I think the problem comes in deciding where to draw the line. Some of us think presenting your beliefs to your children while taking them to church, praying, etc. is making them your children follow your religion. Others don't think it is.
But with the comments I am reading from posts made in favour of the OP stance, nobody is drawing a line but Instead drawing a circle, i.e. classifying any and every thing that religious parents do as indoctrination / brainwashing. I have a feeling that
members posting against the OP stance already drew such a line stating that they merely introduce their children to activities and concepts that they believe in. However
members in agreement with the OP stance are unwilling to accept this notion and instead painted any and every religious activity with the indoctrinating brush
How is that fair?
Why would people class these activities as indoctrination / brainwashing?
Why are OP proponents being so adamant that we are damaging children's futures with religious beliefs?
Straying from the topic, BUT what then can we say about parents who introduce their child to the sport of baseball and make their child go to every Red Socks game because of the parents favourite team? Is this not indoctrination too? Or is it that because it is something as simple as baseball then we need not worry about it? If that is the case then we go right back to Favlun's post where he says what people are finding a problem with is the content and not the method. And that would come right back to my point in that we should stop imposing our personal agendas onto parents because we disagree on theistic concepts
You could do that, but you wouldn't get much opposition from those of us here calling religious upbringing indoctrination.
But then religious people could make a sweeping statement that avoiding teaching your children that there is a true God is a form of indoctrination, an atheistic way of living. Please do not start any drama on that statement. But I'm just saying it is possible and an argument could develop from both sides.
Sure, but I'll still point out that raising your kid to hold the same religious beliefs as you isn't the best way to go.
I acknowledge that this is your stance. In your estimation, religious parents are not doing the best by their children when they pigeonhole their minds into the parent's belief. If that's where you and member of the OP party stand then fine, you are free to maintain non-theistic way of living and show your children the same in keeping with the common notion that parents are doing the best for their children.
However, I will repeat, do not impose or claim that religious are performing an injustice because whether you want to agree or not, following a religion is a real thing and their beliefs are the truth.
There are many threads running on this forum which seek to disprove such a notion, I would urge OP proponents to put forth such arguments there. But in the matter of religious parents introducing their religion to their children, the parents' actions are justified and is a natural way of bonding.
I too was made to dress up and go to Church, and sing hymns and listen to pastors rambling on and inevitably sleeping because in my little head I couldn't understand what the heck was going on and it seemed like a waste of time. But my parents had a plan, they know they wanted me to be a model citizen and proceeded accordingly.
Fast forward to today and I can't tell wen last I stepped inside a church. I wouldn't consider myself a Christian by any stretch of imagination. But do I despise my parents for what they did? NO
Maybe I'm an exception or a one-off case. But then aren't all families different:rainbow1:
Now can we /thread :bow: