and you could try suggesting that we know about God because of those feelings of wonder and mystery. You can talk about God as the reason why all these things are. A good way to explain God's presence is like the game peekaboo - we catch glimpses of God, for instance in a sunset, or a smiles, or a moment of joy. But we can never see him.
Niminy- this absolutely is indoctrination, you just can't see it. I'll kindly explain why (so you don't embarrass yourself when a child like my dd calls you out on your presuppositions)..
You have used language that presupposes god actually exists, you even have the nerve to harness the natural curiosity that children have with the world around them and wedge god into it (the sunset, smiles, moments of joy) how dare you hijack those moments of enjoyment in a child's life and attribute them to god- and only the god you believe in. Thats absolutely not ok. god is NOT a reason for anything. A belief in god is called faith- that is the OPPOSITE of reason.
The other thing is to talk about Jesus who shows us the way to God because God came to us through him. You could tell her some of the stories of Jesus - the feeding of the five thousand or the calmness by of the storm - that show us what God is like: that God is generous and gives us everything g we have, that God helps us not to be afraid when we go through hard times. A simple child's Bible might help.
^I can't believe you don't see how saying something like this to a child is indoctrination, I'm actually staggered. The presupposition and the sureness of your words astound me..
and it is up to her how much she wants to know.
This presupposes that you know^ things, that what you are telling her is truth- thats vile indoctrination.
A good rule with children is to only answer the questions they ask - don't treat it as the opportunity to tell them everything
^Ha! a theist's credo.. 'don't ask, don't tell' and when they do ask, only tell them the fluffy bunny version. Why wouldn't you take the opportunity to research things alongside them? because that would mean answering some very difficult questions that may expose your delusion to a child...children are very good at doing that.
Answer them as honestly as you can in a 'this is what I believe' kind of way. That way you are not 'trying to convert' her but you are being open and honest about who you are
^The wording of your first two paragraphs completely contradicts this.
Come back and defend yourself as to why you think thats an appropriate why to explain 'god' to a child. Because if you said that to my child- she would ask you for evidence, all children should be taught that.