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When Small Hearts Carry Big Fears — Teaching Children to Name Anxiety

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Spiritual Formation & Emotional Well-Being

When Small Hearts Carry Big Fears — Teaching Children to Name Anxiety

  • October 22, 2023
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Kemi stopped joining the memory-verse games. She used to leap across the carpet with the other kids, but lately she sat quietly, fingers twisting the hem of her dress. At parents’ night, her mother confessed: “She’s been waking up afraid — worried about exams, fights at home, and weird videos she saw on a phone.”

The teacher could have offered a bland “just trust God” line and moved on. Instead, she brought Kemi a small “worry jar” the next week — a decorated jar and little slips of paper. “Write the fear,” she said, “and fold it to the Lord.” Kemi’s first slip read: “What if Daddy leaves?” The teacher prayed with her, read a short Psalm, and taught a breathing prayer: breathe in “God with me,” breathe out “I am safe.”

Within weeks, Kemi began naming fears instead of letting them rule her. Naming allowed her to give them away.

  • Five Practical Steps for Ministers & Parents

    1. Name It Together. Teach children to label feelings — “I’m worried,” “I’m sad.” Naming reduces fear.

    2. Short Spiritual Practices. Breath prayers, sticky-note prayers, tactile worry-jars, 1-minute gratitude checks.

    3. Teach Truth in Story Form. Use a short story + Scripture to show God cares about small hearts.

    4. Normalize Seeking Help. Combine prayer with practical help — a calm corner, a trusted volunteer, or professional care when needed.

    5. Model Emotional Honesty. Let adults say, “I felt anxious today and I prayed about it.” Kids learn authenticity.

Controversial take: too many churches spiritualize trauma. “Pray more” is not always enough. Faith must stand with wisdom. When we only spiritualize, we risk shaming children whose brains need skills as much as souls need scripture. Be gospel-full and practice-smart.

Scripture Meets Soul-Skills

The Bible never divorces heart from help. David wrote truth when he was terrified: “When I am afraid, I put my trust in you.” — Psalm 56:3. Paul gives a practical prescription: “Do not be anxious about anything… present your requests to God” — Philippians 4:6-7. That’s both prayer and practice.

 

Jesus didn’t ignore emotions — He entered them. He comforted, wept, and taught. Spiritual formation for children must be both biblical and psychologically wise.

When children learn a language for their feelings, they don’t become fragile — they become resilient. Helping them say “I’m scared” and then handing them a scripture + a breath technique is not coddling — it’s equipping. Jesus taught us to bring the littlest concerns to the Father; our job is to give children both language and tools to do it.

Teach Them to Name It — Then Take It to Jesus

Spiritual formation isn’t only doctrine; it’s formation of the heart. Help kids name fears, practice simple spiritual disciplines, and watch faith grow from trembling to trusting

This week, teach one child a 30-second breathing prayer and a one-sentence scripture to say afterwards. See what changes.

Share on:
When Doubt Knocks — Creating a Safe Space for Honest Questions
When Parents Outsourced Heaven — The Church That Forgot Its Role

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