lowfatbaconboy
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- Oct 21, 2000
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Originally posted by: Jamie571
My nine year old daughter luvs going to church. We do not force her, its her decision at this point. She is a straight A student, and in gifted programs at school. She recently got an award for having perfect conduct for the entire year. Everyone always tells my wife and I what a joy it is to be around her. I know she would not be where she is today, if she didn't follow the teaching she received at a Christian church.
The one question I leave you with is what will you say to your children when they ask you at around 4 years old, "What happens when you die?"
Most religion gives children hope and security of going to heaven. This helps ease the mind while growing up. It also provides and explanation of where Great Grand-father is.
Originally posted by: Ikonomi
Originally posted by: Jamie571
My nine year old daughter luvs going to church. We do not force her, its her decision at this point. She is a straight A student, and in gifted programs at school. She recently got an award for having perfect conduct for the entire year. Everyone always tells my wife and I what a joy it is to be around her. I know she would not be where she is today, if she didn't follow the teaching she received at a Christian church.
The one question I leave you with is what will you say to your children when they ask you at around 4 years old, "What happens when you die?"
Most religion gives children hope and security of going to heaven. This helps ease the mind while growing up. It also provides and explanation of where Great Grand-father is.
So is religion a crutch for avoiding difficult explanations or meaningful conversation with your child?
Anatomy and human reproduction are not beliefs, period.Originally posted by: Homerboy
Originally posted by: Toastedlightly
Her child, her way of raising it. I'm sure those of you with kids out there would do SOMETING that other people would disagree with. It is all a matter of who's raising the kid.
WINNAR!
Why are the mother's beliefs under scrutiny? Becuase they may differ from yours or mine? Thats awfully "superior" of us I'd say. If that is what the mom "believes" (and I say that in quotes becuase I would safely bet that the mom was giving the kid the easy alternative versus mom and dad had wild, animal like sex 8 months ago that culiminated in daddy ejaculating inside of mommy's vagine, where a 1 sperm, out of a bajillion penetrated the egg that is reelased monthly from ommies ovaries, then embedded itself into the linning of her uterus etc etc ... ).
I would certainly tell my 0-8 yr old that mommy and daddies make babies, but it is a blessing from God that makes it truly happen.
Its her beliefs, and her right to pass those beliefs onto her children. If they aren't your beliefs, STFU.
Oh, and if you don't have kids yourself, you have no place in this thread. As you can talk all you want about how you are going to raise your kids before you have them, but I ASSURE you it changes DRASTICALLY once they are born.
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Originally posted by: Jamie571
My nine year old daughter luvs going to church. We do not force her, its her decision at this point. She is a straight A student, and in gifted programs at school. She recently got an award for having perfect conduct for the entire year. Everyone always tells my wife and I what a joy it is to be around her. I know she would not be where she is today, if she didn't follow the teaching she received at a Christian church.
The one question I leave you with is what will you say to your children when they ask you at around 4 years old, "What happens when you die?"
Most religion gives children hope and security of going to heaven. This helps ease the mind while growing up. It also provides and explanation of where Great Grand-father is.
Originally posted by: Jamie571
My nine year old daughter luvs going to church. We do not force her, its her decision at this point. She is a straight A student, and in gifted programs at school. She recently got an award for having perfect conduct for the entire year. Everyone always tells my wife and I what a joy it is to be around her. I know she would not be where she is today, if she didn't follow the teaching she received at a Christian church.
The one question I leave you with is what will you say to your children when they ask you at around 4 years old, "What happens when you die?"
Most religion gives children hope and security of going to heaven. This helps ease the mind while growing up. It also provides and explanation of where Great Grand-father is.
I can speak only of what I have known through my own experiences in life. Perhaps, no, most likely, I would have been as I am regardless of how I was brought up, but my own path is such that I wouldn't recommend it to others.Originally posted by: nakedfrog
My parents never really instilled any sort of religious thought into me when I was a kid. I went to a few Sunday School type of things at my daycare when I was 4-5, but by the time I was 6 had more or less discarded the idea of christianity. Then I was an atheist for years, then I became a searcher and read up a tad on various religions. I'm perfectly comfortable with the path I ended up on, and it's never really affected anyone around me.Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
The child would become a searcher, and would spend its life seeking a truth. Perhaps eventually finding the truth but by that point the child would not know anything other than the way of the seeker and he would look at the Truth, set it down, and say, "Oh, that's nice.", and never have any clue what to do with it. The child would not tie himself to the Truth without much pain being inflicted upon him and he would bring others pain as well through his wavering and his pendulum-like motion through the joy of finding and the despair of having nothing for which to seek.
There is much that I would give to have been one of those children who was sure from the start.
I say bless those parents.
ZV
Contrary to wanting to be one of those children who was raised to believe something, I'm happy that I was free to seek religion my own way.
Who says that one must be a "fundie" to be brought up in that manner? I know plenty of people who were brought up in that way, who have always been sure, and who are decidedly not "fundies".Originally posted by: 91TTZ
The problem with that reasoning is that the "truth" that the fundies teach their kid isn't the truth at all.Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
The child would become a searcher, and would spend its life seeking a truth. Perhaps eventually finding the truth but by that point the child would not know anything other than the way of the seeker and he would look at the Truth, set it down, and say, "Oh, that's nice.", and never have any clue what to do with it. The child would not tie himself to the Truth without much pain being inflicted upon him and he would bring others pain as well through his wavering and his pendulum-like motion through the joy of finding and the despair of having nothing for which to seek.Originally posted by: hscorpio
I often wonder what it would be like if parents didn't teach their kids about God/religion until their children were old enough to have developed some critical thinking abilities.
There is much that I would give to have been one of those children who was sure from the start.
I say bless those parents.
ZV
So yes, that child will go through life thinking she already knows the answers, but those answers will be wrong. To compound her ignorance, not only will she believe the wrong information, she will be brainwashed and refuse to believe anything else. To a hardcore Christian, their minds are closed. Whatever is taught it church is true to them, and anything else, even if proven by science, is false.
Fundamentalism blinds a populace and ensures that they never utilize their brain to its full potential. It will lead them to make poor choices in life by providing a foundation built on falsehoods.
Originally posted by: Ikonomi
Originally posted by: Jamie571
My nine year old daughter luvs going to church. We do not force her, its her decision at this point. She is a straight A student, and in gifted programs at school. She recently got an award for having perfect conduct for the entire year. Everyone always tells my wife and I what a joy it is to be around her. I know she would not be where she is today, if she didn't follow the teaching she received at a Christian church.
The one question I leave you with is what will you say to your children when they ask you at around 4 years old, "What happens when you die?"
Most religion gives children hope and security of going to heaven. This helps ease the mind while growing up. It also provides and explanation of where Great Grand-father is.
So is religion a crutch for avoiding difficult explanations or meaningful conversation with your child?
Originally posted by: LongCoolMother
so you all tell your kids santa claus is bullsh!t? and the easter bunny is bullsh!t? and everybody who says otherwise is full of sh!t?
gee, id love being your kid :roll:
age 7 is a little young to teach otherwise. imo.
Originally posted by: Goosemaster
Ignorance is the trashbag that the weak use to sheild themselves from the rotten tomtatoes of truth....