Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop trying to indoctrinate your kid.
Let them play sports and get exercise better for their brain cells.
If you raised an intelligent kid they will leave the church anyway.
Exactly. I PURPOSELY did not baptize my kids and have told them since an early age they can pick their own religion or none at all and I will support them either way.
So sick of the families forcing their beliefs onto their children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop trying to indoctrinate your kid.
Let them play sports and get exercise better for their brain cells.
If you raised an intelligent kid they will leave the church anyway.
Exactly. I PURPOSELY did not baptize my kids and have told them since an early age they can pick their own religion or none at all and I will support them either way.
So sick of the families forcing their beliefs onto their children.
The open displays of hated toward Christianity are appalling.
Do you hate Islam and Judaism as much?
If only there were words to describe people who hate Judaism. Or Islam. Or christianity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop trying to indoctrinate your kid.
Let them play sports and get exercise better for their brain cells.
If you raised an intelligent kid they will leave the church anyway.
Exactly. I PURPOSELY did not baptize my kids and have told them since an early age they can pick their own religion or none at all and I will support them either way.
So sick of the families forcing their beliefs onto their children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop trying to indoctrinate your kid.
Let them play sports and get exercise better for their brain cells.
If you raised an intelligent kid they will leave the church anyway.
Exactly. I PURPOSELY did not baptize my kids and have told them since an early age they can pick their own religion or none at all and I will support them either way.
So sick of the families forcing their beliefs onto their children.
Anonymous wrote:Why are sports being held on Sunday mornings?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My parents let us decide for ourselves whether we wanted to go to church as soon as we were old enough to stay home alone if we wanted, so like 10ish. Verdict: one non-religious adult child, one who consistently attends church with her two small children. I think this solution makes the most sense — your relationship with God isn’t dependent on being in church every Sunday in my view (I’m the religious adult child as you may have guessed).
Asking parents to forgo their pre-existing engagement so the child can do sports is a manners issue, however. Can you guess compromise on that? Carpool so you don’t have to miss every Sunday, and when he has games attend a different service than you usually would?
It's not preexisting arrangements. Parents can go at a different time or church.
I would guess that the parents have had a longer connection with the church, than the kid has had with the sports team.
Church is a primary source of social connection, and emotional support, for many adults. Asking a parent to give that up isn't reasonable. Telling a teenager that they do not have to attend services, but they need to arrange their own rides, or fund their own ubers, seems like a reasonable compromise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’re Catholic so we have a wide variety of church times (we still miss it on occasion), but I’ve found with faith development that what happens at home is most important. We pray nightly as a family and each of the special liturgical seasons, Advent and Lent, we use a prayer book and reflection questions together. My kids are teens, they give one word answers often, but I can see that relationship with God is building.
I was raised Catholic, gave one word answers and my relationship with God was waning by the minute.
The only way to tell if their relationship with God is building is to tell them they can do whatever they want with respect to religion...if a teen voluntarily attends church or does any of the praying you mention, then you are correct.
Anonymous wrote:We’re Catholic so we have a wide variety of church times (we still miss it on occasion), but I’ve found with faith development that what happens at home is most important. We pray nightly as a family and each of the special liturgical seasons, Advent and Lent, we use a prayer book and reflection questions together. My kids are teens, they give one word answers often, but I can see that relationship with God is building.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop trying to indoctrinate your kid.
Let them play sports and get exercise better for their brain cells.
If you raised an intelligent kid they will leave the church anyway.
Exactly. I PURPOSELY did not baptize my kids and have told them since an early age they can pick their own religion or none at all and I will support them either way.
So sick of the families forcing their beliefs onto their children.
Anonymous wrote:Why are sports being held on Sunday mornings?
Anonymous wrote:Stop trying to indoctrinate your kid.
Let them play sports and get exercise better for their brain cells.
If you raised an intelligent kid they will leave the church anyway.