0
votes

Why I'm Thankful I Was Not Raised in a Devoutly Religious Household

posted July 6, 2008 - 4:28pm
Why I'm Thankful I Was Not Raised in a Devoutly Religious Household

When my father was a young man recovering from minor heart surgery, he had an epiphany (for want of a less religious term) of sorts. A hospital affiliated minister came around to his room and engaged him in a discussion about God. Somewhere during the discussion, my father indicated that he did not need The Bible, or any other organized belief system, to get closer to God. He stated that he was perfectly capable of discovering God on his own. This didn't set well with the minister, of course. After all, he was there to prey upon the vulnerability of my father in his physically and mentally weakened state in hopes of bringing another sheep into the fold. The minister's reply was one of pity and scorn. "Well, I feel sorry for you," he said. At that moment, my father developed a deep disdain for organized religion.

While my father was a lifetime believer in God, it was always on his terms. Never do I remember him imposing his beliefs on me as I grew up. Yes, he shared his beliefs with me, but he did not impose them upon any of his children -- nor did my mother. Both believed that the deciding a spiritual path is better left to adulthood. Yes, they shared their thoughts on God and the after life, but never indoctrinated us. That, I feel, is a huge mistake. Strict religious upbringings can really do a number on your head. It can take years to overcome, if one ever fully does, the fear, repression, and the negative connotations religion superimposes on sexuality. For those who awaken to a freer mindset, it can be a lengthy journey.

I remember having a conversation with a pastor some years ago who pointed out that he had encountered many atheists who reached out to God on their death beds. After pondering that for quite some time, I reasoned that it many cases it can be explained by that old fear of "eternal hellfire" that never completely left the consciousness. It can rear its ugly head at those weakened moments, just as the small minded minister came to my father's bedside to sell his twisted theology, then attempted shame him with pity. It's all about control. Why else would the authors of the Bible have concocted such an odious fate as hell for those who refuse to accept their doctrine? I can't even remember the number of people have confessed to me, in so many words, that they are pretty much just covering their asses by buying into such a ludicrous concept.

What if they're right? Can I take that chance?

That's a pretty poor excuse for adopting a belief system, in my mind. I'm lucky that at no point in my life did the hell story ever take root and pervert my sense of logic and rationality. It helped that I was raised without any attempt to tattoo my brain with such nonsense.

Then there are those who are merely card carrying members of a religious faith. My grandmother was a case in point: Every Sunday she dragged my grandfather off to the Methodist Church to perform the weekly ritual of being seen as a "good church going Christian." It was all for show, mostly. I do know my grandfather later stated that he never really believed in God, nor the after life. Yet he was always an person who loved life, and lived life to the fullest. Not so my grandmother. She was one of the most negative people I've ever met in my life. Being around her could suck the life out you faster than a car wash vacuum hose sucks the debris from the floor of a minivan. They were complete opposites. Still, my grandfather was willing to go along with the farce of keeping up appearances in their little rural community for his wife. I've always found that rather sad.

Yes, I am thankful I never had too arduous a task of deprogramming myself as I grew into adulthood. Thankfully, they taught me right from wrong without the burden of religious indoctrination -- and they instilled in me the importance of an open mind. Were they the perfect parents? Nahhh, but there is no such animal. As I grow older, I become more of a spiritual person.But God just never figured into it. I keep my eyes open for life's truths, but I never search for them. I've found that the more you willfully search for "truth", the more likely it whatever you find will be filtered through a preconceived notion of it. And usually at the base of those notions is a lifetime of religious brainwashing.

Join Xomba to comment on this article



Comments

Gods will be human

After all, we created them.

 
 

It's interesting to me just

It's interesting to me just how many religions DO feature Gods that are petty, vindictive, etc. As a child, I was always fascinated with the Greek and Roman myths (which, of course, were once part of theist-based religions), as well as those of the Norse, etc. - but I was always amazed at how un-"Divine" the deities acted. (I realize this isn't exactly what you were commenting on, that you more likely had in mind religions where a God smites someone for a fairly minor infraction or for insullting Him, etc. - but this is what it brought up for me.)

Perfect sense

The feeling of oneness should overule religion for the human race to flourish.... Division is what keeps us in constant conflict with each other -- and religion is one of the keys ways that is achieved. ↑ Grab this Headline Animator Join Xomba

 
 

A wise mother

I think religion has things to teach us, but I think it becomes a huge mistake to become overly dependent on it. Raising children to be open minded and think for themselves is most important.

 
 

Creation

Some versions of God seem quite petty, jealous, and vindictive. I can't understand why anyone would want to worship such an entity. Does it make any sense that an all powerful deity would possess off the worst human traits? I believe we are all part of something, I just don't choose to put a label on it, myself.

 
 

Lady Kenai, You A.R.E the Conversation-with-God when You ...

... use His gifts as He intends! 'Excalibur (the blesséd sword) was NOT 'blesséd' until people PWNed The Blessing!' Uncle MythMan---His Mission? http://www.xomba.com/the_new_mythman_plan -How You Can Join Him in It? http://linkbrander.com/go/65240 http://linkbrander.com/go/65241 http://linkbrander.com/go/65242 -P.S. HotGirl33705 is Heavenly (NO SIG. HTML!)

---when You Join Xomba, you can join this- and MythMan's other-hot discussions!

Hope everybody understands this...

Lokesh The feeling of oneness should overule religion for the human race to flourish.... good touching article this.... thnx...

Lokesh

Open mind

Long time ago it was difficult for people to be "others". In South Italy it is very difficult today too: people think they are right, because they go every Sunday to the church. I've my own thoughts about religion: every religion has good and bad things. My family think, intollerance = ignorance I educate my children to be open and to think with their own head.

Well mythman .....

I have not been with, seen or talked with God ..... I just believe we should treat "everyone" in our lives, the way we would like to be. That means so, SO, so many things )but ya need common sense) shall I go on? ... if you see someone needs help... HELP THEM! ... if you see someone dropped something (kinda big) ... HELP!!! pick it up ! ... if you see someone crying ... hand them a tissue if ya got it, if not give them a hug.... (watch out for the tears!) ... if someone is hungry.... give em those extra fries .... (i did that one time!) another story.... ... etc .... it is SO simple! don't worry about yourself so much, go help others, it works really good :) “Begin doing what you want to do now. We are not living in eternity. We have only this moment, sparkling like a star in our hand — and melting like a snowflake.” -Marie Beyon Ray

If you would like to chat about Xomba or anything you want, join here:
http://home.wanadoo.nl/mqs/ladykenai/chat.html

<script type="text/javascript"></script>

<script type="text/javascript"

Would this be what God means

Would this be what God means when said " Not to begrudge you of what you have now, It is all you have"? A snowflake, a sparkling star? God says a vapor. Watch out for the trap. Kjack you are denying the actions of some, that you would say you don't do, is extreme and causes the question to be asked what is normal?. Would denial be a snare too?

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.

Post new comment

  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • You can use BBCode tags in the text. URLs will automatically be converted to links.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <p> <br> <b> <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <img> <span> <object> <param> <embed> <table> <tr> <td> <div>
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.

More information about formatting options

Join Xomba Today

Do you like to write? Would you like to make a little extra money on the side? These people do. Join the Xomba community today.
Become a Member