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09-05-2002, 01:27 PM | #91 |
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So, I will pass the test, then, if I write "I'm right and everyone else is wrong"?
Sounds easy enough! A lot easier than raising kids, in fact (that was a rather weak attempt to link this to the topic ) love Helen |
09-05-2002, 02:47 PM | #92 |
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I would like to add my two cents on this question. I am middle aged and very non-religious but I was a teenager long ago. I am now married but no kids, so I am not qualified on the parent issue, just my own experience.
I was a lonely depressed teenage boy and a nice girl talked me into going to a fundy type church. I was converted for a while,(the nice girl vanished by the way), and even told my parents at the time. They didn't react much at all and just ignored the issue. That was typical of the WW2 generation, who my parents were members of, when handling a lot of kid problems. Just ignore it and hope it goes away. Well, they were right. I was too inquisitive and had read way too much Nietzsche to stay converted. I am now a bit embarrassed that I went that route all those years ago, but I derive much comfort from the fact that Michael Shermer(Skeptic Magazine) did some time as a born-againer. It is inevitable that during the confusion of late adolescence that one could be attracted to a nutty religion. In a way, it can be good to see first hand how religion operates. I know in my case, that my short time of religious delusion innoculated me in a way. I am now very immune from religious infection. |
09-05-2002, 06:47 PM | #93 |
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Helen Wrote:
"Personally, I don’t see why telling children “Christianity is evil” is any less indoctrination than “Christianity is true”, or why telling them “God doesn’t exist” is any less indoctrination than “God is out there watching you”." Isn't it up to the theist to prove "God does exist? Christianity can be easily proven to be harmful to the world (I won't use the word evil) but no one can prove "Christianity is true". I assume what you mean by the word "true" is that the tenets of Christianity, miracles, resurrection the bible etc. can be proven. [ September 05, 2002: Message edited by: god-free-pen ]</p> |
09-05-2002, 11:58 PM | #94 | ||||||||||||||||
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One more round, before the weekend:
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"A person should only believe x if s/he has good reason to believe it, and should not hold stubbornly to x if s/he has no reasons for holding that belief. One should, conversely, be able to explain one's reasons for not believing x, especially if it's obvious that some people do take x very seriously." The world makes sense, and it's highly virtuous to make the most sense of it that we can. That much is unquestionably true; atheism or theism is just a petty derivative issue with various practical consequences. Or so it all seems, if we can look at it with some wry detachment. I suppose the alternative (to inculcating an automatic respect for reason tied to reality) could only be an attitude of misology leading to "logocide," surely a crime against humanity, beginning with abusing the thinking self and culminating in tearing-down all aspects culture which depend upon reason. Or, less extreme: an attitude of flippant disregard for facts and reason when they don't suit our purposes. With, unfortunately, similar results... Perhaps our basic "pro-logic" indoctrination is what sets modern human individuals apart from the quasi-animal herds of prehistory? (And perhaps as peoples' respect for reason diminishes, logocide in bits and pieces will utterly destroy civilization as we know it?) But I digress. Quote:
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What was the question again? Oh, my experience with early teenagers. Not nearly enough to have one suddenly dropped into my household for a year of care and feeding, and far from enough to tell a real parent exactly what to do with their kids, but enough for me to feel comfortable that what I've advocated in my posts wouldn't harm my own (as yet unborn) kids. Quote:
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(St Teresa of Avila's experience is a possible exception on that point... and St Mary's -if Jesus and the Holy Spirit are one being- and perhaps Mary Magdalene's as well...? Hmmm, maybe there's more to this than I thought...) Anyway, speaking as a heterosexual male, and as one who was a Christian during adolescence, I assert that my own reaction to being in the presence of a girlfriend was quite different from my experiences in prayer or reading scripture or listening to good preaching. I do agree that achieving a conviction of "certainty" is of great importance to young adolescence - particularly certainty of acceptance or certainty of love, which are promised by the gospel of unconditional love and forgiveness through Jesus' intervention on our behalf, etc. The gospel is a message well-suited to adolescent tendencies and desires. It fulfills fantasies, or promises to. This is powerful, intoxicating stuff. BTW, the comparison with cult teachings/atmosphere is interesting because a case could be made (elsewhere, by somebody else) that contemporary Christianity's youth outreach exhibits cult characteristics, just in a more socially acceptable form. (unless you live in France, where a lot of evangelical groups have been ostracized as cultlike - those frogs and their silly Catholic heritage!) Quote:
William James, I think (it's hot and I don't feel like diving into my bookshelf right now), also mentions that at the core of all "faith" is this conviction that there is a benevolent, justice-wielding master of the universe, and that if we just hold on, everything will be alright (as we from our religious and subjective perspective define "alright"). Pragamatically, James thinks it makes sense to believe in God even if our reasoning would persuade us that He doesn't exist, because belief has this sort of benefit. I agree that if you face trials and can believe in that sort of being, then your outlook on life will be quite different and less apt to despair, and I know that their faith is something of a life-bouy to people about to flounder on the seas of difficulty. I don't deny the "power of faith." I just don't believe that the object of this faith is real, and I'm not persuaded (though I used to be, shortly after my own skepticism reared its head) that it's ultimately helpful to believe in God despite the nagging of one's reason. I think it's a bad habit to get into, to repress reason in this way just to make life (or dying) easier. But then I partially grew up in Wyoming among folks who didn't believe in tiptoeing around tough issues or sweetening their coffee. So unlike Wm. James, I've come to think that unflinching realism/rationality is at least as valuable as hopeful faith, for those who realize they can stomach it. Another parenthetical aside: This issue of what a relationship with Jesus really is, as seen from both Christian and secular/naturalistic viewpoints, could be its own hot topic, one I'd enjoy participating in, if somebody else wanted to craft the opening post. Quote:
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In my own real life, I had a Christian family, or lapsed Christians who didn't speak against the church, or black sheep who might not have been Christians but weren't set up as great examples in any case. Lacking the internet and direct confrontation with atheists, I did not take unbelief as seriously as I undoubtedly would in the childhood of this thought experiment. So who knows? Perhaps I'd go for techno-paganism and reject all familial influences? Quote:
I hope to train my kids to carefully examine any and all "package deal" worldviews prior to consumption, so that their normative viewpoint is always open for examination and alteration, not fixed in a canon of documents or doctrines. I would, if necessary, firmly remind them of this whether the newly fascinating package deal was the Bible, the Koran, Dianetics or Atlas Shrugged. My children need to be the managers of their own worldviews, not simply the hosts of another person's. Quote:
They contacted this Christian rescue group whose team pulled up next to him in a van, grabbed him and stuffed him inside, then drove to what seemed like a cross between Christian youth camp and a funny farm - a "detox" facility for the prodigal mind. He recovered, but from what I remember he replaced the quiet cult-fervency with bombastic Christian fundamentalism, but at least he had a larger and better-adjusted society to share it with - and his family got him back, which was their main concern, as you indicated. Now that I think of it, I do seem to reading that Scientologists sometimes doing the same thing in order to get back their prodigals who leave that "faith". So it's more common than I initially recalled. Those are only a couple of anecdotes and if you say you've heard of entirely secular "rescue groups" or "deprogramming centers" then I believe you, but I still think the whole idea's weird, and I wouldn't easily go that route. But then again I've never lost a child to a cult. So much just depends on so much else. Messy reality! Quote:
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When it comes to preachers, politicians, and philosophical demigods, though, I intend to poison the well quite a bit and train my kids to be critical audience members, and to question claims or positions that are broadcast from an impressive presenter. Youth events, like weekend youth rallies, will be interesting to deal with, if my son or daughter is ever invited to one. I've organized and attended many of those, and besides generating excitement and being a lot of social fun, the evangelism and indoctrination is laid on pretty thick. Evangelical evangelists (!) often deliver their messages to a presumed partially secular youth audience as though it were a dramatic revelation, often by contrasting it with (unfairly mischaracterized) secular or at least non-Christian ideas about mankind and God and the nature of things. This is as close to direct mass programming as it gets; some of these events are like Amway meetings in the worst possible way. I would not be thrilled if my son or daughter came home begging to go to one of those. But I remember specifically wording our fliers in such a way that they would not immediately reveal the Christian evangelical intent of such events, so I know I'd have to expect similar strategies from whichever groups are active in my area. I wish I'd kept one of my evangelistic and youth preaching textbooks; it covered getting "excitement" into the message (gotta get 'em crazy for kerygma!) and getting "sure results" at the altar. Even as a believer I found it distasteful, though I knew its tactics were in regular use in churches and events I'd attended. The deliberately calculating nature of modern mass evangelism chills me to the bone, now that I'm well outside the evangelical fold. I glimpse such things on TV or hear radio messages and I can't believe people still go for this. It's much like the way being a former salesperson immunizes you to the scripted pitches you get at the appliance store. You know how the game works, and it makes you sick to see the same tricks continue to get refined and used successfully to hook new people. Sorry to end this on such a dour personal note; I've really enjoyed this interchange and I think it's a good issue for secular parents or parents-to-be to explore. I'm busy for the rest of the weekend, so I won't be responding any more until Monday-Tuesday at earliest. -David PS - Quote:
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09-10-2002, 03:12 AM | #95 | |
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Picking up on just the one comment above, at this time - because probably neither of us have time to continue writing long posts on this topic - this comment makes a lot of sense to me. Inherent in it is that in the end it's their decision, whether we like what they decide to believe or not... love Helen |
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09-10-2002, 06:04 AM | #96 |
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I think this is a very thoughtful topic, HelenM, and I thank you for raising it.
I suspect the spectrum of answers you will receive is as varied as the individuals who supply them. Just as theists are not a monolithic entity, nontheists are a diverse bunch as well (you hear us constantly complaining about how we can't ever get organized...) I have put a great deal of thought into this question myself. My two daughters are now 15 and 12. When they were born, my mother, a Holocaust survivor, was very concerned about their sense of identity. Although she is an agnostic, she is understandably emotional about being a Jew, and we had many heated arguments about my desire to raise them as free human beings, exposed to many different thought systems and beliefs, who would ultimately make up their own minds. I don't know how many people are aware of this, but there is a strong phenomenon in the Jewish community of "ba'al tshuvah", those who become "born again" as orthodox, mainly fundamentalist Jews. This is particularly true in Israel, where I grew up, because of the strong orthodox influence there. I know many old friends and neighbors who went through this process, not too dissimilar to joining a cult in their fervor and extremism (usually far more fervent and extreme than those who actually grew up orthodox, and in fact there is quite an overlap between young Jews who join cults and those who become ba'al tshuvah at some point in their lives). In addition, my sister has always been mystical and now attends a (very liberal and tolerant) Christian church. My wife and I discussed this as well. Her parents are very theistic, and her father went through a "ba'al tshuvah" phase which is thankfully over. So this is all more than a hypothetical for me. Ultimately, I have (ironically) "faith" that reason prevails, and that, given a free and open choice and an diverse education including an understanding of critical thinking, children will rarely choose faith over reason. In fact, it seems evident to me that all chidren are born atheists, and that it takes quite an effort of indoctrination and restriction to turn them into blind believers. Both my daughter have made, each in their own time and own way, a decision that the god-myth does not resonate with them. They experience, as Ingersoll described it, the wonderful freedom and exhiliration of being an independently thinking human. If, however, either of them came home one day and announced that they were a Christian, or orthodox Jew, or Muslim, or Wiccan, or whatever, I would respect and continue to love them regardless, just as I respect and love my mostly theistic friends and family. In fact, it is quite possible that they may marry or partner with a theist and decide to join his or her church "for the sake of the children". While I would disagree with their choice, I believe in free choice and self-determination more strongly than I believe in any thing else, and I would not make their life any more challenging or difficult or conflict-ridden than I anticipate it would already be. For me, atheism naturally equates to tolerance, inclusiveness and a believe in self-determination. How could I treat my own children with less understanding or care than I would treat anyone else? (Note: I hope this long personal message is not out of keeping with the spirit of this forum. I am frankly not accustomed to the kind of emotional sharing that is so evident on many of these forums, being far more comfortable in the intellectual arena. I am genuinely attempting to adjust my habits to more appropriately communicate in this community. Please bear with me if, from time to time, I go overboard as I probably have in this message ) [ September 10, 2002: Message edited by: galiel ]</p> |
09-10-2002, 06:39 AM | #97 | |
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09-10-2002, 06:42 AM | #98 | |
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09-10-2002, 06:50 AM | #99 |
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Thanks for your comments, galiel. I appreciated what you shared.
I'd say there is freedom to share personally or not to, on these forums. There is a lot of chat and personal sharing; that is true. But I expect some people never share personally. I do find it helps sometimes to know the background of another person. And knowing that they come from another culture/another first language (when applicable) reminds me to give them the benefit of the doubt if something they say seems strange in my own language, say. Since you shared a lot about yourself and family... My maternal grandparents left Darmstadt in the early 30s (as young adults whose families knew each other, not as a couple yet) because of the situation there for Jews. My father is not Jewish and I was not raised in a religion; it was my own choice as a young adult [away at college, fwiw] to become a conservative Christian... My own children are 7 and 9. At present they attend church with me; which I've shared here before. My husband is an atheist and he's ok with that. (And, no, I did not strongly coerce him into being ok about it ) I hope I can be ok with letting my children make their own choices, as they grow up. I think my goal is that they grow up able to make informed decisions, as far as it lies in my power to help them do that. love Helen |
09-10-2002, 07:42 AM | #100 |
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HelenM:
I will not interfere with my childrens' quests for the truth. I will try to guide them to think critically as they search. My three year old son has been asking about church (there are some pretty impressive looking ones that we drive by all the time). I've told him to pick one that he'd like to check out so I can take him. I would like to take him to several different ones representing many of the various faiths. I have to admit though, I'm personally a little uncomfortable going to places of worship where I'm unfamiliar with the customs. I would like to blend in while I'm there. |
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