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Valerie Tarico

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Losing Your Religion? How to Talk to Your Kids

Posted: 03/25/09 05:30 PM ET

Sometimes I get letters from former Christians -- the evangelical/fundamentalist type -- who are also parents. "What do I say to my kids?" they ask. "I raised them to believe that without the blood of Jesus they are evil sinners. What a horrible thing for them to think! I feel guilty." "All of their friends are members of our old church, so we keep going. I don't want to tear them apart, but it's getting harder and harder for me to pretend." "When I try to talk to them they just cry. They think I'm going to hell." No matter what age the kids are or what the situation, telling them you no longer believe can be tricky. Here are three things to remember.

  1. Help them to understand your changes as a matter of spiritual growth rather than spiritual abandonment.

    The bottom line is that your personal evolution is very much in keeping with the history of human religion, including Christianity. Every past generation answered our deepest questions as best they could. What is real? What is good? How can we live in moral community with each other? But every generation was like the blind men and the elephant. They were limited by their cultural and technological context -- their point in history -- as well as the fact that they, like us, were imperfect. By outgrowing the answers that were handed down to us, we honor their quest and continue their journey.

    Here is how I explained my own loss of faith to my extended family.

    Even if you emphasize growth, both your own and that of our ancestors, your kids will ask about your current beliefs. After all, you've probably taught them to think that it's the answers that matter, not the process. Do you believe in God? Are you a Christian? Do you believe in Jesus? Are you going to Hell? Try to anticipate their questions and think ahead about some simple responses that are both honest and reassuring. But let them know that you are still learning and that you expect to keep learning for the rest of your life. The nice thing about this framework is that it allows your conversations to continue evolving.

  2. If your children are still at home, don't forget that they may need a new community.

    As you continue to grow and change, you may find community online or with your spouse or you might simply prefer solitude and good books in this next phase of the quest. But if you have raised your children with religion in the center of their lives, they will have their own need for explicit conversations about religion, spirituality and morality. What should replace Sunday school or Pioneer Girls or Bible study?

    On top of this are their social needs. Did your church reach out to kids with fun and music? Your kids may have their friends, their weekend activities, and their summer camps all integrated with religion. It's not fair to cut them off abruptly just because you've hit your own tipping point.

    Think about seeking out a moral/spiritual community that allows room for doubt or even atheism. A Unitarian church might be a fit, or a Quaker meeting or Ethical Culture Society. Within Christianity there are traditions that would allow your children access to familiar rituals and stories without feeding the belief that the Bible is perfect and their parents are doomed. Traditions I might look at include United Church of Christ, United Methodist, and Episcopal. All of these recognize the human handprints on the Bible and traditional dogmas--and they allow a humble, inquiring approach to the meaning of the Christian faith. However, this very much depends on the individual minister. Openness to interfaith or "interSpiritual" work can be one indicator that a group doesn't make exclusive claims about truth and salvation. Pay particular attention to whether your children would be offered explanations of the world that seem real and right to you, and whether they would have a group of peers.

  3. Trust yourself, even when you are feeling your way in the dark, to be a spiritual guide for your children.

    You may feel less wise or less confident than before, but that is because you have moved forward. Don't be afraid to talk with them about spiritual matters, just because you no longer have a clear set of pat answers. What you do have still is deeply held values and principles that guide your life. What are they? Have you ever put them into words? At the Wisdom Commons or the Virtues Project International or similar sites you can find quotes, stories, and curriculum materials to help you talk with your kids about your moral core.

    As complicated and awkward as it may feel to find the right words for all of this, it's worth it. You have the chance to model for your kids what it means to be a lifetime learner -- someone who cultivates the curiosity and humility that can make it actually feel good to discover you were ignorant. Along the way, if you keep asking questions, you will be making some wonderful discoveries, and part of the delight can be sharing them. You once gave your kids a fish. Now you can invite them on a fishing expedition.

 
 
 

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Sometimes I get letters from former Christians -- the evangelical/fundamentalist type -- who are also parents. "What do I say to my kids?" they ask. "I raised them to believe that without the blood of...
Sometimes I get letters from former Christians -- the evangelical/fundamentalist type -- who are also parents. "What do I say to my kids?" they ask. "I raised them to believe that without the blood of...
 
 
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08:59 AM on 03/26/2009
"I raised them to believe that without the blood of Jesus they are evil sinners. What a horrible thing for them to think! I feel guilty."

You actually have heard Christians say this? Wow, then they should feel guilty, because that is an emotive abomination of the Christian position.

The actual Christian Position is;

1) All fall short of the glory of God.
2) The "blood" of Jesus is the redemptive gift offered to all
3) Everyone has a choice to make after hearing the gospel.
4) Sanctification of ones life is an ongoing process after accepting Jesus, not a one time, one prayer deal, that is justification.
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JohnFromCensornati
The End is near
11:53 AM on 03/26/2009
How is your christian position different from the christian position you are criticizing? It is a distinction w/o a difference. Either way, w/o Je$u$, one is unsanctified.
01:35 PM on 03/26/2009
Your personal inability to discern understanding from NHARRISON's comment does not mean it is without meaning.

Simply that you will never gain that meaning, and the understanding that could accompany it.

Here's a clue: the word "evil" only appears in NHARRISON's post once, as part of a quote from the article. I think the entire meaning of the comment rests on that. Try re-reading without inputting your own agenda.
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06:13 AM on 03/26/2009
Many ask, “How can I be happy in Heaven knowing that a close family member has been sentenced to Hell?†In Heaven, the righteous will fully comprehend the exceeding sinfulness of sin. They will not see the attractive, Hollywood and Madison Avenue version of sin. They will view sin as God perceives sin. They will look upon their unrepentant infidel family members with utter contempt, guilty sinners and deserving of their eternal torment. God is love.
08:42 PM on 03/25/2009
As someone who for over 67 years dealing with and trying to find something in religion, I finally gave up when I started having panic attacks from being anywhere near a church. I have had myself excommunicated from one major religion and sent my baptismal certificate back to another. One of my daughters ended up a good Catholic and the other a Buddhist. My advice at this point in life is to cut your loses and keep children away from religion altogether. Expose them to nature, teach them to be kind and thank trees for delivering oxygen. Read every word in the Old Testament and determine if you really want that god to be the moral example for your children. Religion is just too dangerous to give to kids--like a loaded gun without a trigger lock.
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02:09 PM on 03/26/2009
melmoid ,
Religion .......... like a loaded gun without a trigger lock.
Perfect analogy!
05:48 PM on 03/25/2009
How do you go about finding more open/liberal/progressive churches? Me and my wife are expecting our first children, and she is very confused about the issue.

We live in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and the churches around here are very conservative, anti-gay, and misogynistic. My wife particularly can't stand the anti-gay and anti-women attitudes. (She's a republican and mostly pro-life, but strongly supports gay marriage and women's rights.) She actually isn't sure if she considers herself a Christian any more because she sees the Bible as chock full of misogyny.

I've told her that there are more progressive churches out there, but I have no idea where to look for one here in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Valerie Tarico
07:46 PM on 03/25/2009
Good question. Never having been to Baton Rouge, I would check out the denominations mentioned--especially Unitarian, given that she's exploring her relationship to Christianity. There is room to be explicitly Christian or not in that setting.
01:38 PM on 03/26/2009
If I were looking for a church with a personality that is right for me and my family, I would do a couple of things: one would be to check the "Religion" forum on Craigslist and try to find some recommendations that you can visit.

Also, you could get a listing of every potential church, and call to get a feel for that church's personality by talking to someone or making an appt to meet the clergy there.

Good luck with it!
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05:44 PM on 03/25/2009
My wife and I went through leaving a funamentalist church. We eventually got "disfellowshipped" (ex-communnicated, whatever). It was one of the most painful and terrifying times of our lives. It's been 20 years now and the pain still hits once in a while. The best thing to do is to try to leave quietly, if they will let you. Find some people who are going or have gone through the same situation. There are more out there than you might think. Undoubtedly you will need support.

We are so glad to be free to live in reality without this fantasy god thing keeping us from growing.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Valerie Tarico
07:49 PM on 03/25/2009
Wow. it sounds horrible. Many people have found support at www.exChristian.net. Also, Marlene Winell, Ph.D. has a therapy practice focusing on recovery from toxic religion. She works by telephone with people who have no-one in their area. She is at: http://marlenewinell.net/
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metropixie
"Near normal" is close enough...
05:21 PM on 03/25/2009
Just tell them it was all a hoax into which you blindly believed until (fill in the blank) caused you to relegate it to folklore, like fairies, pixies, tooth fairy, Santa Claus, WMDs, etc.
11:08 AM on 03/26/2009
Bingo! And tell them you ARE SORRY for doing it to them, but you got fooled too. Be sure to reassure them that you're all NOT victims. You made the best choice you felt you could with the information you had at the time. Now you know better. You used your human reason (which some still believe is God-given and others believe is a process of evolution which does not rely on the existance of a personal god).

I would also recommed the book Parenting Beyond Belief, edited by Dale McGowen. Very Helpful!!
I got my copy of Amazon.