fbpx
Wikipedia

Religion and children

Children often acquire religious views approximating those of their parents, although they may also be influenced by others they communicate with – such as peers and teachers. Matters relating the subject of children and religion may include rites of passage, education, and child psychology, as well as discussion of the moral issue of the religious education of children.

The Children and Parents area in the Priory Church of St Mary, Totnes, Devon, UK
Chairs for children in the Church of Agia Marina in Kissos (Pelion, Greece)

Rites of passage edit

 
A Roman Catholic infant baptism in the United States.

Most Christian denominations practice infant baptism[1] to enter children into the faith. Some form of confirmation ritual occurs when the child has reached the age of reason and voluntarily accepts the religion.

Ritual circumcision is used to mark Jewish and Muslim and Coptic Christian[2] and Ethiopian Orthodox Christian[3] infant males as belonging to the faith. Jewish boys and girls then confirm their belonging at a coming of age ceremony known as the Bar and Bat Mitzvah respectively.

Education edit

 
A young Muslim couple and their toddler at Masjid al-Haram, Makkah, Saudi Arabia.

Religious education edit

A parochial school (US) or faith school (UK), is a type of school which engages in religious education in addition to conventional education. Parochial schools may be primary or secondary and may have state funding but varying amounts of control by a religious organization. In addition, there are religious schools which only teach the religion and subsidiary subjects (such as the language of the holy books), typically run on a part-time basis separate from normal schooling. Examples are the Christian Sunday schools and the Jewish Hebrew schools. Islamic religious schools are known in English by the Arabic loanword Madrasah.

Prayer in school edit

Religion may have an influence on what goes on in state schools. For example, in the UK the Education Act 1944 introduced the requirement for daily prayers in all state-funded schools, but later acts changed this requirement to a daily "collective act of worship", the School Standards and Framework Act 1998 being the most recent. This also requires such acts of worship to be "wholly or mainly of a broadly Christian character".[4] The term "mainly" means that acts related to other faiths can be carried out providing the majority are Christian.[5]

Teaching evolution edit

The creation–evolution controversy, especially the status of creation and evolution in public education, is a debate over teaching children the origin and evolution of life, mostly in conservative regions of the United States. However, evolution is accepted by the Catholic Church and is a part of the Catholic Catechism.[citation needed]

Display of religious symbols edit

In France, children are forbidden from wearing conspicuous religious symbols in public schools.[citation needed]

Religious indoctrination of children edit

Many legal experts have argued that the government should create laws in the interests of the welfare of children, irrespective of the religion of their parents.[6] Nicholas Humphrey has argued that children "have a human right not to have their minds crippled by exposure to other people's bad ideas," and should have the ability to question the religious views of their parents.[7]

In "Parents' religion and children's welfare: debunking the doctrine of parents' rights", philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer spoke of the subject in the 19th century:

"And as the capacity for believing is strongest in childhood, special care is taken to make sure of this tender age. This has much more to do with the doctrines of belief taking root than threats and reports of miracles. If, in early childhood, certain fundamental views and doctrines are paraded with unusual solemnity, and an air of the greatest earnestness never before visible in anything else; if, at the same time, the possibility of a doubt about them be completely passed over, or touched upon only to indicate that doubt is the first step to eternal perdition, the resulting impression will be so deep that, as a rule, that is, in almost every case, doubt about them will be almost as impossible as doubt about one's own existence."

— Arthur Schopenhauer, On Religion: A Dialogue

Several authors have been critical of religious indoctrination of children, such as Nicholas Humphrey,[8] Daniel Dennett[9] and Richard Dawkins.[10] Christopher Hitchens and Dawkins use the term child abuse to describe the harm that some religious upbringings inflict on children.[11][12] A. C. Grayling has argued "we are all born atheists... and it takes a certain amount of work on the part of the adults in our community to persuade [children] differently."[13]

Dawkins states that he is angered by the labels "Muslim child" or "Catholic child". He asks how a young child can be considered intellectually mature enough to have such independent views on the cosmos and humanity's place within it. By contrast, Dawkins points out, no reasonable person would speak of a "Marxist child"[a] or a "Tory child."[11] He suggests there is little controversy over such labeling because of the "weirdly privileged status of religion".

On several occasions, Dawkins made the claim that sexually abusing a child is "arguably less" damaging than "the long term psychological damage inflicted by bringing up a child Catholic in the first place".[11]

Dawkins wrote an illustrated scientific book for children, The Magic of Reality, in which some natural phenomena that have usually left explained to them by means of the action of gods or other mythical creatures are demystified. Each chapter is devoted to a single natural phenomenon, such as earthquakes, always starting with a myth or folklore of world's major religions followed by an actual scientific explanation that debunks the latter.[14]

Child marriage edit

Some[which?] scholars of Islam[15] have permitted the child marriage of older men to girls as young as 10 years of age if they have entered puberty. The Seyaj Organization for the Protection of Children describes cases of a 10-year-old girl being married and raped in Yemen (Nujood Ali),[16] a 13-year-old Yemeni girl dying of internal bleeding three days after marriage,[17][18] and a 12-year-old girl dying in childbirth after marriage.[15][19]

Latter Day Saint church founder Joseph Smith married girls as young as 13 and 14,[20] and other Latter Day Saints married girls as young as 10.[21] The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints eliminated underaged marriages in the 19th century, but several fundamentalist branches of Mormonism continue the practice.[22]

Health effects edit

Medical care edit

 
Saint Francis Borgia performing an exorcism, by Goya

Some religions treat illness, both mental and physical, in a manner that does not heal, and in some cases exacerbates the problem. Specific examples include faith healing of certain Christian sects, denominations which eschew medical care including vaccinations or blood transfusions, and exorcisms.[23][24]

Faith based practices for healing purposes have come into direct conflict with both the medical profession and the law when victims of these practices are harmed, or in the most extreme cases, killed by these "cures."[25][26][27] A detailed study in 1998 found 140 instances of deaths of children due to religion-based medical neglect. Most of these cases involved religious parents relying on prayer to cure the child's disease, and withholding medical care.[28]

Jehovah's Witnesses object to blood transfusion primarily on religious grounds, they believe that blood is sacred and God said "abstain from blood" (Acts 15:28–29).

Religion as a by-product of children's attributes edit

Dawkins proposes that religion is a by-product arising from other features of the human species that are adaptive.[10] One such feature is the tendency of children to "believe, without question, whatever your grown-ups tell you" (Dawkins, 2006, p. 174).

Psychologist Paul Bloom sees religion as a by-product of children's instinctive tendency toward a dualistic view of the world, and a predisposition towards creationism.[10][29] Deborah Kelemen has also written that children are naturally teleologists, assigning a purpose to everything they come across.[30]

Developmental psychology edit

Many have looked at stage models, like those of Jean Piaget and Lawrence Kohlberg, to explain how children develop ideas about God and religion in general.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ However, consider the Jugendweihe ceremonies in eastern Germany

References edit

  1. ^
  2. ^ Thomas Riggs (2006). "Christianity: Coptic Christianity". Worldmark Encyclopedia of Religious Practices: Religions and denominations. Thomson Gale. ISBN 978-0-7876-6612-5.
  3. ^ "Circumcision". Columbia Encyclopedia. Columbia University Press. 2011.
  4. ^ www.teachernet.gov.uk 2010-11-04 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Catholic Education Service 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ James G. Dwyer (December 1994). "Parents' Religion and Children's Welfare: Debunking the Doctrine of Parents' Rights". CALIFORNIA LAW REVIEW. pp. 1371–1447.
  7. ^ "WHAT SHALL WE TELL THE CHILDREN?". Edge. 21 February 1997.
  8. ^ Humphrey, Nicolas (1998). "What Shall We Tell the Children?" (PDF). Social Research. 65: 777–805. Children, I'll argue, have a human right not to have their minds crippled by exposure to other people's bad ideas – no matter who these other people are.
  9. ^ Dennett, Daniel (2006). Breaking the Spell. New York: Viking. ISBN 0-670-03472-X.
  10. ^ a b c Dawkins, Richard (2006). The God Delusion. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. p. 406. ISBN 0-618-68000-4.
  11. ^ a b c Richard Dawkins. "Childhood, abuse and the escape from religion". The God Delusion.
  12. ^ Hitchens, Christopher. "Is Religion Child Abuse?". God is Not Great.
  13. ^ "The God Argument". Late Night Live. ABC Radio National. 26 March 2013.
  14. ^ Popova, Maria (6 October 2011). "The Magic of Reality: Richard Dawkins Teaches Children to Fight Myth with Science". Brain Pickings. Retrieved 19 February 2015. Each chapter begins with a famous myth from one of the world's religions or folklore traditions, which Dawkins proceeds to myth-bust by examining the actual scientific processes and phenomena that these stories try to explain.
  15. ^ a b . Archived from the original on October 7, 2009.
  16. ^ Daragahi, Borzou (June 11, 2008). "Yemeni bride, 10, says I won't". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 16 February 2010.
  17. ^ "Dead Yemeni child bride tied up, raped, says mom". Fox News. 2010-04-10.
  18. ^ "Yemeni child bride dies of internal bleeding". CNN. 2010-04-09.
  19. ^ "CNN article on 12 year old bride death". 2009-09-14.
  20. ^ Compton, Todd (1997). In Sacred Loneliness: The Plural Wives of Joseph Smith. Salt Lake City, UT: Signature Books. ISBN 1-56085-085-X.
  21. ^ Hirshon, Stanley P. (1969). The Lion of the Lord. Alfred A. Knopf.
  22. ^ D’Onofrio, Eve (2005). "Child Brides, Inegalitarianism, and the Fundamentalist Polygamous Family in the United States". International Journal of Law, Policy and the Family. 19 (3): 373–394. doi:10.1093/lawfam/ebi028.
  23. ^ . Bar-Ilan University, Israel. Archived from the original on 2007-12-29.
  24. ^ Papademetriou, George C. . Archived from the original on September 24, 2008.
  25. ^ Carmiola Ionescu. "Exorcism priest is jailed for nun death". The Scotsman.
  26. ^ "US boy dies during 'exorcism'". BBC News. 2003-08-25. Retrieved 2010-01-02.
  27. ^ . The Hindu. Chennai, India. 2005-01-05. Archived from the original on 2005-02-08.
  28. ^ Asser, S. M.; Swan, R (April 1998). "Child fatalities from religion-motivated medical neglect". Pediatrics. 101 (4 Pt 1): 625–9. doi:10.1542/peds.101.4.625. PMID 9521945.
  29. ^ Bloom, Paul (December 2005). "Is God an Accident?". The Atlantic. Retrieved 15 May 2016.
  30. ^ Kelemen, Deborah (2004). "Are children "intuitive theists"?". Psychological Science. 15 (5): 295–301. doi:10.1111/j.0956-7976.2004.00672.x. PMID 15102137.

External links edit

  • By John Hartung Skeptic, Vol. 3, No. 4, 1995. Includes the responses of Israeli children to the account of the Battle of Jericho in the Book of Joshua.

religion, children, examples, perspective, this, article, represent, worldwide, view, subject, improve, this, article, discuss, issue, talk, page, create, article, appropriate, october, 2020, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, children, often, acqui. The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Children often acquire religious views approximating those of their parents although they may also be influenced by others they communicate with such as peers and teachers Matters relating the subject of children and religion may include rites of passage education and child psychology as well as discussion of the moral issue of the religious education of children The Children and Parents area in the Priory Church of St Mary Totnes Devon UKChairs for children in the Church of Agia Marina in Kissos Pelion Greece Contents 1 Rites of passage 2 Education 2 1 Religious education 2 2 Prayer in school 2 3 Teaching evolution 2 4 Display of religious symbols 3 Religious indoctrination of children 4 Child marriage 5 Health effects 5 1 Medical care 6 Religion as a by product of children s attributes 7 Developmental psychology 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksRites of passage edit nbsp A Roman Catholic infant baptism in the United States Main article Rite of passage Most Christian denominations practice infant baptism 1 to enter children into the faith Some form of confirmation ritual occurs when the child has reached the age of reason and voluntarily accepts the religion Ritual circumcision is used to mark Jewish and Muslim and Coptic Christian 2 and Ethiopian Orthodox Christian 3 infant males as belonging to the faith Jewish boys and girls then confirm their belonging at a coming of age ceremony known as the Bar and Bat Mitzvah respectively Education edit nbsp A young Muslim couple and their toddler at Masjid al Haram Makkah Saudi Arabia Religious education edit A parochial school US or faith school UK is a type of school which engages in religious education in addition to conventional education Parochial schools may be primary or secondary and may have state funding but varying amounts of control by a religious organization In addition there are religious schools which only teach the religion and subsidiary subjects such as the language of the holy books typically run on a part time basis separate from normal schooling Examples are the Christian Sunday schools and the Jewish Hebrew schools Islamic religious schools are known in English by the Arabic loanword Madrasah Prayer in school edit Main article School prayer Religion may have an influence on what goes on in state schools For example in the UK the Education Act 1944 introduced the requirement for daily prayers in all state funded schools but later acts changed this requirement to a daily collective act of worship the School Standards and Framework Act 1998 being the most recent This also requires such acts of worship to be wholly or mainly of a broadly Christian character 4 The term mainly means that acts related to other faiths can be carried out providing the majority are Christian 5 Teaching evolution edit Main article Creation and evolution in public education The creation evolution controversy especially the status of creation and evolution in public education is a debate over teaching children the origin and evolution of life mostly in conservative regions of the United States However evolution is accepted by the Catholic Church and is a part of the Catholic Catechism citation needed Display of religious symbols edit See also Laicite In France children are forbidden from wearing conspicuous religious symbols in public schools citation needed Religious indoctrination of children editSee also Indoctrination Criticism of religion children Child evangelism movement Criticism and Shukyō nisei Many legal experts have argued that the government should create laws in the interests of the welfare of children irrespective of the religion of their parents 6 Nicholas Humphrey has argued that children have a human right not to have their minds crippled by exposure to other people s bad ideas and should have the ability to question the religious views of their parents 7 In Parents religion and children s welfare debunking the doctrine of parents rights philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer spoke of the subject in the 19th century And as the capacity for believing is strongest in childhood special care is taken to make sure of this tender age This has much more to do with the doctrines of belief taking root than threats and reports of miracles If in early childhood certain fundamental views and doctrines are paraded with unusual solemnity and an air of the greatest earnestness never before visible in anything else if at the same time the possibility of a doubt about them be completely passed over or touched upon only to indicate that doubt is the first step to eternal perdition the resulting impression will be so deep that as a rule that is in almost every case doubt about them will be almost as impossible as doubt about one s own existence Arthur Schopenhauer On Religion A Dialogue Several authors have been critical of religious indoctrination of children such as Nicholas Humphrey 8 Daniel Dennett 9 and Richard Dawkins 10 Christopher Hitchens and Dawkins use the term child abuse to describe the harm that some religious upbringings inflict on children 11 12 A C Grayling has argued we are all born atheists and it takes a certain amount of work on the part of the adults in our community to persuade children differently 13 Dawkins states that he is angered by the labels Muslim child or Catholic child He asks how a young child can be considered intellectually mature enough to have such independent views on the cosmos and humanity s place within it By contrast Dawkins points out no reasonable person would speak of a Marxist child a or a Tory child 11 He suggests there is little controversy over such labeling because of the weirdly privileged status of religion On several occasions Dawkins made the claim that sexually abusing a child is arguably less damaging than the long term psychological damage inflicted by bringing up a child Catholic in the first place 11 Dawkins wrote an illustrated scientific book for children The Magic of Reality in which some natural phenomena that have usually left explained to them by means of the action of gods or other mythical creatures are demystified Each chapter is devoted to a single natural phenomenon such as earthquakes always starting with a myth or folklore of world s major religions followed by an actual scientific explanation that debunks the latter 14 Child marriage editThis section appears to be slanted towards recent events In particular Before 1929 English law allowed girls as young as 12 to be married Please try to keep recent events in historical perspective and add more content related to non recent events February 2019 Main article Child marriage Some which scholars of Islam 15 have permitted the child marriage of older men to girls as young as 10 years of age if they have entered puberty The Seyaj Organization for the Protection of Children describes cases of a 10 year old girl being married and raped in Yemen Nujood Ali 16 a 13 year old Yemeni girl dying of internal bleeding three days after marriage 17 18 and a 12 year old girl dying in childbirth after marriage 15 19 Latter Day Saint church founder Joseph Smith married girls as young as 13 and 14 20 and other Latter Day Saints married girls as young as 10 21 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints eliminated underaged marriages in the 19th century but several fundamentalist branches of Mormonism continue the practice 22 Health effects editMedical care edit nbsp Saint Francis Borgia performing an exorcism by GoyaSee also Exorcism and Faith healing Some religions treat illness both mental and physical in a manner that does not heal and in some cases exacerbates the problem Specific examples include faith healing of certain Christian sects denominations which eschew medical care including vaccinations or blood transfusions and exorcisms 23 24 Faith based practices for healing purposes have come into direct conflict with both the medical profession and the law when victims of these practices are harmed or in the most extreme cases killed by these cures 25 26 27 A detailed study in 1998 found 140 instances of deaths of children due to religion based medical neglect Most of these cases involved religious parents relying on prayer to cure the child s disease and withholding medical care 28 Jehovah s Witnesses object to blood transfusion primarily on religious grounds they believe that blood is sacred and God said abstain from blood Acts 15 28 29 Religion as a by product of children s attributes editDawkins proposes that religion is a by product arising from other features of the human species that are adaptive 10 One such feature is the tendency of children to believe without question whatever your grown ups tell you Dawkins 2006 p 174 Psychologist Paul Bloom sees religion as a by product of children s instinctive tendency toward a dualistic view of the world and a predisposition towards creationism 10 29 Deborah Kelemen has also written that children are naturally teleologists assigning a purpose to everything they come across 30 Developmental psychology editThis section is an excerpt from Psychology of religion Developmental approaches to religion edit Many have looked at stage models like those of Jean Piaget and Lawrence Kohlberg to explain how children develop ideas about God and religion in general See also editChildren s rights Daugherty v Vanguard Emmanuel Schools Foundation Freedom of religion Homeschooling Islam and children Lost boys Mormon fundamentalism Preacher s kid Religion and abortion Religious male circumcisionNotes edit However consider the Jugendweihe ceremonies in eastern GermanyReferences edit Major Branches of Religions Ranked by Number of Adherents Thomas Riggs 2006 Christianity Coptic Christianity Worldmark Encyclopedia of Religious Practices Religions and denominations Thomson Gale ISBN 978 0 7876 6612 5 Circumcision Columbia Encyclopedia Columbia University Press 2011 www teachernet gov uk Archived 2010 11 04 at the Wayback Machine Catholic Education Service Archived 2011 07 16 at the Wayback Machine James G Dwyer December 1994 Parents Religion and Children s Welfare Debunking the Doctrine of Parents Rights CALIFORNIA LAW REVIEW pp 1371 1447 WHAT SHALL WE TELL THE CHILDREN Edge 21 February 1997 Humphrey Nicolas 1998 What Shall We Tell the Children PDF Social Research 65 777 805 Children I ll argue have a human right not to have their minds crippled by exposure to other people s bad ideas no matter who these other people are Dennett Daniel 2006 Breaking the Spell New York Viking ISBN 0 670 03472 X a b c Dawkins Richard 2006 The God Delusion Boston Houghton Mifflin p 406 ISBN 0 618 68000 4 a b c Richard Dawkins Childhood abuse and the escape from religion The God Delusion Hitchens Christopher Is Religion Child Abuse God is Not Great The God Argument Late Night Live ABC Radio National 26 March 2013 Popova Maria 6 October 2011 The Magic of Reality Richard Dawkins Teaches Children to Fight Myth with Science Brain Pickings Retrieved 19 February 2015 Each chapter begins with a famous myth from one of the world s religions or folklore traditions which Dawkins proceeds to myth bust by examining the actual scientific processes and phenomena that these stories try to explain a b Seyaj Organization for the Protection of Children Archived from the original on October 7 2009 Daragahi Borzou June 11 2008 Yemeni bride 10 says I won t Los Angeles Times Retrieved 16 February 2010 Dead Yemeni child bride tied up raped says mom Fox News 2010 04 10 Yemeni child bride dies of internal bleeding CNN 2010 04 09 CNN article on 12 year old bride death 2009 09 14 Compton Todd 1997 In Sacred Loneliness The Plural Wives of Joseph Smith Salt Lake City UT Signature Books ISBN 1 56085 085 X Hirshon Stanley P 1969 The Lion of the Lord Alfred A Knopf D Onofrio Eve 2005 Child Brides Inegalitarianism and the Fundamentalist Polygamous Family in the United States International Journal of Law Policy and the Family 19 3 373 394 doi 10 1093 lawfam ebi028 Exorcism by Rabbis Talmud Sages and Their Magic Bar Ilan University Israel Archived from the original on 2007 12 29 Papademetriou George C Exorcism in the Orthodox Church Archived from the original on September 24 2008 Carmiola Ionescu Exorcism priest is jailed for nun death The Scotsman US boy dies during exorcism BBC News 2003 08 25 Retrieved 2010 01 02 Exorcism bid turns fatal The Hindu Chennai India 2005 01 05 Archived from the original on 2005 02 08 Asser S M Swan R April 1998 Child fatalities from religion motivated medical neglect Pediatrics 101 4 Pt 1 625 9 doi 10 1542 peds 101 4 625 PMID 9521945 Bloom Paul December 2005 Is God an Accident The Atlantic Retrieved 15 May 2016 Kelemen Deborah 2004 Are children intuitive theists Psychological Science 15 5 295 301 doi 10 1111 j 0956 7976 2004 00672 x PMID 15102137 External links editLove Thy Neighbor The Evolution of In Group Morality By John Hartung Skeptic Vol 3 No 4 1995 Includes the responses of Israeli children to the account of the Battle of Jericho in the Book of Joshua Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Religion and children amp oldid 1212363834, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.