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Evangelizing Children
For many believers, fulfilling Christ’s
command to make disciples of all nations
begins at home—with their children. In fact,
few experiences bring greater joy to Christian
parents than seeing their children come to faith
in Christ.
The process of evangelizing one’s children,
however, can be a daunting task. For many
parents, the questions are as practical as they are
disconcerting: How should I present the gospel
to my children? What’s the best approach to
take? How do I know if I’m doing it right?
Pitfalls, both real and imagined, intimidate
virtually every parent who contemplates this
responsibility. On one hand, there’s the danger
of leading children to think they are saved when
they are not. On the other, there’s the risk of
discouraging children who express a genuine
desire to follow Christ.
How, then, should we evangelize our children?
The answer to this question is not an easy one,
but it begins with recognizing and avoiding
some of the common pitfalls in child evangelism.
Common Pitfalls in Evangelizing Children
Oversimplifying the Gospel of Christ
Because a child’s comprehension is less developed
than an adult’s, the temptation for many
parents is to oversimplify the message of the
gospel when they evangelize their children.
Sometimes this stems from canned or
programmed approaches to child evangelism,
which often abbreviate the gospel, downplay
the demands of the gospel, or leave out key
aspects of the gospel altogether.
Like adults, children must be able to understand
the gospel clearly before they can be saved. This
involves grasping concepts such as good and
evil, sin and punishment, repentance and faith,
God’s holiness and wrath against sin, the deity
of Christ and His atonement for sin, and the
resurrection and lordship of Christ. Certainly
parents need to use terminology children can
comprehend and be clear in communicating the
message, but when Scripture talks about
teaching children spiritual truth, the emphasis
is on thoroughness (Deuteronomy 6:6–7).
Oversimplification is a greater danger than
giving too much detail. It is the truth—found in
God’s Word—that saves, but that truth must be
understood.
Coercing a Profession of Faith
Whether parents present the gospel in an oversimplified
or thorough manner, many solicit
some kind of active response to that message. It
could be a show of hands in a group setting, a
rote repetition of “the sinner’s prayer,” or
almost anything that may be counted as a positive
response. Children will almost always
respond in whatever way parents ask—not at all
guaranteeing real acts of faith in Christ.
Rather than getting their children to pray “the
sinner’s prayer” or enticing them into a superficial
response, parents must faithfully, patiently,
and thoroughly teach them the gospel and diligently
pray for their salvation, always bearing in
mind that God is the One who saves. There is
no need to pressure or coerce a confession from
the mouth of a child, for genuine repentance
will bring forth its own confession as the Lord
opens the heart in response to the gospel. And
as time goes by, it is never right to reinforce to
the child that a childhood prayer is evidence of
salvation.
Assuming the Reality of Regeneration
The next pitfall is assuming with certainty that a
child’s positive response to the gospel is fullfledged
saving faith. The temptation here is to
regard regeneration as a settled matter because
of an outward indication that the child has
believed. One cannot assume, however, that
every profession of faith reflects a genuine work
of God in the heart (Matt. 7:21–23), and this is
particularly true of children.
Children often respond positively to the gospel
for a host of reasons, many of which are unrelated
to any awareness of sin or real understanding
of spiritual truth. Many children, for
example, profess faith because of peer pressure
at church or a desire to please their parents.
In addition, Scripture indicates that children
tend to be immature (1 Cor. 13:11; 14:20),
naive (Prov. 1:4), foolish (Prov. 22:15), capricious
(Isaiah 3:4), inconsistent and fickle (Matt.
11:16–17), and unstable and easily deceived
(Eph. 4:14). Children often think they have
understood the ramifications of a given commitment
when they have not. Their judgment is
shallow and their ability to see the implications
of their decisions is very weak. Despite the best
of intentions, they seldom have the ability to
think far beyond today, nor do they perceive the
extent to which their choices will affect
tomorrow. This makes children more vulnerable
to self-deception, and it makes it more difficult
for a parent to discern God’s saving work in
their hearts.
For this reason, only when a child’s stated
convictions and beliefs are tested by circumstances
in life as he matures do parents begin to
learn more conclusively his spiritual direction.
While many people do make a genuine commitment
to Christ when young, many others—
perhaps most—don’t come to an adequate
understanding of the gospel until their teenage
years. Others who profess Christ in childhood
turn away. It is only appropriate, then, that
parents move cautiously in affirming a child’s
profession of faith and not be quick to take any
show of commitment as decisive proof of
conversion.
Assuring the Child of Salvation
After becoming convinced their child is saved,
many parents seek to give that child verbal
assurance of his salvation. As a consequence, the
church is filled with teenagers and adults whose
hearts are devoid of real love for Christ, but
who think they are genuine Christians because
of something they did as children.
It is the role of the Holy Spirit—not the
parent—to give assurance of salvation (Rom.
8:15–16). Too many people whose hearts are
utterly cold to the things of the Lord believe
they are going to heaven simply because they
responded positively as children to an evangelistic
invitation. Having “asked Jesus to come
into their hearts,” they were then given a false
assurance and taught never to examine themselves
and never to entertain any doubt about
their salvation. Parents should commend and
rejoice in the evidence of real salvation in the
lives of their children only when they know the
child understands the gospel, believes it, and
manifests the genuine evidence of true salvation—
devotion to Christ, obedience to the
Word, and love for others.
Rushing the Ordinance of Baptism
A final pitfall for many parents is having the
child baptized immediately after he professes
faith. Although Scripture commands that
believers be baptized (Matt. 28:19; Acts 2:38),
it is best not to rush into the ordinance in the
case of a child. As previously stated, it is
extremely difficult to recognize genuine salvation
in children. Rather than rushing them into
baptism after an initial profession, then, it is
wiser to take the ongoing opportunity to
interact with them and wait for more significant
evidence of lasting commitment. Even if a child
can say enough in a testimony to make it
reasonably clear that he understands and
embraces the gospel, baptism should wait until
he manifests evidence of regeneration that is
independent of parental control.
Here at Grace Community Church, our general
practice is to wait until a professing child has
reached the age of twelve. Because baptism is
seen as something clear and final, our primary
concern is that when a younger child is baptized
he tends to look to that experience as proof that
he was saved. Therefore, in the case of an unregenerate
child who is baptized—which is not
uncommon in the church at large—baptism
actually does him a disservice. It is better to wait
until the reality to which baptism testifies can be
more easily discerned.
Foundational Keys to Evangelizing Children
It is not enough for parents simply to avoid
these common pitfalls—they must also seek to
put into practice the following keys to child
evangelism.
Setting a Consistent Example of Godliness
Evangelizing children consists not simply of
verbalizing the gospel with one’s mouth, but
also of exemplifying it in one’s life. As parents
explain the truths of God’s Word, children have
the unique opportunity to observe their lives up
close and to see whether they seriously believe
what they are teaching. When parents are
faithful not only to proclaim, but also to live out
the gospel, the impact is profound.
Because marriage is a picture of Christ’s relationship
with the church (Eph. 5:22–33), the
relationship between the parents as husband
and wife is particularly significant. In fact, aside
from the parents’ fundamental commitment to
Christ, the single most important foundation for
successful parenting is a healthy, Christcentered
marriage. Setting a consistent example
of godliness is indispensable.
Proclaiming the Complete Gospel of Christ
The heart of evangelism is the gospel, “for it is
the power of God for salvation to everyone who
believes” (Rom. 1:16). If a child is to repent and
believe in Christ, then, it will be through the
proclamation of the message of the cross (1 Cor.
1:18–25; 2 Tim. 3:15; James 1:18; 1 Peter
1:23–25). Children will not be saved apart from
the gospel.
For this reason, parents need to teach their children
the law of God, teach them the gospel of
divine grace, show them their need for a Savior,
and point them to Jesus Christ as the only
One who can save them. It is best to start from
the beginning—God, creation, the fall, sin,
salvation, and Christ in His life, death, and
resurrection.
As they teach their children, parents must resist
the temptation to downplay or soften the
demands of the gospel and must proclaim the
message in its fullness. The need to surrender to
the lordship of Christ, for example, is not too
difficult for children to understand. Any child
who is old enough to understand the basic
gospel is also able by God’s grace to trust Him
completely and respond with the purest, most
sincere kind of repentance.
The key is to be clear and thorough. Parents
more than anyone have ample time and opportunity
to explain and illustrate gospel truths, to
correct misunderstandings, and to clarify and
review the most difficult aspects of the message.
The wise parent will be faithful, patient, and
persistent, being careful to look at every
moment of the child’s life as a teaching opportunity
(Deut. 6:6–7).
One such teaching opportunity is found in the
parents’ responsibility to discipline and correct
their children when they are disobedient (Eph.
6:4). Rather than seeking simply to modify
behavior, the wise parent will look at discipline
as an opportunity to help his children become
aware of their failure and inability to obey, and
subsequently, their need for forgiveness in
Christ. In this way, discipline and correction are
used to bring children to a sober assessment of
themselves as sinners and to lead to the cross of
Christ where sinners can be forgiven.
As parents explain the gospel and exhort their
children to respond to the gospel, it is best to
avoid an emphasis on external actions, such as
praying “the sinner’s prayer.” There is an
urgency inherent in the gospel message itself—
and it is right for parents to impress that
urgency on the child’s heart—but the focus
should be kept on the internal response
Scripture calls for from sinners: repentance from
sin and faith in Christ. As parents diligently
teach the gospel and take opportunities each
day to instruct their children in the truth of
God’s Word, they can begin to look for signs
that their children have indeed repented and
believed.
Understanding the Biblical Evidences of Salvation
The evidence that someone has genuinely
repented of his sin and believed in Christ is the
same in a child as it is in an adult—spiritual
transformation. According to Scripture, true
believers follow Christ (John 10:27), confess
their sins (1 John 1:9), love their brothers
(1 John 3:14), obey God’s commandments
(1 John 2:3; John 15:14), do the will of God
(Matt. 12:50), abide in God’s Word (John
8:31), keep God’s Word (John 17:6), and do
good works (Eph. 2:10).
Parents should look for an increasing measure
of this kind of fruit in their children’s lives as
they continue to instruct them in the truths of
the gospel. In addition, parents should be
fervent in their efforts to teach their children
about Christ and their need for salvation, but
they should also recognize that an essential
part of that work is to guard them from
thinking they are saved when they are not.
Understanding the biblical evidences of salvation—
and explaining them to one’s children—is
foundational to this work of protection.
Encouraging Possible Signs of Conversion
Because of the immaturity and fickleness of children,
it is tempting for some parents to write off
childlike expressions of faith as trivial, or even
meaningless. In contrast, parents should
encourage every sign of faith in their children
and use the opportunity to teach them even
more about Christ and the gospel. When a child
expresses a desire to learn about Jesus, parents
should feed that desire and encourage the child
when they see possible signs of conversion.
Even if parents conclude it’s too early to regard
their child’s interest in Christ as mature faith,
they must not deride a profession of faith as
false, for it may be the seed from which mature
faith will later emerge. Instead, the parent
should continue to point that child toward
Christ, teaching the truth of God’s Word with
patience and diligence, and always looking to
the One who is able to open hearts to respond
to the gospel.
Trusting the Absolute Sovereignty of God
The greatest need of children is to be born
again. Regeneration, however, is not something
that parents can do for them. Parents may pressure
their children into a false profession, but
genuine faith and repentance can only be
granted by God who regenerates the heart. Put
simply, the new birth is the work of the Holy
Spirit and Him alone (John 3:8).
The salvation of children, then, cannot be
produced by the faithfulness or diligence of
parents, but only by the sovereign work of God
Himself. Such a realization should bring
comfort to parents. In addition, it should motivate
them to bathe their evangelistic efforts in
prayer to the One who does His work where
they cannot—in the child’s heart.
Parts of this article were adapted from John MacArthur, What the
Bible Says About Parenting (Nashville: W Publishing Group, 2000);
John MacArthur, The Gospel According to the Apostles (Nashville:
Word Publishing, 2000); Dennis Gundersen, Your Child’s Profession
of Faith (Amityville, N.Y.: Calvary Press, 1994); and Tedd Tripp,
Shepherding a Child’s Heart (Wapwallopen, Penn.: Shepherd Press,
1995). For a fuller treatment of child evangelism, consult these
resources.