Who is God? Teaching Kids About God Through Nature
Sacrificial Love in Marriage
âLoveâ can be defined in many ways. Christâs love for us is an unconditional love, and this is the love we are to seek in marriage.
July 9, 2026
Understanding an unseen God is easier for children to grasp when we look at nature.
Estimated reading time: 7 minutes
Seeing God in nature comes naturally to children.
My family was sitting around the table one Sunday evening, enjoying an all-too-frequent dinner selection of pizza, carrot sticks, and root beer. Our daughters were chatting about the morning at church. It was all light and fun, but then 6-year-old Isabelle turned things serious: âI believe in God, and I love Jesus so much. But I can never hear God. Why canât we hear God or see God?
I suppose most kids donât progress much beyond a âbig handsâ notion of a super-intelligence governing the cosmos. He instructed His people and declared His truth. Who hasnât wondered why He doesnât speak with that same audible clarity today?
Itâs not a question parents can answer in a tidy sound bite. Recognizing when God speaks, when His Word gives instruction to our lives or when His Spirit nudges us in a certain direction, is an ongoing part of every faith journey. But my response that night wasnât about the Bible or the Holy Spirit. I told my daughter that when I see and hear the things God has made, itâs very much like I am hearing and seeing Him.
A simplistic answer, perhaps. And certainly not the end of that conversation. But creation is an important part of Godâs revelation to humankind. No, we canât fully understand Godâs message without encountering the truth of His Word and the gift of His Son, but for kids just becoming aware of what a faith in âthings not seenâ really means, this tangible world gives parents a powerful opportunity to reinforce key aspects of Godâs character.
One rainy evening a few years back, we were shopping for kidsâ shoes when I turned to see Isabelle standing perfectly still in the main aisle, staring toward the front of the store. From where I stood, I couldnât see anything interesting. A few clothing racks, some checkout lanes.
âIzzy,â I said, âcan you come here?â
She didnât respond. Couldnât respond, it seemed. I walked over and knelt down next to her. From her angle, I could see out through the windows at the front of the store. A stunning sunset was breaking through the rain clouds and enflaming the western sky. It was changing quicklyâa dark front was rumbling in to re-shroud those brilliant colorsâso I stayed down next to my daughter. âItâs like God made a painting that moves,â I said.
Isabelle was only two at the time, four years before she would ask why she couldnât see or hear God, but the moment assured me of the truth of the psalmistâs words: âThe heavens declare the glory of God.â (Psalm 19:1). Yes, at times God may feel distant and âwordless,â but other times His proclamations and presence are truly undeniableâto young and old alike. As parents, do we stop amid the flurry of family life to recognize those moments when the King throws back the curtains to declare His glory?
My girls have all gone through a little stage where they enjoy understanding the differences between the things God has made and the things people have made. Theyâll ask if God made the moon, the elephants at the zoo, the houses on our street, those really big telephone poles. Of course, there are really only two answers to these questions: 1) God made it, or 2) People made it using stuff that God made.
Iâve enjoyed watching my girls grow in their awareness of the sheer scale of Godâs creativity and powerâpower to design the rhinoceros and the rain forests, snowflakes and the solar system. No, we canât yet look upon Godâs face, but His power and divine nature surround us and are âclearly perceivedâ by the things that have been made (Romans 1:20).
I was saying good night to my youngest daughter, 3-year-old Lexi, after a day spent at a nearby reservoir. âDid God really make all those mountains?â she asked.
âYes,â I said. âAnd the birds and the trees.â
âWell,â Lexi said, settling in with Ella, her stuffed elephant, âHe must have really big hands.â
I suppose most kids donât progress too far beyond a âbig handsâ notion of a super-intelligence who governs the cosmos. Not that we as parents can truly comprehend the scope of that majesty, either. But a limited understanding shouldnât stop us from appreciating, with our kids, that this world clearly demonstrates the power and divinity of the Creator.
Does nature reveal Godâs love? Scripture teaches that Godâs love was primarily demonstrated to us in the sacrifice of His Son (Romans 5:8). But the apostle Paul also taught that God uses nature to testify to His goodness, giving ârains from heaven and fruitful season, satisfying your hearts with food and gladnessâ (Acts 14:17). I think we all experience some degree of Godâs love and goodness to us when we enjoy the sights and sounds and tastes of this world. A friend once said, âI donât know how you canât believe in Godâs love once youâve had a really good mango.â
We canât grow mangos in our familyâs backyard, but we have some raspberry bushes and a few fruit trees. On late summer mornings, our girls enjoy running down to the garden to see if any berries are âreadyâânot that being unready ever prevents them from enjoying these tastes of Godâs goodness.
As you raise your children to understand the reality of Godâs love, study Scripture together and thank Him for the gift of His Son. But if you can ever do this while sharing a bowl of fresh fruitâall the better.
âWhy doesnât God just make it rain?â my oldest daughter, Mikayla, asked one evening last June as a wildfire raged near our community. It was the second blisteringly hot summer in a row that wildfires were a big part of our conversations and prayers.
Natural disasters can seem incompatible with our view of a world created by an all-powerful, all-loving God. But kids will also wonder why this world is filled with all other manners of misery and death. Scorching deserts and deadly cold winter nights. Vicious hyenas. Cancer. Did God really make these things?
Not all of them, or at least not in their current state. Yes, this world was crafted by God, and in it we see His glory and power and love reflected, but we canât forget that this world has been sickened by the consequences of sin. Creation, Paul wrote, continually suffers the pains of its âbondage to corruptionâ (Romans 8:21).
I donât know if we can help our kids see a clear-cut distinction between Godâs perfect design and our fallen world, although imagining a pre-fall Eden with tornadoes and man-eating tigers is challenging. But we can always remind our children that sin brought all death into this world, and the infection remains to this day.
The story doesnât end there, however. Someday Godâs redemption will be complete. Just as God saved us, so too will He redeem all the things He has made. And we who trust in the Savior will experience the full glory of the Creatorâand of His creation (Romans 8:18-25).
Teaching kids about God from Scripture can be helped by pointing out examples in nature. âThe heavens declare the glory of God.â (Psalm 19:1). Even though we canât see God, we can see the things he has made and learn about Him.
Nature teaches us that God is merciful and loves even his enemies. âFor he makes his sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends rain on the just and on the unjustâ (Matthew 5:45). Nature also teaches us that God is faithful, trustworthy, and unchanging, since He makes the sun rise every day, and sustains the world (Psalm 19:1-6).
How it works
Once you click Generate, Ollama reads this article and crafts 5 comprehension questions. Your answers are graded against the article content â general knowledge won't be enough. Score 70+ to count toward your certificate.
Questions are cached â you'll always get the same 5 for this article.