Anonymous wrote:I am a military guy, I have a cross right on my dog tags. I wear my tags out of tradition. My cross stays right on.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, and I do daily.
Anonymous wrote:I have a beautiful cross necklace I got for my birthday. I work at a fed agency. I've seen others do it, but I'm not sure how appropriate it is.
Anonymous wrote:I have a beautiful cross necklace I got for my birthday. I work at a fed agency. I've seen others do it, but I'm not sure how appropriate it is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you have a standard office job, it should be fine. If you have any special considerations, such as working with religiously diverse clients who might be put off by it, that could be a reason not to wear it at work. But generally that should fall into personal expression and be OK.
Would you say the same thing to a Muslim woman, asking if it would be OK to wear a hijab to work?
Not PP, but I think a hijab is different because women who wear it usually feel it's a requirement of their faith, like Jewish men who wear a kippah or religious women of various faiths who dress modestly (long sleeves/pants/skirts). I've never heard that wearing a cross is a religious requirement of any faith, as opposed to a personal expression of faith.
I wear a Star of David myself, around the office, but not to court arguments or interviews. And if I were in private practice and had religious clients of another religion, I might not wear it so as to not make them uncomfortable. For me it is optional. However, if I were Orthodox, I would not alter my expression of faith for any of these scenarios.
So, this person's feelings as to what is a requirement in her faith is more important than my or someone else's desire to wear a Christian cross necklace? Just making sure I'm clear on your point.
I have no idea what your point is, but mine is that it's the difference between a requirement and a wish. A need of a want. I'm not saying the want is invalid. Just that it's easier to be flexible when it's a desire and not a mandate. (I said "feel" because obviously there are differing interpretations of what is religiously required. For example I have friends who are fairly observant Muslims who don't wear the hijab.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All religious displays in the workplace bug me - I don't care if it's a hijab, a yarmulke, a cross, or a pentagram. But I recognize it's your right to wear symbols of your private beliefs openly, even if I disagree.
I wouldn't, becasue of posters like this. I hide my faith - people dislike me enough as it is.
Oh, cry me a river. We all hide things at work in order to maintain professional and cordial relationships. I bite my tongue about divisive issues all the time. But religion is different and special, right?
Actually, yes.
Although I highly doubt you bite your tongue.
+1 no question
Of course I bite my tongue, I'm not a moron. I value my job and I'm not a troublemaker.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All religious displays in the workplace bug me - I don't care if it's a hijab, a yarmulke, a cross, or a pentagram. But I recognize it's your right to wear symbols of your private beliefs openly, even if I disagree.
I wouldn't, becasue of posters like this. I hide my faith - people dislike me enough as it is.
Oh, cry me a river. We all hide things at work in order to maintain professional and cordial relationships. I bite my tongue about divisive issues all the time. But religion is different and special, right?
Actually, yes.
Although I highly doubt you bite your tongue.
+1 no question
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a beautiful cross necklace I got for my birthday. I work at a fed agency. I've seen others do it, but I'm not sure how appropriate it is.
Look around -- do you see others wearing religious jewelry? Ask your boss. Read the regulations.
What kind of agencies have regulations that do not permit the wearing of religious symbols/items? Does that get into regulating religious practice/expression?
um, I am thinking the French embassy? #Laicity
No American federal agency would have such a rule for civilian employees.
Anonymous wrote:I have a beautiful cross necklace I got for my birthday. I work at a fed agency. I've seen others do it, but I'm not sure how appropriate it is.