“I didn’t do it!”, says Jesus. Likely story. Yes, we’ve heard it all before. Tony points to a rather humorous cartoon depiction on You Tube of the story in The Infancy Gospel of Thomas, chapter 9: The Gospel of Thomas: The Adventures of Little Jesus (by Martin McDonald). The suggestion that the child Jesus encouraged Zenon to try to fly is an editorial edition to the original story in that gospel. (The Mel-Gibson-like foreign language and subtitles are something else).

Here’s a translation of that story (from Greek recension A):

9 1 Now after certain days Jesus was playing in the upper story of a certain house, and one of the young children that played with him fell down from the house and died. And the other children when they saw it fled, and Jesus remained alone. 2 And the parents of him that was dead came and accused him that he had cast him down. And Jesus said: I did not cast him down. But they reviled him still. 3 Then Jesus leaped down from the roof and stood by the body of the child and cried with a loud voice and said: Zeno (for so was his name called) arise and tell me, did I cast you down? And straightway he arose and said: No, Lord, you did not cast me down, but did raise me up. And when they saw it they were amazed: and the parents of the child glorified God for the sign which had come to pass, and worshipped Jesus (translation by M.R. James, The Apocryphal New Testament: Translation and Notes [Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1924] with modifications).

Earlier I have commented on related matters in The Cursing Infant Jesus: Ancient vs. modern sensibilities (NT Apocrypha 1.2).