I liked the concepts so much that I began putting up signs around the house. My children began to repeat the concepts and I found we were using them in context with our house rules. (See PDF file at the bottom of this post.)
The Two Rules of Natural Law are:
- Do all you have agreed to do.
- Do not encroach on other persons or their property.
Within these Two Rules of Natural Law, we discovered that most smaller rules are included within the two main rules. This allowed us to streamline the family rules and make life a bit more calm. My parenting time has greatly lessened because we do not have to remember so many other tedious rules, tally points, or manage tedious consequences. The consequences of one's actions are also "natural" and fit the rule broken.
Some examples:
Family Work
When our family work assignments were originally given, my husband and I sat down with the family and described the new plan. All listened and gave input about the new plan. Some questions were asked and things were clarified. In the end, the entire family agreed to the new plan of the division of household assignments feeling positive about the arrangements and all were happy with the new assignments.
As time went on, occasionally a member of the family neglects their duties. When discovered, someone would point to the chart of the Two Rules of Natural Law and say, "You have not done all you agreed to do." The child who has neglected their duties then needs to get in gear and catch up their work area. Sometimes, there is a disagreement about who has done what, leaving one person feeling slighted. I've discovered that if we simply go back over the timeline of assignments, it usually becomes pretty clear who has neglected their duties and who has not.
Computer Time
One area of constant complaint is computer time. We have only one laptop and everyone wants to use it pretty much all day. We determined a set computer schedule would benefit us the most, but there was a problem. Nayna needed the computer for online classes were Chris needed the computer for programming, but he does not have a set time when he needs the computer where Nayna does have set times to sign in for classes. We had to develop a plan that would allow Nayna to be on the computer during her scheduled times, but still allow Chris to have blocks of programming time. I need time to do writing for curriculum and take care of church duties.
Over time, we discovered that sometimes people were encroaching on another person's scheduled time (sometimes this was Mom!). It was easy to point to the chart of the two main rules and say, "Are you encroaching on another person?"
Personal Space and Property
Another area of contention is the bathroom. We have teens and teens take up a lot more time in the bathroom than younger children. We have not needed to have a bathroom schedule...yet...but we do have problems with some people making more of a mess in the bathroom that others or using someone else's items in the bathroom or just plain taking forever!
We've been able to again apply the Two Rules of Natural Law to our household. If someone uses another's property, it needs to be replaced, cleaned, or tidied up. If someone takes too long, they have encroached on another person's time, they need to make up for that time.
Resolving Encroachment Issues
We allow them to work out the problem among themselves until everyone is satisfied that the encroachment has been resolved.
Some ways they have decided to work out Restitution have been:
- Replacing items used or damaged.
- Giving a monetary settlement.
- Offering a service to replace time lost when another person has encroached on their time or in household neglect.
- If the encroachment is small, sometimes a simple "I'm sorry" has sufficed.
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Sending Sam Back to College |
I should point out that I do incorporate other methods into my parenting style like:
- Parenting With Love And Logic
- I enjoyed this book because I learned to parent through simple logic rather than my emotions. When I step back and answer their feedback (both positive and negative) with logic, it teaches them the "why" behind the constant requests that parents make of them. What this book lacks, however, is the teaching of right and wrong.
- The 5 Love Languages of Teenagers New Edition: The Secret to Loving Teens Effectively
- From this book, I learned that I needed to change my parenting when my children enter the teen years and to expect that change as a natural part of growing up.
- The 5 Love Languages of Children
- I love this book because it makes me think of each child's personal needs and what they need to feel truly loved. A true gem for every parent.
- Parenting a House United
- Teaching Self-Government - Through teaching my children to respond respectfully, I believe this book has taught us all how to be in opposition without offense. What this book lacks is the individual's need to respond with their grievances. She teaches that after one time of responding to a request they should just do it without question. I don't agree with that philosophy.
- The Great Behavior Breakdown
- While this book is geared towards children with severe problems, I did find it most useful in explaining how parents react with Fear and Anger most of the time. What we need to do is parent from a point of Love. When we do, we get much better results, we show our unconditional love for our children, and we show them the proper way to handle problems in their lives. What this book lacks is clear teaching of right and wrong and does not come from a religious perspective.
Over the past 20 years as a parent, I just learned that I needed to simplify what I've digested from these books and methods into the larger picture of parenting from God's Law (Natural Law) and how that can be done with less stress and through a basis of Love. Children still face consequences, but rather than a specific consequence for a specific infraction, the children give restitution for the act itself. In other words, "the punishment fits the crime". I believe this leads to better teaching of right and wrong, true and false, good and bad. We have also found that the children are less angry because the restitution is typically decided among the injured party and themselves. The conflict between youth and parent becomes less and less as the parents become the mediators and not the jail wardens.
Society and Parenting
The trend in parenting in society is becoming more and more institutional. Parents look to day cares, nannies, babysitters, schools, and media to do the teaching. There is very little parenting time in most homes with children spending up to 10 hours a day in day cares, schools, and after care programs, then sleeping for 8 to 9 hours a night. This leaves the average parent with a maximum of 6 hours with their children, yet statistics say children typically watch 4-6 hours of television each day. TV has become the cheap babysitter and teacher.
This is in tune with Man Made Laws, not with Natural Law. Natural Law or God's Law would have the teaching of right and wrong be done within the family. Parenting through institutions was one of the key factors listed in the Communist Manifesto (see pages 24-27). As a mother, I encourage all parents to truly consider where their parenting style comes from and how it can be improved to promote love within the family and freedom in our country.
Society and Parenting
The trend in parenting in society is becoming more and more institutional. Parents look to day cares, nannies, babysitters, schools, and media to do the teaching. There is very little parenting time in most homes with children spending up to 10 hours a day in day cares, schools, and after care programs, then sleeping for 8 to 9 hours a night. This leaves the average parent with a maximum of 6 hours with their children, yet statistics say children typically watch 4-6 hours of television each day. TV has become the cheap babysitter and teacher.
This is in tune with Man Made Laws, not with Natural Law. Natural Law or God's Law would have the teaching of right and wrong be done within the family. Parenting through institutions was one of the key factors listed in the Communist Manifesto (see pages 24-27). As a mother, I encourage all parents to truly consider where their parenting style comes from and how it can be improved to promote love within the family and freedom in our country.

I agree the most important thing that people can do to bring about a free society is teach their children with love and logic.
ReplyDeleteI like to some up natural law in the non-aggression principle.
Where did you get "do what you agreed to do" in natural law? I think there is a difference between a contract and a promise, a promise falls outside of natural law, but it is still an important moral principle to uphold.
Great question! We have studied several Uncle Eric books, written by Richard Maybury, that discuss Natural Law, also known as Common Law. We learned that "do all you have agreed to do" is the premise for all contract law. Often we think of it today as "giving your word" or "shaking on it". There are numerous court cases over these types of verbal, implied contracts. So, in that light, I believe a promise (a verbal contract) does fall into the category of Natural Law. In my opinion, everything falls into the category of Natural Law because it is God's Law. I was involved once in a case where a design artist in our company verbally promised a product that we did not deliver. The client sued our company and won. It was all verbal contract and not in writing.
ReplyDeleteRemember too that when we discuss Natural Law or Common Law that we are talking about moral principles. Our modern society has gotten very far from basing decisions morally, rather they think of what is legal, too very different approaches. It is a big paradigm shift for our modern society to think in terms of morality when we discuss any type of law. Yet, the origins of Natural Law are based on morals or principles based on God's Law.
I would suggest reading "Whatever Happened to Justice?" by Richard Maybury to get an idea where we are coming from on this topic. He explains it so much better than I.
Sorry for my misspelling, that is "two very different approaches".
ReplyDeleteI guess we are just looking at the definitions of promise vs contract differently. I am getting my ideas from Murray Rothbard's "The Ethics of Liberty." I have only read parts of the book but what I have read definitely make a lot of sense, although some parts are difficult to understand.
ReplyDeleteI think it is important to view the difference between God's law and morality too. God's (natural) law applies to everyone but there are certain covenants when made with God that only apply to you or the people that you worship with that have been baptized or covenanted into that faith. Like in the video "The Devil's Playground," once the person gets baptized into the faith of the Amish community then they are bound and if they break the covenant then they are shunned.
Any ways, I appreciated this post. It is disconcerting to me how many people I talk to that don't believe in the concept of natural law so it is always good to hear people teaching their children this concept. I think in government schools this concept is really glossed over and the dangerous concept of "Social Contract" is emphasized instead.
Thanks for the book recommendation, I'll check it out!