How A Theologian and A Child Practitioner Perceive Child Rights
Abstract
Christianity has its own unique way in perceiving child rights. This perception has been shaping the form
of child education either at Sunday schools or Christian schools. This study tries to depict a comprehensible
perspective on child rights in the lenses of Biblical perspectives and Christian theories on education. This
study is in the form of descriptive study involving two respondents, a theologian and a child practitioner
as participants. The data was mainly obtained from in depth interview with the participants, then analyzed
using framework based on the Bible, United Nation convention on child rights and educational theory
from Hill (1990). The findings showed that children have rights to be helped, to be loved, to be cared, to be
nurtured, to be educated and to be happy. These findings are in line with the UN convention on child rights
that categorized into four categories: the right to survival; the right to protection; the right to development;
and the right to participation. Thus, the role of parents and teachers are to provide teachable moments
through teaching for information, teaching for confirmation and teaching for transformation that will guide
the children to fully develop as human being created by God.