A recent post in another thread reminded me of something that's puzzled me for a while now: generally, we consider it inappropriate to choose a child's career for him/her, but plenty of people don't have a problem with choosing a religion for them.
I think the same issues are at play in both: we recognize that a career can be a major part of a person's identity, and that it robs a person of self-direction to try to dictate what sort of adult the child will grow to be.
Isn't the same true for religion? Religious beliefs can be even more central to a person's identity than their career, so doesn't it disrespect the personhood of the child to try to dictate their choice of religion than it is to try to dictate their choice of career?
Thoughts? Is it fair to compare religion and a career this way?
Like SF said, he would allow them to change it later in their lives.
Unlike if you want your child to have a specific job, which you would most likely be wanting them to continue doing as a long-term job. If you are wanting them to grow up to do a job temporarily (such as making them start at a specific job before starting a career with another job of their own choosing, or having them work on the family chores until they move on) then it is not exactly inappropriate, at least how I see it, because parents generally know what is best for a child to start out in to get them experienced for the future.
I started out at a telemarketing job, my dad wanted me to take that job because he said it would get me enough money to save up for when I choose my future job. Now I no longer work there and I work on a farm by my own will.
I was raised in to be Baptist and/or Lutheran, being that my family went to both churches, the Lutheran one always in the winter because the Baptist one was a lot farther away. Anyways, my family just quit going to church altogether at one point, just having very little time and simply not caring to. Not sure what religion they think I am a part of because we never really discuss it, but I'm sure they don't care. I told my mom that I was an atheist when I was a while back, she didn't really care, at that point I knew it wasn't necessary to even tell them.
If my dad had wanted me to work at (for example) the telemarketing business as a life-long career, that wouldn't be equivalent with how they raised me into religion, considering they didn't care but raised me a Christian.
Your parents choosing a lifelong career = Your parents choosing a lifelong religion.
Your parents choosing a starter career = Your parents raising you to believe something and later you can believe whatever you want.