Are you telling lies about God?
I was in line at a
local rib joint recently when a grandmother pointed at me and told
her rambunctious toddler, "This here's a policeman, and he's going
to lock you up in jail if you don't start behaving."
The little girl was
stunned, but no more than I. This cute little sweetheart shrunk away
from me and hid behind her grandmother's coat. I was shocked into
silence, unable to conjure a way to counter such a parenting blunder
without making matters worse.
I felt horrible being
described as a mean authority figure who would punish little
children by locking them away. I wondered how God liked it. After
all, people often describe God in those terms, with the result that
God's children shy away for fear they'll be swooped up and punished.
Whether you know it or
not, parents, you're giving your children their first clues about
what God is like. Are you even aware of the God you're describing?
Kathleen Norris, poet and author of The Cloister Walk (Riverhead
Books, 1996), says, "I firmly believe that the way we bathe a child
or discuss family matters at the dinner table reveals who our God
is."
The truth of this
statement hit home to me years ago when I was teaching religion to
high-school seniors. We were studying the Our Father, and one of my
students, Mary, told me, "I don't say the Our Father." Why not,
Mary? "If you knew the way my father treated me, you'd know why I
could never say that prayer!" Mary's father maltreated and abused
her. The face of God he portrayed to his daughter was distorted and
untrue, but that's the image of God she came to her senior year of
high school with.
What images of God do
you want to convey to your children? Here are some traits we as
Catholics believe about God, along with some of the false features
that often get attributed to God:
God is love: you
convey this by being kind and loving to your child - vs. God is
out to get you: this gets portrayed when you constantly find
fault.
God cares for each
person with a special care: this message comes across when you
stop what you're doing to make time for your children; you take
their concerns seriously - vs. you're not worth God's time or
attention: your children will come to believe this if you're
always too busy or preoccupied when they ask questions.
God created a
universe of goodness and abundance: your child will learn this
if you celebrate as a family and keep an optimistic outlook - vs.
God created a hard world to put us to the test: your language
will give you away if you don't cultivate the belief that God
intends good things for you.
Who you are is
wonderful in God's eyes: this is the message when you look into
your child's eyes and express your delight with him or her - vs.
who you are is dangerous and needs to be controlled: when you
shame your child for having feelings rather than helping the child
manage those feelings, you give this false sense about God.
God is trustworthy:
do you make promises and keep them? - vs. God is unreliable:
when your child can never rely on you.
Stop a minute to think
about what traits you want to make sure you convey to your children,
and think about what qualities you might be expressing instead. God
is surely more than we can ever portray, and our children will go on
(we hope) to have their own rich relationship with the God beyond
all understanding. But never forget that you're the first and
foremost person to give them clues to just who this awesome God is.