The_Reaper
Minister of Silly Walks
I was raised a loose-Roman Catholic...
My parents never really talked about religion, and never took us to church.
Anyways, as a younger lad I was actually quite impressed with the whole idea of religion and such.
But, alas, childhood naivity wore off and I soon found myself asking too many questions.
There were just things I couldn't understand.
The entire, God is supposed to be just and fair...Yet so many terrible things happen for no reason. Sort of contradicts what they teach us.
Then of course, there were the legions of unanswered prayers. That didn't help build a case in religion's favour in my life either.
So, somewhere around Gr. 5 or Gr. 6 (even before I had realized I was gay) I had given up on religion and decided to basically be a realist and try to focus on whats around me and why it occurs, not what might be around us.
Although, I do like to consider myself somewhat well versed when it comes to the Bible, as it's nifty to point out things that "true Catholics" missed out that show a bit of their own naivity to their own religion.
The best moment of this ideal was during an arguement on same-sex marriage with a catholic teacher. When she got high and mighty about the Bible condemning homosexual relations, I retorted with the usual "What's your shirt made out of? Cause just a line from where it condemns homosexuals, it condemns where clothes of two fabrics." Her response: It doesn't say that. So I grabbed a bible and showed her.
What make it more sweet, is that she was one of the christian ethics teachers.
So, while I don't hold a personal faith for many various reasons...I think one thing that helps cement it, is how little most people actually know about the faith they've chosen to follow.
My parents never really talked about religion, and never took us to church.
Anyways, as a younger lad I was actually quite impressed with the whole idea of religion and such.
But, alas, childhood naivity wore off and I soon found myself asking too many questions.
There were just things I couldn't understand.
The entire, God is supposed to be just and fair...Yet so many terrible things happen for no reason. Sort of contradicts what they teach us.
Then of course, there were the legions of unanswered prayers. That didn't help build a case in religion's favour in my life either.
So, somewhere around Gr. 5 or Gr. 6 (even before I had realized I was gay) I had given up on religion and decided to basically be a realist and try to focus on whats around me and why it occurs, not what might be around us.
Although, I do like to consider myself somewhat well versed when it comes to the Bible, as it's nifty to point out things that "true Catholics" missed out that show a bit of their own naivity to their own religion.
The best moment of this ideal was during an arguement on same-sex marriage with a catholic teacher. When she got high and mighty about the Bible condemning homosexual relations, I retorted with the usual "What's your shirt made out of? Cause just a line from where it condemns homosexuals, it condemns where clothes of two fabrics." Her response: It doesn't say that. So I grabbed a bible and showed her.
What make it more sweet, is that she was one of the christian ethics teachers.
So, while I don't hold a personal faith for many various reasons...I think one thing that helps cement it, is how little most people actually know about the faith they've chosen to follow.























