It was December when she said it.
We were snuggled up together on the couch, under a quilt; we’d just finished reading the story of Jesus healing Jairus’ daughter. What a glorious story! And then she said it, quiet, to herself,
“God doesn’t do that anymore.”
My breath caught, struck that her unguarded childlike words would reflect what I too suspected, way down deep:
Does God do that anymore?
The truth was, though I’d read those words dozens of times, I wasn’t quite sure if God “did that anymore.”
My own inner doubts seemed harmless enough, honest questions, right? But once I heard my own unbelief spoken softly into the air, through the very lips of my precious daughter, the one I have devoted my life to discipling into a follower of Christ … then I knew something great was at stake:
My life is becoming her doctrine.
I closed my eyes and saw the sand in the hourglass–time running out.
See, childlike faith can quickly turn to cynicism. Certainly, we cannot (and should not!) shelter our children from all disappointment. God does not say yes to every prayer. (This too is grace.) But children give us the gift of unfiltered speech:
The Emperor has no clothes!
They see right through religion. What is real? We’re often afraid to speak the obvious, afraid it will expose our own inadequacies, and as a result we sometimes miss seeing a real God do real stuff in the real world every single day.
Later, months later, we sat on the couch and read The Hungry Thing. When all the adults cannot fathom was schmancakes and hookies and gollipops could possibly be, the small child speaks up with the clarity that only humility can bring:
Pancakes, and cookies and lollipops!
This year’s read through the Bible has only been a lesson in childlikeness. Believe what the Word actually says. Keep living as if “biblical” is real, because it is, even if you don’t feel it or see it at first.
Eventually your “real” will rise to meet biblical. Don’t give up.
What does this mean for my mundane? It means refusing to give up. It means meeting the questioning gaze of my daughter when she prays again and doesn’t see the answer she’d hoped for. It means honestly admitting that I also don’t understand sometimes. And it means celebrating every glimpse of the miraculous in our mundane. (Four times recently Heidi has prayed on her own to find a misplaced item and each time God immediately answered. She prayed for a specific need on Wednesday and had it clearly answered. Mundane miracles start tiny!)
It means cultivating an atmosphere of childlike faith and steadfast hope. It means rejecting cynicism, doubt, discouragement, and unbelief. It means come to the Father again and again in faith, in prayer, asking for everything from miracles to meals.
Let’s not lose our children to cynicism. Let’s commit afresh to seeing His kingdom come, in our homes and in their hearts as it is in heaven.
May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that by the power of the Holy Spirit you may abound in hope. (Rom. 15:13)
{Happy weekend. Thanks for reading.}
6 thoughts on “Leading our children from cynicism to hope…”
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This is so good. They are the warriors in the Kingdom and you and your husband are teaching them to walk in Truth and the Love that will slay the enemy for the times to come. We will see miracles more and more upon this earth. We will be witnesses and we will be a part by the power of the Holy Spirit. I too long for those days. Times they are a changing. Karen
True, Karen. Thanks so much for the encouragement–it’s always needed! Bless you!
I love reading about this season of your faith. My mom always says she will err on believing bigger about God. And if in heaven He says, “Well, you shouldn’t have believed me for THAT or prayed for THAT,” then so be it. But, really? He’s not going to say that… 🙂
Amen! So true, Sarah. Thanks for joining us here on the journey!
First of all, YAY for comments again! 🙂 It’s so fun to scroll through the posts and see so many responses. It’s a community here at Sacred Mundane, and I love that! As for this post… so encouraging, Kari! I pray with my kids daily regarding little and big miracles, but after reading this post I’ve made it more of a priority to pray in a way that shows I really BELIEVE God can move. In fact, a couple of weeks ago, I started driving a neighbor girl to school on my way to drop Hudson off, and so far there have been two opportunities to pray out loud in the car with her and BOTH times God responded by granting her requests! I fully believe, with my WHOLE heart, that He is leading her to Him and urging me to pray in faith so that he can show is daughter how available and powerful He is. I love being a part of this so much!! It has encouraged me to go ahead and ask for things I have previously categorized as impossible. Thanks for sharing, friend!!