A little too accepting

Lately I’ve been talk­ing here on the blog about my prob­lems being an athe­ist deal­ing with our reli­gious soci­ety. And I’ve been hearing  some­thing sur­pris­ing (to me) from other athe­ist par­ents: they don’t mind their chil­dren being religious.

In fact, colum­nists from both Salon and Slate recently answered the same letter about this topic. A father  whose daugh­ter is being brought up in an evan­gel­i­cal church by her mother won­dered how to deal with his daughter’s fear that he’s going to hell. Coin­ci­den­tally, they both gave him the same advice: go to church with her.

This strikes me as crazy. I can’t imag­ine Bap­tists telling their child that they’d be happy to go with them to a meet­ing of athe­ists. Heck, I really can’t imag­ine any Muslim being cool with their child’s inter­est in Vishnu, Ganesh or Kali. Why are people that are con­vinced that all reli­gions are wrong so much more open-​minded than people that think that one reli­gion is right?

Per­son­ally, I’m against my chil­dren going to church for the same reason that I worry about autis­tic kids being given use­less treatments:  even if they aren’t harmed, they’re wast­ing time that could be better put to use doing some­thing worth­while. Every minute that a kid spends learn­ing about the fan­ci­ful goings-​on of the book of Gen­e­sis is a minute they aren’t spend­ing learn­ing about some­thing that actu­ally hap­pened. Every minute they’re singing about how Jesus loves them, they could be play­ing a game, learn­ing a musi­cal instru­ment, or read­ing a book. And every penny they put in the offer­ing plate could be going to a char­ity that isn’t spread­ing religion.

I’m not saying that church will hurt them - or even them make them Chris­t­ian (see exhibit a: me) - just that if I firmly believe that it’s a waste of time, why wouldn’t I dis­cour­age them?

October 30th, 2007 · Category: Personal, Religion · Tags: , , , , , , , , , · 9 Comments »