I've been thinking a lot about religion lately. When one is a parent
and would like to set certain examples. religion is surely a minefield
that one can avoid, tiptoe through, or march confidently into with respect to the teachings that resound for lifetimes. As someone who considers myself a somewhat spiritual, free thinking proponent of free will, theological questions
raised by children give pause for thought. My 8 year old daughter
understands that there is a god, there is a heaven, and daddy has a big
family bible that contains stories about god and his son Jesus. She
also believes that her grandmother's spirit visits in lady bug form, and
Santa Claus can certainly pull off his yearly logistical nightmare.
That, is the privilege of childhood - the grace of being deliberately
kept in ignorance of the truth, so that happiness can be provided
easily.
I have tried to have an open mind about god
and religion. My own personal journey included stints at church with
family as well as by myself. I guess it is with some comfort that
although my father was never religious, he didn't preach intolerance of
religion. My mother perhaps more spiritual and respectful of the
institution, took us to the United Church in small-town Ontario but for
the most part, my sister and I were allowed to explore that world
ourselves. I am older now. When I think of religion now, I can't help
but to see it as a blood thirsty enterprise that uses the texts and
tenets of humanity to rule and prosper as they have for years like the
corporations and governments that pull . Having faith by definition
requires letting go of doubts and trusting your teacher. Like any
paradox - the greater the possibilities, the greater the possibility of
abuse.
But god is good right? I mean, they're all good. Do I choose my own god or is god chosen for me? If the I hadn't had my kids
with me Saturday morning, and if I had happened to smoke a joint before
the "soft" knock on my door - I might have entertained the two
attractive Jehovah Witness disciples on my front porch. Wearing my
Barney purple bathrobe, I could have educated AND entertained myself. As it were, I shook them off with a disappointed shake of my head as it was clearly pancake and pj time at Chateau Heathen.
We had a Winterfest to attend nearby as half the neighborhood was
jacked up to go to the warehouse between the French school and City
Housing. The big, old place was full of bouncy castles, games, live
music, face painting, coffee, hot chocolate, snacks...all free of
charge. Packed with hundreds of kids and staffed with dozens of
smiling, helpful people, this was not funded by any level of government.
No, Winterfest was basically a PR/info gathering exercise by a
religious based organization who is planning on converting this
warehouse space into their new place of worship. Not your father's
church - these people are clearly media savvy, motivated and well
organized. What seemed to strike me - and kinda creep me out, is that
the people all seemed so happy and focused..two things I crave at
times. I'm not sure if all the people there cared they were being
farmed and filtered by a group for the power and economics they might
provide or if it happens so often they see it as normal. Maybe they just really want to share the secret of happiness.
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