It's Day Five of World Childless Week, and today's theme tackles the thorny issue of religion.
Comments referring to religion easily fall off the tongues of strangers, friends and family without consideration of who they are addressing or how their comments may be received. Have you been upset, shocked or angered by the ignorance and cruelty of a religious based comment and how did you deal with the conversation?
Why do you feel remarks touching on religion are inappropriate?
Some personal religious background: I was brought up Anglican/Episcopal, although we attended the United Church of Canada during the five years when we lived in a town with no Anglican congregation, and I attended Catechism classes with my best friend there, who was Catholic. As an adult, my church attendance has been sporadic. We joined an Anglican congregation when we were hoping to start a family, because we agreed that our children should learn something about God and faith and the Bible -- if only because the Bible is the basis for so much of our literature and other cultural touchstones. You miss out on an awful lot if you don't know your Bible stories and verses...!
The parish we attended was lovely and supportive in the aftermath of our daughter's stillbirth -- we held a small family funeral service there -- but as time went on, and the women in the pews who had been pregnant at the same time as me returned with their babies to baptize -- and then a second, and a third -- it got harder and harder to remain. At the same time, encouraged by the then-minister, the congregation began taking on a more American-style fundamentalist/evangelical flavour, which made both of us increasingly uncomfortable, and we gradually drifted away and stopped going. We have yet to attend a service locally since we moved here six years ago.
These days, I'm mostly ambivalent about church attendance, and religion generally. I believe Jesus (who, by the way, had no children...!) had the right ideas about how people should treat each other, and think it's sad that so many churches and so-called Christians have strayed so far from those core messages. I take some comfort in the ritual and liturgy and hymns of my youth (some of which I can still sing by heart) -- but I do not believe it's necessary to attend church regularly to be a good Christian, or a good human being. I don't believe any one religion or denomination (and certainly no one person) has all the answers.
The pronatalism inherent in so many religions and denominations is an obvious and painful problem for many childless/free people. "Be fruitful and multiply," we are told. The stories of Sarah and Hannah and Elizabeth are hammered into our heads -- barren women whose faith was ultimately rewarded with a child.
I don't know why some people get babies they don't want and others desperately want babies they never get. I don't know why my daughter didn't get to stay with me. I don't know why I was never able to have another child. "God needed an angel," some would tell me. "It's all in God's plan." (Like that's supposed to make me feel better??) "She's in a better place." (Better than being with me & her dad??) "Everything happens for a reason... we'll find out, someday."
Well, vague promises of "someday" aren't good enough for me. What reason could possibly be good enough to justify taking my child from me?? The God I believe in (to the extent that I believe in God) would never deliberately do that, to me or any other parent.
As I've often said: if there is a God and a heaven, and I get there someday, He & I are going to have a very lonnnnnnggggggg talk....!
After our daughter was stillborn, someone recommended the book "When Bad Things Happen to Good People" to me -- by Harold Kushner, a Jewish rabbi who lost his son. It's been a long time since I read it, but I do remember I found it tremendously comforting.
Most of my posts on this subject have been tagged "religion/faith" -- although you might find a couple under "WTF?" and "people are idiots," lol.
Check out today's content on the WCW site, including community members' contributions (new ones being added every 15 minutes throughout the day) and a free, live webinar at 2 p.m. Eastern Time hosted by Stephanie Phillips and featuring four childless women with diverse religious backgrounds. This webinar will be recorded and uploaded to the Day Five page for anyone who cannot make the live event.
Oh, yes. Sarah and Hannah and Elizabeth. Why them and not me?? -- I remember thinking. What did they do to be more deserving than I?
ReplyDeleteAnd also this: "why do some people get babies they don't want and others desperately want babies they never get."
I couldn't reconcile the previously held idea of God as all-knowing and all-powerful and all-compassionate with the God who was withholding from me. We had a lotta talks in those days, mostly one-sided, lol.
Thanks for the book reminder. I think I will be pulling that one out again.
That idea that some want babies and don't get them, and others don't want them (or can't or don't cope with them) and do get them completely disproves the "everything happens for a reason" or "it was(n't) meant to be" or "it's all in God's Plan" platitudes for me. It actually gave me great comfort to realise that there is no plan, no judgement, no worthy/not worthy proclamations in whether we have children or not.
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