To expand on Chris's answer, the problem is that the browser is rendering the text you write in the same way as it renders any other piece of html, which means white space (including carriage returns) is treated as a word separator, not a line or paragraph separator. And multiple consecutive white space characters are condensed down to a single space. This is explained further in the html spec.
This is different to how it treats text within a textarea element.
So as Chris suggested, you need to replace carriage returns in your string with html <br> elements:
var enteredText = document.getElementById("TextArea").value;
var updatedText = enteredText.replace(/\n/g, '<br />');
document.write(updatedText);
Note: you should be able to get the textarea's value directly with .value rather than saying .childNodes[0].nodeValue.
Note 2: I second what Chris said about document.write() - it is usually not the best option.
Note 3: If you're catering for non-Windows system you may also need to replace \r.
txt_element.value. – RobG Nov 7 '11 at 5:12