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Home » TRANSCRIPT: 7 Lies Your Kids Will Believe Unless You Do Something – Elizabeth Urbanowicz

TRANSCRIPT: 7 Lies Your Kids Will Believe Unless You Do Something – Elizabeth Urbanowicz

Read the full transcript of Mike Winger’s conversation with author Elizabeth Urbanowicz on “7 Lies Your Kids Will Believe Unless You Do Something.”

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

MIKE WINGER: All right, we’re going to talk today about lies that your kids are probably going to believe even though nobody’s directly telling them these lies. These are things that we absorb from culture because nowadays, unlike in the past, like if you live in a farm culture back in like rural wherever 200 years ago, your kids are exposed to this much of the world’s culture, but now it’s in the cell phones and it’s in the music and it’s in the YouTubers that they follow and it’s in the TV shows that they watch.

And we’re consuming so much that I started calling this world culture because it’s like sort of like planetary, you know, internet-supplied culture. And to talk to you about the lies that your kids will believe, the things that they will swallow, we’re going to talk to Elizabeth Urbanowicz who’s going to be going through these specific lies. She has a lot of experience dealing with these types of things.

She’ll tell more about her experience later, but I thought first just say welcome, Elizabeth. This is the Bible Thinker crowd and Bible Thinker crowd, this is Elizabeth. Thanks for joining us.

ELIZABETH URBANOWICZ: Thanks so much for having me on today, Pastor Mike.

Lie #1: Truth is Subjective

MIKE WINGER: Yeah, absolutely. And I’m looking forward to this. Let’s just jump straight into it, then we’ll talk more about you and the program you’ve got and all that other stuff. What is the first lie that you’ve experienced with kids that you’ve dealt with?

ELIZABETH URBANOWICZ: Yes. So lie number one and what I would say is most foundational that we have to deal with with our kids is the lie that if I feel it, it must be true or just this lie that truth is subjective. And as I started working with kids and really helping them start to think critically and start to think biblically, I was shocked to discover how deeply ingrained this lie is. And the more I have worked with parents and pastors and Christian educators, the more I’ve seen how shocked they are in not even understanding that our kids have just absorbed this lie from culture.

When I first started creating resources for others, I started getting monthly and now weekly emails from others saying, oh my goodness, like I had no idea that here I am teaching my kids the truth. We talk about truth all the time and they think that the truth isn’t true for everyone. Because one of the activities that I give people to do is just whether it’s with the kids at home or at church or in Christian school is just to ask them the question, is the truth true for everyone? Is the truth true for everyone?

And then give the kids a sticky note and have them write down either yes or no and then a justification for why. Is it true for everyone or is it not and why do you think that? And parents and pastors and teachers are always shocked that usually more than half the kids in their care say no, the truth isn’t true for everyone. It depends on who you are.

MIKE WINGER: Just to pause you for a second and tell people a couple of things real quick. Do this if you can. Do this with your kids. No pressure. You just ask them and have them write down their answer. Walk them through this. These are the kinds of things you don’t know they’re believing because they’re not expressed outward but then they really affect worldview. And so we’re walking them through this and Elizabeth has got a lot of experience.

This is why for you guys I wanted her to come and talk to you about this. She’s dealt with hundreds and hundreds of kids and she’s actually developed a program for teaching worldview to kids which by the way is not easy. Okay, I do all kinds of thinking biblically stuff but the idea of teaching it to like kids under like 10, under 7, this starts to get a lot more difficult and you have a special skill set. That’s why we brought you on here.

So please continue.

ELIZABETH URBANOWICZ: Yes. And so usually the older the child is when we start to work with them on this, just the more deeply ingrained it is and the more reformative work that we have to do where if we can begin with 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 year olds about thinking about the concept of truth, we can be much more formational rather than reformational in our work. And a lot of times as Christians it’s tricky to cover this concept of truth because truth isn’t necessarily outlined directly in scripture.

It’s just everywhere assumed just because 150 years ago, no matter what worldview you adhered to, you thought that truth was true for everyone, that truth was objective, that there were absolute truths out there where now our culture just believes something so completely different. So a lot of times all we do is we have our kids memorized John 14:6, Jesus is the way, the truth, and the life. We’re like, okay, there, we did it. We covered truth with kids.

When we look at that passage, Jesus is talking about him being a true representation of who God is because he is God. He’s showing his disciples who the Father is. But then when we stop and think about it and think like, okay, well, what is truth? How do I actually get my kids to understand that truth is objective, that what we need to do is we need to help them discern the difference between objective truths and subjective preferences.

And those of you who are into the world of theology and apologetics and philosophy, you probably know the correspondence theory of truth backwards and forwards, or this might be a new thing for you, that truth is that which corresponds with reality.