We give our children exposure to a wide range of people in our culture - but from the good side of that culture.
What we don't do is either:
- Keep the children isolated from everyone who doesn't have "perfect" views (encouraging rebellion once they hit teenage years), or
- Let them interact with everybody and be taught by society to have worldly views.
We try to find the middle ground. This, for us, means:
- No television. We do watch media content - but do it online, where we can choose exactly what is being watched, and are not surprised by inappropriate advertising, programs, or state/corporate propaganda.
- Homeschooling (to avoid the destructive influence of the philosophies taught in schools today, and to avoid our children's day-to-day life being dominated by interactions with ungodly children).
- Giving children many opportunities to meet other people in settings where the majority of the people there are reasonably decent. Ours attend church youth groups / clubs from two different denominations, have regular homeschooling meetups with other Christian families, some attend martial arts training (in a discipline that focusses on the physical not the spiritual), hobby clubs etc.
- Giving them plenty of opportunities to interact with sensible adults.
We also always tell the children the truth - and make a major point of this. No santa, easter bunnies, tooth fairies - we tell them these are pretend. This means when we tell them something is real, they know we are also serious.
We will also answer
any question they ask. If they are mature enough to ask a question, they are mature enough to comprehend the answer to that question - but precisely that question. For instance, I had the following conversation with a 4-year-old (I think)
Child: "How did the baby get in Mummy's tummy?"
Me: "I put it there."
Child: "But
how did you put the baby there?"
Me: "How do you think I put the baby in Mummy's tummy?" (honestly, I was stalling for time while I thought of an honest yet age-appropriate answer!)
Child (thinking for a minute): "Through the same hole the baby comes out?"
Me: "Exactly."
Child left completely satisfied with that answer.
Note that in this conversation I gave
completely accurate answers to their questions - I didn't make up some sort of silly nonsense (storks, cabbage patches), or refuse to answer and leave them unsatisfied. However,
I only answered the actual question - I did not make the opposite mistake of sitting the child down and explaining sex to them. They weren't capable of understanding that - nor should they. They were capable of comprehending the precise answer to the actual question they asked, at just enough level of detail to satisfy their curiosity. Once they were satisfied their question had been answered, my job was done.
Applying that to culture - children will pick up all sorts of things from the culture around them. They will ask about "what does it mean to be gay", "how do you know if you are a boy", and so forth. The natural Christian reaction to such questions is often to launch into a knee-jerk moral lecture on "God says this and everything else is sin".
That is usually NOT the right answer - firstly, it's not actually the answer to the question they asked, and secondly it can easily be twisted to sound like "God is a moralising killjoy - so if I don't follow God I can have lots more fun". The correct answer is to think carefully about what question was actually asked, and then to precisely answer that actual question, accurately. I can demonstrate if this is something you'd find helpful.