My mom told me the other day that I’m doing a piss-poor job of giving my sons a strong religious base.
She’s right. To a point…
I grew up Lutheran. Church every Sunday, Sunday School, choir. Christmas Eve, Easter, etc. When my mom married husband #3, she started experimenting, taking us to different churches. My brother and I balked and were told that when we turned 18 we could choose our own church. Fair enough.
Now maybe if we would have continued going to the church we grew up in, or if we had stayed close by, things would have been different. But save for a few stints here and there, my wedding, other weddings, baptisms, concerts, etc., I haven’t really been to a church service in years.
And I am ok with that.
See, because I have faith and belief; I have spirituality, but don’t feel like I need to sit in a church to prove that. I pray, but on my own terms. I don’t believe everything the bible says - I believe it’s all open to interpretation, and that the men who wrote it likely put some of themselves into it, changed things around a bit. I believe it was meant to be a guide, not a rule book.
My kids are baptized. Matt knows the story of baby Jesus. My mom prays with them sometimes. We read Thank You God books. I don’t hide religion from them, I just don’t actively promote it.
I guess if that equals a piss-poor job, then that’s what I’m doing.
I have nothing against religion, organized or not. I think people should believe what they believe, in whatever way works for them. In fact, I kind of admire those who have such strong faith. I’ve learned a lot from Casey about her religion and from Ali and Metalia about theirs. I find it all very interesting. The only thing that bothers me about religion is when people push it on others. I appreciate their dedication, but have never understood (a) how the most “christian” people are the most judgmental (and how they justify their judgments by saying they are chrisitian) and (b) how the people who go door to door really really believe that doing so will really get people to jump on board. I can’t imagine someone coming to my door and me going “WOW, that sounds like a great concept, I’m in!”. Either way, you believe what you believe and I respect that. Apparently getting my mom to do the same is a lost cause.
On the other hand, perhaps I should be more actively teaching them about God and belief and faith. The problem is that I don’t want to teach them how I learned, so instead, I do nothing.
I’m open for suggestions. For those of you non-church goers, what, if anything, do you teach your children about faith and belief? I know you’re out there…in fact, I’ve found that many of my bloggy friends feel similar to the way I do. Are there books, stories, ideas that you share with your kids? Feel free to chime in. But remember, if you comment just to tell me I’m going to hell because I don’t take my kids to church, I’ll delete it. I’ve no time for such craziness.
Thanks friends.
