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- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!news.service.uci.edu!skid.ps.uci.edu!cortese
- From: cortese@skid.ps.uci.edu (Janis Maria Cortese)
- Subject: Re: the next generation...?
- Nntp-Posting-Host: skid.ps.uci.edu
- Message-ID: <2B5F5C82.2498@news.service.uci.edu>
- Newsgroups: alt.pagan
- Organization: University of California, Irvine
- Lines: 69
- Date: 22 Jan 93 02:31:30 GMT
- References: <kre-210193205220@b61693.student.cwru.edu>
-
- In article <kre-210193205220@b61693.student.cwru.edu> kre@po.CWRU.edu (Keith R. Elflein) writes:
- >In reading some of these articles and also from my own mind :) I have come
- >across an issue that i would like some input on. When I get married, my
- >wife will most likely not be a Wiccan..(who knows though, mebbe she will be
- >:) anyways, whether she is or not, what do you think about what to do when
- >the children come? Theoretically, one could do several things. Depending on
- >your situation, if both parents are Wiccan, you could introduce the
- >children to wicca very early..much like the judeo-christian religions do
- >with their children. If one parent is a wiccan and the other belongs to one
- >of the other religions, there could potentially be some SERIOUS conflict :)
-
- If the Wiccan in question has a SERIOUS conflict about their kids not
- being Wiccan, they have some SERIOUS problems. For any kids, just let
- them grow up and ask questions. They'll clue in however they want. If
- they ask you, "Where do we go when we die?" just tell them, "Well,
- people who agree with me think this, but other people think some pther
- things." Maybe you can give the kid a little Whitman's Sampler of what
- people think, and then tell them, "But there are peple who don't agree
- with any of these, either, and they have their own opinions." Just let
- the kid know that their parents may think one thing, but basically, it's
- still an open question. This can be done for any number of profound
- questions that any spirituality deals with.
-
- >about how to guide the child in religion. In regards to the first, is there
- >anyone that you know of who has always been wiccan? (meaning their parents
- >were wican and they have been raised wiccan) i would find that
- >fascinating...I would like to teach my children Wicca because i feel that
- >it is not only a religion, but an entire way of life that i feel is
- >correct. (i mean the bond between humans and the rest of nature that we are
-
- Watch out. A way of life is correct for YOU. Your kids might not
- agree. What to do if they dig Discordia? I'd expose them to it, as I
- prefer the Wiccan worldview as well, but ultimately they'll have to
- arrive at it for themselves. You don't want to do with Wicca what the
- catholics do with catholicism and little kids, which is give it to them
- au fait and make them think it's the only way to go. You'll just make
- them sick, and once they get into the "rebellious" phase that this
- culture appears to insist on, that'll be the first thing to go.
-
- Just teach them to question and think for themselves, and they'll arrive
- at something sooner or later. If your future spouse insists on raising
- the kids one way, think harder about the marriage.
-
- >a part of)...but then again, i don't know if my children would appreciate
- >it if i forced my religion down their throats, like my parents did with me.
- >That was probably one of the reasons i left the "religious company" that i
- >was a part of after discovering Wicca. Perhaps if the child was interested,
- >and asked questions, then i could answer and teach..but only if interested.
- >Maybe that is the best method. I think i really feel that the child should
- >be left to discover religion for (his)(her)self..with some guidance and a
- >lot of support from the parents :) What do you think?
-
- Gotcha! Just let the kid grow up with a sense of logic and rationality
- sbout the universe, and that the universe is open to questions, and that
- there are some things that you CAN get the answers to, and some things
- that no one yet knows the answers to, and some things beyond asking
- questions . . . They'll get the hang of it for themselves.
-
- Blessings,
- Janis
-
- >"All the Gods are one God, and all the Goddesses are one Goddess, and there
- >is one Initiator."
-
- Why, with the last word of this sentence, do I imagine some deity
- somewhere with a wooden paddle, smacking souls in heaven on the ass
- while they say, "Thank you sir/madam may I have another!" Just sick, I
- guess.
-
-