
Family
Spirituality
Six daily routines that
foster family faith
Learn French in your
sleep! I remember seeing that headline on an ad years ago. It
sounded too good to be true, and it probably was. But recent research
shows that your child can learn his or her faith, if not while asleep,
at least while getting ready for bed. And while eating breakfast,
talking around the kitchen table, and enjoying Christmas, to boot.
Princeton Sociologist Robert
Wuthnow discovered that the prime source of faith for self-described
"religious" people was the way faith permeated the daily
life of their family. Time and again they pointed to variations on
six common family activities. Wuthnow says his study showed that religious
formation happens when "specific, deliberate religious activities
. . . are firmly intertwined with the daily habits of family routines."
He adds, "Compared with these practices, the formal teachings
of religious leaders often pale in significance. Yet when such practices
are present, formal teachings also become more important."
So, parents, pay attention
to these six at-home opportunities as theyre practiced (religiously
or not) in your home. Think of ways to enhance them in your home.
eating:
Time and time again I come across data showing the extreme value of
the family meal. When you sit down to eat together regularly, say
grace before meals, and share information about your lives, you provide
your children with one of the most potent ways of forming their faith.
sleeping:
Bedtime rituals are a great opportunity to introduce prayer naturally
to your children. Spend time talking at bedtime and youll hear
questions they never would have asked in daylight. Its easy
then to introduce your belief in Gods providence and care, which
can accompany them through the night. Invite them to pray about the
joys and worries of the day.
having
conversations: Think
about the quality of conversations you have with your kids. Decades
ago, children spent hours a day in conversation with adult family
members. Now it maybe reduced to a few minutes of information exchange,
order giving, or reprimands. A friend rues the day she got an automatic
dishwasher because it ended the practice of standing at the sink gabbing
with one or another of her children every night. You dont have
to go out of your way to lace your conversation with talk of values,
character, and holiness. Your values and character and everyday brand
of holiness will come through if you talk (and listen) long enough.
adorning
your living spaces:
Good religious art is becoming easier to find (call Religious Resources
International at 800-648-8350 for their catalog). Is there a Bible
within easy reach in your home? A crucifix on the wall? Art that reflects
your values? Catholic magazines or newspapers? Any indications at
all that people of faith live in your home?
celebrating
the holidays: The
religious roots of most of our holidays provide their true significance.
But those religious underpinnings get lost amidst the secular celebrations.
Remedy that by going back to family traditions from your past or by
researching religious holiday practices and adopting them as your
own. The good news is that with kids, if they like the practice and
if you do it twice in a row, it becomes the "way weve always
done it."
being part
of a community: Kids
take much of their identity from the groups they belong to, e.g.,
Bulls fans, kids who love NSync, kids who hate NSync,
kids who talk endlessly about Star Wars, or the goof-offs who
go up and down my alley every Saturday night knocking down garbage
cans. These groups are generally harmless. But we can do better than
that for our kids. Initiate your children into a community of faith
by making your parish your community, too. Sign up at the rectory.
Talk to people you meet at church. Participate in ways that appeal
to you. Doing so will round out your childs identity as more
than a child of a consumeristic age.
You dont have
to make a big production out of these routines. Just emphasize the
ways your own faith shines through. After all, children dont
learn their faith from instructors; they learn from witnesses. (Based
on ideas from Growing Up Religious: Christians and Jews and Their
Journeys of Faith, by Robert Wuthnow, Beacon Press, 1999.) TJM
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