Growing up in the Church of England
Oct. 17th, 2003 08:48 amThe cementing will probably be quite fun, if it doesn't rain. M's mum and husband have built their own eco-house in a field in the middle of nowhere, which I haven't seen since it's been finished. They are very sweet people too. The leg can stay on.
There have been a lot of posts about religion on my flist recently, and it got me thinking. From the age of 4 till I was 11 I attended a Church of England school. We said prayers three times a day, sang hymns every morning, had talks from the vicar on Friday afternoons, went in crocodiles to the church for special occasions, and celebrated all the festivals. So in one way our school days revolved around Christian traditions and beliefs, but in another way they totally didn't. I can't remember ever believing in God. There was no meaning for me in the prayers, they were a string of odd sounding words that we had to chant. The hymns meant more to me, but that was because I liked singing.
But mostly, there was no sense of a deeper meaning in any of it, and it makes me wonder what it was all about. Obviously, for the C of E, and for most churches there's a get 'em young policy. But they didn't get us young, they made religion into something you fidgeted through until you could get out and run around in the playground. And it makes me wonder- what was the point? I suppose there's an argument that goes; Louise, you spent 7 of your most formative years being told that God exists and the bible is all true, therefore, secretly, deep down, you probably do believe in God. Well, I don't know about that.
There have been a lot of posts about religion on my flist recently, and it got me thinking. From the age of 4 till I was 11 I attended a Church of England school. We said prayers three times a day, sang hymns every morning, had talks from the vicar on Friday afternoons, went in crocodiles to the church for special occasions, and celebrated all the festivals. So in one way our school days revolved around Christian traditions and beliefs, but in another way they totally didn't. I can't remember ever believing in God. There was no meaning for me in the prayers, they were a string of odd sounding words that we had to chant. The hymns meant more to me, but that was because I liked singing.
But mostly, there was no sense of a deeper meaning in any of it, and it makes me wonder what it was all about. Obviously, for the C of E, and for most churches there's a get 'em young policy. But they didn't get us young, they made religion into something you fidgeted through until you could get out and run around in the playground. And it makes me wonder- what was the point? I suppose there's an argument that goes; Louise, you spent 7 of your most formative years being told that God exists and the bible is all true, therefore, secretly, deep down, you probably do believe in God. Well, I don't know about that.
no subject
Date: 2003-10-17 09:35 am (UTC)Or, (apologies as Google won't tell me who I'm paraphrasing) small doses of religion throughout your childhood stopped you catching the real thing.
My favourite religion-related memory of my CoE primary school was playing a Rabbi in the Easter story.
I told my (Jewish) grandmother how I was playing a Bad Person and so I had to be very serious, and she got upset and told me that while it was wrong to kill people, my character believed Jesus was attacking God and God's word. The next rehearsal for the play, the teacher started discussing the characters' motivations. She asked about the rabbis, and I, of course, put my hand up and repeated pretty much word for word what my grandmother had told me. The teacher wasn't best pleased, and told me that no, the rabbis were angry because Jesus wanted to stop them trading in temple.
Heh. That was more tangential than I meant it to be. Sorry.
no subject
Date: 2003-10-18 04:25 pm (UTC)The quote is "Getting inoculated with small doses of religion prevents people from catching the real thing."
no subject
Date: 2003-10-19 07:21 am (UTC)