Stages of Age and How to Deal with Them

1. Basic principles for all stages
-
Establishing a relationship of love and friendship between the servant and the child.
-
Respecting the child’s personality and feelings and never harming or insulting him.
-
Using encouragement and praise instead of rebuke.
-
Defending the child before others without justifying mistakes.
2. Understanding the nature of early childhood
-
The child responds through senses more than intellect; therefore, his senses must be engaged with visuals, movement, and sounds.
-
Church teaching tools are more effective than long explanations.
-
Coptic rites (candles, incense, icons, hymns…) nourish the child’s senses and deepen his belonging.
3. The child’s abilities and talents
-
His memory is very strong; what is memorized at this age remains for life.
-
He loves repetition, refrain, singing, and movement, so lessons should be melodic or dramatic.
-
He imitates easily; therefore, the servant must be a model.
4. The child’s imagination
-
His imagination is wide and should not be considered lying.
-
He loves fantasy stories, angels, animals, and miracles.
-
Stories teach him indirectly and fix values in his mind.
5. The role of stories in spiritual upbringing
-
Children need many stories from Scripture, saints’ lives, virtues, and even animals.
-
Adults who lack stories fail to attract children.
-
Grandmothers are loved because they tell stories; servants should be the same.
6. Planting faith through receiving, not reasoning
-
The child is in a “receiving stage,” not a stage of argument.
-
He accepts what he sees: the sign of the cross, prayers, fasting, and God’s love.
-
Atheism is foreign to human nature; the child accepts God without questioning.
7. Warning against fear-based teaching
-
Do not frighten the child with God, the church, martyrdom, or trials.
-
Show God’s love, care, blessings, and gifts instead.
-
Stories of martyrs should focus on their glory, not their suffering.
8. Building the spiritual memory
-
The child stores everything in his subconscious.
-
What is planted early cannot be removed easily.
-
His memory must be filled with hymns, prayers, verses, and spiritual stories.
9. Stages of spiritual and educational growth
-
Nursery and early childhood: the stage of receiving.
-
Late childhood (primary): the stage of teaching and understanding.
-
Preparatory and secondary: the stage of dialogue.
-
University: the stage of deep and elevated dialogue.
For better translation support, please contact the center.




