Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:None of our kids attend church as adults, in fact they say our religion is a cult now. They were home schooled and attended church school. Their kids go to public school and don't regularly attend church. They drink alcohol and challenge godly teachings they were raised with. In fact they blame us and the church for a lot of their adult problems. I feel like coming back to church would help these problems, but they reject it. It makes me question what was it all for.
Anyone's adult kids come back around to the church in time?
OP, what was it all for, in your view?
Homeschooling was very difficult, lots of conflicts and fights daily. Also, the loss of one income was hard to recover from. It seems like a huge waste of time, money and energy.
Anonymous wrote:Because I could never reconcile the idea that God loved us so, yet hung the threat of eternal damnation over our heads to keep us in "faith". All you had to do to be saved was believe. So you be a very good person, who happened to be Jewish, and you would go to hell. And you could be a terrible, awful person who believed in Jesus and thus would be saved. That is the central, most abiding tenet of Christianity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:None of our kids attend church as adults, in fact they say our religion is a cult now. They were home schooled and attended church school. Their kids go to public school and don't regularly attend church. They drink alcohol and challenge godly teachings they were raised with. In fact they blame us and the church for a lot of their adult problems. I feel like coming back to church would help these problems, but they reject it. It makes me question what was it all for.
Anyone's adult kids come back around to the church in time?
OP, what was it all for, in your view?
Homeschooling was very difficult, lots of conflicts and fights daily. Also, the loss of one income was hard to recover from. It seems like a huge waste of time, money and energy.
Yes, it was. And almost certainly worse academically than a public school. Why didn't you send your kids to public school?
There was a movement in the 1990’s to homeschool with creationism as a basis. So the homeschooling curriculum didn’t conflict with church doctrine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:None of our kids attend church as adults, in fact they say our religion is a cult now. They were home schooled and attended church school. Their kids go to public school and don't regularly attend church. They drink alcohol and challenge godly teachings they were raised with. In fact they blame us and the church for a lot of their adult problems. I feel like coming back to church would help these problems, but they reject it. It makes me question what was it all for.
Anyone's adult kids come back around to the church in time?
OP, what was it all for, in your view?
Homeschooling was very difficult, lots of conflicts and fights daily. Also, the loss of one income was hard to recover from. It seems like a huge waste of time, money and energy.
Yes, it was. And almost certainly worse academically than a public school. Why didn't you send your kids to public school?
Anonymous wrote:I grew up going to church and public school. My church was pretty liberal in many ways (supported gay rights, believes in science etc) and I still left. So did my siblings.
Why? Because I could never reconcile the idea that God loved us so, yet hung the threat of eternal damnation over our heads to keep us in "faith". All you had to do to be saved was believe. So you be a very good person, who happened to be Jewish, and you would go to hell. And you could be a terrible, awful person who believed in Jesus and thus would be saved. That is the central, most abiding tenet of Christianity.
Those thoughts crept in while I was in high school, and was still very involved in my church. In college, I still went to church here and there, but much less. Eventually I just couldn't get around that piece of it and stopped going. No amount of religious thought yoga gets you around it. Christians don't believe that good people matter. They only believe Christians matter. I don't agree or believe that. Thus I am an adult who does not have a religion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:None of our kids attend church as adults, in fact they say our religion is a cult now. They were home schooled and attended church school. Their kids go to public school and don't regularly attend church. They drink alcohol and challenge godly teachings they were raised with. In fact they blame us and the church for a lot of their adult problems. I feel like coming back to church would help these problems, but they reject it. It makes me question what was it all for.
Anyone's adult kids come back around to the church in time?
OP, what was it all for, in your view?
Homeschooling was very difficult, lots of conflicts and fights daily. Also, the loss of one income was hard to recover from. It seems like a huge waste of time, money and energy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:None of our kids attend church as adults, in fact they say our religion is a cult now. They were home schooled and attended church school. Their kids go to public school and don't regularly attend church. They drink alcohol and challenge godly teachings they were raised with. In fact they blame us and the church for a lot of their adult problems. I feel like coming back to church would help these problems, but they reject it. It makes me question what was it all for.
Anyone's adult kids come back around to the church in time?
OP, what was it all for, in your view?
Homeschooling was very difficult, lots of conflicts and fights daily. Also, the loss of one income was hard to recover from. It seems like a huge waste of time, money and energy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:None of our kids attend church as adults, in fact they say our religion is a cult now. They were home schooled and attended church school. Their kids go to public school and don't regularly attend church. They drink alcohol and challenge godly teachings they were raised with. In fact they blame us and the church for a lot of their adult problems. I feel like coming back to church would help these problems, but they reject it. It makes me question what was it all for.
Anyone's adult kids come back around to the church in time?
OP, what was it all for, in your view?
Homeschooling was very difficult, lots of conflicts and fights daily. Also, the loss of one income was hard to recover from. It seems like a huge waste of time, money and energy.