Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Take comfort in the evidence that you've raised people with brains. Congrats.
OP Here, thank you. My DH and I try to cultivate an enviroment of critical thinkers, however I am scared that they may have veered off too far without putting in the work to
investigate the things that have issues with. I will love them unconditionally, but I do think that later in life they may find Jesus again.
I think that a lot of the issues I had with Christianity as a young adult were because I thought it was mainly about rules (don't have sex, etc.) and political stances that I was coming to disagree with. God seemed very strict and angry. I think if church and religious ed had connected more with the emotional/experiential--aren't so many aspects of our lives amazing when we stop and appreciate our friends, family, and nature? Somehow finding hope when we despair? As a late teen, I thought that because I didn't literally hear God inside my head as some of my friends claimed, that there was no god.
I think you should try to have an open conversation with them and back off on trying to bring them around. How have you experienced God in your life? How have they experienced something big and amazing and beyond words in their lives (if they don't believe in God)?
I think you might want to find some books that your family could read and discuss together that focus more on the spiritual side of Christianity rather than the rules and the political--two I really liked as a questioning former Christian were Amazing Grace by Kathleen (?) somebody and Barbara Brown Taylor's An Altar in the World. Both of these authors are Christian, but not Catholic (Brown Taylor is Episcopal and the Amazing Grace author is not Catholic but frequents a monastery) and really not into dogma and doctrine.