This was posted on the Doc Spouse Current Events group, but I thought I'd bring it here for those of you who don't participate in FB.
http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed...115-story.html
I thought this was a really interesting article, and one that makes me really happy.
I was raised Catholic, but in a weird way. I think due to my mom's culture (Italian), the Catholicism she was raised with and then raised us with was more superstitious/guilt-driven than it was devout, if that makes sense. We went through the motions of being Catholic, but never talked in depth about our faith or why we practiced it, etc. It was very robotic. My parents sent me to a private Catholic school and that didn't help my view of the Catholic church at all.
I fell away from religion, but for a while, DH and I both agreed (he, too, was raised Catholic-ish...doing the rituals and going to mass but not really being that in to it) that when we had a kid, we would baptize it, send it to CCD, etc. For this reason: to instill a sense of guilt that we'd both been instilled with that we felt kept us from some of the more negative behaviors we may have otherwise engaged in. We actually thought that forcing church or CCD onto a child would help them grow a moral compass, but we've since eschewed that idea and have no intention of doing any of that.
Disrespectfully or not, I do think I'd still have a baptism for my mother...for her sentimentality and the symbolism and the tradition that I know she respects. Maybe that's wrong, but I figure it can't hurt.
Do you think you can raise good, moral, ethical, kind people without religion?
http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed...115-story.html
I thought this was a really interesting article, and one that makes me really happy.
I was raised Catholic, but in a weird way. I think due to my mom's culture (Italian), the Catholicism she was raised with and then raised us with was more superstitious/guilt-driven than it was devout, if that makes sense. We went through the motions of being Catholic, but never talked in depth about our faith or why we practiced it, etc. It was very robotic. My parents sent me to a private Catholic school and that didn't help my view of the Catholic church at all.
I fell away from religion, but for a while, DH and I both agreed (he, too, was raised Catholic-ish...doing the rituals and going to mass but not really being that in to it) that when we had a kid, we would baptize it, send it to CCD, etc. For this reason: to instill a sense of guilt that we'd both been instilled with that we felt kept us from some of the more negative behaviors we may have otherwise engaged in. We actually thought that forcing church or CCD onto a child would help them grow a moral compass, but we've since eschewed that idea and have no intention of doing any of that.
Disrespectfully or not, I do think I'd still have a baptism for my mother...for her sentimentality and the symbolism and the tradition that I know she respects. Maybe that's wrong, but I figure it can't hurt.
Do you think you can raise good, moral, ethical, kind people without religion?
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