nori-chan 0 Posted March 6, 2004 Share Posted March 6, 2004 I have another interesting question and I hope some people might answering it. If my parents are Catholic, is it surely case I will grow up to be Catholic? And if my parent not Catholic, I become not Catholic? (You can swapping word Catholic with another religion name) It is interesting whether people are growup as some religion, or another case. I hope it explain enough Link to post Share on other sites
miteyak 0 Posted March 6, 2004 Share Posted March 6, 2004 My Grandfather was a canon in the church of England, my parents are baptist/born again christians... and me, a staunch atheist ... So in our cases, no. Link to post Share on other sites
nori-chan 0 Posted March 6, 2004 Author Share Posted March 6, 2004 Did they encouraging you to, or want you to be also? In your situatiom, are they disappointing? Link to post Share on other sites
miteyak 0 Posted March 6, 2004 Share Posted March 6, 2004 Yes, I was raised to be a good christian boy, and they probably pray for my salvation every night... I could say I hope evryday that they'll see the light, but however ridiculous I find their religiious believes, as far as I'm concerned, If it makes them happy, then so am I. We never talk about it, because discussions never go their way. It's hard to be convincing when all you have in yer arsenal is..."But the bible says..." Bitter about my upbringing? Not openly, but as one can probably tell from my posts on the subject, a little resentment resides. I think everyone has the right to choose to follow a religion, but when parents/the church/the state think that faith and truth are interlinked, religion has overstepped the mark. (I'll stop before I go to far, the last time I used my right to free speech on religion I lost a star ) Link to post Share on other sites
sweetaz 0 Posted March 6, 2004 Share Posted March 6, 2004 Quote: Originally posted by nori-chan: If my parents are Catholic, is it surely case I will grow up to be Catholic? And if my parent not Catholic, I become not Catholic? Traditionally children take on thier mother's religon and their father's political beliefs. So traditional families tend to impose their beliefs on their children. Others raise their children with a religon but then allow their children to make up their own minds when they are older. Link to post Share on other sites
snowboard_freak 0 Posted March 6, 2004 Share Posted March 6, 2004 I wasn't raised in a religous household. But i did go to a Church of England high school. We had to go to church once a week and did a subject called "Divinity" tiwce a week. That didn't have any effect on my "religiousness" (or lack there of). Link to post Share on other sites
Plucky 0 Posted March 6, 2004 Share Posted March 6, 2004 In reply to the topic question: My mother's parents are extremely religious. My mom did not subscribe to this. Same with my pops. My parents never took me to church, but allowed me to go to church with friends. I visited churches of the baptist, mormon, protestant and catholic faith. I'd come home and my parents would ask me if I had fun or not and that was it. Frankly, even at a young age, I thought it was all a bunch of BS. Religion is personal. The family guilt isn't working too well in a lot of places in the US any more. Well, maybe Texass and the midwest, but not many other places. Link to post Share on other sites
oblivion 5 Posted March 7, 2004 Share Posted March 7, 2004 MY parents were brought up in a fairly religious background and almost discouraged me to be religious when I was young. My grandmother was not amused Link to post Share on other sites
GoodTimes 0 Posted March 8, 2004 Share Posted March 8, 2004 My parents were both not into religion at all, so I never grew up in a religious environment. I'm sure if I grew up with it all round me there'd be a much bigger chance I'd take it on myself. Glad it didn't work out that way. Link to post Share on other sites
KlingKlang 1 Posted March 9, 2004 Share Posted March 9, 2004 My grandparents were very religious - as were many of their generation. My parents less so, but I was still dragged to church when I was younger. I didn't like it, and they stopped themselves when I was about 14 so there were no problems with me being anti-religion. Link to post Share on other sites
Ocean11 0 Posted March 9, 2004 Share Posted March 9, 2004 Being forced to sit through 'Religious Education' classes at school was a rare kind of torture. It was a State school and it was supposed to be comparative religion which might have been interesting. But instead we had a Christian who was in advanced stages of alcoholism, who would lean against the teacher's desk like it was a bar. With a public house philospher's hand gesture he would intone "Ya have to turn yourself to God". I compared notes with my older sister and she said the old w*nker had said the same thing to their class two years earlier with exactly the same gesture of inspecting a glass for lipstick stains. Also the Headmaster's unauthorized sermons in morning assembly filled me with rage and a strong urge to heckle. The Jewish kids were spared it because it wasn't their religion and they always came in afterwards just to listen to the announcements. I wanted to know why I wasn't spared it too because it wasn't my religion either. Link to post Share on other sites
amandanism 0 Posted March 9, 2004 Share Posted March 9, 2004 Quote: Originally posted by snowboard_freak: I wasn't raised in a religous household. But i did go to a Church of England high school. We had to go to church once a week and did a subject called "Divinity" tiwce a week. as did i. what school were you at in sydney? Link to post Share on other sites
snowboard_freak 0 Posted March 9, 2004 Share Posted March 9, 2004 Shore in North Syndey. Did you go to school in Sydney too manda? I did comparitive religion at uni and thoroughly enjoyed it. "Divinity" how ever was far from comparitive. More like "if you don't live this way your a sinner and will burn in hell" blah blah blah. Link to post Share on other sites
amandanism 0 Posted March 9, 2004 Share Posted March 9, 2004 yeah i went to SCECGS redlands in cremorne, another church of england school. i was only there until 7th grade though. Link to post Share on other sites
barok 0 Posted March 10, 2004 Share Posted March 10, 2004 I was raised Catholic, and dragged to church every week. Nowadays, the majority of the time, I side against religious thinkers, but a small part of me can't discount the faith entirely. I guess on some level I have been brainwashed, but I am cool with it. I think that alot of the Christian symbolism is interesting. But as a scientist, I would never use "Well the Bible says. . ." as support for anything other than anthropological evidence for behavior. Link to post Share on other sites
OzOzOz 2 Posted March 17, 2004 Share Posted March 17, 2004 I was brought up in a religious family, and was also dragged to church every Sunday up until I was a teen, so I supposed I just accepted it. I've nothing against it now, but will never be in another Sunday church servive I can tell ya. Link to post Share on other sites
snowboard_freak 0 Posted March 17, 2004 Share Posted March 17, 2004 Ahh yeah good ol' Redlends. I nearly went there instead of Shore. Link to post Share on other sites
which was nice 0 Posted March 18, 2004 Share Posted March 18, 2004 I grew up in a non-religious environment. Which was nice. Link to post Share on other sites
which was nice 0 Posted March 18, 2004 Share Posted March 18, 2004 Are organisations like the Scouts and Boys Brigade religious?? Link to post Share on other sites
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