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It’s easy for the faith of children to go unnoticed. But here are six spiritual things kids do better than adults:
They Ask Questions:
Nobody asks more — or better — questions than children. “Who?” “What?” “Where?” “When?” and “Why?” are expressions patented by kids everywhere. They’re obnoxiously curious and want to know everything about everything.
They aren’t afraid to ask the most difficult and messy questions. Too often we mistake spiritual maturity for certainty, and lose our thirst for discovery. Kids remind us how to approach God — truthfully, stubbornly, inquisitively, and tirelessly.
They’re Honest:
Nobody is more truthful than children — often brutally so. “That looks ugly!” “I don’t like them!” and “This meal is horrible!” are just a few of the unfiltered expressions that spew from the mouths of kids.
But children hold nothing back. They don’t put on a facade or pretend everything is OK. If something is wrong — they’ll tell you.
Being vulnerable, open, and awkwardly transparent is what children do best. It’s a remarkably important spiritual gift that seems to get lost with age.
Adults are experts at hiding their genuine selves, putting on fake smiles, and keeping up appearances. Within Christianity, few are able to reveal their true identity, bravely admit their deepest fears, declare their opinions, openly confess their sins, or simply be themselves as sincerely as children.
They’re Passionate and Excited:
Kids remind us just how awesome God is. Children marvel at the magnificence, mystery, and wonder of God. They scream, yell, dance, and gleefully cheer about God — they’re utterly fascinated.
They desperately want to KNOW God! They believe. They’re immersed within a sacred — enchanted — romance.
Being unquenchably and explosively enthusiastic about Jesus shouldn’t be a spiritual practice exclusively reserved for kids.
Unfortunately, as adults get older they tend to lose this sense of curiosity, wonder, and fascination. Faith can slowly devolve into something mundane, boring, and normal. Our awe can become tainted by cynicism and bitterness.
Fortunately, kids understand and reflect the frenetic reality of the divine. If only we could do the same.
They’re Gracious and Forgiving:
One day they’re kicking, screaming, biting, hitting, and calling names—but then the next they’re best friends again. Just like that. Adults could learn a lot from how kids forgive each other—and maybe like parents instruct children, adults shouldn’t be allowed to leave things broken, and be required to apologize, make up, and make things right.
Children are good at this because they know it’s something they have to do. It’s mandated of them by almost everyone they know—their parents, their teachers, their childcare providers. It’s amazing that Christian adults don’t treat God’s commands to forgive one another equal weight and authority.
Grownups hold grudges, gossip, and continue fighting—sometimes for their entire lifetimes. Friendships are ruined, relationships broken, marriages destroyed, churches fractured, denominations split, and wars (both figurative and literal ones) are started—because adults have forgotten the simple art of forgiving.
They’re Trusting and Loving:
What adults see as a child’s greatest weakness and vulnerability is actually one of their strongest spiritual strengths: their ability to trust and love.
Children believe in people—in God. They aren’t cynical, burned out, or cold to the world around them. They run up to friends, parents, relatives, strangers, and anyone without the slightest hesitation or worry. Their relationships are generously unrestrained.
Eventually, many adults—after getting routinely hurt, betrayed, and disappointed—withdraw their trust and love, and sometimes completely abandon it altogether. One of the most depressing aspects of humanity is when people lose their child-like love, and when an individual’s faith loses its child-like beauty.
They’re Adventurous:
Kids bravely do things nobody else would dare attempt. They’re experts at making nearly everything breakable, dangerous, and hazardous. They foolishly jump, ran, dive, roll, crawl, swim, fly, fall, and boldly go where none have gone before.
They venture to places they aren’t supposed to. They talk to people they aren’t supposed to. They do everything they aren’t supposed to. They take wild risks.
Adults are the exact opposite: logical, safe, and calculated — boring. We rarely go beyond our comfort zones. Thus, we turn Christianity into a religion of safety, a form of escapism. We become trapped by careers, comforts, commitments, responsibilities — rational excuses.
Following Jesus was never meant to be safe — and definitely not logical. Christianity is a perilous journey filled with all sorts of treacherous adventure. Children understand this better than anyone.
Jesus saw how the faith of children (Mark 10) was a beautiful and precious gift. Too often, we dismiss the legitimacy of their spirit, underestimate the depths of their soul, and belittle their beliefs.
We mistakenly see their spiritual attributes as something to grow out of instead of into. We should treasure these childlike traits, and seek to foster them into adulthood. God help us.
This is an edited piece originally featured by the author on sojo.net.