Welcome!

By registering with us, you'll be able to discuss, share and private message with other members of our community.

SignUp Now!
  • Welcome to Talk Jesus Christian Forums

    Celebrating 20 Years!

    A bible based, Jesus Christ centered community.

    Register Log In

Child like faith?

Then you do agree we can be perfect.
Good.
Yup Of course we can be perfect...Didn't He tell us to be perfect?
Matthew 5:48 (CJB)
48 Therefore, be perfect, just as your Father in heaven is perfect.

If He tells us to do something, it's doable...Maybe impossible but its always doable.
 
As others have indicated a natural child has a real faith in those who are taking care of him. In time as was also indicated, sometimes a child learns the hard way not to be so trusting of everyone. It is like the former that we are to come to God. By the time I really came to God, I was 32 years old. To come as I child I had to be able to set aside many wrong things that I has learned from my parents, and my teachers in public schools as well as my college professors. Down the road a ways I learned that I also at time needs to set aside some things that preachers and pastors had taught me. When we have already gotten so much error that we did not realize was error was people to trusted and respected, there comes a time to put aside that aside that error. The only way to do this is not through our logical reasoning, but by coming to Him as if we had never had any of those experiences and as if we had never learned all of those wrong things.

People who grew up in really Christians home are fortunate, but they also must grow toward God. If we have already grown crooked in places, it may be necessary to break the bones and reset them:

"For these things were done, that the scripture should be fulfilled, A bone of him shall not be broken." John 19:36

All of us likely had some bones that needed to be broken and reset...
 
As others have indicated a natural child has a real faith in those who are taking care of him. In time as was also indicated, sometimes a child learns the hard way not to be so trusting of everyone. It is like the former that we are to come to God. By the time I really came to God, I was 32 years old. To come as I child I had to be able to set aside many wrong things that I has learned from my parents, and my teachers in public schools as well as my college professors. Down the road a ways I learned that I also at time needs to set aside some things that preachers and pastors had taught me. When we have already gotten so much error that we did not realize was error was people to trusted and respected, there comes a time to put aside that aside that error. The only way to do this is not through our logical reasoning, but by coming to Him as if we had never had any of those experiences and as if we had never learned all of those wrong things.

People who grew up in really Christians home are fortunate, but they also must grow toward God. If we have already grown crooked in places, it may be necessary to break the bones and reset them:

"For these things were done, that the scripture should be fulfilled, A bone of him shall not be broken." John 19:36

All of us likely had some bones that needed to be broken and reset...
The problem with pastors is....They are people too..They put their pants on one leg at a time just like the rest of us....They're prone to mistakes just like the rest of us...Yet we Christians tend to put those poor people on pedestals and judge them when they lose their balance and fall off.
 
Yup Of course we can be perfect...Didn't He tell us to be perfect?
Matthew 5:48 (CJB)
48 Therefore, be perfect, just as your Father in heaven is perfect.

If He tells us to do something, it's doable...Maybe impossible but its always doable.
I'm glad we agree on this.

How long have you been a non-sinner?
 
The problem with pastors is....They are people too..They put their pants on one leg at a time just like the rest of us....They're prone to mistakes just like the rest of us...Yet we Christians tend to put those poor people on pedestals and judge them when they lose their balance and fall off.
Only the unregenerated "fall off".
Pastors that manifest that they are not reborn of God should be fled from.
 
I'm glad we agree on this.

How long have you been a non-sinner?
Ever since I was born again....Now whenever I slip and do something wrong, I confess my sin and He is faithful and just to forgive my sin and to cleanse me from all unrighteousness...restoring me to perfect righteousness 1 John 1:9
 
Worse than that.
I needed to kill the old man, and rely on the grace and love of God for a rebirth.
Thanks be to God for making it possible!
You don't need to kill the old man....he died when you were born again
 
Mark 10:14-15
But when Jesus saw it, he was indignant and said to them, “Let the children come to me; do not hinder them, for to such belongs the kingdom of God. Truly, I say to you, whoever does not receive the kingdom of God like a child shall not enter it.

  • Agreed and we have all witnessed it: "Simple Child-like faith"!
  • One of favorite verses showing God's love and acknowledgement of children.
  • Proves to me, up to some age of awareness, children are born saved!
  • Here is another verse: Matthew 18:6 "If anyone causes one of these little ones--those who believe in me--to stumble, it would be better for them to have a large millstone hung around their neck and to be drowned in the depths of the sea.
 
Ever since I was born again....Now whenever I slip and do something wrong, I confess my sin and He is faithful and just to forgive my sin and to cleanse me from all unrighteousness...restoring me to perfect righteousness 1 John 1:9
You are saying that God's seed CAN bring forth evil fruit.
That isn't biblical. (1 John 3:8-10)
If you haven't sinned since you were reborn, how can you still commit sin?
 
You don't need to kill the old man....he died when you were born again
I did need to kill the old man, to fulfill the verse..."For the wages of sin is death;..." (Rom 6:23)
And to fulfill the verse..."Some men's sins are open beforehand, going before to judgment; (death), and some men they follow after." (1 Tim 5:24)
Without that death, I would still be trying to satisfy the lusts of the flesh.
And walking in the flesh instead of in the Spirit.
And in darkness.
 
There was a time on talkjesus when every thread ended in a 'can you lose your salvation?' debate. Before that, there was a period when, no matter the subject, the thread would degenerate to a law v works squabble. Now it appears that it's impossible to get away from a debate about perfection. Anyway...

Looking at the circumstances of the original conversation might help with the meaning. The disciples were preventing the children from coming to Jesus. Why?

Perhaps because they did not have any power or influence, no wealth of their own, strength or great learning. They were not important or able to contribute much.

Jesus turn this on its head - 'unless you drop your ideas of your own importance, you cannot enter the kingdom.'
 
Greetings again,

I know I have already said it but I would like to re-say what I said before and will use the following words (how well they line up with that which i wrote before I do not know, but this has been repeating to me over the last few days in connection with this thread).
What I am seeing here is something that happens often when Christians get debating things. Namely that we find ourselves debating over concepts that have arisen out of traditional teaching passed on to us when we begin listening to men rather than the Lord, especially in regards to what is written in Scripture for us to read and see. We tend to somehow see the things we hear (or read in books or forums etc) and read the Scriptures with those glasses on. What happens is we then read things that are NOT there and leave out the bits that are. Because everything gets a heading to it in our minds, (understanding and interpretation being part of that) we come at Scripture with these headings and all we then see is the Scripture bits that align with those headings. As with the example here of Children and coming as children, etc. We completely overlook what IS written because it does not line up with that which we come at it with. We then begin discussing the man made precepts and eventually become divided at some point which is not at all what the Scriptures are given for. From there we tend to categorize one another depending on their talk. Again, this is rather than depending on God's talk which, as far as I understand, directs us like a captain directs a ship, to think not ourselves better than the next Christian man, nor forsake all the aspects of love and fruit in communicating and relationship with one another.
We can end up in a rather nasty and sticky web. I do not believe for a second that any one of us really wants that.

If we take an un-traditional look at the verses we tend to quote to talk about child like faith or similar expressions, we should be able to see, in the context of Scripture (NOT the context of tradition taught to us by others) that Jesus was throughout the 4 Gospels, some more evidently that others, (and the Apostle Paul filled up any that remained as he was set apart to do, called out of season) giving the Disciples (an other who would hear Him) the whole teaching that they were to understand as 'time' revealed it to them. Of course it was the Lord by His Spirit Who revealed it to them. After the resurrection of our Lord they understood much of what He had taught them. Some things He had told them specifically to not tell about until afterwards, also. I think that much of what He taught was really brought out to them after what we call Pentecost and from what I see in my own life, as an ongoing reminding of all that He did teach them, as needed for the purpose of keeping them and providing them with the things needed for each and every moment of their time here.

Getting to the Children part, it is reasonably clear, if we read the words and stop listening to the traditional ideas, that Jesus was saying to His disciples, who He was discipling/teaching/ preparing that, entering in to the Kingdom of Heaven meant first becoming children... which ,please remember, was not a favourable position in society in their tradition. Children were loved etc but they were children, not men. Even youth (what we might today classify as teen-agers up until around the 25 yo age) were not considered as men. Whn talkimng about being the greatest, remember, they were not thinking about the greatest from a child's perspective but as men who, like today, rally to be number one in near everything they do, even if in secret, and they were being not childish but serious about it. Someone great in a kingdom had to be a man, and that was a no-brainer, to them. Please try to see the next bit.
Except ye become as little children meant except ye are willing to have the staus of a child... you will not enter in. To where? The Scripture tells us the Kingdom of Heaven. we also know that Isaiah tells of Jesus as the Everlasting Father. Except we are willing to become His Children, we will not enter in. NOT, "except you start having child like faith".... No, it actually would take a much more adult style of strong faith to accept that sort of prerequisite.
We must remember that these men were completely surrounded by and living out all their traditions and culture. They were NOT yet born again. Children were children and definitely not men and I imagine that like today, a man being called childish would be taken as somewhat of an insult and a derogatory slap in the face. Not a compliment or a suggestion of the level of faith they had.
Consider the several times in the New Testament we see men addressed as children by the Apostles. Why? They were men. But did they take offence to it? I doubt it very much for they had become children of God through the new birth. Someone who is born is never born a man. They might be men-in-the-making but they are not men, but babes and children until they mature.

So, debating over other principals to hold up a wrong analogy of Scripture is rather silly... almost childish, but we do it! For example, debating about if we need to have child like faith to then have a child like innocence to enter in, is absurd at best. We all do it or have at least done it, although there may be one or two exceptions, but probably not.

Perhaps in a very simple way, I could ask, where in Scripture does it say, expressly, child like faith? Only Scripture without our slant on it? If anyone can show me, please do.

Look online, for example at this page where it is headed 'Faith of a Child' and is only Scripture. There are none that actually testify to 'Child like faith'. There are 100 verses under that heading. And it is in ESV which, being modern, if they could twist it to say 'Child like Faith" they would have. Some of these Scriptures are used regularly and have been for years, to back up this traditional teaching of 'Child like Faith'.
What Does the Bible Say About Faith Of A Child?

IN this webpage BIBLE VERSES ABOUT FAITH OF A CHILD which is KJV, there are much fewer verses but still no mention of 'Child Like Faith'

You might notice this one though....
Matthew 18:3 - And [Jesus] said, Verily I say unto you, Except ye be converted, and become as little children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven.
Except ye .. what? Have child like faith? or, be converted, which will result in you becoming as children (which is somewhat against the flesh and carnal way of becoming great or even being able to show your bearded head in public)... ye shall not enter the Kingdom of Heaven. Sort of losing ones life to save it. Losing face we might call it. It is SO important to be a man... isn't it, men? Really and honestly... being a man is and always has been very important. A man in every way we look and move and have our reputation. So, the result of being converted will render you as if you were children... and therefore need a daddy all over again when, after growing up, you are finally a man in your own right, has some reservations to it... but, except ye do..... no entry!
So are we to start behaving like children? Will that give us a free ticket. We know it won't. Except ye have childlike faith ye won't enter? No. Child like faith has no grip on reality. We need faith of men to accept that we will be OK becoming children of the King and not only OK but blessed by God Himself for trusting Him with full bottled faith of men. we are not called to stick our thumbs in our mouth and say goo goo gaa gaa and call that faith.
Jesus was also adding to all else He taught them about what was in front of them, which meant that they would understand when it all happened, and would be able to say to one another.. "do you remember how Jesus told us of these things? Now it all makes sense." It's like Jesus saying to them, "This is what it's all about... this new life you are called to" "You are going to become My Children and I, your Father"

Going back to what I said earlier, because I may have gone on too long, we must see that Jesus was talking to His disciples who He was preparing by the things He spoke and the things He did, for what was to come, and I do not think any of them had any idea that they would be such mighty Apostles and be setting up the Church and laying permanent foundations for it to grow on. 'Unless you are willing to become my Children, you can not enter the Kingdom of Heaven. If you will enter the Kingdom of Heaven you will be doing so as children, of Mine, not as men who make their own decisions.'
Remember that the Kingdom of Heaven is God's domain, not man's... our relationship with Him will be as His Children. All of us.
Our Father.... a group of children would pray that, wouldn't they? All of the teaching of Jesus to the Disciples can be seen clearly from our advantage point having them all written down for us and set out in our language if we both read through (or listen to a recording) the whole of a Gospel and hear what is actually being told to them. It becomes so evident. Jesus was preparing them. The point about becoming as little children was part of that preparation and instruction so that they would understand when the time was right.. and full. It was about the relationship principal of the Kingdom of Heaven between us and God.
He had been telling them for a long time already, which we can see in the Old Testament.

Anyone who has been world-set in their thinking and is to even consider the Gospel to be wortth considering, must muster up as much faith as possible as it really goes against the grain of our thinking as men. We don't come at such a total surrender on the amount of childish faith that a child would muster, We are overcoming our manhood and that needs to be met with at least as much manly faith.


Bless you ....><>
 
Mark 10:14-15
But when Jesus saw it, he was indignant and said to them, “Let the children come to me; do not hinder them, for to such belongs the kingdom of God. Truly, I say to you, whoever does not receive the kingdom of God like a child shall not enter it.

@Dave M
Greetings,

if we look at the context it is itself a bit strange.... Jesus was telling the Disiples about His earlier words regarding marriage and adultery and the next thing you know, they are bringing children to Him. Is that because children are the fruit of marriage? (I haven't thought that out yet, so I am only putting it out there)
BUT, read the following from Mark and see at least two things, (I underlined a couple of bits that i am commenting on but read it all - if you will, that is)

first, directly after telling about children, a man comes asking what he needs to do to inherit eternal life.
Why didn't Jesus say he needs to become as a child? Or is inheriting eternal life different from entering the Kingdom of Heaven?

Then notice down lower verse 24, He says to them (I think?) "Children...." or is he saying Ah, Children. How hard it is for them, children, that is, that trust in riches to enter the Kingdom of God."?

Notice three different things, Kingdom of Heaven, Eternal Life and Kingdom of God.

Did Jesus love this man (verse 21) because the man came as a child to Him? or was it that He loved him because that is what Jesus is like... or is it for some other reason?

11And he saith unto them, Whosoever shall put away his wife, and marry another, committeth adultery against her. 12And if a woman shall put away her husband, and be married to another, she committeth adultery. 13And they brought young children to him, that he should touch them: and his disciples rebuked those that brought them. 14But when Jesus saw it, he was much displeased, and said unto them, Suffer the little children to come unto me, and forbid them not: for of such is the kingdom of God. 15Verily I say unto you, Whosoever shall not receive the kingdom of God as a little child, he shall not enter therein. 16And he took them up in his arms, put his hands upon them, and blessed them.

17And when he was gone forth into the way, there came one running, and kneeled to him, and asked him, Good Master, what shall I do that I may inherit eternal life?

18 And Jesus said unto him, Why callest thou me good? there is none good but one, that is, God.

19Thou knowest the commandments, Do not commit adultery, Do not kill, Do not steal, Do not bear false witness, Defraud not, Honour thy father and mother. 20And he answered and said unto him, Master, all these have I observed from my youth. 21Then Jesus beholding him loved him, and said unto him, One thing thou lackest: go thy way, sell whatsoever thou hast, and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven: and come, take up the cross, and follow me. 22And he was sad at that saying, and went away grieved: for he had great possessions. 23And Jesus looked round about, and saith unto his disciples, How hardly shall they that have riches enter into the kingdom of God! 24And the disciples were astonished at his words. But Jesus answereth again, and saith unto them, Children, how hard is it for them that trust in riches to enter into the kingdom of God!

a few thoughts , if you don't mind. (you don't have to reply. I was only sharing a few observations, going over the passage you started this thread with)


Bless you ....><>
 
I did need to kill the old man, to fulfill the verse..."For the wages of sin is death;..." (Rom 6:23)
And to fulfill the verse..."Some men's sins are open beforehand, going before to judgment; (death), and some men they follow after." (1 Tim 5:24)
Without that death, I would still be trying to satisfy the lusts of the flesh.
And walking in the flesh instead of in the Spirit.
And in darkness.
So you're saying that the death Jesus suffered for you on the cross was not good enough? You're saying that what He could not do, you did for Him?
 
Unless you accept God’s kingdom in the simplicity of a child, you’ll never get in
 
The problem with pastors is....They are people too..They put their pants on one leg at a time just like the rest of us....They're prone to mistakes just like the rest of us...Yet we Christians tend to put those poor people on pedestals and judge them when they lose their balance and fall off.
Yes, this it true, but it is also so that they are in a special position with regard to the people of God. Let us pray for them!
 
Worse than that.
I needed to kill the old man, and rely on the grace and love of God for a rebirth.
Thanks be to God for making it possible!
Yes, while the old man still lives in any measure in us, we will be coming short of God's desire for us. It is too much of this, [the old man remaining in the contest], for too many who call themselves believers that makes this nation [The United States] a very in-Christian nation. Just calling yourself a Christian does not make you like Christ.
 
You don't need to kill the old man....he died when you were born again
Is this so? What is James saying?

"But the tongue can no man tame; it is an unruly evil, full of deadly poison.
Therewith bless we God, even the Father; and therewith curse we men, which are made after the similitude of God.
Out of the same mouth proceedeth blessing and cursing. My brethren, these things ought not so to be." James 3:8-10

It ought not so to be, but I have seen it too often in people. For Jesus on the one hand and for themselves or the devil on the other: double mindedness.

Jesus killed the "old man" of temptation in Himself and each of us need to do the same. Jesus paid the price to make it a possibility. We have the Holy Ghost and the written Scriptures to help us to make all the way to where God wants us to be.
 
Back
Top