TEV = Today’s English Version
KJV = King James Version
Jesus Loves the Little Children
by
Josprel
In studying the earthly ministry of Jesus, one cannot help but notice that He loved children. He reserves a special place in His heart for them. Contrary even to some parents, the Lord never is too busy for children. During His earthly walk, He expressed a special tenderness towards them.
The Old Testament prophets predicted this. Isaiah wrote, "He shall gather the lambs with his arms, and carry them in his bosom" (Isaiah 40:11 KJV). An anonymous Eastern traveler told of witnessing what the prophet described. "One shepherd led his flock by a zigzag path, up the almost perpendicular bank of the glen. Behind it two young lambs trotted gaily along at the feet of their mother. At first they frisked about and jumped lightly from stone to stone; but soon they began to fall behind. The poor little things cried piteously when the path became steeper and the rocks higher, and the flock more distant. The mother cried too, running back and forth now lingering behind, now hasting on before, as if to wile them upwards. It was in vain. The ascent was too much for their feeble limbs. They stopped, trembling on the shelving cliff, and cried; the mother stopped and cried by their side. I thought they would certainly be lost; and I saw the great eagles that soared in great circles around the cliff far overhead, swooping lower and lower, as if to pounce upon their prey. But no! The plaintive cries of distress had already reached the ear of the good shepherd. Mounting a rock, he looked down, and saw the helpless little ones. A minute more, and he was standing by them. Then taking them up in his arms, he put them one on each side in his bosom, in the ample folds of his coat, which was bound round the waist by a girdle" ('The Pulpit Commentary'; Isaiah; Vol. II; P. 93).
What an appropriate description of our Good Shepherd, Jesus Christ. John Mark recorded that Jesus "took the children in His arms, placed His hands on each of them, and blessed them (The Gospel of Mark 10:16 TEV).”
Today’s public schools are inundated with anti-Biblical propaganda. Parents often fail to check on what their children are being taught. Christian parents should advantage themselves of whatever input they can give to their children's education. Visit the schools, become acquainted with school officials and teachers, attend parent/teachers meetings, inspect textbooks and other literature assigned for children’s reading. When a close friend of this writer did so, he discovered that one of his son's teachers often lectured her students on the advantages of the homosexual life-style. She distributed graphic pictures to the class and collected them before the class ended. The father vehemently protested to the district school superintendent, who did not know this was occurring. An investigation authenticated the situation. The teacher, not yet tenured, was fired.
Be involved with your schools; you owe it to your children.
Wise parents instill the knowledge of Jesus Christ in their children from infancy, doing as much as possible to counteract the anti Christian propaganda so prevalent today. One Sunday, when our services were cancelled because of a sever blizzard, my wife, Maria, and I tuned into the telecast of a popular evangelist. His message was on the topic of the media's systematic endeavor to counter all facets of American family life with humanistic propaganda. Aiming soap operas at women, daytime T.V. dwells on themes of extramarital and premarital sex, the validity of divorce on demand, the women's lib agenda, and the right to abortion on demand. Cable T.V. apparently is the worst offender in broadcasting such trash. Targeting men, evening cable T.V. broadcasts programs showing free sex, nudity and violence, while most of the weekend daytime cable T.V. broadcasts, target children, showing killings, violence, idolatry, cultism, and heathen brainwashing.
This writer had a conversation with a computer specialist regarding the media problem. She informed me that in computer programming one gets out what one puts in. She called it, "garbage in; garbage out." She then mentioned that, since the human brain operates somewhat like an infinite computer, the "garbage in; garbage out" factor remains valid to the human mind. What we feed into our minds is what we extract from them. As I mulled this over, it occurred to me that God warned of this in His word, when He said, "As he [a man] thinks in his heart, so is he" (Proverbs 23:7; KJV). The word 'thinks' in this passage is derived from a Hebrew word meaning 'gatekeeper.'
How appropriate! Parents must serve as the 'gatekeepers' of the minds of their children, since children develop into that which they think upon. For this reason, Satan attempts to capture young minds, with the purpose
of shaping them to his image, while they still are pliable.
Jesus taught that God is so concerned with children that He has assigned a special angel to each one, with a children's ministry portfolio. These angels have priority entrance into the Presence of the Father. The Lord warned, "See that you don't despise any of these little ones. Their angels in heaven, I tell you, are always in the presence of my Father in heaven" (Matthew 18:10; TEV).
A child, by nature, is a believer. Upon its birth, a baby has the potential to believe whatever it is taught. Jesus considers it an offence worthy of execution to stumble a child. So terrible is such an offence, that Jesus said it "were better for him [the offender] that a millstone were tied about his neck, and that he were drowned in the debt of the sea (Matthew 18:6).
An astounding execution! But how can an adult stumble a child?
This is done by the setting of an evil example. It can also be done by deliberately teaching a child to sin. At one of my pastorates, a judge paroled three children to me. The father had taught them to steal, lie and cheat. This they constantly did, until they were captured by the police. The father was imprisoned, and the mothe,r who was a good woman, took full custody of the children. and gave me a weekly report on their conduct. Though it required time, prayer and a great deal of patience, the father's influence on the children finally was broken.
A child also can be stumbled when it hears adults ridicule and sneer at what is pure and holy. Calling sins by softer names in order to not make them seem so evil also accomplishes this. This author would be overjoyed if every teacher, parent, clergyman, textbook publisher, and comic book writer could hear how Jesus feels about the stumbling of a child. According to Jesus, they and every child prostitution panderer and child molester deserves a millstone tied around the neck and being cast into the sea the special execution reserved for Roman criminals who had committed the worst types of crimes.
Jesus used children as the Christian's role model for entering His Kingdom. He desires for us to become childlike. In a debate His disciples had over who would be the greatest in the kingdom of heaven ". . . Jesus called a child, had him stand in front of them, and said, 'I assure you that unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the Kingdom of Heaven. The greatest in the Kingdom of Heaven is the one who humbles himself and becomes like this child. And whoever welcomes in my name one such child as this, welcomes me (Matthew 18:1 5; TEV).
The KJV uses the word 'converted' for the word 'change' employed by Today's English Version. Converted here involves a change of mind regarding priorities. In essence, Jesus told His disciples [and us] that to enter the Kingdom of Heaven, one must surrender worldly ambition.
Some time back, I took my four-year-old grandson, Anthony, to a local fast food restaurant. As we waited in line, a little girl - a total stranger, entered with her mother. Anthony and the girl looked at each other. Then, she embraced and kissed him. I marveled at the purity of the act and that Anthony seemed not to consider it unusual.
This is what Jesus meant about our becoming as little children. Their humility and simplicity, their guilelessness and believing hearts, must become ours. During my decades of ministry, I have noticed the above traits so innate in children. Many are the small gifts young children have brought my wife, Maria, and me. One has hung in my office at home for several years, now. It was presented to us by the five-year-old twin daughters of a newly born again young woman. Upon entering the church vestibule, where Maria and I usually stand to greet the people before they enter the sanctuary, the twins always insisted on kissing us on our cheeks. Maria would sit on a chair, and I would descend on my heels and the twins would embrace and kiss us.
Maria and I have two wonderful sons, but no daughters. However, had God blessed us with daughters, I would want them to be like those twins - innocent, loving, and acquainted with Jesus Christ. -30- © Josprel
josprel@verizon.net