Excellent for both encouragement and educating. As someone who has only read through catechisms and never been a catechumen before I found this to be extremely helpful in practical application of an important tool that is fading.. but one that I believe would do the Church and families well to be customary once again. Also shares a brief but interesting history on the history of children’s Sunday school and how it came to be.. (I’ll let you read to find out) To share a few brief tastings from the book…:
1) (possibly my favorite quote from the book) “If we expect children to mature, to stand fast for the truth, to contend earnestly for the faith, to resist the great deceiver, and to fight as the saints who nobly fought of old, they will need basic training more rigorous than making slingshots to understand the story of David and Goliath.”
2) “Everyone except Christians seems to realize that little children are easily indoctrinated.. We remember that Francis Xavier, a Jesuit missionary in the sixteenth century, was reported to have said, “Give me the children until they are seven, anyone may have them after.” In our day, the television networks and their sponsors also recognize that children are impressionable! Their minds, hearts, and affections, are soft and malleable.”
3) “We do not take our children through the training ground of the wilderness merely to leave their bleached bones on the border of Canaan or have them whimper on the banks of Jordan. Instead send them into the land of wickedness, of giants and castles, for “they shall be dust beneath your feet,” says the Almighty. “O brethren,” said Richard Baxter, “what a blow we may give the kingdom of darkness by the faithful and skillful managing of this work [catechizing].”