Postby uptheoctave » Mon Aug 15, 2022 8:36 am
My mother found God a few years ago and we went to her baptism. At the time the kids were 7,9 & 11. We watched her getting dunked and the kids were a bit bored (although they found the dunking hilarious/scary as a lot of the other dunkees were resisting it and had to be forced underwater by the dunkers).
The church was very evangelical, there was a lot of preaching and the kids ended up going outside for a long time as attention spans were limited.
We answered their questions as openly and respectfully as we could (not using the borderline flippant language I started this post with) and gently explained that it made Grandma happy, gave her a wider community of friends and something to take comfort in after losing her parents then her husband (my father). And we explained that this was absolutely ok and should always be respected.
After a while, they started coming back from her house saying "Mummy, Grandma says she loves Jesus more than she loves us!" I had to explain that it was a different sort of love, that Grandma was still very excited about how happy she felt with her new belief and she probably didn't mean it that way. She would also preach to them a lot. The older 2 kids weren't interested, the younger one has always been a bit more spiritual so enjoyed hearing stories. However, she felt a lot of the Biblical stories were outdated and so, a year or 2 later, she decided that she was going to worship the Dolphin God and felt that talking with Him gave her comfort. She still occasionally sets up a mini altar, lights a candle and has some quiet time with her Dolphin God. We support this, as she quite clearly gets something from it. Her reasoning is that anyone can believe in anything if makes them feel a bit better.
My partner is an atheist and my belief depends on my mood. As long as my kids are happy and kind, I will always support any religious belief they choose to explore. I don't agree with the dogma of anything but if it makes people happy and kind then why is it a bad thing? Yes, there's room for exploitation, but there is in everything so it's teaching kids to think for themselves but if they want to model their behaviour on something that brings a bit of happiness into the world, then who am I to stop that?
Your post was put well, I'm sorry it's elicited some angry responses from people, but it's not as if your kid's friend's family are promoting hate speech, so just go with the flow. And to finish with a Biblical quote, "...this too shall pass"!