Years
ago, I asked fifth-grade students to prepare a list of questions to ask Jesus
if He were to show up in person the following week. I also asked groups of
adults to do the same thing. The results were startlingly different. The kids’
questions ranged from adorable to poignant: “Will we have to sit around in
robes and sing all day in heaven? Will my puppy be in heaven? Were the whales
in or out of the ark? How’s my grandpa doing up there with You?” Almost without
fail, their questions were free from doubt that heaven existed or that God acts
supernaturally.
Adults,
on the other hand, featured a completely different line of questioning: “Why do
bad things happen to good people? How do I know You’re listening to my prayers?
Why is there only one way to heaven? How could a loving God let this tragedy
happen to me?”
For the
most part, children live life unfettered by the cares and sorrows that burden
adults. Their faith lets them trust God more readily. While we adults often get
lost in trials and sorrows, children retain the psalmist’s view of life—an
eternal perspective that sees the greatness of God (Ps. 8:1-2).
God can be trusted, and He longs for us to trust Him the way children do (Matt. 18:3).