Monday, June 03, 2013

Church

In the past 3 months, Archer and I have started taking our boys to church.  I haven't attended church regularly since, well, ever.  My father is a lapsed Catholic, and my mother was Presbyterian.  We didn't go to church unless we were visiting my mother's parents.  Even attending church then was a big deal, at least for my mom.  My dad never went, not even out of respect to my grandparents, which was upsetting to everyone.  My mom went occasionally, but her visits were usually prompted by lengthy guilt trips on the part of my grandmother.  As an adult, I would go with my grandparents when I visited them.  It meant a lot to them, and as it was really no hardship to me, I went.  I rarely discussed religion with my grandparents though as it was hard for me to explain that I see religion much differently than they did.  It was easier just to go than to debate the finer points of theology.

Recently, Wild Man has started asking questions about religion, questions that Archer and I are really unprepared to answer.  We can't answer, in part, because we're not sure what we  believe, and we can't answer some questions because we simply don't know enough about Christianity to answer.  So we've started attending church to give our children some sort of religious grounding, to combat our own ignorance, to feel more connected to our community, and to figure out what we believe in.  I know there are lots of people out there who will likely be offended for our reasons, but I can't honestly say I feel called to go to church.  I haven't been divinely inspired or anything like that.  I really just want to learn more, and I also want to be able to help my children find their way.

You see, I feel like my parents did my siblings and I a huge disservice by not educating us about religion.  We never discussed religion in my house when I was a child.  If religion came up, it was only when my father openly derided anyone who was religious for his or her hypocrisy (he never explained how religious people were hypocritical, just insisted they were).  What I know about Christianity, Islam, and Judaism is what I've gleaned on my own. I've read some religious texts, and I am familiar with the Bible (I have to be given the period that I study).  I took a few religious studies courses in college out of interest, and I read a lot.  By virtue of all that I am not completely ignorant about religion.  But I don't feel like I can adequately answer my children's questions about religion.  I want my children to have a religious background because I want them to have something to reject.  I want them to be able to say, with confidence, I believe in X, but I don't believe in Y.  I want that, in part, because I can't do that.  I know so little about theology and doctrine that I don't really know what I believe.  So we're going to church and I've been reading some spiritual narratives.  I'm still not sure what I think, but I find comfort in knowing what other people believe, in knowing that I'm not the only one with questions.

I am also really enjoying the church we're going to.  It was recommended by some friends, and the congregation and ministers (they are a husband and wife) have been really welcoming.  They have also given us a lot of space to get used to things.  No one has called us at home or tried to visit us.  Both ministers have offered to talk to us "when we're ready," but no one has pressured us.  That has been nice, comforting even.  I appreciate that they recognize that we're trying to figure this out for our family and not trying to strong arm us into anything (which has been my experience with very religious friends in the past).  It also helps that we've specifically chosen a denomination that is very liberal and open-minded.  This specific church is also very welcoming of children. No one cares when George starts jabbering during the middle of the sermon--and I mean he jabbered so loudly that he made the minister laugh mid-sermon.  No one cares if Bear comes to church in his slippers--seriously, I have bigger battles to fight than getting the kid into "real" shoes.  And no one cares when Wild Man stops the ministers during "Children's Corner" to ask a doctrinal issue--why can't I take communion yet?  I don't know if this church will become my spiritual home, but I do know this church has welcomed me and my family while allowing us to get acclimated and to determine how involved we want to be.  For that, I'm grateful.

5 comments:

L said...

I hope that this experience can be a positive one for you and your family.

I'm grateful for my religious upbringing, but it is still hard to figure out what exactly I believe in and also to come to terms with many outrageous things that sometimes happen within a religious organization. It's a tough journey for everyone, I think, even for those who had a very religiously-centered upbringing like I did.

Unknown said...

No offense here. I had a feeling it related to the children.

And as long as people are nice, I can't think of a better reason to go and give it a chance.

--Prudence

rented life said...

Those seem like good reasons to go to church. How will you know what you believe, or how to answer Wild Man's questions without going?

My parents took us when we were older, I think I was in 5th grade? I had questions. No religion was pushed at home, just acceptance of people different that you. While mom still goes to that church (which has sadly changed a great deal post 9-11, with some awful new pastors), and my brother says he's an atheist, I don't think the experience was bad for us overall. As an adult I no longer share my mom's beliefs, and my dad's have changed over the years. We ended up more in line with each other without even knowing.

p-duck said...

We recently joined a church too. It's liberalish one and the denomination we were raised in as kids. S and I don't know where we stand religiously but we are in our own ways spiritual people. We appreciate the support and sense of continuity and community we gained from being raised in a church, and we want our kids to experience the same thing. Sometimes we feel hypocritical for joining for mainly the sense of community rather than spiritual guidance, but I think good congregations are used to helping people through such things.

M said...

I really like the intellectual aspect of this particular church. The ministers seem to go out of their way to address the history behind the Bible. That makes me happy, as it give me a way in. I'm always ask questions about feasibility, so having them acknowledge time line and similar things makes it more interesting to me.

It also helps that Wild Man really likes one of the ministers. In fact, I think he has a bit of a crush on her.