Guest guest Posted June 27, 2005 Report Share Posted June 27, 2005 >>When I first read the above paragraph, my initial response was, " But you're not 12! " Oops, so sorry--12 years, 9 months as my daughter would insist. Her skin's not quite thick enough yet to let most of these sort of things slide, but I have seen a bit of this.<< --If I'd been in a Christian-dominated school at 12, I would have wanted the advice I gave. Nobody is ever ready to deal with people who are insulting, until they get practice. If she's surrounded by conservative Christians, she'll get practice. >>More often than not she tells me that her emotions get in the way at the time, and afterward she thinks, " Why didn't I say so-and-so? " << --This is not a 12 year old thing. Adults have the same problem. Most people, of any age, are not prepared ahead of time to deal with " culture wars " . That's why Bush won two elections. Instead of dealing with fundamentalists in a mature, intelligent way, most secularists either ignored them or insulted them. It backfired. >>The point is that she, too, recognizes this as an appropriate way to deal with the clashes, and with practice I hope this sort of thing will come more easily to her.<< --If she knows that, then she's ahead of many adults. >>She said, " It sounds to me like Jesus IS the only Christian. The rest of us are just trying to copy and making things up as we go. " << --I think in her case, age isn't going to be much of a problem. If adults fail to stand up for sanity, their kids will. Adults have been far too avoidant of conflict, and when conflict has been forced upon them, they have been unprepared to deal with it gracefully. Give kids that advantage, if they are interested. We do, after all, live in a country where fundamentalists don't kill you for standing up to them, especially if you do it with genuine compassion. Iranians have an excuse for being silent. We don't. And from what I've seen, young people have a hunger for sanity that is not satisfied by the silence of their parents. They will, one way or another, stand up for what they believe. Enabling them to do it without insulting their " enemy " is a good idea. >>I tried to explain to her Jung's concept of individuation and how it related to her moment of insight.<< --Even Jesus had to break with tradition and single himself out as a unique voice. Your daughter may be closer to him than anyone on the religious right. Probably not a fun task if you're 12. But is it EVER fun? Actually, it can be, if you learn how to let insults slide off your back and debate creatively. I've met young people online who delight in giving fundamentalists Bible verses they aren't used to hearing from non-fundamentalists. Never underestimate the power of smart-ass kids to challenge adult hypocrisy. That's why I don't worry about creationism being taught in schools. I know what teenagers can do when they're inspired, and the questions they'll ask in class will be incredibly entertaining and insightful. All they need is encouragement and information. Believe me, the evangelical parents " arm " their kids for battle and coach them. But progressive kids are quicker on their feet and they don't need a script. Just point them toward information when they need it, and remind them to be Christlike toward the Evangelical kids, who usually just lack enough exposure to other points of view to know how to accept differences. >>This daughter, by the way, does identify herself as Christian.<< --All the better. Progressive Christians will be the undoing of fundamentalist hypocrisy. __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.