
4 Ways to Make Your Kids Hate Christianity
May 12, 2025Dana Dill
As my little ones are growing up (too quickly), I am finding that good parenting involves saying the word “No” a lot. I need to say “No” when my daughter wants to stick her finger in the electrical outlet. I have to strongly reject her wishes to lay down in the middle of the street. When she wants to go for a quick run with the kitchen knife, I have to deny her the experience. The simple fact is this: loving your children in a dangerous world demands that you use word “No” regularly.
Not only is this true of physically harmful things, but the spiritually harmful things too. Christian parents have to say no to things that could possibly prepare our kids to buy empty promises of the world that only lead to destruction and dissatisfaction. The word “No” is vital to use for the spiritual health of our children.
Four Dangers a “No”-Culture Can Cause
However, saying “No” too often about too much, especially about spiritually poignant matters, poses a danger. Natasha Crain puts her finger directly on it:
In a world like this, parents must increasingly say “no.” A lot. But if we’re not careful in how we execute our counter-cultural living, our kids can start seeing us like the alarmist…and resent Christianity because of it.
Natasha goes further to examine four major ways that Christian parents unintentionally cause their children to resent Christianity as they do the necessary work of saying “No.”
1) We focus more on the dangers of the world than on the beauty of Christianity
Our kids’ view of Christianity will be warped if the only time it ever comes up is when we’re talking about what’s ugly about the world and not as much, or at all, about what’s beautiful about Jesus. Crain says:
In a world that seems to be going crazier by the second, it’s easy to spend more time pointing out the darkness of culture than the light of Christianity. Now, don’t get me wrong; we absolutely need to make our kids aware of cultural dangers. But when we don’t consistently point them back to the beauty of the Christian worldview which renders our culture so ugly in the first place, our faith will become defined by what we’re against more than what we’re for.
As they say, you catch more bees with honey, not vinegar. By all means, expose the ugly lies about the world, but don’t neglect relishing in the beautiful truths about Christ.
2) We spend more time addressing what is problematic about culture than why it’s problematic
A “no” culture can overemphasize the results and neglect the reason for their inadequacy.
When the message our kids hear is an ongoing stream of don’ts without meaningful explanation—don’t listen to this music, don’t visit these sites, don’t use this social media platform, don’t subscribe to this magazine, don’t join this political movement—they’ll start to wonder if our level of concern about the world is warranted. And meaningful explanation requires demonstrating how the problems actually relate to the Christian worldview. Simply telling our kids that a movie has violence and they shouldn’t watch it, for example, is hardly a meaningful explanation. Why is that a problem for Christians? How can that affect us spiritually? Where should we draw the line? These kinds of questions should regularly be discussed.
If we’re only saying no then our parenting is reduced to cutting off the bad fruit without ever helping our kids see the poisoned root. Since the what is always downstream of the why, focusing only on the what can make our kids ignorant altogether of the why. Make sure your not only pointing out behavioral symptoms of bad culture, but its underlying sickness of belief.
3) We frame our lives in terms of worldly limits more than Christian freedom
A “no”-culture can make our kids think Christianity is limiting them rather than freeing them.
I often see ex-Christians comment about the freedom they feel in “letting go of God.” The language they use to describe their deconversion says so much. They saw religion as a limiting approach to life and therefore felt freer after shedding their beliefs in God. But as Christians we know that we are not free in our natural state at all—we are slaves to sin. When we put our faith in Jesus, we are given a new nature that is free from such bondage (Romans 6:18).
The reality, therefore, is that only Christians are actually free.
Jesus has come not to limit our life, but to give us life and life abundant (John 10:10). There are “no’s” inherent in following Christ, but those aren’t intended to limit our kids, but to free them from what limits them.
4) We focus more on authoritative parental decisions than on cultivating the skill of discernment
Reducing our parenting to “no’s” hinders our kids from maturing into wise adults. It keeps the training wheels on them so they never learn how to ride the bike of life themselves.
In many cases, parents have a bigger perspective than kids can possibly have given their limited life experiences. We have to make certain decisions on our kids’ behalves. But if we consistently present our “counter-cultural” lives as a series of decisions made by mom and dad (albeit for good reason), kids will naturally resent what they feel has been forced upon them. To the degree we can, we should always strive to cultivate our kids’ skill of discernment by involving them in the thought process of our decision making. After all, the second they walk out our door as adults, “authoritative parental decisions” no longer apply.
Whenever we need to say “no”, especially with our older children, we should use it as an opportunity to train them to think about what the issue in question presupposes (what kind of beliefs must someone have to make this a good thing?), promises (what does this thing offer and do you think it will deliver?), or prohibits (how would this thing make it harder to live the free life Christ offers you?).
You can read her whole post here.
A last word, Natasha recommends a book by my friend, apologist Brett Kunkle, that seeks to explain, “Why culture matters and how to handle topics with your kids such as pornography, the hookup culture, sexual orientation, gender identity, affluence and consumerism, addiction, entertainment, and racial tension.” This may be a good read to do with your kids to void the problems above and get you into the habit of saying “no” wisely while avoiding a “no”-culture.