B
Bradski
Guest
‘Well, kid, when you die you get buried in the ground and eaten by worms.’Where does faith come into this instruction? How does knowing the facts of a religion impart a sense of faith?
I have a nephew, who is just reaching the age where he is starting to understand death and mortality. It caused him a lot of distress to think that there might be a day when he is here, alive, and I’m not. He is raised in a secular home, without any faith, and respecting his parents’ choice, I’d never shared my faith with him. Until the day he came to me, tears in his eyes, and wanted me to explain how I could be okay with the fact that someday, the people I love will die. I explained to him what it meant to believe in an eternal life, to believe in God, to believe that when I’m sad or worried or scared I can tell God.
This is what is missing when a child is raised without faith. And it only gets harder as one gets older and the questions get more difficult. I personally can’t endorse raising a child like that.
‘Well, kid, if you are naughty you get sent to hell where you will be tormented for eternity’.
I’m not sure either approach is good for young children.
Tell him what you believe by all means, but don’t tell him he must believe it.