"As a general rule, children like attending Church,
and this instinctive attraction to and interest in Church services is the foundation
on which we must build our religious education. When parents worry that children
will get tired because services are long and are sorry for them, they usually
subconsciously express their concern not for their children but for themselves.
Children penetrate more easily than do adults into the world of ritual, of liturgical
symbolism. They feel and appreciate the atmosphere of our Church services. The
experience of Holiness, the sense of encounter with Someone Who is beyond daily
life, that mysterium tremendum that is at the root of all religion and
is the core of our services is more accessible to our children than it is to
us. 'Except ye become as little children,' these words apply to the
receptivity, the open-mindedness, the naturalness, which we lose when we grow
out of childhood. How many men have devoted their lives to the service of God
and consecrated themselves to the Church because from childhood they have kept
their love for the house of worship and the joy of liturgical experience! Therefore,
the first duty of parents and educators is to 'suffer little children and
forbid them not' (Matt. 19:14) to attend Church. It is in Church before
every place else that children must hear the word of God. In a classroom the
word is difficult to understand, it remains abstract, but in church it is in
its own element. In childhood we have the capacity to understand, not
intellectually, but with our whole being, that there is no greater joy on earth
than to be in Church, to participate in Church services, to breathe the
fragrance of the Kingdom of Heaven, which is 'the joy and peace
of the Holy Spirit.'