The Freeman

10 Things Children Should Learn About Faith

- By Natasha Crain

Yesterday, my threeyear-old daughter asked about the word “faith” after hearing it in the devotional audiobook she received for Christmas. I told her that faith means we believe in God even though we can’t see Him, hear Him or touch Him. Hearing myself say that out loud, I realized for the first time just how difficult the concept of faith can be. My definition was true in a simple sense, but as my kids grow I want them to understand the greater richness of the word as used in the Bible.

This inspired me to study the different instances of the word translated as “faith” in the New Testament. Based on my (digital) study Bible, there are 245 such instances. I read each of the passages and categorize­d them into 10 key insights on faith that I hope to teach my children as they grow.

1. Faith is what saves.

Among the many verses that attest to this, Ephesians 2:8 clearly states, “It is by grace you have been saved, through faith – and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God.” Our children first and foremost need to learn that faith in Jesus is the only thing that results in salvation of our souls.

2. Faith can grow.

Since the Bible clearly establishe­s faith as the requiremen­t for salvation, it is natural to think of it as something we either have or don’t have. While that is true for saving faith, many verses make it clear that the faith of (saved) Christians can and should continue to grow (according to Romans 4:20, 2 Corinthian­s 10:15, Philippian­s 1:25, 1 Thessaloni­ans 3:10, Romans 14:1). Children need to understand that growing faith is a life-time process that starts with saving faith.

In Luke 22:31-34, Jesus foretells Peter’s denial. In verse 32 Jesus says, “…but I have prayed for you that your faith may not fail.” Our faith can fail due to our circumstan­ces. When facing such circumstan­ces, our children need to know they can pray for their faith to remain firm.

Romans 12:3 and 1 Corinthian­s 12:9 tell us that faith is a spiritual gift from God and therefore it varies by person. When it first registered for me last year that strength of faith is actually a gift, I honestly felt a sense of relief; I had always thought something was wrong with my faith because it’s been more of a struggle for me to believe than for many other Christians I know. Our children should understand that faith does vary among believers and

3. Faith can fail.

4. Faith is a gift.

that comparison­s are fruitless. What matters is our personal faith growth.

5. Faith can move mountains. Jesus says in Matthew 17:20 and 21:22 that if you do not doubt, your faith can move mountains. Note that He didn’t say that “medium” faith will move hills! Our children need to understand that the power of prayer lies in full conviction.

The book of Matthew quotes Jesus saying, “O you of little faith” on five occasions. On all but one of those occasions, He was addressing the disciples regarding their fear or worry (6:30, 8:26, 14:31, and 16:8). If little faith results in worry, that implies great faith results in trust. When our children are worried or scared, we should help them pray specifical­ly for God to grow their faith; faith that results in trust is the remedy for fear.

There are two New Testament verses that use faith as a metaphor for spirituall­y protective armor (the “shield of faith” in Ephesians 6:16 and the “breastplat­e of faith” in 1 Thessaloni­ans 5:8). Our children

6. Faith means to trust.

7. Faith is protective.

need to be aware of the need for spiritual protection in their daily lives, and that faith is the basis for that protection.

8. Faith results in action. Hebrews chapter 11 recalls many of the most faithful people of the Old Testament. Each verse starts with the pattern, “By faith (person) (did something).” It wasn’t enough for the author to point out that each of these people had faith; the focus was on what that faith produced. Our children need to understand that authentic faith results in action.

9. (Great) Faith is believing before you experience.

In almost every instance where Jesus acknowledg­ed someone for having great faith, it was in the context of believing in Him prior to experienci­ng healing (see Matthew 8 for the “greatest” faith of the Centurion). Our children need to know that faith doesn’t require waiting for signs or experience­s that lead to the “conviction of things not seen”; Jesus acknowledg­ed great faith as first believing in Him.

10. Faith is a decision everyone makes.

Even if a person does not have faith in God, he or she must have faith in another “unproven” alternativ­e about the afterlife (even if it’s that nothing exists). Our children need to realize that faith is a decision everyone makes, not just Christians.

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