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THE THEOLOGICAL LIFE OF A CALIFORNIA CHILD. 767
simply an improved earth. More than five hundred children locate it “in
she sky,” ““in the clouds,” or ¢¢ up.” The next most common location is
*“ where the good go” or ‘where God is;” while a few say it is ““in the
sarth,” “all about us,” “on some star,” or “in the east,” ‘“and no one
n a balloon could reach it, it is so far away.” More arguments are pro-
duced to prove the location of heaven than to prove any other one point.
Christ, they say, ascended ; Elijah went up; and several close the argu-
ment for locating it in the sky by saying : ¢“ Besides, where else could
it be 27
Among those who are in heaven, four hundred and eighty-two
mention angels ; three hundred and sixty-seven, God ; four hundred and
twelve, the redeemed ; and sixty-four, Christ. A few mention dead rela-
ives, the saints, Santa Claus, and unborn babies.
Heaven is most commonly described as ‘“a beautiful place ;” but large
numbers describe it as ‘“ a city,” ‘“a mansion,” “a palace,” <‘a fine
house,” “a garden,” or ‘‘a park.” It has streets and gates, plants,
flowers, birds, and trees. The concrete particular most commonly men-
tioned is gold. The streets are of gold, the walks are of gold, the houses
are of gold, and one boy has the angels eat gold bread. Several say there
is no night, and opinion is about equally divided as to whether there are
animals in heaven.
The redeemed and the angels are generally the same. Three hundred
and forty-six children mention their wings ; nearly the same number
speak of them as looking like people dressed in white. A considerable
aumber say they are women, because they never heard of any men being
angels, while a few say they are fairies, birds, ghosts, or little babies.
Several think of them as always small, others as having ¢¢ just babies’ heads
and wings,”
The appearance is sometimes carefully described, as when a girl of
thirteen says : I think they wear white gowns shirred around the neck 7s
and she adds: “I should think the boys and girls would wear their hair
alike.” Another says : “I thought angels were all the same size : that
even if before they died they were fat, they grew thin.”
The activities of the redeemed, or the angels, furnish the most difficult
detail in the children’s theology. Several say they do not know what the
angels do ; but most of the papers represent them as flying around, play-
ing on harps, and singing praises to God. Sometimes they are said to
help God, and a very few have them help the people on earth. Children
of twelve or thirteen often mention the monotony of the life.
Several mention the angels as carrying the souls of the dead to heaven,
and bringing babies to the earth. Some of the children declare that the
angels work, while an equal number say no one works in heaven. To some
of the children this freedom from work is the chief attraction.
The evil spirit and his abode are pictured far less often and with less