Toggle navigation
Toggle navigation
Home
DCUM Forums
Nanny Forums
Events
About DCUM
Advertising
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics
FAQs and Guidelines
Privacy Policy
Your current identity is: Anonymous
Login
Preview
Subject:
Forum Index
»
Religion
Reply to "Uncomfortable religious situations you were forced into"
Subject:
Emoticons
More smilies
Text Color:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Violet
White
Black
Font:
Very Small
Small
Normal
Big
Giant
Close Marks
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I mean, were they all child molesters at this church, op? Did they force you to handle snakes? I would have been uncomfortable, too. But unless you feared for your safety, so what? You were uncomfortable for a few days. I dont understand why you think this was such an unacceptable thing for them to do. Bringing a friend to church while they were under my parents care is exactly what my own parents did and what most other parents I knew did. Uncomfortable, sure. Egregious, not really. [/quote] Would they ask the friend first? I think there is a difference when a child is a certain age. Like if the child is 6-10 I don't even think you would ask-but I think after that its at least polite to ask if they are ok with it. I also think church is one thing, making a teenager go to the "teen bible study" is going too far and then making the teenager go again on a different day after they said they were uncomfortable is taking it WAY too far.[/quote] Insert a different religion and see if you respond with such support to the OP. If this post had been OP sharing how she had stayed with a Muslim family and they had “forced” her to go to their mosque (because they felt responsible for her while she was staying with them for the weekend and didn’t feel like they should leave her alone) and then OP went on and on about how she was super uncomfortable with all the kneeling in the direction of Mecca and praying and such, would you be responding in the sane way or would you be chastising OP for not being open-minded enough to spend a couple of hours outside her comfort zone in appreciation of someone else’s faith traditions? Is it do very hard yo expect a house guest to simply be polite and go along and experience a faith tradition with which thru are unfamiliar? Or is this only Objectionable when it’s Christianity as the target?[/quote] In both cases, I would say the kid has to go and be respectful, but should be able to opt out of religious things (i.e., sit in the lobby or waiting room with a book). And for all the Christians that think this is no big deal and OP is a whiner - would you like it if your 14-15 year old Christian believer child was told for hours that God didn’t exist? Got sent to a class to study why God isn’t real and then was asked what she learned? Or do you think some Christian children might feel justifiably uncomfortable with 3 days of that?[/quote] The short answer is I wouldn't randomly pawn my kid off on the hardcore atheist family that visits the local atheist society two or three times a week to begin with. That being said kids are exposed to atheistic thought period so its not that big of a deal. I suppose it would depend on whether it was an exposition of the works of Nietzsche or David Hume who are historically significant figures or whether it was just lowbrow Dawkins-style bigotry. Being ignorant of the Bible is to be ignorant of the most influential book in the development of Western Civilization (and all modern civilization really). At least people like Nietzsche and Hume were smart enough to realize that. I find it odd you would want your kid to be purposefully shielded from such a historically significant work, but if you feel that strongly about it then of course you are always welcome to, say, look after your own children?[/quote] 1. all atheists do not believe in god - "hardcore" or not. 2, Richard Dawkins is hardly lowbrow. He was an Oxford professor of zoology and finished his academic career there as the Charles d Simonyi Professor for the Public Understanding of Science 3. The Bible has certainly been very influential but that does not mean that its contents reflect accurate history or religious truth. 4. people can look after their children very well, while occasionally leaving them in the care of others.[/quote]
Options
Disable HTML in this message
Disable BB Code in this message
Disable smilies in this message
Review message
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics