Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a shame that beliefs based on ancient myths have to get in the way of raising a 21st century family
What a shame you don't have a better outlet for your boredom/anger/isolation than trolling on a mom's chat board.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a shame that beliefs based on ancient myths have to get in the way of raising a 21st century family
What a shame that you feel the need to mock people who believe differently than you do.
What a shame that you see stating a fact as mocking. There are many faithful, educated, scientifically-thinking sophisticated Christians who are quite aware that their religious beliefs are based on ancient myths
If they believe God and Jesus are myths, then they aren't Christians and you know it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a shame that beliefs based on ancient myths have to get in the way of raising a 21st century family
What a shame that you feel the need to mock people who believe differently than you do.
What a shame that you see stating a fact as mocking. There are many faithful, educated, scientifically-thinking sophisticated Christians who are quite aware that their religious beliefs are based on ancient myths
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a shame that beliefs based on ancient myths have to get in the way of raising a 21st century family
What a shame you don't have a better outlet for your boredom/anger/isolation than trolling on a mom's chat board.
Anonymous wrote:What a shame that beliefs based on ancient myths have to get in the way of raising a 21st century family
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a shame that beliefs based on ancient myths have to get in the way of raising a 21st century family
What a shame that you feel the need to mock people who believe differently than you do.
Anonymous wrote:What a shame that beliefs based on ancient myths have to get in the way of raising a 21st century family
Anonymous wrote:DH is a Jewish atheist and I am protestant Christian (non-evangelical). I am more of a believer than he is, but pretty liberal in my understanding of things. We both feel very attached to the cultural aspects of our respective religions.
We've decided to embrace both traditions, while steering discussion of the faith aspects toward the commonality in our faiths: God rather than Jesus. I do talk to my kids about Jesus but describe him as an important teacher who helped people learn new ways of thinking about God. We have decided not to enroll the kids in church- or synagogue-based education. We do plan to have some sort of coming of age ceremony/party and hope to find a private tutor who can help the kids read both old and new testament and study the two sides of their heritage in a way that focuses on similarities, differences, moral obligations, and ways of grappling intellectually with the more challenging aspects of having two religious traditions. We may look to the Interfaith Families Project for help with this when the kids get a bit older.
There is a psychotherapist in DC who is also a Rabbi and specializes in working with interfaith couples: Dr. Blecher. We worked with him prior to marriage and found the experience both harmful and helpful. I would recommend meeting with him, but don't be surprised if it polarizes you (at least for a while) and don't expect to figure out a neat framework for living with two faiths within a couple of months of sessions. I found him mostly helpful in that he could articulate all the dimensions of religion where tensions arise (faith, community, identity,ritual, etc.). This allowed us to recognize that we could harmonize the two traditions in some dimensions but needed to consciously gloss over the conflict in other dimensions (faith) in order to make our arrangement work.
This sounds interesting and respectful to both sides. I think it must be hard for many people to feel like they are giving something up when trying to raise kids in 2 faiths. I know my ex had a tough time with this - but as a general rule he didn't really get the "compromise" concept. Despite the many conversations we had on the subject he banned Christmas trees and pushed traditional Hebrew school and Bar Mitzvahs. He became increasingly disgusted with me for not being Jewish ... There was definitely non"deferring to the wife" in our house. Ever.
Too bad we didn't know of dr blecher at the time. Sounds like this therapist is a realist, at least that is implied by your post. Glad things worked out for you - you must both be reasonable people!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Atheist(ish) husband with Christian (non-denominational) wife. It's not always easy because there's a natural conflict. But we both respect each other, and have so far been able to work things out. General philosophy is to raise the kids to be critical thinkers and make their own decisions.
That works fine as long as the atheist parent doesn't exclude faithful people from critical thinking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Atheist(ish) husband with Christian (non-denominational) wife. It's not always easy because there's a natural conflict. But we both respect each other, and have so far been able to work things out. General philosophy is to raise the kids to be critical thinkers and make their own decisions.
That works fine as long as the atheist parent doesn't exclude faithful people from critical thinking.
Anonymous wrote:Atheist(ish) husband with Christian (non-denominational) wife. It's not always easy because there's a natural conflict. But we both respect each other, and have so far been able to work things out. General philosophy is to raise the kids to be critical thinkers and make their own decisions.