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Old 04-08-2008, 11:01 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by raytri View Post
I'm an agnostic and my wife can best be described as a deist, so we don't belong to any particular religion or go to church.

However, I was raised Presbyterian, and we talk to our kids about religion (covering the major tenets of all the major belief systems) so that they're not raised ignorant of the concept.

My 8-year-old loves stories of any kind, and lately has been asking me to tell her Bible stories. So I've been telling her some common Jesus stories -- the loaves and the fishes, the walking on water, etc.

Finally I asked her if she wanted to read them for herself. My Southern Baptist mother-in-law had given us a "Jesus loves me" kids Bible years ago, which we stashed on our bookshelf. I took it down and handed it to my daughter.

She disappeared into her bedroom, emerging hours later having read the whole thing. Now she's re-reading it catch all the details she missed on her first time through.

We've been asking her what she thought, and her response has been "some of it seems true, some made-up." She didn't find Noah's Ark all that believable, or most of the miracles. But she thought most of the rest of what Jesus did was plausible.

I frankly doubt she's going to experience a sudden religious conversion, but if she does that's her business. We have friends who go to church, and they'd be happy to take her along if she wanted to go.

Just thought y'all might be interested in how a family of unbelievers handles religion.

hah lucky kids.


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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sickntiredofliblies View Post
Interesting.
raytri, does she ask you whether you believe in god or not?
We don't have kids yet but my wife and I are both atheists, but raised catholic. So of course our families would try to indoctrinate them in some form. My wife and I have talked about this and well....we haven't decided whether or not we would tell the child that we don't believe in god . Children are influenced by their parents' opinions right? Most Catholics would baptise the child right away but we do have problems with forcing our (non-)religious beliefs on our children.


I got snipped and dunked before I knew what hit me

Personally, was born & raised a Roman Catholic, So I still am.
But not at all devout.. my connection to The Church is mostly for the historical ties at this point.

If I have kids, more than likely I'll take them to a mass. A real one with the works.. at a Cathedral, in latin, the whole smokey pomp and ceremony with choir music that can bring grown men to their knees in tears... Helluva show!

hmm the Vatican should really sell tickets to it.
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Last edited by Tedminator; 04-08-2008 at 11:04 PM.
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