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A child should be taught spirituality from the very first moment he sees the light of day.

When the child cries for the first time, the mother must ask herself why the child has cried.

Is it because the child saw ignorance-sea for the first time and became afraid, or is it because the child is missing the light and delight which he was wont to enjoy?

If the mother feels that it is ignorance-sea which has frightened the child, then inwardly she must tell the child that this ignorance-sea is short-lived, and that soon he will be swimming in wisdom-sea and enjoying supreme satisfaction.

If the mother feels that it is the separation from Heaven-Light that has compelled the child to cry, then inwardly she must tell the child that God is not only in Heaven but also on earth.

She must tell the child that God sent him down to earth to fulfil a special purpose.

In either case, the mother must speak to the inner reality of the child, which is the soul.

Outwardly, also, you can start a child's spiritual journey at a very tender age — at six months even.

Perhaps the child cannot utter a word, but, for example, if you are a Christian you can show him a picture of the Christ.

God expresses Himself through beauty, so you can also show the child something beautiful, like a flower.

A child can appreciate the beauty of a flower.

At that time, the flower itself is God for the child.

Then, when the child can speak, let him say 'God' a few times as his prayer.

As he advances in years, he can be taught higher meditation.

You give your child the only real freedom when you give him the truth, the reality.

Real freedom does not lie in striking someone or moving around like a vagabond.

No!

Real freedom lies in doing everything the way God wants us to do it.

That is freedom.

God is all light, all freedom, and if we listen to Him, only then do we enjoy real freedom.

Sometimes parents ask me how they can describe to a small child something like prayer or meditation, which they feel is abstract.

But for an adult, prayer and meditation are not abstract.

When we pray, we fold our hands and cry inwardly to Someone who is above us or within us.

If you want to explain prayer to a young child, do not try to convince him only with the physical.

Tell him that prayer is something totally different from just folding his hands and looking up.

Tell him that prayer is something that he has to do inside, but if he wants to see or feel it, then he has to fold his hands.

You can tell a child that prayer is something which he will feel when he folds his hands and talks to God.

Then, when he folds his hands and feels something within — whether it is awe or love or sweetness or softness — then for him prayer will no longer be abstract; it will be a reality.

For meditation, the child has to sit calmly and quietly.

When he sits like that, immediately he will begin to feel that he is meditating.

This concrete action will take him into something which originally may seem abstract.

You can teach a child through outer action, but do not neglect to emphasise the inner feeling.

When he starts feeling joy, peace and love and gradually becomes these things on the strength of his meditation, how can they remain abstract?

His body is not abstract to him because he identifies with his body.

Whatever he identifies with, he claims as his own.

If he identifies himself with prayer or meditation, he will feel peace, joy, love and so on.

And once he feels these things, he gives form to them and they no longer remain abstract.

Prayer and meditation are like two roads.

Prayer is always done for our own sake, for our own life, for the near and dear ones in our own small world.

But meditation is for the entire world.

When we meditate well, we feel our oneness with our own expanded reality and fulfil not only ourselves but the entire world.

Prayer is necessary and meditation is necessary.

When I pray, I talk and my Father listen.

When I meditate, my Father talks and I listen.

When we pray, we go up to God; when we meditate, God comes down to us.

Ultimately it is the same.

Right from childhood, we are taught to pray to God for everything.

Our parents teach us to pray, but they do not teach us what to pray for.

They say, "Pray to God for everything you want."

So we start praying: "O God, please make me be first in the examination"; "O God, let me be first in the running race"; and so on.

When we start praying for all these kinds of things, there is no end.

Instead, parents should say to their children, "Pray to God to make your mind calm and quiet so that you will feel peace and bliss everywhere.

Pray in the heart."

But unfortunately, the parents do not tell this to their children, so from early childhood, children pray for every silly thing.

Still, it is certainly better to pray to God for silly things than not to think of God at all.

The better thing is to meditate.

If children are taught how to meditate, they will not develop the habit of expecting God to fulfil their desires.

You should tell your children, "If you meditate, your mind will be calm and quiet.

You will become totally one with the vastness of Infinity and God will become your Friend."

From:Sri Chinmoy,A child's heart and a child's dreams, Aum Publications, 1986
Sourced from https://srichinmoylibrary.com/chd