a basement rafter.
Every day, heartbreaking accounts of school-based bullying appear in our newspapers. Such reports make us upset and concerned, yet most of us wonder what, if anything, we can do to help.
The facts about school-based bullying are shocking. About 85 percent of arrested school shooters told the Secret Service that revenge against bullying, which in some cases lasted years, was the reason they murdered indiscriminately.
The American Psychological Association estimates that 90 percent of fourth- through eighth-graders are targets of bullying. Approximately 160,000 students skip school each day due to bullying. The U.S. Department of Justice reports that about 85 percent of bullying takes place in front of others, yet only 11 percent of witnesses intervene.
Jesus told us we have a moral obligation to help those in need. So did the prophet Isaiah when he wrote, ”Learn to do right! Seek justice, encourage the oppressed” (Isaiah 1:17). Teaching our children to help targets of bullying is pivotal to their moral education.
Stopping bullies
Bystanders have the greatest opportunity to reduce bullying. One study shows that when they do intervene, they succeed more than half the time.
Mark Galli, managing editor of Christianity Today, told me how in high school he stopped someone from beating up a kid.
Mark said quietly, ”Lay off.”
”What are you going to do, Galli?” the bully said.
”I’m not going to fight you. I want you to stop it.”
The bully stopped and left.
Most bullying is verbal, not physical, so simple and powerful words are often sufficient: “Stop it.” “That’s wrong.” “That’s cruel.”
Teach your children to tell an authority figure when they see bullying, especially when it’s physical. Also encourage them to act in tandem. The power of two is found throughout the Bible. Jesus tapped into this dynamic when He sent His disciples out in pairs, not alone (Matthew 21:1; Mark 14:13).
A strategy for targets
When the target of bullying is your child, how can you respond? Telling him to “just ignore it” is a common mistake. He can no more ignore a bully at school than a parent can at work. Instead, he needs a wise game plan, and he needs to see you behave courageously.
Most bullies seek students who are timid and unassertive. Teach your child assertive but short responses: “That’s not true.” “You’re wrong.” “Whatever.” He should avoid longer responses, which only encourage further attacks. Teach him to give the impression that the bully’s approval doesn’t matter. Show him how to leave an area with confidence: shoulders back and without an emotional display.
Meet with school authorities if you have to, but make sure that you are firm, not attacking. Have your facts down and stick to them. Do not confront the bully yourself. A parent who directly fights a child’s battles for him makes the child appear even weaker, causing him to become an even larger target.
Showing courage
My wife and I expect our three children to show courage, not cowardice, when a classmate is bullied. Distraught, our daughter told us one day how two girls were hurting a physically challenged classmate.
“What did you do?” I asked.
“I defended her,” she said.
Three words have never made me more proud. Later, I had an opportunity to speak to her class. The teacher asked the class what they thought about my daughter. The girl she defended raised her hand and said, “I think Abby’s a good person.” She said “good” with passion and thankfulness. That little girl saw a side of God’s protective nature that I doubt she had seen before.
Our character and our ability to love expand or shrink depending on the courage we possess, and that includes the courage to stand against bullying.

