http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1686828,00.html When I read the headline, my first thought was "this is the stupidest thing ever", but after reading the body of the article, I am thinking this might not be such a bad idea. When I have kids, it remains to be seen how I will raise them, but I might actually send them to something like this.
11/26/2007 5:23:24 PM
Sounds interesting, but something to be concerned about (and it's entirely possible it's just poor wording and example choosing on the reporter's part) is a sense of hostility being projected though. It's great that you have something for such kids, and it's certainly helpful to have the support there for the parents, but things like:
11/26/2007 6:40:57 PM
actually seems pretty stupid to me. if a family isnt religious and doesnt want to raise their kid religious thats completely fine. it just seems like atheists etc. go out of their way to be non-believers these days. and these morals and values the parents want their kids to have could easily be taught by non lazy parents.i can see some of their arguments but think the concept of the school and sleep-away camps for this is retarded.
11/26/2007 7:01:47 PM
good lord that article was crazy biased. It said everything but "CHRISTIANS ARE EVIL!!!" jeez
11/26/2007 9:30:25 PM
^ In what way? I was probably the most visible unbeliever on campus for a semester and people pressured me non-stop to believe in God. Is it that hard to believe that others try and get you to believe when it's the "most important thing" to them?
11/26/2007 9:47:25 PM
I think this is a great idea, and not at all going "out of the way to be atheists" so much as they are taking the initiative to teach their kids quality morals without fairytales.
11/26/2007 9:47:29 PM
^^ yeah and how much do you assholes complain and whine about christians trying to share with you what they think is the most important thing
11/26/2007 10:20:20 PM
I personally don't whine and complain that much actually -- I invited it because I find those kinds of conversations fun.But I'm sure you had a point in there somewhere.
11/26/2007 10:26:51 PM
In what way?Pretty much the whole thing... The tone of the article was very "oooh, woe for the poor atheist child. woooooooe. he is assaulted on all sides by the savage Christians. wooooooooooe is he!"
11/26/2007 10:44:19 PM
not really. it pretty much just said what the motivation for the school was and why people sent their kids there. big whoop.
11/26/2007 10:49:17 PM
^^[Edited on November 26, 2007 at 10:51 PM. Reason : .]
11/26/2007 10:51:11 PM
^^ umm. yeah. just keep telling yourself that.
11/26/2007 10:52:48 PM
what that this specific article is unbiased? it's really not that big of a deal.
11/26/2007 10:54:09 PM
11/26/2007 11:48:20 PM
I'd be afraid that they were teaching the kids that they were better than religious people, which almost defeats the purpose of someone claiming to be atheist or agnostic.
11/26/2007 11:57:59 PM
yeah the first rule of thinking you're better than others is not to tell people you think you're better than them
11/27/2007 12:49:24 AM
11/27/2007 1:01:59 AM
This would be a much better idea if it wasn't explicitly atheist/non-Christian... A Sunday School class that teaches kids values for life (as per the "Why do we share?" "Because it's a nice thing to do" example) but does not mention or deal with religion at all would be something that could appeal both to non-religious and religious families. Making an atheist Sunday School only reinforces the idea that many atheists belong to the Church of Not-Having-A-Church (in other words, they are religious about not believing in a religion).
11/27/2007 1:15:39 AM
I went to Christianity-based summer camps for the most part, and I was never uncomfortable as an agnostic. We all just played with sticks and snuck candy while unenthusiastic teenagers tried to overcome their hangovers long enough to wing a two-minute devotion that they forgot to prepare. And that was pretty much it for our daily dose of Jesus.Anyway, I kinda think you should leave that stuff up to the kid. You shouldn't put him in Warriors for Jesus or take him to church every Sunday or let some persuasive Christian preach to him all the time, but you also shouldn't send him to atheist camps to reinforce your atheist beliefs. Make sure the kid gets a decent amount of exposure to some different ideas, and if he wants to do some more research, you should support him. Be an absent guide and let him make his own journey.If you want your kid to take classes to develop his critical thinking skills/reasoning abilities and study free thinkers, then enroll him in classes for it. You don't need to call it atheist Sunday school.I was harassed a little bit. One mother told me in front of a group of girls that I was going to hell. I don't know if I was especially incorrigible or what. I just remember her asking me what church I went to, and I told her I didn't go to the church, and she told me matter-of-factly that I was going to hell. Another mother used to come by my house in the middle of the afternoon before my parents came home from work with little snacks and invites to church. I loved those snacks. And, of course, I had some especially devoted and sincere peers who threatened (with hell), begged, and cried to get me to go to church with them. I always ended up feeling uncomfortable for them.One of my friends who also grew up in a nonreligious home made a comment to me about the nonsense we took as kids for not going to church. Our other friend who grew up in a Catholic home acted like she had no idea what we're talking about and practically got offended at our conversation...we were the ones who got damned to hell as children, and she was offended that we would mention this cruel reality of her precious faith. There was also an element of jealousy, like she felt she had missed out on some sort of enlightening persecution.
11/27/2007 2:37:11 AM
11/27/2007 2:46:23 AM
Article quotes:
11/27/2007 11:18:03 AM
^ isn't that the point?
11/27/2007 11:37:32 AM
On the issue of atheists being oppressedhere's a University of Minnesota study that concludes that atheists are the least trusted group in Americahttp://www.ur.umn.edu/FMPro?-db=releases&-lay=web&-format=umnnewsreleases/releasesdetail.html&ID=2816&-Find
11/27/2007 12:10:27 PM
11/27/2007 1:49:23 PM
a large part of the attraction of church/sunday school is the sense of community.i have to admit, i miss that aspect.i tried going to a U.U. church, but it was way too full of fluffy fruity moonbats to ever spend any time there
11/27/2007 2:29:07 PM
^yeah exactly. i grew up in a pretty liberal united methodist church and it was a very welcoming community. i could see wanting that for my kids if i have any.
11/27/2007 2:38:52 PM
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11/27/2007 4:13:52 PM
11/27/2007 5:08:18 PM
11/27/2007 5:32:14 PM
11/27/2007 5:34:37 PM
^I'm gonna expand on that.Parents who are racist or eliteist do teach their kids that they are better than other people. Even if the parents don't say so directly, that kind of thing does get subtly passed along by the parents' behavior.I was raised Catholic, so I can speak for Catholicism here, which both directly and indirectly taught that we were better than anyone who didn't go to church or went to any different church. I distinctly remember what I called the "Lutheran-bashing" lecture in Sunday School that actually got repeated three years in a row. It really was a long lecture about how Catholics were right and everyone else was wrong, using Lutherans as the main example.They really do teach that kind of bigoted stuff in Sunday School, and half the kids latch on to it to make fun of others, while the other half, myself included, usually stop going to church.
11/27/2007 5:51:18 PM
11/27/2007 9:18:13 PM
11/28/2007 2:09:25 AM
what these people are trying to establish is a sense of community with out religion or church. there are a lot of people out there who just go to church to be in a social club, which isn't a bad thing. kids need that interaction and sense of community as well as parents. lots of friendships are made at church. however, there aren't really many "churches" for atheists or agnostics,free thinkers if you will. if there was something like this in the area i would go.
11/28/2007 12:37:27 PM
11/28/2007 9:27:44 PM
11/28/2007 9:34:17 PM
^^ Thank you! Like I said earlier, it's just about impossible to not at least partially inject the opinions of the parents into the kids, but it's really irresponsible to try to just give up guidance all together. Developmnental psychology says: Children are NOT mini-adults, they don't function like adults, and they need guidance to get to the point of adults. Maturity is a process that takes a little guidance.^ It's because you go to college. You interact with college people, and among our population, there are more atheists bashing christians than christians bashing people of other faiths. Christians that go to college learn more tolerance for other people than their uneducated counterparts. Plus, the highest level of atheist populations are among college students. (But the number does go down when you look at populations aged about 30. Seems even atheists need something to cling to as they get older and later in life.)
11/28/2007 10:16:52 PM
^^As the person above me said, you only see this because of the educated college lifestyle. Plenty of college students pick up atheism to try to seem intellectual (many do it for more legitimate reasons, though). These sorts of people tend to be pretty hostile towards christians. Go to any rural or small suburban community in the South or Midwest, though, and you'll be surrounded by self-proclaimed Christians who would rather spout the "change your ways or you're going to hell" line than do anything resembling evangelical outreach.
11/29/2007 12:55:20 AM
11/29/2007 12:56:04 PM