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25 Ways to Teach Kids to Pray
Paul Thigpen
© 1995 by Paul Thigpen
Little Christopher kneeled by his bed and prayed softly: "Harold,
please bless Mommy and Daddy."
"Harold?" said his father. "Why do you call God 'Harold'?"
"You know," said the boy. "We say it every week in
church: 'Harold be thy name.'"
Most kids are probably like Christopher -- they're willing to pray,
but they need a little help in learning how to go about it. Here's
a smorgasbord of suggestions for teaching your family about talking
with God.
1. Find a regular time for daily family prayer that fits
everyone's schedule, then make it a priority. A thousand distractions
will try to keep you from establishing this discipline in your home,
but persevere. No matter how much you pray alone, your family needs
to pray together as well.
Try setting aside ten minutes a day at first. Once you've formed
the habit, you can expand the time without much difficulty. The
important thing is to get started and stick with it.
2. Teach your kids the basic elements of prayer. Making requests
is only one aspect of talking to God. To remember the other important
elements, think of the letters of the word "ACTS":
- A is for Adoration: praising God for who He is.
- C is for Confession: admitting to God our sins and telling Him
we're sorry.
- T is for Thanksgiving: recalling all that God has done for us.
- S is for Supplication: making requests, both for others (intercession)
and ourselves (petition).
Not every prayer needs to have all these elements. But taken as
a whole, our prayer times should reflect a balance of them.
3. Join family prayers to the Scripture. Pray a psalm responsively
as you do in church. Read together from the Scripture lessons designated
for the day and let the words shape your thoughts in prayer.
4. When you pray together, combine spontaneous prayer with
fixed forms of prayer such as the Our Father, the Hail Mary
and the Glory Be. Both kinds of prayer are important: Fixed forms
help us find the right words, remind us of concerns we might otherwise
have forgotten, and relieve us of the burden of trying to make every
prayer new and different. Spontaneous prayer, on the other hand,
allows us the flexibility to tailor our prayer to the needs of the
moment and keeps us aware that we're having a conversation with
a living Person.
5. Make song a part of family prayer. Music can lift our
hearts to God and allow us to express our feelings in ways the mere
spoken word can't even touch. Sing praise songs throughout the day.
If no one in your home is musically gifted, don't worry--as one
old Bible translation puts it, just "make a joyful noise unto
the Lord!" (Psalm 66:1 KJV).
6. Tell your children that prayer is a two-way conversation.
We should spend some time listening to God as well as talking
to Him. Sometimes after a few minutes of silence in His presence,
we can hear in our minds His words of comfort, discipline or direction,
or we can simply feel His love and concern.
7. Teach your kids that prayer is a discipline and a privilege.
So much in our culture leads them to assume that to be worthwhile
an activity must feel good and be entertaining. Let them know that
even though prayer is often a pleasure, it is also work. We pray,
not for fun, but because it's the right thing to do.
8. Divide up intercessory responsibilities when you pray
together as a family. Make sure each person has at least one concern
to focus on, then take turns leading in prayer.
9. Any time family members have a concern they want others to bring
to God, have them add it to a family prayer list on the refrigerator
door. Then pray through the list during family prayer times.
10. Take on a prayer project with your kids. Discover a need
someone has that only God can fill, then commit yourselves to interceding
for the situation until you see an answer.
11. Encourage your children to start a prayer journal, perhaps
in the form of letters to God. Writing down their conversations
with the Lord can help them clarify their thoughts. Later they'll
profit from reading over what they wrote in light of later events.
12. Keep a "thanksgiving book" of your family's
answered prayers. Review it whenever you need to stir up your faith
in God's provision. Swap stories of answered prayer with other families.
13. Pray together for people and situations in the news, especially
government leaders and victims of war or natural disaster.
14. Build a family habit of taking problems to God as soon as
they arise. Make prayer your first response to a challenge,
not your last resort.
15. Pray about the small things together. Whatever concerns
your children concerns the Lord. Be specific and concrete in your
prayer requests.
16. Pray your family table grace in public places without
embarrassment or apology. Show your kids you're not afraid to let
strangers see your faith.
17. Be on the lookout for the "prayable moment." Maybe
you and your teen have just watched the sunrise at the beach, and
you feel close to God just now. Perhaps a favorite pet just died
and your preschooler needs the Lord's comfort. Some occasions naturally
invite us to pause a few minutes and talk with God.
18. Make basic, perennial concerns permanent items on your family
prayer list, such as the Church, the poor, the sick, and the
government. Honor the Holy Father's request that children everywhere
pray for world peace.
19. When your family receives a bit of good news -- the announcement
of a new job, the birth of a nephew, top grades on a report card
-- celebrate together by praising God on the spot. Give the
Lord a round of applause, a rousing cheer, or anything else that
says to Him, "Thank you!"
20. Help your children practice daily self-examination in prayer.
Bedtime is the traditional time for a brief review of the day, with
thanksgiving for God's favors and confession of our failures.
21. Discuss the meaning of the words in the prayers of the Mass
so your kids will understand what they're saying in Church.
22. Pray the rosary and an occasional novena as a family.
Talk to your children about how the words of repetitive prayers
can press themselves deep into our hearts and free our minds to
meditate on the mysteries of faith.
23. Teach your children about the saints and how God has
granted us the great favor of their intercession. Join your family
in asking them to pray for you.
24. Tell your children about their guardian angel and teach
them to ask his protection daily. Read to them what the Catechism
of the Catholic Church has to say about the role of angels in
our lives (see sections 328-336).
25. Finally, remember that the best way to teach prayer is to
model it to your children. Make prayer a way of life. If your
family sees that you and God have frequent, intimate conversations,
they'll be more likely to want to build their own friendship with
Him.
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