Vixie ♥;462334 said:
I was a Christian for 15 years of my life simply because my parents were (and they're not exactly devout, either.) Parents have immeasurable influence over their young children and instil a foundation of values.
My parents are technically Catholics, so what? I didn't ever think about what I considered my religious beliefs until I was 14 (I wasn't baptised so could hardly consider myself Catholic). I was never taught "The Bible says this, it is truth!". I had religious education at a public primary school and was never taught that these stories were fact (which I would hardly have believed since I knew about evolution before I knew about religion). Mind you, I was NINE at that time. And I *liked* the stories. It's fully, and entirely, possible to be taught about the religious stories without them being represented as the truth. I never ever saw any Biblical story as the truth, even when I was told about the Old Testament stories at age 9.
I went to a Catholic (technically) school. I took religious education for four out of those six years, with a break of one year in between due to some random illness.
In my last two years, our RE class taught us about the following subjects:
- Ethics (this included everything from Thomas de St. Aquinas to outright postmodernism, utilitarianism as well as Kant, both atheist and religious sides addressed)
- Christianity
- Buddhism (we had a collective choice between this or Islam. Our class voted Buddhism en masse)
- Religious symbolism of the senses or something weird like that.
That is what our religious study entailed. We were, ffs, allowed to CHOOSE which religion we studied (and although we did study Christianity as it was a Catholic school, this included religious history as much and was not, in any way, explicitly, related to Catholicism - everything from the Nicene Creed to the protestant split and indulgences were addressed. There was no sides being taken or anything of the sort).
Relatedly, I am now an antitheist.
I'm an atheist too. I was hardly raised religiously and yet I've been reading about pretty much every mythology you can think of since I was 9 or 10. My favourites were always the Hellenic stories, but I also liked Roman ones (and took Latin for this reason).
I'll tell you something: in high school religious education was one of my favourite classes. We had an excellent teacher. He, too, was a Catholic. It was entirely possible for him to separate the teaching of religion from the teaching of students. He has, never, in any way, attempted to indoctrinate any of us. He was ridiculously open minded. He willingly taught us about a religion he himself had barely even studied and that cost him ages to read up on. It is entirely unfair, in every way, to state that religion cannot be taught as a subject in schools without indoctrinating people.
It's happened for me, it's happened for others and since it is such a pervasive element of culture it is plain wrong to state this.
And mind you I was at a Catholic school not a public one (it was an open catholic school though, so technically religion didn't matter for entering)