Showing posts with label Christian personality theory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christian personality theory. Show all posts

Monday, May 27, 2019

WHAT CHILDREN KNOW AND ADULTS CAN LEARN ABOUT RELATING TO GOD


“Daddy,” asks four-year-old Ben, “How old is God?”

Daddy, who has been through this before, answers, “God doesn’t have an age, Ben. He just always was and always will be.”

“Oh,”says Ben, taking that in. He looks down. “I’m sad, Daddy, because then God doesn’t get to have birthday parties.”  

Daddy, who is learning fast, says, “Well, Ben, you don’t have to be sad, because Jesus does have a birthday. We celebrate it every year at Christmas.”

Ben’s face lights up. “Hurrayyy!” Then his brows furrow. “But why don’t we give Jesus gifts? All we do is get gifts.”

Daddy tears up a little, if the truth be told. And rolls with it: “Very true, son. What do you think Jesus would like for a birthday present?”

Ben looks up, brown eyes pondering, finger on his bottom lip. 
“Ummm. I know! I’m going to draw him a picture of me and Mommy and you and Sissie.” He beams, running off to his room to do just that. "Then Jesus will know what we look like!" Ben calls out joyfully from the top of the stairs.


Children are gifted with an intuitive sense 
for relating to God. They are:

Open, not judgmental
Curious, not fearful 
Accepting, not resistant 
to, the nature of God


During their Preschool years, young children ask "why" questions like, “Does God wear clothes?," "Can God come for dinner tonight?," or “Where does God live?They are busy assimilating information from their parents, yet displaying an intuitive openness and acceptance of the idea of God.

Still innocently accepting—not skeptically resisting—School age children are often moved on by the Holy Spirit to accept Christ as their Savior without understanding the theology behind it, but surrendering nonetheless with little fuss about it, differentiating the “before” and “after” experience within their spirit, integrating the essential belief that Jesus belongs to God and they belong to Jesus, a concept they see as very natural.

Adolescents develop increased self-consciousness and are more wary of the idea of God, perhaps because in the maturation process they have had to reject worldly myths, such as Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny, or the Tooth Fairy; but they still are drawn to the Ideal of Someone who is supremely authentic, Someone worthy of radical trust. Their idealism can find differentiation within church settings that offer youth fellowship, appealing to their social needs and to their beginning theoretical integration of Jesus’ life and personality with their own.

Indeed, Christian Personality Theory asserts that it is God’s presence in humankind, and in the particular lives of the child or adolescent, that quickens their sense of right or wrong, and woos them toward a personality integration that counters anxiety, apathy, or alienation that often haunt the human condition.

From young adulthood through middle age and beyond, persons find themselves facing issues like how to integrate the sudden death of someone dearly loved; how to handle a bad accident or tragic illness, wondering where God is and why there is no sense of his presence; or how to maintain faith even though the effects of aging heighten the awareness of mortality.






“Truly I tell you," Jesus said, "anyone who will not receive the kingdom of God like a little child will never enter it” Mark 9:37).

CHRISTIAN PERSONALITY THEORY

 

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Free Will and Discipline, The Christian Trinity Way

“I will walk about in freedom, for I have sought out your precepts” (Ps 119:45).

In the beginning God builds into human personality the capacity for free-will choices on the one hand, and self-discipline on the other, intentionally creating dialogue partners who voluntarily express their freedom within the blessing of his will and purpose.

Because God’s purpose for creation is larger than any single person or group, he seeks to educate people from their earliest years that their freedom is accountable to him and their personal fulfillment contingent upon the degree to which they cooperate with him. 

God does this through the constant interplay of free will and discipline that intersects every person’s social existence, starting with parental rules and boundaries that nonetheless leave room for childhood expression and exploration, moving into school systems with their behavioral codes, and evolving into an adult lifestyle that must take into account the well-being of others and civil law, alongside one’s freedom to pursue life, liberty, and happiness.

In this ongoing human enterprise, God desires individuals and communities to develop a holy self-regulation akin to that of the Trinity, who live together with individual identities that interpenetrate one another in self-transcending love, expressing the freedom of creative expression and the discipline of guarding one another’s well-being.

Christian Trinity

The Trinity's Plan for A Developmental Rhythm of Freedom and Discipline

Infants, with their parent’s help, experience rudimentary forms of a rhythm between freedom and discipline. They begin a lifelong growth path in regulating inner states, like calming themselves down as they go off to sleep. The parent ensures they are fed, changed, free of pain, well hugged and talked with, yet allows the infant freedom to find their particular way of shifting into a sleep state, a process that initially may include some crying, but develops into the self-disciplined awareness of how to go to sleep peacefully. When an infant begins to grasp and eat their favorite cereal, the parent offers the freedom to explore other foods, within limits of safety and parental sanity. The parent respects the infant’s freedom to stop eating when their internal regulator signals “full,” yet removes food if it keeps getting thrown on the floor, an opportunity for infants to absorb the discipline of social rules for eating.

Toddlers are busy declaring their freedom to become the individuals they are discovering themselves to be. They frequently do this by testing boundaries; yet they need and want limits set for them, clearly and without much ado, so that in spite of verbal or physical protests to the contrary, it is often a relief for toddlers when parents step in and let them know who is in charge. The freedom they experience feels overwhelming at times and needs the counter-balance of fair limits set by parents. Toddlers slowly internalize this external discipline, making it their own, as they learn the initial social rules of interpersonal engagement. 

Toddlers learning social rules

Preschoolers like to challenge boundaries verbally and can be very creative in doing so. “Why” questions and well-formed counter-arguments can amaze and bemuse parents, distracting them from the underlying reality that their child is controlling the situation yet again. Because the specter of power struggles looms large, preschoolers respond well to a few essential limits applied as consistently as possible. Then they feel the security of exercising certain freedoms within the overarching safety of wise discipline. Their social consciousness now includes a sense of guilt when they have done something wrong, a sign that they are internalizing the discipline involved in becoming an interpersonal self.

School age children are concerned with fairness. They respond to reason and like being included on discussions of rules and the reasons for them. When given responsibility for tasks that slightly exceed their capability and praise for a job well done, a cooperative dynamic results in which they exercise their freedom by complying with decisions that affect them, a process that in turn develops increased accountability and self-discipline.



School Age Children Showing Fairness


Adolescents experiment with newfound freedoms. Like toddlers, they push boundaries: geographically, in terms of distances they travel away from home; psychologically, in terms of less dependence upon parents; socially, in terms of friends they make and groups they join; behaviorally, in terms of new ways to define themselves as persons. This exploration can create conflict not only with their parents but also within their developing conscience, an inner force for restraint and ethical assessment of their actual behavior. 

Because they are now capable of abstract thought, adolescents can better stand outside behavior that is troubling them and observe it more impartially. And more easily compare it, for example, to how Christ might behave in a similar situation.  They are intrigued by and like to discuss the possible meaning of scriptures like, “As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts” (Isa 55:9). This kind of assessment process is part of the spiritual discipline actualized in many adolescents, evident as potential in others.

Adults are more capable of integrating the rhythm of freedom and discipline without the need to overly emphasize either extreme.

Sometimes young adults, after a fairly freewheeling adolescence, will find a deeper relationship with Christ; yet at the same time overemphasize the discipline side of this rhythm at the expense of freedom. This works fine for a season, since the human psyche needs to assimilate truths of Christian faith and doctrine to the point where the personality and human nature become more spontaneously trustworthy

 
Free Will and Discipline in Christ

But once the principles are internalized and the laws of God inscribed upon the heart, then persons can relax and trust the flow of the Holy Spirit through their being, expressing greater behavioral freedom, not in ways that are self-defeating, but in ways that are creative and intriguing as they expand the meaning of God-with-us. They take in the beauty of Paul’s insight: “It is for freedom that Christ has set us free” (Gal 5:1).

Even in the crises of illness, divorce, unemployment, empty-nest syndrome, and advancing age, God wants people to combine the freedom of ever-deepening trust in him with the discipline required to make it through a crisis. He wants to enhance their disciplined choices with divine blessing, strengthening their interpersonal selfhood, while simultaneously intensifying their unity with the Trinity, for “where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom” (2 Cor 3:17).

Fro more, read: 


Christian Personality Theory