Childhood
Conversion
A woman came to humorist
Will Rogers, saying, "I struggle with this problem. Every time
I look at myself in the mirror, I'm proud." He said, "Ma'am,
that's not pride, that's a mistake!" Now I know that you are proud
of your children, but you have never been as proud of a child
as a woman I met who claimed that her five year old daughter had
never sinned! She was serious. I realize that this woman was not
doctrinally savvy, or even a believer, but how can she miss the
obvious? That's not pride, that's a mistake!
God says children are born
sinners. They are, sadly, not born in Christ, but in Adam. "As
in Adam all die..."1 Cor. 15: 22. When David said that he was
born in iniquity and in sin his mother conceived him, he was not
describing an illegitimacy of his parent's, but the true nature
of every child. He was speaking of what we call "original sin."
Original sin is something that we should be able to see by mere
observation. One police study on juvenile delinquency stated:
Every baby starts life as
a little savage. He is completely selfish and self-centered: he
wants what he wants: his bottle, his mother's attention, his playmate's
toys, his uncle's watch, or whatever. Deny him these and he seethes
with rage and aggressiveness which would be murderous were he
not so helpless. He is dirty; he has no morals, no knowledge and
no developed skills. This means that all children, not just certain
children, but all children are born delinquent. If permitted to
continue in their self-centered world of infancy, given free reign
to their impulsive actions to satisfy each want, every child would
grow up a criminal, a killer, a thief, and a rapist. (Quoted from
Reb Bradley, "Biblical Insights into Child Training.")
If it is true, and it is,
that there are "none righteous, no not one," (Rom. 3:10) then
my children are among those without inherent righteousness. And
if they are without inherent righteousness, then they are in need
of Christ and the salvation which He provides. This fact drives
me. Though I believe in a growing moral awareness, but not an
age of accountability, I am pressed with the weight of my children's
need of salvation. Surely you who are Christian parents feel what
I feel.
Imagine this scenario. It
is late at night when your seven year old daughter arrives home
from her children's meeting, announcing that she has "prayed the
prayer" and is now a Christian. She produces a card which says
that she has "invited Jesus into her heart," complete with date
and signature of an adult sponsor. What do you do? Have you ever
asked the question, "Just how do I know if my child is ready to
become a Christian, or really even understands what it means?"
Or maybe we should be less dramatic and say that your child is
now beginning to ask thoughtful questions about God. What are
you supposed to think? How should you respond?
First note that your child's
questions about God should not necessarily be taken as
an indication that God is at work in his or her life in any special
way. It does prove that your child has normal intelligence. There
is nothing at all unusual about his query; it is good to take
advantage of that openness, but it is generally nothing more than
normal inquisitiveness. Let me suggest that you prepare yourself
by focusing now on three major aspects of God's work in bringing
children (or anyone) to Christ. Knowing what God is doing (and
He alone makes Christians, after all) allows the parent to help
his child avoid deception, and will give you much added confidence
in "reading" the situation. The three activities of God are conviction,
revelation, and regeneration.
Conviction
Conviction is the work of
the Spirit in bringing sin and the necessity of Christ home to
the child's conscience. Jesus said that the Holy Spirit convicts
of sin, righteousness (that is, that there is only one righteousness
and it is found in Christ), and judgment (see Jn. 16:8-11). In
looking for conviction, we should avoid any preconceived ideas
about how many tears or how much agony is appropriate and keep
in mind that conviction is God's tool to bring your child
to a hatred of sin. God alone knows what it takes. That there
must be conviction in the preparation for salvation is, however,
a bedrock truth. It is in the development of conviction that the
parent can play a most significant part. By carefully laying out
the law (the demands of God on the conscience), by explaining
the consequences of breaking that law, and by continually emphasizing
the exclusivity of Christ in delivering the child from those consequences,
the parent cooperates with the Spirit in this special preparation
of the heart.
Sin is, after all, lawlessness
(1 Jn. 3:4). It is necessary to know the law in order to know
sin. However, it is the weight on the conscience in his breaking
of the law that is true conviction. Paul thought of himself as
blameless in relationship to the law for some time (Phil. 3:6),
but when the Spirit brought home the nature of true covetousness
(the most internal of the ten commands) something powerful happened
to Paul which we could all hope will happen to our children. Note
his narrative:
...I would not have known
sin except through the law. For I would not have known covetousness
unless the law has said, "You shall not covet." But sin, taking
opportunity by the commandment, produced in me all manner of evil
desire. For apart from the law sin was dead. I was alive once
without the law [that is, he perceived himself to be alive], but
when the commandment came, sin revived and I died. Rom.
7:7b-9
One of the most striking
features of the teachings on children in the Bible, both Old Testament
and New, is the emphasis on commandment and obedience. These admonitions
to teach the commands to our children bring to the forefront the
importance of conviction. It is through the law that our knowledge
of sin is made lucid. Our forebears realized this need by their
use of catechisms, almost all of which included the memorization
of the ten commandments, plus a great deal of other vital material
on the nature of God's expectations. I'll never forget the pain
I saw in my oldest child some years ago as he cried softly in
a well of true frustration about his inability to do what God
commands. Sin was coming home to the conscience. And by disciplining
them we augment that sense of sorrow for sin and may "deliver
his soul from hell." (see Prov. 23:13-14)
We can cooperate in the
Holy Spirit's convicting process by teaching our children the
awful consequences of sin as well. Many leaders refuse
to talk straightforwardly about hell with children, but I disagree
with trying to soft-peddle on the subject of eternal judgment.
My children began to learn about hell as soon as I thought they
could comprehend the most elementary truths. How many times more
important is it for them to fear an eternity in hell than being
hit by a car in the road? If we go to great efforts to keep them
out of the street, should we not go to even more pains to keep
them out of hell? Hell is worse than being hit by a car, worse
than poison, worse than rape, worse than abduction, worse than
anything you can imagine. You say, "I fear causing my child to
have nightmares!" I hope you understand that I too love my children
and wouldn't want them to unnecessarily experience mental trauma,
but really, wouldn't a week of nightmares be worth it if it delivered
your child from the eternal nightmare of hell?
There is a very real sense
in which there is no one or no thing to fear other than the God
who can deliver both body and soul to hell (Mt. 10:28). May I
suggest as well that you take all unnecessary horrors away from
them by carefully monitoring what they see. I have great suspicions
that the enemy of our souls would love to dull the acuteness of
hell by images of violence and fear on television. Labor in cooperation
with the Spirit for the depth of conviction which "produces repentance,
without regret, leading to salvation." (2 Cor. 7:10) For an illustration
of this conviction, rarely seen in our day, look at young Spurgeon,
who became the best known preacher of the nineteenth century:
For five years as a child
there was nothing before my eyes but my guilt...Wherever I went,
the law had a demand upon my thoughts, upon my words, upon my
rising, upon my resting. What I did, and what I did not do, all
came under the cognizance of the law. I seemed as if I was a sinner,
and nothing else but a sinner...Was there ever a bond-slave who
had more bitterness of soul than I, five years a captive in the
dungeons of the law, till my youth seemed as if it would turn
into premature old age?...When God the Holy Ghost first quickened
me, little did I know of the precious blood which has put my sins
away, and drowned them in the depths for ever. But I did know
this, that I could not remain as I was; that I could not rest
happy unless I became something better, something purer than I
was; and, oh, how my spirit cried to God with groanings-I
say without any exaggeration-groanings
that could not be uttered!
I tried a long time to improve
myself, but I never did make much of it; I found I had a devil
within me when I began, and I had ten devils when I left off.
Instead of becoming better, I became worse...Then I laboured to
believe. It is a strange way of putting it, yet so it was. When
I wished to believe, I found I could not. It seemed to me that
the way to Heaven by Christ's righteousness was as difficult as
by my own, and that I could as soon get to Heaven by Sinai as
by Calvary. I could do nothing, I could neither repent nor believe.
I fainted with despair, feeling as if I must be lost despite the
gospel, and be for ever driven from Jehovah's presence, even though
Christ had died. (Autobiography, Vol. 1, 'The Early Years', 1973,
pp. 56-71)
In another place he said
this about conviction:
I used to hear a minister
whose preaching was, as far as I could make it out, 'Do this,
and do that, and do the other, and you will be saved'. According
to his theory, to pray was a very easy thing; to make yourself
a new heart, was a thing of a few instants, and could be done
at almost any time; and I really thought that I could turn to
Christ when I pleased...But when the Lord gave my soul its first
shakings in conviction, I soon knew better... (ibid, p. 49)
Do we see such conviction
today? I don't think that most of our leaders or parents even
consider at all the issue of conviction or the tilling up of the
soil of the soul for the gospel seed. Unfortunately, some of our
methodology prematurely "reaps" children and adults before conviction
has a hold and makes many false converts.
Revelation
There is a poem by the hymn
writer, Joseph Hart, which goes in part like this:
Let us ask the important
question
(Brethren, be not too secure)
What is it to be a Christian,
How may we our hearts secure?
Vain is all our best devotion
If on false foundations
built.
True religion's more than
notion,
Something must be known
and felt.
If the essence of Christianity
is knowing Christ (John 17:3, Heb. 8: 11), then He must be revealed
to us. It is one thing for your child to hate hell and another
to love the Lord as One he knows. There is no Christianity without
knowing Christ. And it is at this point where the parent's hands
are most tied. There is no way to make this happen. We can present
the beauty of Christ and of the Father, we can demonstrate before
our children the joy of knowing Him by the intimacy of our prayers,
etc., but we cannot force the Revealer's hand. Revelation is in
the hands of the Revealer. In John 10, a passage that has knowing
Christ the Shepherd at its heart, the sheep are said to know Him
("I know my sheep and am known by My own", v. 14), however, not
all are said to be sheep. "But you do not believe, because you
are not of My sheep, as I said to you. My sheep hear My voice,
I know them, and they follow Me." (vs. 26-27).
Young Samuel ministered
before the Lord (1 Sam. 3:1), but did not yet know the Lord (vs.7)
before the Lord "called" him. The reason is that the Word of the
Lord was not yet revealed to Him (vs. 7). Eli in this case did
help Samuel to know that it was the Lord who was calling the boy,
and gave him the proper response, which might indicate a place
for the parent's intervention in interpreting events. When Paul
preached Christ's cross in Corinth he said that to some it was
foolishness and to others it was a stumblingblock, but it was
the power of God unto salvation to the called (see 1 Cor. 1: 22-24).
Here he is speaking of the effectual call of the Holy Spirit rather
than the broader call of the preacher (i.e. "Many are called,
but few chosen" Mt. 20: 16). This is another way to discuss this
issue of revelation. One convert said, "Christ became as irresistible
to me as my sin had been before." Observation and counsel are
important here, but you cannot play God's part. Your child is
not just signing a contract because he wants to close a good deal,
but is meeting a person who has the power to reveal or not reveal.
"Seek the Lord while He may be found; call upon Him while He is
near..." (Isa. 55:6)
Regeneration
Regeneration, or the giving
of life to a dead soul, is the last of the three major categories
we should look for. In some ways this is the most often misunderstood.
It is important for the parent to realize that regeneration, or
the new birth, when it is dealt with in a more technical way in
the Scriptures is mentioned as preceding conversion. At
other times the idea of regeneration and conversion are put together.
In other words, God gives life to the dead soul (Eph. 2:1) unto
repentance and faith. Without regeneration, the dead soul continues
to run from Christ (Jn. 3), and does not seek God (Rom. 3:11).
But when God grants this life it evidences itself in conversion,
or repentance and faith, plus love for God and true holiness of
life.
The early Baptist theologian,
John A. Broadus, succinctly stated it in question form like this:
"Does faith come before the new birth? No, it is the new heart
that truly repents and believes" (Catechism of Bible Teaching).
Richard Furman, another Baptist leader described regeneration
preceding and producing repentance and faith in this way:
It is therefore, beyond
all contradiction a supernatural change produced by the Sprit
of God; and there is something in its nature which is mysterious
and wonderful,...but however inscrutable...its effects are certain...Its
effects will be, repentance toward God, and faith toward our Lord
Jesus Christ; a hatred to sin, and a love to holiness; supreme
love to God, and unfeigned benevolence to men. (Conversion Essentials
to Salvation, 1816, p.8, emphasis mine)
This becomes more easily
seen upon examining the first chapters of John where the new birth
is said distinctly not to be "of human decision" (1:13) and is,
in effect, like the wind acting on the passive individual (3:8)
However one believes about this, it is significant to note that
no child, born in original sin, will ever get to heaven without
this regeneration, or life from above.
Let's make four admissions
related to this matter of repentance and faith, or true conversion.
1. We must say that many,
probably most, of those children that are supposedly being converted
in our churches in the early days are showing no signs of conversion
later in life. Think of all those who "made decisions" at Vacation
Bible Schools, children's programs, Sunday School emphases, etc.,
who are on our rolls yet have no real life in them at all. Is
it not obvious to us that getting a child to make a decision about
Christ in early years does not guarantee that they are believers
at all? I have written about this elsewhere and will not take
much time to support this argumentation, but it should be easy
enough for us to see. The fallout is massive. Some who thought
they were child converts, thankfully, have come to Christ later
in their teen or adult years, sometimes without using the terminology
or fully understanding the change that has taken place.
2. We also must admit that
it is a rather easy thing to convince children to pray a prayer
we call "the sinner's prayer" (this prayer, by the way, is not
found in Scripture), or to raise their hand, or sign a card, in
response to a persuasive presentation of the gospel. I hope you
understand when I say that I could get a fairly good response
of supposed "new converts" from almost any classroom of children
due to some persuasive skills. Whether I am getting these converts
sincerely or not is not the question. I am only saying that children
are easily swayed and convinced.
3. In the third place we
should admit that we are often not even discussing repentance
and faith with the children we are hoping to evangelize, but are
rather using the unsupported terminology of "inviting Jesus into
the heart," a phrase and concept not found in the Bible. A better
look at John 1:12 with verse 11 and Revelation 3:20 in context
might reveal that the only verses we cling to for this methodology
are not saying what we think they are. I am not saying by this
that the Spirit of Christ is not "in" the Christian but that our
invitation to come to Christ is different than the Bible's.
4. In the fourth place I
think we need to realize that the methodology often used in churches
tends to encourage premature conversions. I mean particularly
that the altar call system and the giving of immediate assurance
as practiced by many is not a help in securing a sound conversion.
This and the other issues above contribute to the struggle the
Christian parent has in working though the issues of salvation
with their children.
In the context of a nurturing
Christian family it is often difficult to tell just when a child
who is seeking God is truly converted. He may, in fact, deal with
repentance and faith over and over again, seeking assurance. We
know that there is a time in all their seeking when the believing
child does truly convert to Christ from his sin and selfishness,
but often that exact date is hard to know. For the adult conversion,
it may be more easily discerned.
We have put a paradigm of
exact dating on most conversions so that we tend to force whatever
is happening in the child into a moment in time which he or she
can remember, but the reality may be far more difficult to ascertain.
For instance, my child has often prayed at night about his soul.
I encourage this and often remind him and the other children,
"Don't forget to talk to God about your soul before going to sleep."
What I am looking for is not whether or not he has said some words
in the right way that supposedly "bind" God to give him salvation.
No, what I am looking for, and what he is looking for, is a changed
life. He is looking for the signs of being made a "new creature"
in Christ.
When we speak of assurance,
we are speaking of that which we know because the evidence is
clear. This is the heart of First John and the other passages
dealing with this subject. The way to tell if you are a Christian
is not to look at the sincerity of a decision, but to look at
the change in the life. As far as I can tell, there is no teaching
in the Word which says that you can be sure that you are a Christian
by looking back at an historical conversion experience. "These
things I have written to you who believe in the name of the Son
of God, that you may know that you have eternal life..."
(1 Jn. 5:13, emphasis mine). What things? Those tests which
make up the content of the epistle. In other words, one's assurance
should be based on discernible factors which can be tested.
Once, when my oldest was
talking with me about how he could know if he were a true Christian,
I explained the issue like this: If I gave you a seed to plant
in the ground and told you it was a certain type of flower, you
would not know for sure it was so, even it if began to sprout.
You would know more when it put out leaves. And you would be even
more sure when the bud appears. But you would know for certain
when the flower blooms." My son is quite hopeful that he is a
believer, seeks God with his heart, listens to and reads the Bible,
seeks understanding when the Word is preached, however, he is
still not certain of the state of his soul. He is hopeful and
so am I, but not resolved at this point, knowing that children
must be particularly cautious. There is no sense of being held
back, rather he is encouraged to do just what any person should
do-repent
and trust in Christ. After all, we are life-long repenters and
life-long believers. He will know "the genuineness" of his faith
(1 Pet. 1: 7) as he faces those maturing trials of life.
What about that child we
mentioned earlier who announces he is converted after the children's
meeting? Our response to our child's expressions that he is now
converted should always be positive, encouraging and sincere.
We should help the child see the basis upon which he can have
assurance of new life rather than take it upon ourselves to offer
him an immediate assurance not ours to give. Say something like
this, "I'm thrilled that you are repenting and trusting in Christ.
More than anything we want to know that God has really changed
your life. The way we will know is if you continue repenting and
trusting and if you act like a true Christian-that
is, you have a new heart that loves to obey God. Sometimes we
do not know that until we are in a place where it really costs
us to be a Christian. Maybe you will not know it until you face
the choice between your friends and Christ. Let's see what God
does. We'll watch and pray about it. As questions come up, we'll
talk."
In better days, when sound
theology was more prominent in our churches, the leaders would
often approach the child who was dealing with salvation like this.
They would, first of all, assert that children could be converted.
However, they would emphasize that the child's ability to know
if they are converted on a sound, biblical basis was not
likely, due to the ease with which children are deceived. The
child would have been encouraged, prayed for, and guided. There
would be no push for baptism because the responsibility of the
pastor was to baptize valid converts. The validity of this hopeful
conversion was yet undecided. The parents understood this and
were comfortable with the process because, in most cases, this
was the practice among all of their child's peers. There is nothing
that could be done to "unsave" a truly converted child. This process
would continue until the mid to later teen years.
As a result of this kind
of leadership, no child was discouraged from seeking Christ, or
from repenting and believing, yet the massive fallout of those
who were deceived, as we unfortunately find today, was abated.
In other words, children were not told that they were converted
and would have to then wait some years before baptism. Rather,
they were told, and I think rightly so, that time and maturity
was needed in order to know if their hopeful conversion was genuine.
At that discovery baptism would be as immediate as was the New
Testament precedent.
Correcting
our Mistakes
Leaders and parents must
consider the benefits of returning to a better method of dealing
with the souls of our children. To give assurance on the basis
of praying a prayer or some other outward, immediate sign is sealing
many in deception and makes them harder to reach in their adult
years. Any casual look at the disparity between the rolls of our
churches plus the numbers of supposed converts who do not even
find their way on to our rolls against the actual changed lives
being produced, should cause us to do some very serious thinking.
In the manner of our great grandfathers who often exhibited such
reasonableness and biblical wisdom, we should return to a method
that both allows our active and vigorous pursuit of our children's
salvation, while at the same time protects against large scale
deception.
You who are parents can
begin this reformation now. If you have taken a more "decisionistic"
approach to your children, placing hopes of salvation on the sincerity
of a decision instead of on a revolutionary change of life, then
you may still be able to return and correct your mistakes. Go
to your child and tell him or her that you now understand things
much better and can help him more. I find that children are eminently
forgiving and able to understand our mistaken notions, especially
when they were developed with good intentions.
Copyright
ã
1997 Jim Elliff
Christian
Communicators Worldwide, Inc.
201 Main, Parkville, MO 64152 USA
http://www.ccwonline.org/
Permission granted for not-for-sale
reproduction in exact form including copyright
Other uses require written permission. Write for additional materials.
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Sidebar:
Resources to Help You Understand
and Explain the Gospel to Your Family
Order from Christian Communicators
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The
Eaglet...a
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The
Tract Primer...a
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The
Broad and Narrow Gates
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Wasted
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The
Unrepenting Repenter...a
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Order from Calvary Press,
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Your
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Pastors should order several for counseling parents.
Order from FamilyLife Today,
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"How
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