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Should Children be Exposed to Other Religions?

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Aras

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Should young children (even as young as 5 or 6) be exposed only to Christianity or should they have exposure to other religions, or at least to the concepts and ideas before making the decision to devote their life to Christ? I can't help but think if it is the only thing they have been exposed to they are only making the decision because there parents told them to.

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Fae23x

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I certainly believe children should be educated about as many different religions as possible. I was. :)

You can raise children to be a specific religion while still giving them a fair and unbiased education about other religions. If you have any faith in the transparent truth of your own religion, then your children should see the truth within Christianity.

I was raised in a kind of Eastern philosophy/new age spirituality, and my mom educated me about any religion I showed interest in. Thus, I became interested in Christianity in general, and Eastern Christianity in particular.

If you fail to educate your children about other religions, you are, IMHO, implying that your religion cannot stand up to the challenges of other beliefs.
 
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£amb

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Aras said:
Should young children (even as young as 5 or 6) be exposed only to Christianity or should they have exposure to other religions, or at least to the concepts and ideas before making the decision to devote their life to Christ? I can't help but think if it is the only thing they have been exposed to they are only making the decision because there parents told them to.

Opinions?

I think at that age, they're alittle young to totally take it all in. I'm not saying that 5/6yr olds cannot understand the basic things, but it may overwhelm them. Personally, if you're going to expose your child to other religions, then wait until they have a better grasp that there are different beliefs. As a parent who is a believer, I need to train my child...Proverbs 22:6 "Train a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not turn from it." I need to train my child who God is, who Jesus is, and what they mean to us. Once my child is trained, then it will be their choice into wanting to understand more about other beliefs. But I would rather my child be grounded in their faith before that. Besides, on this forum, I read alot about people who have made the choice to turn from God even though they were raised in a christian home. It was their choice to do so. [font=Arial, Arial, Helvetica][/font]
 
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Aras

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Once my child is trained, then it will be their choice into wanting to understand more about other beliefs.

Doesn't it seem a bit unfair to teach them about other choices only after they are convinced of yours? I do not seek to argue or question your parenting skills. Merely to understand.
 
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marciebaby

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My 5 and 7 year olds have always been aware that there are other people out there with different religions. They are pretty sharp little ones and ask good questions. Once we heard someone talking about how they don't believe in Jesus (it was a skit at church) and my daughter who was then 4 or 5 looked knowingly at me and whispered, "I bet she celebrates Hanukkah." Haha.

These things are all a part of life, and it doesn't make sense to me to shelter them from it.
 
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£amb

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Aras said:
Once my child is trained, then it will be their choice into wanting to understand more about other beliefs.

Doesn't it seem a bit unfair to teach them about other choices only after they are convinced of yours? I do not seek to argue or question your parenting skills. Merely to understand.

It's alright, I'm not argumentive...I'm usually as cool as a cucumber..:)

Not really, because as we get older, we'll explore on our own. I grew up in a christian home. I was taught from a young age about christianity. I wasn't what you call convinced of their belief. It wasn't until I reached maturity and a better understanding that I became convinced on my own about God. Yes, my parents taught and trained me up, but I didn't become convinced until I lived it. Living my life for God is what taught me to be grounded in my faith. I'm now 35 and just learning about other faiths out there. I'm thankful that I didn't do it at a younger age because I may have led myself down a path that I wouldn't want to be on. Now that I'm grounded, I can learn about other faiths without being deluded into beliefs that are not biblical.

Besides, it's not my beliefs that are going to convince anybody, but God changing our hearts that will convince us. I don't want my children to see it as that..."mom's belief", but by God guiding them into truth.
 
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The-Doctor

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I was brought up in a school that was church of england however taught other religions. My parents were christian however let me decide whether I wanted to follow christianity or not. I think children should be educated in regard to various religions throughout the world. With understanding comes tolerance.
 
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DailyBlessings

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Oh, definitely! I would hate for my children to think that I had railroaded them into my own quirky religious beliefs. And they would be in major trouble if I caught them being intolerant of other faiths.

Truth is the shattered mirror, strewn in myriad bits.
 
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California Tim

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Aras said:
Should young children (even as young as 5 or 6) be exposed only to Christianity or should they have exposure to other religions, or at least to the concepts and ideas before making the decision to devote their life to Christ? I can't help but think if it is the only thing they have been exposed to they are only making the decision because there parents told them to.

Opinions?

Consider what the Bible says (always a good source for Christian parents):

Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will
not depart from it.
(Prov 22:6)​
I noticed it did not say : "train up a child in the way he should NOT go......". So my question would be, on what basis does a Christian parent instruct their youngs ones in error, or worse yet ... leave them to discover the "right way" for themselves? I would say that to a Christian parent, it is your Godly DUTY and ultimate responsibility to train the child properly in truth - not the least of which is man's hopeless destiny apart from Christ.
 
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fuzzyh

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I hope I don't offend anyone too much, but I have always considered religious study similar to the way a doctor studies diseases. That is to say that you study religions to gain an understanding of them and knowledge about them. This is not a study in which you get personally involved. Mind you, I believe the study of other religions is to provide a cure for the problem.

This of course, will relate to the way you let your children learn about other religions. You setup guidelines for the way that you let your child study religions. Also, you ground your child with good solid defenses for their own faith. Christianity is not a faith that is unreasonable. In fact, by simple study it is head and shoulders above any other religion.
 
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EchelonForm

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Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will
not depart from it.
(Prov 22:6)

This is true but this means they have to be trained in evangelizing...so they need to learn what others believe....plus, you should know your own kids, trust yourself to know when the right time is to teach them different thing, God related or not.
 
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rkymtnjesusfreak

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California Tim said:
Consider what the Bible says (always a good source for Christian parents):


Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will

not depart from it. (Prov 22:6)
I noticed it did not say : "train up a child in the way he should NOT go......". So my question would be, on what basis does a Christian parent instruct their youngs ones in error, or worse yet ... leave them to discover the "right way" for themselves? I would say that to a Christian parent, it is your Godly DUTY and ultimate responsibility to train the child properly in truth - not the least of which is man's hopeless destiny apart from Christ.
This is a great post.:thumbsup: The only thing that I would add is I think that you should tell them there are other people out there that do not know the Truth. I don't think, however, that requires us to educate them or expose them to those beliefs. I think that if they are earnestly seeking after and following Jesus, they can defend their faith without being well versed in every other belief system.
 
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Aras

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rkymtnjesusfreak said:
This is a great post.:thumbsup: The only thing that I would add is I think that you should tell them there are other people out there that do not know the Truth. I don't think, however, that requires us to educate them or expose them to those beliefs. I think that if they are earnestly seeking after and following Jesus, they can defend their faith without being well versed in every other belief system.

Their is a difference between being well versed and knowing the core beliefs. If the kid has one option it is not a choice. And a kid being Christian only because mommy said so leaves him in great peril later down the road.
 
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£amb

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Aras said:
Their is a difference between being well versed and knowing the core beliefs. If the kid has one option it is not a choice. And a kid being Christian only because mommy said so leaves him in great peril later down the road.

How does it leave them to great peril? I grew up in a christian home and was taken to church every Sunday and Wednesday. When I became a christian, it wasn't because my mother told me to. I sat on the bed with my sister one afternoon, maaaany years ago, and she was the one who told me what it took to be a child of God. We're talking a 12yr. old and a 9yr. old....not adults. My oldest son will be 11yrs. old soon, and he has become a christian on his own choice. Yes, he was taken to church, but it was by the Holy Spirit and God that helped him make his choice...not me. I was letting him learn and to be ready on his own. When he is more grounded in his faith, then it's his choice if he wants to learn about other religion, but I'm not going to throw a bunch of books of his lap and tell him "hey, as soon as you learn how to be a mature christian then you need to become familiar with every other religion out there." As I said in an earlier post, I'm now just becoming familiar with other religions. It was my choice, but I waited until I was ready. When my kids are ready to learn, then they can learn.

But it comes down to the choice of the parent if they think their child is ready to be exposed to many religions.
 
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rkymtnjesusfreak

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£amb said:
How does it leave them to great peril? I grew up in a christian home and was taken to church every Sunday and Wednesday. When I became a christian, it wasn't because my mother told me to. I sat on the bed with my sister one afternoon, maaaany years ago, and she was the one who told me what it took to be a child of God. We're talking a 12yr. old and a 9yr. old....not adults. My oldest son will be 11yrs. old soon, and he has become a christian on his own choice. Yes, he was taken to church, but it was by the Holy Spirit and God that helped him make his choice...not me. I was letting him learn and to be ready on his own. When he is more grounded in his faith, then it's his choice if he wants to learn about other religion, but I'm not going to throw a bunch of books of his lap and tell him "hey, as soon as you learn how to be a mature christian then you need to become familiar with every other religion out there." As I said in an earlier post, I'm now just becoming familiar with other religions. It was my choice, but I waited until I was ready. When my kids are ready to learn, then they can learn.

I am so glad that you beat me to the punch on this! You said it much better than I would have!:thumbsup:
 
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Hadron

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Aras said:
Should young children (even as young as 5 or 6) be exposed only to Christianity or should they have exposure to other religions... ?

Are you talking like, "Ok Billy we were Christian last week, but this week we need to pray to Allah."
 
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intricatic

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fuzzyh said:
I hope I don't offend anyone too much, but I have always considered religious study similar to the way a doctor studies diseases. That is to say that you study religions to gain an understanding of them and knowledge about them. This is not a study in which you get personally involved. Mind you, I believe the study of other religions is to provide a cure for the problem.

This of course, will relate to the way you let your children learn about other religions. You setup guidelines for the way that you let your child study religions. Also, you ground your child with good solid defenses for their own faith. Christianity is not a faith that is unreasonable. In fact, by simple study it is head and shoulders above any other religion.
I have to agree with this, it does make sense.
 
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Crazy Liz

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£amb said:
How does it leave them to great peril? I grew up in a christian home and was taken to church every Sunday and Wednesday. When I became a christian, it wasn't because my mother told me to. I sat on the bed with my sister one afternoon, maaaany years ago, and she was the one who told me what it took to be a child of God. We're talking a 12yr. old and a 9yr. old....not adults. My oldest son will be 11yrs. old soon, and he has become a christian on his own choice. Yes, he was taken to church, but it was by the Holy Spirit and God that helped him make his choice...not me. I was letting him learn and to be ready on his own. When he is more grounded in his faith, then it's his choice if he wants to learn about other religion, but I'm not going to throw a bunch of books of his lap and tell him "hey, as soon as you learn how to be a mature christian then you need to become familiar with every other religion out there." As I said in an earlier post, I'm now just becoming familiar with other religions. It was my choice, but I waited until I was ready. When my kids are ready to learn, then they can learn.

But it comes down to the choice of the parent if they think their child is ready to be exposed to many religions.
I was raised pretty much as you were. The vocabulary "becoming a Christian" was the way my parents' church viewed faith, and it was always presented as an individual decision.

However, not all Christian parents think that way. Whether or not children are baptized before they are old enough to make that choice for themselves is something that shows Christians differ in how they consider a child's identity as a Christian to be formed.

There are other variables, too. To what degree does your child interact with non-Christian children? If your next-door neighbors are Buddhist or Muslim, you are going to have certain kinds of discussions with your child that you probably wouldn't have if you carefully kept your child from encountering people of other faiths.

Very few parents lay out a smorgasbord of religions before their child at a certain age. All parents model to their children the ways in which faith is or is not a part of the parent's and/or the family's identity. All parents realize that gradually the responsibility for a child's identity shifts from the parent to the child, with the extended family and larger community having a role, too, to varying degrees.

I had a neighbor once who wanted her children baptized so they would have godparents, but insisted they not be exposed to religion "until they were old enough to understand it was just a myth." It seemed to me that she was giving mixed messages about her family's religious identity, but the basic family identity she was forming in her child was one of non-faith. My daughter is a little evangelist and catechist, so relationships with parents of her friends who are trying to inoculate their children against religion have been interesting, to say the least. But basically she has been exposed to other religions and non-religions as she has come into contact with people of different views.

I don't think there is one right way. I think it is good for children to get to know people of different backgrounds and cultures. Exposure to other religions will be a natural part of this, but parents are still going to instill in their child an identity, and the child will get from the parents' modeling, even more than teaching, what part faith plays in that identity.
 
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butterfoot

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Aras said:
Should young children (even as young as 5 or 6) be exposed only to Christianity or should they have exposure to other religions, or at least to the concepts and ideas before making the decision to devote their life to Christ? I can't help but think if it is the only thing they have been exposed to they are only making the decision because there parents told them to.

Opinions?

I think they should be exposed to other religions after they completely understand why we are christians. We have a moral obligation according to God to spread his word and bring others to him. But it is important that when children get older that they understand the History of our religion and others as well. Honestly this was just in the past year for me that outside of Christianity I have felt mature enough to study other religions without affecting my beliefs.

-cw
 
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