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Coverage about ICCF:
Keeping the faith
Valley religious groups know that childhood is a
critical time to learn beliefs.
By Ron Orozco
The Fresno Bee
The traditional school year is upon us, which means that
places of worship are reinvigorating children's
education classes following summer's lull. In the
central San Joaquin Valley, various faiths emphasize
religious teaching for second- through sixth-graders who
don't go to religious schools. This becomes especially
important during the years when children are expected to
prepare for an important rite of passage, such as First
Communion or a bar or bat mitzvah.
Religions go about it in different ways.
While Mom and Dad are worshipping in the sanctuary or
taking a Sunday School class, some places of worship
provide children's classes at the same time. Others hold
midweek activities at night, and others provide
after-school classes.
Some faiths leave the curriculum up to program
coordinators, who decide to blend learning with
activities and few requirements. Others adhere to their
faith's governing bodies or boards, which often means a
stricter curriculum that is used across the country or
even around the world.
Regardless of the faith's approach or method, children's
education coordinators say their goal is to work with
parents while passing on the religion's tenets and
traditions.
"Faith is a personal choice and a choice of the family;
it's part of tradition and part of heritage," says
Sister Kathleen Garcia, religious education coordinator
at St. Anthony of Padua Catholic Church in Reedley.
"Part of it is handing on the heritage of a religion so
children will understand about religion and have a
personal relationship with God that develops all during
their life. . . . So, hopefully, when the hormones kick
in and the choice gets more difficult, they have
something to fall back on."
Religious education is designed to help parents explain
faith to their children in everyday life, religious
educators say.
"Other organizations are to support the family -- not to
take the place of the family," says Suzanne Reintjes,
former president of primary education for The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints' Woodward Park Ward in
northeast Fresno.
The educators believe what children learn early in life
goes a long way in helping them make decisions about
faith later, when they're on their own.
"They will need to process the information and make a
decision for themselves," says Forouz Radnejad, program
committee coordinator at the Islamic Cultural Center of
Fresno. "It's not: 'You are born into a Muslim family.'
You don't inherit a religion. You have to make your
choice."
The educators say their aim also is to present faith in
a clear, understandable way to children.
"When you get them when they're little, they probably
can't grasp some concepts, [but] something has stuck in
their mind," says Juanita Betancourt, St. Anthony of
Padua elementary coordinator.
Loosely structured
From Protestant evangelical churches to Sikh temples,
children's education leaders try to blend learning and
reinforcement of their faiths with some fun activities
to keep kids' attention.
On a recent summer Sunday at Sonrise Church of Clovis,
which has nearly 200 families, children in the fifth and
sixth grades look up Bible verses to solve a Digging for
Treasure crossword puzzle about God's nature.
The children recite a Bible verse written on a board as
a reminder to obey God's word (Luke 11:28).
Then they rush outdoors to join dozens of other kids for
the summer-ending Olympic program.
In a basketball-dribbling maze, Kory Krigbaum completes
the course in 21 seconds. In timed jump-roping, Krista
Whittaker completes 49 in 60 seconds.
There's also a Frisbee toss for distance.
Kids, waiting their turn, beam with excitement. So do
the parents supervising the activity.
Learning and having fun also are emphasized at Sonrise
children's classes during the traditional school year.
Kidz Jam is presented monthly, an event in which nearly
300 children and adults worship together at a
supercharged show featuring cranked-up music, videos and
drama.
AWANA Club (Approved Workmen Are Not Ashamed) is offered
Wednesday night with prescribed curriculum for story
time, games and Bible memory verse recitation in small
groups.
Students also have a handbook to learn at home and can
earn badges for work completion.
"We want to create an environment where children love to
go to church," says Russ Counts, Sonrise associate
pastor.
"Church should not be boring. . . . The childhood age is
brilliant because of their imagination and they live
life so quickly."
Sonrise also presents Heritage Builders classes for
adults, covering Communion, baptism and other
denominational teachings so they can better pass on the
faith to children.
This, Counts says, helps children to make informed
decisions, including professions of faith in Jesus
Christ.
Says Counts, "Salvation is a free gift offered to anyone
no matter what they've done -- past, present or what
they will do."M
At Gurdawa Sahib in central Fresno, children attend
two-hour classes on Sundays when adults are worshipping
in the temple.
The classes feature storytelling about the faith's 10
gurus, reading of the Guru Granthi (holy book) and
Punjabi language lessons.
Guddi Ranu, children's religion instructor at the
temple, says she's adapted her teaching style to the
more than 100 children who attend.
"At first, I was teaching whatever was on my mind, which
was mostly how my parents passed on the faith to me,"
says Ranu, who doesn't use a textbook.
"But I realized we couldn't do whatever they did back
home [in India] because kids ask so many questions."
Children enter the temple to participate in the close of
the adult service.
Some play harmoniums (small reed organs) and the tabla
(small drum).
Everyone else sings a hymn while blessing the food that
will be served following the service.
Tightly structured
Islam, Roman Catholicism and The Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints, among other faiths, conform to
tighter guidelines and have set requirements about
becoming members.
Islam, for example, teaches that parents should
concentrate on playing with their children in their
first seven years and teaching them in their next seven,
says the Islamic Cultural Center's Radnejad.
It's the reason the center in northeast Fresno offers a
world view of Islam and emphasizes the Prophet Muhammad
and other prophets, including Abraham, Moses, Noah, Adam
and Jesus.
"You cannot be a Muslim if you don't believe in Jesus,
Moses and the other prophets," Radnejad says.
The only requirements are that girls begin to pray
regularly by ages 9-10. For boys, it's ages 13-15.
"Girls mature faster," Radnejad says. Muslims are
required to pray five times daily, facing toward Mecca.
Says Radnejad, "Religion is a framework. Your belief in
God and a self-worth system will always help you in good
times and bad."
Roman Catholicism teaches that children must complete a
two-year preparation for First Communion as a
requirement of the faith.
In Reedley, St. Anthony of Padua presents Confraternity
of Christian Doctrine classes as outlined by the Roman
Catholic Diocese of Fresno. Children attend after-school
classes for an hour once a week, learning about the
Creation, the Resurrection and important events on the
Christian calendar, such as Easter, Ash Wednesday and
Lent.
Parents are asked to reinforce at home what children
learn in class.
The parish priest also takes an active role in the
children's spiritual development. In addition to hearing
confession, he visits classrooms and talks with
students.
Usually, the doctrinal requirements for First Communion
are completed in the second grade. Poor attendance or
failure to complete work means children have to retake
the class.
Says Juanita Betancourt, "I tell my [six] grandchildren:
'You're going to Mass -- you need to know your faith.' I
don't want them to stray to another faith."
Catholic youth also take additional classes as they
mature in preparation for Confirmation, when they become
adults in the eyes of the church.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints provides
a primary program that's universal in the Mormon church.
The ward uses a manual whose 2003 theme is "I Believe in
Jesus Christ."
Suzanne Reintjes says, "If you were to go visit a ward
in Connecticut, you'd find the same material used."
On Sunday, children remain with their parents at
sacramental and testimonial meetings in the sanctuary
for nearly an hour before being dismissed to two-hour
primary education.
In the Woodward Park Ward, all children, regardless of
grade level, gather for an hour. Some give talks on a
gospel theme. Everyone sings and prays together. Then
they attend class by grade for the second hour, focusing
on scriptural stories and values.
"The primary focus is to help children come to Christ
through the Scriptures, the Gospel, what they can do in
their own life to develop a relationship with Jesus
Christ and the heavenly father," Reintjes says.
The Mormon church teaches that it's family members'
responsibility to educate children about faith. It
advises parents to use guidebooks, "Faith in God for
Girls" or "Faith in God for Boys," as supplements to the
ward's primary education. Wards also have Wednesday
activity night for children and youth.
The church teaches that children reach the age of
accountability at age 8, when they can be baptized.
Reintjes says, "Because of that, they prepare for their
baptism by becoming familiar with what God expects of
them, how to make correct decisions, what is right and
wrong."
On the religious education of children, Radnejad says,
"It's healthy to society that its members believe in a
supreme being and start to evaluate their own behavior.
If we were to stay away from wrongdoing, we wouldn't
have the need for policemen on the street. I believe
having a religion is far better than not having a
religion."
The reporter can be reached at rorozco@fresnobee.com or
441-6304.
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