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Should it be considered child abuse to tell a child that he or she may be going to Hell?
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Child abuse might be a bit strong but I suppose it is. I remember my mum telling me about hell when I was about 4/5 years old, probably to shut me up. It was probably effective for 10 minutes till the next time I was reminded where I was heading. Lazy parenting I think, but I don't know if it did any lasting damage except scare me a little bit. Whether this likely false information was beneficial or detrimental to me... who can tell?
Ah, interesting, and I think you may be onto something here. I think that many parents who abuse their children do so in part because they choose not to open their minds to more effective and benevolent parenting tactics. Rather, they resort to simply overpowering the child, no matter what the effects on the child are--the seed of all child abuse.
Should it be considered child abuse to tell a child that he or she may be going to Hell?
Inflicting emotional pain on children as a part of the education is an issue that imo gets far too little attention in general.Should it be considered child abuse to tell a child that he or she may be going to Hell?
Should it be considered child abuse to tell a child that he or she may be going to Hell?
And if a person who is against abortion would ask this question - would you find yourself able and willing to answer it?is a person who is probably for abortion really in such a position to ask a question? Pro-abortionists are in no position to make ethical decisions or moral decisions since they have no moral ground to stand on in the first place.
Yes its wrong to warn your own child about Hell just as Christ warned everyone, but its ok to kill your own unborn child if it impedes your life.
here is a clear example of liberal logic..
Holy Roller said:It's society abuse when we don't discipline our children and they grow up to be street thugs.
By warning them of the danger of spending an eternity with the devil we are saving their souls. We're also raising civilized adult human beings.
This response made me laugh abit at the sheer arrogance and dogmatic approach.It's society abuse when we don't discipline our children and they grow up to be street thugs.
By warning them of the danger of spending an eternity with the devil we are saving their souls. We're also raising civilized adult human beings.
You´ll be going to Hell if you do.Should it be considered child abuse to tell a child that he or she may be going to Hell?
Inflicting emotional pain on children as a part of the education is an issue that imo gets far too little attention in general.
I think if we want to start legislating against such issues we would first have to change the widely held paradigm that parents are entitled to raise their kids as they see fit.
On another note, there are a lot of technical problems with legislating against emotional violence against children inflicted upon them by their parents.
Education is the key. Parents are the products of their own upbringing, and the children they bring up will be parents in the future.
What's odd is the people who voted, "Yes, telling your kid he's going to hell should be made illegal" are the same people who voted against making adultery illegal in my thread. Why the hypocrisy?
is a person who is probably for abortion really in such a position to ask a question? Pro-abortionists are in no position to make ethical decisions or moral decisions since they have no moral ground to stand on in the first place.
Yes its wrong to warn your own child about Hell just as Christ warned everyone, but its ok to kill your own unborn child if it impedes your life.
here is a clear example of liberal logic..
I would vote - except you didn't specify what age the child is.
It is my understanding and belief that children under the age of accountability do not go to Hell. The exact age of accountability is unknown - and likely varies, it's more of a comprehension-measure. For speculative purposes only, I would surmise it to be anywhere from around 13 to 21, depending upon the maturity of the person.
I don't have any problem with children being taught the concept of belief and the consequence of unbelief - which is eternal separation from God. I do have a problem with hinging it on behavior, or using it as a disciplinary tool.
That said, I don't think that it is child abuse.
Tell them a lie long enough and loud enough and they'll believe it.
Hell is a lie, and thus should not be told to children.
Are you advocating that parents should not be allowed to raise their children under whatever belief system they have, simply because others feel it is untrue?Tell them a lie long enough and loud enough and they'll believe it.
Hell is a lie, and thus should not be told to children.
Are you advocating that parents should not be allowed to raise their children under whatever belief system they have, simply because others feel it is untrue?
Does that mean that it is your opinion that homosexual couples who have adopted should not be allowed to raise their children to believe that homosexuality is good and is not a choice (opinions held by many on this site), simply because other people disagree and believe this to be a lie?
Or Buddhists, Muslims, Wiccans, etc. should not be allowed to teach their children their beliefs?
I believe that Hell is real. I teach my children that Hell is real. I teach my children my beliefs in Christ and how I believe we are to treat other people. I don't threaten them with Hell - that's crossing a line that no human has the right to cross, imo.
My children, the older ones who have lived through it, are aware of the long road it took to reach my beliefs. My youngest, who is 3, will be raised in a Christian home - but he will also be told of my journey. I don't believe in making them ignorant of other beliefs (as a matter of fact we have a kids' book that I have had for about 10 years now that specifically talks about various religions), but I do teach them that Christ is the only way to God.
My oldest son, 24, was raised by an atheist/agnostic - namely me. He doesn't believe - I don't denigrate him for that, nor do I tell him he is going to Hell. I do tell him about my own beliefs - when he wants to talk about it, not as a chastisement.
Perhaps I am misunderstanding the question. I don't think it is child abuse for anyone to teach their children their beliefs - whether I think they are wrong or not. I DO think it is child abuse to use those beliefs to denigrate them ("you are an evil child, you are going to Hell for doing that") or as a tool of discipline.
I guess my basic problem with the question is that I can't fathom doing that in the first place. Yes, I believe in Hell and teach my beliefs to my kids. But I also teach them love, respect, honesty and that no-one is unworthy - and that the working of the Holy Spirit is what draws people to God - not the threat of Hell. Holding that over MY head never worked - I wouldn't presume to think it would with anyone else either.
Sorry if this got long and rambling - I was trying to talk to someone and type this post at the same time.![]()