Sunday School Christianity Is Dangerous to the Faith
Posted by Anthony on July 13, 2008
I received a forwarded email that originally was sent by some media guy who lost his faith reporting on religion. In that email the following excerpt was provided, abbreviated already, and I abbreviated it more:
… Having been raised to believe in a just God, my faith was shaken when my husband and I lost our ten-year-old child to Cystic Fibrosis, a congenital disease for which there is no cure.
We felt betrayed that a loving God could bring such pain to parents who lived by the Golden Rule and followed the Ten Commandments. As we coped with our grief, we couldn’t help but wonder why our love for our child wasn’t enough to keep her alive and why our faith wasn’t bringing us any comfort.
After losing another child to the same illness, we came to the conclusion that we were naïve to believe in the Sunday School version of a deity that sits in a place called heaven and doles out rewards for good behavior and punishment for bad. We have only to look at world events and know this isn’t true.
So, who to pray to? An impersonal deity who lets bad things happen to good people? We still haven’t figured that out. But it is difficult to abandon a life-long belief.
First of all, I am sympathetic to the woman who wrote this. I don’t think I blame her for her reactions. She merely compared the version of Christianity she received with the world as she experienced it. What she describes as the ‘Sunday School version’ of God is in fact what many people receive growing up, and what they receive even as adults. This is anecdotal evidence for a state of affairs I’ve been calling attention to repeatedly. For example, many of the nonChristians I discourse with also have ‘Sunday School versions’ of God floating around in their heads. Read the rest of the entry… »



























