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RE: Parenting Observations...WHY IS NOAH'S ARK A THING??
I feel that these baby and toddler targeted religious toys and books come from the unfortunate idea that religion must be taught as early as possible to make sure it sticks. I get things like baptism, where you feel it's washing away original sin and such, but it seems to me the people making these products lack the faith that a child can come to the truth when their older and capable of properly processing the information.
That Titanic movie is a bit more of an oddity. A terrible oddity with a rapping dog, created out of a misguided (seemingly at least) idea of what children like.
For us, it never comes from a desire to "teach religion" to our kids. We want them to be aware of the Father organically and wholistically because it's a part of our daily life, not something forced into a specific time frame or building. I really don't think a toddler is capable of understanding the story of the Flood, and I'm still so perplexed at why it's considered a kids' story. And I'm looking forward to watching my son grow in knowledge as he watches us, learns from us, and observes reality, not repeating canned phrases. :)
And...that Titanic movie may be an oddity, but even the fact that it (and two others??) exist is mind-boggling. I'm assuming you've at least seen a review of that movie, since you mention the rapping dog. I really wish I could get "Party Time" out of my head.
Oh thanks, I DID have "Party Time" out of my head :P
I've watched a couple of comprehensive reviews on it, yes. Pretty much saying the same thing: how is this even a thing?!
Personally I think the organic way is the way to go. I'm primarily skeptical of these publishers who distort the story to fit children. I remember a number of bible stories that I later found out I was taught wrong, or at least with a spin that completely misses the message. Noah's Arc definitely being one of them.
I don't support Christianity myself, but I support some of the messages and certainly respect the stories and their influence. To tamper with that to market to children seems very wrong and outright disrespectful.