Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Brainwashing. Please stop perpetuating it.
Are you Buddhist? If not, try this thought experiment. Do you think it's brainwashing when a Buddhist mom takes her children to temple? I'm guessing not. When religions are "foreign" enough for us to see them clearly, we recognize that they're cultural practices -- part and parcel of a person's cultural identity. Therefore they feel off limits to our judgment.
Of course, ALL religions are cultural practices. Even the one practiced by your nosy annoying neighbor. They're brainwashing only in the same way that all other cultural customs, traditions, and norms are "brainwashing."
Anyway, OP, I think that understanding the cultural nature of religion is actually the key to raising a child who will continue to practice the religion as an adult.
If your child truly experiences the religion as a crucial, integral part of his or her cultural identity, s/he'll be far more more likely to remain involved, or drawn back into it, once she's an independent adult.
Anonymous wrote:If your 20- or 30-something still practices the faith they were raised in, what factors do you think contributed to that? How did your teen or college student "make their faith their own?"
We go to church as a family and pray at meals, try to live out the values of our faith, etc. Right now I would say our teens are nominal Christians. They would assent to the gospel and all that goes with it as being "true," but they don't orient their lives toward this truth.
Anonymous wrote:I'm Muslim not Christian so not the same but similar thing. I doubt our American born and raised kids would ever be religious. However, they were raised in a Christian and atheist majority country so it was inevitable.
People who raised practicing kids were more religious themselves and more involved in local immigrant community. They were at the mosque at least once a day and had kids enrolled in some religious activity all through the year.
That being said, even among them, only half were successful. Mostly ones who kept kids living at home for college and got them married right after undergrad with similarly raised spouses.
Anonymous wrote:Troll
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Brainwashing. Please stop perpetuating it.
Are you Buddhist? If not, try this thought experiment. Do you think it's brainwashing when a Buddhist mom takes her children to temple? I'm guessing not. When religions are "foreign" enough for us to see them clearly, we recognize that they're cultural practices -- part and parcel of a person's cultural identity. Therefore they feel off limits to our judgment.
Of course, ALL religions are cultural practices. Even the one practiced by your nosy annoying neighbor. They're brainwashing only in the same way that all other cultural customs, traditions, and norms are "brainwashing."
Anyway, OP, I think that understanding the cultural nature of religion is actually the key to raising a child who will continue to practice the religion as an adult.
If your child truly experiences the religion as a crucial, integral part of his or her cultural identity, s/he'll be far more more likely to remain involved, or drawn back into it, once she's an independent adult.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Brainwashing. Please stop perpetuating it.
Are you Buddhist? If not, try this thought experiment. Do you think it's brainwashing when a Buddhist mom takes her children to temple? I'm guessing not. When religions are "foreign" enough for us to see them clearly, we recognize that they're cultural practices -- part and parcel of a person's cultural identity. Therefore they feel off limits to our judgment.
Of course, ALL religions are cultural practices. Even the one practiced by your nosy annoying neighbor. They're brainwashing only in the same way that all other cultural customs, traditions, and norms are "brainwashing."
Anyway, OP, I think that understanding the cultural nature of religion is actually the key to raising a child who will continue to practice the religion as an adult.
If your child truly experiences the religion as a crucial, integral part of his or her cultural identity, s/he'll be far more more likely to remain involved, or drawn back into it, once she's an independent adult.
Anonymous wrote:Brainwashing. Please stop perpetuating it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your 20- or 30-something still practices the faith they were raised in, what factors do you think contributed to that? How did your teen or college student "make their faith their own?"
We go to church as a family and pray at meals, try to live out the values of our faith, etc. Right now I would say our teens are nominal Christians. They would assent to the gospel and all that goes with it as being "true," but they don't orient their lives toward this truth.
Your kids are probably different from you in other ways, as well. No reason to think that their religion should be exactly what you taught them when they were younger. Times change.
They will make their own choices as adults, and I will respect them. But I think it’s ok to try to cultivate a faith in them while they’re children and pass down values and a worldview.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your 20- or 30-something still practices the faith they were raised in, what factors do you think contributed to that? How did your teen or college student "make their faith their own?"
We go to church as a family and pray at meals, try to live out the values of our faith, etc. Right now I would say our teens are nominal Christians. They would assent to the gospel and all that goes with it as being "true," but they don't orient their lives toward this truth.
Your kids are probably different from you in other ways, as well. No reason to think that their religion should be exactly what you taught them when they were younger. Times change.
Anonymous wrote:If your 20- or 30-something still practices the faith they were raised in, what factors do you think contributed to that? How did your teen or college student "make their faith their own?"
We go to church as a family and pray at meals, try to live out the values of our faith, etc. Right now I would say our teens are nominal Christians. They would assent to the gospel and all that goes with it as being "true," but they don't orient their lives toward this truth.