Jim, you seem to think that church is only for the pure in heart. In reality, first and foremost, the call is to the sinners and the hypocrites.
I do attend church on Sunday mornings and I also teach a class of the most delightful children that you could ever hope to meet. I hope to strengthen the lessons that their parents impart, to challenge them to think critically and to give them a framework on which to develop their moral principles. Oh, where ever possible, we try to enjoy the experience.
Interesting. As we grow older we are supposed to become more religious. All your responses are so welcomed...for I have wondered about my lack of religiosity. Though very spiritual, am turned off by structured religion. Sounds like I am in the majority...thankfully.
I remember even as a child thinking, this religion stuff is really far fetched and seems like another fairytale. That was very difficult because my parents and all the adults around me believed it.. (or pretended to) So I went along with the program, attending Sunday School and Catechism classes and making my Confirmation. Still deep inside knowing that I really had my doubts about what I was being taught and feeling very guilty and bad about it. I had no idea what an agnostic or agnosticism was back then. As a young adult, I was still hunting around for a religion or a Church that didn't feel silly to me.. I've never found one. Now I freely admit to "not knowing" for sure. I still have doubts, but I am much more comfortable having them. I have tried to live my life as a good and moral person. Sometimes succeeding and sometimes failing but knowing the error of my ways. If there is a Heaven.. I see no reason why I shouldn't be let in. If not.. it really doesn't matter.
I remember even as a child thinking, this religion stuff is really far fetched and seems like another fairytale. That was very difficult because my parents and all the adults around me believed it.. (or pretended to) So I went along with the program, attending Sunday School and Catechism classes and making my Confirmation. Still deep inside knowing that I really had my doubts about what I was being taught and feeling very guilty and bad about it. I had no idea what an agnostic or agnosticism was back then. As a young adult, I was still hunting around for a religion or a Church that didn't feel silly to me.. I've never found one. Now I freely admit to "not knowing" for sure. I still have doubts, but I am much more comfortable having them. I have tried to live my life as a good and moral person. Sometimes succeeding and sometimes failing but knowing the error of my ways. If there is a Heaven.. I see no reason why I shouldn't be let in. If not.. it really doesn't matter.
Interesting. As we grow older we are supposed to become more religious. All your responses are so welcomed...for I have wondered about my lack of religiosity. Though very spiritual, am turned off by structured religion. Sounds like I am in the majority...thankfully.
I was raised in the Baptist Church and I had doubts too growing up, I remember asking the preacher about something in the Bible one time, not understanding how it could be...he told me "we don't question what is in the Bible." ....I rarely go to Church now.
As a former student of a Catholic school, St, Brigid's, I can tell you with certainly she was a "Mother Superior".
I believe this is how organized religion damages people. When you are a child, you are indoctrinated almost before you can understand. If you, like me, had doubts, we are not encouraged to bring them up. Instead of being able to question and bring up our concerns, we internalize them and figure there is something "wrong" with Us.. That somehow we are inherently "bad" if we are having problems with the faith. I can't imagine what would have happened to me if I had said what I was thinking.. that being "Are you freaking kidding me??" or something to that effect. AND that's exactly what I was thinking. "How can this be true?" "Do these people actually believe all this stuff?" And of course I felt they did.. so I was the bad one.. The one with the problem.
Sister Edith use to beat the crap outta me when I didn't do my homework...ahhhh those were the days.
My sister and me went to Catholic school when we were in primary school. We were terrified of the nuns who were extremely stern. For some reason, being too scared to answer a question, my sister got strapped on her thigh which left a big red welt. When my parents saw it they immediately took us out of the school and we went to public schools from then on. The nuns came to our house to try and talk my parents into putting us back in and denying the strapping.
When my ex husband was a kid in New England, his aunt, who was a nun, frequently 'beat the crap out of him' (his words) in catholic school. Other abuses against other boys included rape by the priest. This was in the early 50s and early 60s, and I'm sure things have changed and there is no more of that physical abuse, since laws have been changed about beatings by teachers. There were some pretty crazy public school teachers in those days too who would hit the kids.
Catholic school teachers nowadays are not nuns thank goodness and its more secular in curriculum according to a friend of mine.