Wandered Off
Sporadic Driveby Member
A family member attended a church that called itself Methodist, but it was more like a UU congregation. In support of gay marriage, for example, the staff decided that it would perform no weddings of any kind until the larger Methodist church body ends its official stance against gay marriage.
That got me thinking... If I were a traditional Methodist, I might well resent an attempt by some members to change longstanding policies or my beliefs.
(Thread note: This thread isn't about debating gay marriage... I'm just using that scenario as one example, so let's not start that debate again here. There are tons of other threads for that.)
So if the church you belong to has some policies or beliefs with which you disagree, do you think it's better to try to change the church or to find one more compatible?
On the one hand, it seems a bit arrogant to try to change everybody else to conform to your own thinking, but on the other hand, I'd love to see some tolerance movements arise from within some of the more rigid religions, and I think injustice should be challenged everywhere. What's the right balance?
That got me thinking... If I were a traditional Methodist, I might well resent an attempt by some members to change longstanding policies or my beliefs.
(Thread note: This thread isn't about debating gay marriage... I'm just using that scenario as one example, so let's not start that debate again here. There are tons of other threads for that.)
So if the church you belong to has some policies or beliefs with which you disagree, do you think it's better to try to change the church or to find one more compatible?
On the one hand, it seems a bit arrogant to try to change everybody else to conform to your own thinking, but on the other hand, I'd love to see some tolerance movements arise from within some of the more rigid religions, and I think injustice should be challenged everywhere. What's the right balance?