| PARENTINGTalking to Your Children About 
                the Hard Stuff in LifeBy Bruce Bickel & Stan Jantz
 CBN.com  
                It’s hard enough for adults to make sense of life’s 
                difficulties—disease, divorce, and death (and those are 
                just a few that start with “D”!). But just try explaining 
                them to a child. It just may be one of the more challenging things 
                a parent has to do. What do you say to a youngster who wonders why a hurricane would 
                kill so many people and leave so many more homeless? How do you 
                explain the suffering of millions of children in Africa who have 
                been orphaned as a result of the AIDS pandemic? What’s the 
                best way to comfort a child caught in the middle of a custody 
                battle?  Bruce Bickel and Stan Jantz, authors of the newly released God 
                Is in the Hard Stuff (Barbour Publishing), know how difficult 
                it can be to talk with a child about the hard stuff in life. And 
                they think they have some practical advice that will help. “Children want honest answers that can help make sense 
                of the suffering in the world,” says Bickel. “The 
                worst thing we adults can do is avoid talking about it, hoping 
                they will move on to another subject.” “Most adults can wrestle with tough issues over time and 
                still maintain a relatively normal life,” Jantz adds. “But 
                a kid may not be able to move on until his or her questions are 
                answered.” Bickel and Jantz have come up with a short checklist that parents 
                (and others who work with children) can use when talking with 
                kids about the hard stuff in life and the suffering it can cause. 
                Whether the topic is the latest natural disaster or the loss of 
                the family pet, these principles will help frame the conversation. 1. Make sure you have a correct spiritual understanding 
                of suffering.   Before you can respond to a child’s questions about suffering, 
                you need to understand how suffering fits into the world and, 
                more importantly, how suffering fits into God’s plan for 
                the world. If a child has been taught that God loves them, he 
                or she may want to know why a loving God could allow such bad 
                things to happen. 2. Determine your child’s degree of interest. Before you begin to offer explanations and insights into a particular 
                issue, make sure you know the level of your child’s interest. 
                A younger child who just wants a simple answer may be overwhelmed 
                if you try to say too much. 3. Emphasize the sovereignty of God (but don’t 
                use words like “sovereignty”). If a child is asking questions about suffering, it’s not 
                too early to introduce the concept of the sovereignty of God. 
                A child who is troubled by a world where it seems like God doesn’t 
                care needs to be reassured that He is in control. Just because 
                God is allowing certain things to happen does not mean He is unable 
                or unwilling to help us. 4. Bring an eternal perspective to your conversation. It’s important to talk to children about heaven, not as 
                some fairy-tale place, but as a real eternal home that God is 
                preparing for them. If a child understands that there is more 
                to life than our present difficulties, he or she will be much 
                better equipped to handle them. 5. Endure your own suffering with a proper perspective. Children are incredibly perceptive. If they sense that you have 
                not placed your own struggles into an eternal perspective, they 
                will be less likely to listen to what you have to say. Have you 
                committed your own burdens and trials to God? Do you trust Him 
                for the outcome? Your own faith in the sovereign God who loves 
                you will be a great comfort to your children.  These are not easy issues to deal with—neither for adults 
                nor children. But they need to be addressed, because suffering 
                is a part of our world. “Suffering of any kind is hard,” 
                the authors write, “but it’s nothing to be ashamed 
                of. In fact, those who suffer gain a perspective on life and an 
                appreciation for God that others do not have.” Related Links:
 Read an excerpt of God 
                is in the Hard Stuff. Visit the authors' Web site. 
 Article used with permission. Unauthorized duplication prohibited. 
                  
 
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