Resources

Resources

Report #5. Practices for Forming Faith with Young Adults
Young adults have reached a life stage that calls for a lot of sorting. They have had twenty plus years of rules, roles, and responsibilities provided by parents, teachers, friends,… Read More
Report #4. Practices for Forming Faith with Adolescents
Adolescence is the age period of intense ideological hunger, deep search for meaning and purpose, and near constant yearning for relationships and connectedness. Adolescence is also the age period when… Read More
Report #3. Practices for Forming Faith with Children
If we accept the broadly affirmed theological premise that God is present in every human person, regardless of age and development, then we owe it to children to help them… Read More
Report #2. Practices for Forming Faith Intergenerationally
We have known for some time that a graded-level, schooling model of faith formation focused almost exclusively on children and youth, all by itself, fails to move the needle in… Read More
Report #1. Practices for Forming Faith with Families & Parents
We seek to respond to several key questions that surface when considering faith transmission for children and youth. When it comes to passing faith to the next generation, in our… Read More

What Parents Should Know About How Children Learn about Their Faith

Faith is more caught than taught

Words Describe Our Experiences

Faith Grows Over Time

The Early Years Are Essential

Children Want to Know ‘Why?’

It’s Up To You

The Keys to Success

Practice Makes (nearly) Perfect

The first thing you need to do is be a parent — do what children need parents to do: love them, protect them, guide them, show them how much they are valued as a child of God, and invite them to share their gifts and talents with others as a sign of God’s generosity. If you create a family environment in which these things are present, you will have created a solid foundation for your child’s faith. This foundation will be even stronger if children see you participating in a faith community which helps you experience, understand, express, and live with faith. Practice your own faith and let the children see how important it is to you.

According to Leif Kehrwald, an expert in family faith development, the four keys to children’s faith formation are things every parent can manage: 
   • rituals and traditions, which help children experience their faith; 
   • caring conversations, which help children learn about their faith; 
   • prayer, which helps children express their faith; and 
   • serving others, which helps children act with faith.

Because faith shapes how we feel and how we think, helping our children grow in faith means helping them do four things: 
   • experience faith, 
   • learn faith, 
   • express faith and 
   • act with faith. 

In the early years, nurturing faith will focus primarily on helping children experience and express faith.  The ability to learn and act with faith develops more gradually as the child’s ability to think and choose develops.  Everything else, including formal religious education, depends on this experience. Religious professionals can teach your child about faith, but they cannot give your child the fundamental experience of faith that he or she receives in your home.

Link to section – how to support your child’s faith development

As children become more consciously aware of the world around them, one of their first – and persistent – questions is “why?” This is an indication that the child is beginning his or her life-long effort to understand the world. This ability develops gradually, but from early on a child will not only want to know what a parent believes, but why the parent believes. In other words, they will want to know what difference faith makes in a parent’s life. This is the biggest challenge for parents – being able to show and explain, in ways a child can understand, how faith makes a real difference in practical, everyday ways.

The first four or five years of life are critically important in a child’s faith development.  Long before a child can think about faith, he or she is developing basic perceptions and attitudes about reality which may or may not be consistent with what they will later learn about faith.  Many experts agree this experience begins before birth, in a pre-conscious or sub-conscience way, while the child is growing in the womb.  No one has more influence over these pre-birth and early life experiences than parents and others responsible for the child’s primary care. 

Link to Alphabits

Forests filled with trees do not just appear. Seeds are planted. The ground is watered. Trees grow. 

In the same way, the seeds of faith are planted. Faith grows and develops as we do, and it changes as we grow.  The faith of a young child is different from the faith of an older child, a young adult, or a mature adult.  This growth occurs because our experience of faith and our ability to consciously reflect on, or think about, faith develops gradually as we grow.  As a parent, it is helpful to understand how faith grows and changes so that you are providing what your child needs at various stages in his or her faith development.

[document on stages of faith coming]

Just as we tell stories at home to help young people understand truth, beauty, and goodness, our faith has a long tradition of telling stories to teach. As those stories develop and as faith communities reflect on their experiences, they develop certain statements about their faith which describe their faith experiences.  These statements are expressed in creeds or doctrines.  Faith-statements are not the same as facts we can “prove;” they are belief-statements which express what we have chosen to believe because they explain mysteries about life in a way that makes sense to us.

[link to section on what parents can teach their children]

It is often said that children do not “learn” faith, they “catch” faith.  In fact, this is true of human beings at any age.  Human persons come to faith first through personal experience.  These faith experiences determine how we perceive reality – they first change how we feel, then how we think and finally how we act.  Coming to faith (what we call “conversion”) always begins in the heart, and it is always the result of a personal experience or encounter which shows us the deeper mysteries of God’s presence and love. This is why the Baptism Rite ends with a prayer calling mom and dad the “first witnesses of faith” – it is up to parents (and godparents, grandparents, etc.) to witness the faith to young children.

  1. Faith is more caught than taught

It is often said that children do not “learn” faith, they “catch” faith.  In fact, this is true of human beings at any age.  Human persons come to faith first through personal experience.  These faith experiences determine how we perceive reality – they first change how we feel, then how we think and finally how we act.  Coming to faith (what we call “conversion”) always begins in the heart, and it is always the result of a personal experience or encounter which shows us the deeper mysteries of God’s presence and love. This is why the Baptism Rite ends with a prayer calling mom and dad the “first witnesses of faith” – it is up to parents (and godparents, grandparents, etc.) to witness the faith to young children.

  1. Words Describe Our Experiences

Just as we tell stories at home to help young people understand truth, beauty, and goodness, our faith has a long tradition of telling stories to teach. As those stories develop and as faith communities reflect on their experiences, they develop certain statements about their faith which describe their faith experiences.  These statements are expressed in creeds or doctrines.  Faith-statements are not the same as facts we can “prove;” they are belief-statements which express what we have chosen to believe because they explain mysteries about life in a way that makes sense to us.

[link to section on what parents can teach their children]

  1. Faith Grows Over Time

Forests filled with trees do not just appear. Seeds are planted. The ground is watered. Trees grow. 

In the same way, the seeds of faith are planted. Faith grows and develops as we do, and it changes as we grow.  The faith of a young child is different from the faith of an older child, a young adult, or a mature adult.  This growth occurs because our experience of faith and our ability to consciously reflect on, or think about, faith develops gradually as we grow.  As a parent, it is helpful to understand how faith grows and changes so that you are providing what your child needs at various stages in his or her faith development.

[document on stages of faith coming]

  1. The Early Years Are Essential

The first four or five years of life are critically important in a child’s faith development.  Long before a child can think about faith, he or she is developing basic perceptions and attitudes about reality which may or may not be consistent with what they will later learn about faith.  Many experts agree this experience begins before birth, in a pre-conscious or sub-conscience way, while the child is growing in the womb.  No one has more influence over these pre-birth and early life experiences than parents and others responsible for the child’s primary care. 

Link to Alphabits

  1. Children Want to Know ‘Why?’

As children become more consciously aware of the world around them, one of their first – and persistent – questions is “why?”  This is an indication that the child is beginning his or her life-long effort to understand the world.  This ability develops gradually, but from early on a child will not only want to know what a parent believes, but why the parent believes.  In other words, they will want to know what difference faith makes in a parent’s life.  This is the biggest challenge for parents – being able to show and explain, in ways a child can understand, how faith makes a real difference in practical, everyday ways.  

  1. It’s Up To You

Because faith shapes how we feel and how we think, helping our children grow in faith means helping them do four things: 
   • experience faith, 
   • learn faith, 
   • express faith and 
   • act with faith. 

In the early years, nurturing faith will focus primarily on helping children experience and express faith.  The ability to learn and act with faith develops more gradually as the child’s ability to think and choose develops.  Everything else, including formal religious education, depends on this experience. Religious professionals can teach your child about faith, but they cannot give your child the fundamental experience of faith that he or she receives in your home.

Link to section – how to support your child’s faith development 

  1. The Keys to Success

According to Leif Kehrwald, an expert in family faith development, the four keys to children’s faith formation are things every parent can manage: 
   • rituals and traditions, which help children experience their faith; 
   • caring conversations, which help children learn about their faith; 
   • prayer, which helps children express their faith; and 
   • serving others, which helps children act with faith.

  1. Practice Makes (nearly) Perfect

The first thing you need to do is be a parent — do what children need parents to do: love them, protect them, guide them, show them how much they are valued as a child of God, and invite them to share their gifts and talents with others as a sign of God’s generosity.  If you create a family environment in which these things are present, you will have created a solid foundation for your child’s faith.  This foundation will be even stronger if children see you participating in a faith community which helps you experience, understand, express, and live with faith. Practice your own faith and let the children see how important it is to you. 

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