Understanding how a child's faith forms is crucial to knowing how adults can most significantly enhance the child's spiritual development. This book provides parents, teachers, and Christian education leaders with valuable i...

Buy Now From Amazon

Product Review

Understanding how a child's faith forms is crucial to knowing how adults can most significantly enhance the child's spiritual development. This book provides parents, teachers, and Christian education leaders with valuable insights into spiritual formation during childhood. With a biblical perspective as a starting point and a recognition of the crucial role of both the family and the faith community, Stonehouse reviews important contributions from noted child development experts Erik Erikson, Jean Piaget, Lawrence Kohlberg, and James Fowler. This overview gives insight into the processes of psychosocial, cognitive, and moral development in children and adolescents. Stonehouse concludes with solid guidelines for designing children's ministries. By carefully "setting the stage" through liturgy, sacred stories, and parables, Christian educators can help children meet with God. Quiet times of "godly play," carefully adapted to the age level of the child, enable adults to join with children on the journey toward deeper intimacy with God.

Similar Products

Children Matter: Celebrating Their Place in the Church, Family, and CommunityPerspectives on Children's Spiritual FormationChildren's Spirituality: What it is and Why it Matters (Sure Foundations)Listening to Children on the Spiritual Journey: Guidance for Those Who Teach and NurtureFormational Children's Ministry: Shaping Children Using Story, Ritual, and Relationship (ēmersion: Emergent Village resources for communities of faith)Real Kids, Real Faith: Practices for Nurturing Children's Spiritual LivesChildren's Ministry in the Way of JesusSticky Faith: Everyday Ideas to Build Lasting Faith in Your KidsMeet Generation Z: Understanding and Reaching the New Post-Christian WorldStages of Faith: The Psychology of Human Development and the Quest for Meaning