It is a noble thing, a boy growing into a man.
Boys are protectors, designed to grow backbones of steel – and shoulders to carry massive weight of responsibility. A boy’s love of dirt and mud is creator-designed, foreshadowing the hard jobs, the dirty jobs, sometimes fox-hole-kind-of-jobs of the man they will become.
Negotiating playground differences without interference is conflict training for more grown-up matters, like business and freedom. Learning how to defend against people who chose not to go by the rules teaches that sometimes you have to use physical aggression to stop bullying – on the playground and later in the world.
A boy not taught concepts of nobleness risks becoming a mercenary man. A boy taught loyalty, faithfulness, and fairness will honor and protect the weak without thought to material gain or fame. A boy taught this will sacrifice his comfort, his lunch money, his play time to help. The man taught this will sacrifice his golf date, sacrifice his pride to ridicule for standing up for what he believes, even sacrifice his life: “Greater love has no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends” John 15:13.
A boy needs a knightly example to follow, preferably someone who champions for good against evil. Someone who loves his neighbor as himself. Someone who can introduce him to Jesus and His Father. Someone who shows a boy how a man loves God. A boy finding a noble hero finds a mighty mentor.
A boy with a knightly purpose carries himself differently, speaks differently, handles responsibility differently.
If only our culture saw a boy as knightly as they see a girl a princess – imagine how our young men would lead today.









































Amen!! Profound Truth! Men of this character are so desperately needed in our culture that has lost its way. We are doing our best to raise our sons to understand these precious principles. Thank you for such a strong statement of what we believe He desires to accomplish in our young men.
as a mom of a growing son, I really liked this.
I so agree with this. I have 3 grown sons and taught them to be as you describe…knightly men.
Hear, hear!
I LOVE this!
“If only our culture saw a boy as knightly as they see a girl a princess – imagine how our young men would lead today.”- So true!
We need more mothers like you who will help their sons grow up to be godly men – knights in training. It is so important, and so misunderstood in our culture. Thank you!
I think your son will grow up to be just such a man!
Yes!! I LOVE this!!!
I agree we need to teach our children how to be Godly men and women! Great post!!
Great post as usual. Now I have to go read on about knights! I’m doing my best to raise my sons to be godly men of character, but I never really thought of knights and what they symbolize. I’ve never even read a book with knights in it…any suggestions? he,he! BLESSINGS!
Love it!!!!!! exactly
Beautiful! And how true! It really distresses me how much we undervalue a good man in today’s society.
Thanks for sharing!
Great post. We are emphasizing the values of knighthood with our son as he advances in Boy Scouts, which also emphasizes the character values of knights.
We also recently bought our sons the Duct Tape Warfare e-books for fun.
I spent my entire pregnancy praying for the baby to be a girl (which thankfully I got) as I didn’t think that I would be as good of a parent to a boy.
I’m glad to see that God gave lots of boys to a mother like you who clearly does a wonderful job of raising boys.
[...] Treating Boys as Knights in Training: Click Here: Share this:FacebookEmailStumbleUponDiggRedditPrintLike this:LikeBe the first to like this post. [...]
As a mother of 3 boy warriors, I found myself nodding along in agreement to this post!
[...] handmaiden stories in our house, unless they were for me alone. The stories for my boys were Knights-in-Shining-Armor stories, Warriors, filled with nobleness and fighting for [...]
[...] handmaiden stories in our house, unless they were for me alone. The stories for my boys were Knights-in-Shining-Armor stories, Warriors, filled with nobleness and fighting for [...]
[...] Treating Boys as Knights in Training [...]