The ladies have done an awesome job of chatting through this! I m so sorry I'm just getting back to you - I am also helping families in other ways for HOD, and it has already been a crazy summer!
![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon_biggrin.gif)
When talking through combining or not combining, it is really helpful to discuss specifically where each child falls in placement regarding age, reading, writing, grammar, and math, as opposed to just which guide overall each child best places in. Specific information helps make more and more clear whether combining is a good idea, who it may be best for, and what the overall family needs might be. So, based on the general information shared so far, which is age and where each generally places, starting your turning 8 yo in Beyond Little Hearts for His Glory seems to be a good idea. Based on age, your turning 5 yo might place in Little Hearts for His Glory or in Little Hands to Heaven with LA/math from Little Hearts for His Glory. Your 3 yo places in Little Hands to Heaven, or you could wait on that and have your 1 and 3 yo eventually do this more together.
Starting Beyond... with the 8 yo, and stagger starting your 5 yo later would be a great idea! If you like the idea of possibly combining the 3 and 5 yo, or the 3 and 1 yo, then we could talk through some options about that. I'd love to hear specifically about each child's reading/writing/grammar/math skills if you get the chance. The reason placement takes time is because each child is so important! We just want to give you and your kiddos the absolutely best year ever - so it is well worth the discussion!!! If you are at peace moving forward with your 8 yo in Beyond and slowing down LHFHG for your 5 yo, then by all means - just disregard this further discussion of placement I'm asking for - the Lord always knows best, and if you've been in prayer about it, and have found peace and joy moving forward, then hooray! Otherwise, I'd love to dig into this a little more.
As far as the Bible focus of HOD, it is powerful because it is both personal through Bible Quiet Time and parent led through Bible Study, it is daily, and it is not a stand alone subject - so the Bible is not only a dedicated daily 2 prong approach of more private/personal Bible Quiet Time (formally starting in PHFHG) and more discussion/parent led Bible Study - it is part of virtually every subject. Every guide has students share their faith in the Lord by preparing and sharing the gospel in some way, so this is putting into action the sharing of the Gospel on a personal level. Every guide has its own Biblical focus in both Bible Quiet Time (starting in PHFHG) and in Bible Study, but every guide also includes Biblical Scriptural connections through resources chosen (which often include missionaries/biographies of Christians/etc.), discussions, projects, activities, etc. This keeps in balance the nurturing, growing, and maturing of personal faith, alongside the nurturing, growing, and sharing of faith in an outreach missionary capacity. This balance recognizes the importance of tending to personal faith, while also sharing the Good News we have as Christians with others! So, every year has a personal side of faith, and every year has a sharing side of faith, but each year's focus changes. You can read about each guide's Bible Study and Bible Quiet Time focus within the Introduction of each guide, but to see the entire picture of a guide's Biblical focus, you'd want to also look at each of the subjects areas and their resources. So, yes, missions and outreach are a part of HOD, a very important part - but so is the growing of a strong foundation of personal faith and Biblical Worldview - so when our children share the Good News with others, it is coming straight from our King Jesus, who is sitting on the throne of their own hearts. I hope this helps! Thank you for your questions - especially those that show you long for your children to know the Lord and share Him with others! It is the reason HOD exists. I hope you get the chance to enjoy looking through the Bible focus and resources in each of the guides, but I'll share the "Introduction's" description of the "World Geography" guide below. It was a powerful year for our son in 9th grade! All of the Bible Study, Bible Quiet Time, Biblical Worldview, etc. personal and parent-led previous years prepared him beautifully for the Biblical focus in WG! It was an incredible year!
Students not only travel the world with the resources described above, but they also embark on a journey to answer the question, But Don’t All Religions Lead to God? With World Religions – An Indispensable Introduction as a guide, students navigate the multi- faith maze and use their newfound knowledge of 8 of the world’s major religions to reach out to people of other faiths. Since understanding world religions is a crucial and often overlooked part of understanding world geography, our included World Religion & Culture’s study fulfills this need. The religions of the world continue to dominate settlements, architecture, family structures, professions, community design, travel, worship, and government. The World Religion & Culture’s study provides students with a multi-faceted look at the world that helps them expand their thinking and deepen their understanding about life beyond their borders. It is also designed to give students compassion for the unreached peoples of the world, to help them become more deeply rooted and grounded in their faith, and to stir their hearts to share the Gospel with those of other faiths.
I hope something here helps as you ponder your dear family's homeschooling future!
In Christ,
Julie