Bringing Up Kids When Church Lets You Down
eBook - ePub

Bringing Up Kids When Church Lets You Down

A Guide for Parents Questioning Their Faith

  1. 256 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Bringing Up Kids When Church Lets You Down

A Guide for Parents Questioning Their Faith

About this book

"This book is about the various places and ways that uncertainty shows up for parents who, having left or altered the faith they once knew, now must decide what to give their kids. It's about church attendance, Bible memorization, school choices, and sex talks. It's about forging new paths in racial justice and creation care while the intractable voices in your head call you a pagan Marxist for doing so."

After the spectacular implosion of her ministry career, Bekah McNeel was left disillusioned and without the foundation of certainty she had built her life on. But rather than leaving the Christian faith altogether, she hung out around the edges, began questioning oversimplified categories of black and white that she had been taught were sacred, and became comfortable living in gray areas while starting a new career in journalism.

Then she had kids.

From the moment someone asked if she was going to have her first child baptized, Bekah began to wonder if the conservative evangelical Christianity she grew up with was really something she wanted to give her children. That question only became more complicated when she had her second child months before White evangelicals carried Donald Trump to victory in the 2016 presidential election. Soon, Bekah found that other parents were asking similar questions as they broke with their fundamentalist religious upbringing and took on new values: Could they raise their kids to live with both the security of faith and the freedom of open-mindedness? To value both Scripture and social justice? To learn morality without shame?

In  Bringing Up Kids When Church Lets You Down, Bekah gathers voices from history, scholarship, and her own community to guide others who, like her, are on a quest to shed the false certainty and toxic perfectionism of their past to become better, healthier parents—while still providing strong spiritual foundations for their children. She writes with humor and empathy, providing wise reflections (but not glib answers!) on difficult parenting topics while reminding us that we are not alone, even when we break away from the crowd.

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Information

Publisher
Eerdmans
Year
2022
Print ISBN
9780802882097
eBook ISBN
9781467464826
Subtopic
Religion

Part 1

THE ICY ROAD

The next three chapters are the “why” of this book. We walk through the cost of certainty-based, perfectionistic faith and parenting and set ourselves up to comb through the numerous twists and turns of “what” and “how” we might do things differently.

Chapter 1

How to Lose the Faith and Keep It Off

I lost everything I had inside a couple years
Lost my faith, I lost my mind, I lost a lot of tears
I spoke up about these problems that I saw outside
People turned they back on me, you woulda swore I died.
—Lecrae, “Restore Me”
The man at the front of the room wore a floppy blond wig and a tie-dyed shirt. He spoke with a distinctive lilt meant to imply that he was gay. But he wasn’t.
He was one of the founders of a Christian apologetics camp where I was a counselor, and he regularly donned these alter egos, each costumed caricatures of the enemies of the faith he was training young minds to combat. Real Christians, at this point in time, wore cargo shorts. The atheist professor wore a black turtleneck. The gay man wore tie-dye.
This role-playing was engineered to mimic the kind of encounters the campers might have in a college environment. The apologetics camp marketed itself by assuring terrified parents that it could equip their kids to keep the faith in the hostile wilds of the modern university. The weeklong sessions mixed all the traditional elements of Christian camp—emotional worship, silly games, and crushes on cute counselors—with seminars on how to “defend their faith.”
The teens debated the gay character about whether the Bible allows homosexuality. They wielded their logical arguments and Bible verses like sabers, as they had been trained to do. They raised their hands, he called on them, and they volleyed a bit before he moved on.
And then the founder lost control of his audience.
The students—about two hundred homeschooled teens attending a midyear session of the camp—devolved into mockery and jeering. They taunted and booed and mimicked the caricature. As a counselor at the camp, watching things devolve, a quake rumbled deep inside me. Something about the jeering seemed inevitable. It was a chemical explosion from basic parody mixed with acidic certainty.
Eventually, the founder broke character. He gave the campers a stern talking-to about balancing truth and grace, about being loving at all times. He reminded them that his character represented very real people who could potentially be brought into the family of God.
I don’t know how many of those queer real people were in the crowd that night. I know of one for sure. Her week at an apologetics camp designed to help kids defend their faith in college had showcased all the stumbling blocks Christians trip over: an insistence on absolutism in all areas along with arrogance and unkindness that cause personal pain and rejection.
People struggle with faith for so many reasons, but the breaks are rarely so clean that they can simply walk away or get over it. Many exist on a continuum between broken and whole, embracing and rejecting, wounded and healing.
Before we consider the various ways the struggle manifests in parenting—the church attendance, the sex talks, and so on—it might be helpful to understand a little more about why people struggle with faith in the first place.

Doubt

For some, theological doubt is the largest part of the struggle. In fact, evangelicals, progressive Christians, mainline Protestants, Catholics, and all kinds of devout believers struggle with theological doubt. They don’t see how a good and powerful God could allow suffering—theirs or that of others. They don’t buy the idea of hell. It’s all just too far-fetched, too inconsistent, too mystical, too exclusionary. Some religions make more room for doubt than others. Mine made none.
Wheaton College professor Michael Hakmin Lee studies deconversion—the process of losing one’s faith—and says that every faith has “stress points.”1 Every faith has features that trip up the faithful. In evangelicalism, he says, biblical authority is a big stress point.
While doubt can lead to deconversion, Lee says, it is also a common and even healthy part of faith. What comes after the doubt determines the outcome of the struggle. The voices one hears, Lee says, are critical. This may be true in other religions as well. Speaking from experience, I can tell you the moment an evangelical begins to doubt, it can feel like they’ve wandered into the kitchen looking for a drink of water, and instead find their parents fighting about some long-held grudge. Before the interloper can utter a word of explanation, the parents quickly turn and try to win her to their side.
Parent 1: “See, Bekah likes our cozy house. She doesn’t want a bigger house, do you, Bek?”
Me: “Ummm.”
Parent 2: “No, Bekah wants her own room. She’s tired of sharing with her little brother. Aren’t you, Bek?”
Me: “I’m here for a glass of water.”
One “parent” is the ardent believer, the other is an atheist wholly opposed to organized religion of any sort. They have been at each other’s throats for most of the last century.
Anchoring the pro-religion team you have the likes of Josh McDowell and Tim Keller reasoning with you, or writers like Lee Strobel digging up historical evidence to support the historical accuracy of the Gospels. For those who are deeply connected to a religious community, you also have ordinary loved ones who, at the first sign of apostasy, as Rachel Held Evans writes, “treated me like a wildfire in need of containment.”2
Matching them blow for blow, you have folks like Christopher Hitchens and Richard Dawkins, whose 2006 book The God Delusion offers no quarter to those even loosely connected to religion. That book, while incredibly rigid in its anti-religion stance, does offer some insight into why doubt is inevitable and why, for some, it ends in unbelief. Dawkins writes, “I can decide to go to church and I can decide to recite the Nicene Creed, and I can decide to swear on a stack of bibles that I believe every word inside them. But none of that can make me actually believe it if I don’t.”3
Whether the doubter continues to deconstruct or circles back to assurance, the whole thing is made more anxious by the volume of this discussion. The middle of a brawl is not a great place to have a crisis.
More recently, a wave of gentler discussion—unsurprisingly including more women, queer people, and people of color—has explored doubt with less pressure to pick a side. Doubt in the absolutist, white, colonial Christianity we have inherited has been faithfully nurtured by leaders like Randy S. Woodley, Barbara Taylor Brown, Lisa Sharon Harper, and Layton Williams, who invite us to reform and interrogate our faith more than accept or reject it.
Ultimately, Lee says, the biggest determiner in whether someone’s faith “migrates” to a new expression or is ultimately rejected is whether or not the person stays engaged with a faith community. That’s easier than it sounds, because faith communities can be a struggle all on their own.

Disgust

When I started this book, I needed to take some time off from my education journalism gig. I told my editor, a Jewish woman from Brooklyn with a long career in hard-hitting news, that I was writing about parenting while struggling with faith.
“What kind of faith?” she asked.
“Well, any faith, but it will focus a lot on evangelicals.”
“Ooooh. That’s a great idea,” she said. “Everybody is wondering what the hell is up with those people.”
By “those people” she meant white evangelicals. Throughout the book you’ll notice I sometimes use just “evangelicals” and sometimes add “white.” I’m trying to differentiate as much as possible to be fair to the Latino, Black, Native American, and other evangelicals who—while they may wrestle with the theological and moral conservatism of their religion—have a different relationship to power and white supremacy.
But “evangelical” itself is a slippery term. Most efforts to define and study it use four doctrines: biblical inerrancy, being “born again,” evangelism, and the atoning work of Christ (the most conservative version of Bebbington’s quadrilateral, theology people). But, I don’t actually believe those doctrines define an evangelical. Daniel Silliman’s research into the origins of evangelicalism, particularly its flagship publication Christianity Today, confirms something I’ve always felt about evangelicalism: it’s not a set of well-defined beliefs. Silliman concludes evangelicalism as we know it now is an association, and claiming other evangelicals is sort of the main criterion. In launching Christianity Today, the midcentury founders envisioned it as the standard-bearer of yet-undefined evangelicalism, and “they dealt with doctrinal issues as they came up in conversations about specific people. The question, in each case, was concrete: do we want this person in or out?”4
This book partially exists because of how challenging it has become to associate with evangelicals who are acting on their whiteness more than their theology—“those people,” as my editor said.
Three weeks before our conversation, a bunch of God-fearing white evangelicals had stormed the US Capitol sporting Confederate flags and face paint. What the hell is up with these people? In addition to theological doubt, disgust with the behavior of Christians pushes a lot of folks, myself included, away from Christianity, or at least from the institutional church. In the foreword for the essay collection Empty the Pews, the famously “exvangelical” Frank Schaeffer writes, “Christianity is improbable. When its cultural presence fades, be that through the Roman Catholic sex-abuse meltdown or because of the Trumping of white evangelicalism, all that’s left is disillusionment…. The grim ‘witness’ of how Christians have behaved and voted is too heavy a blow for faith in magical thinking to survive.”5 Don’t underestimate disillusionment. It’s subtle, but powerful, like betrayal. It feels like getting punched in the gut when you were expecting a hug.
The title of Dan Merchant’s 2008 documentary Lord Save Us from Your Followers says it well.6 On January 6, 2021, the politicians and congressional aides barricaded in their offices were probably praying that exact prayer. The Trump years took a toll on what was already a dwindling population of American evangelicals. From 2009 to 2019 self-identifying evangelicals went from 25 to 23 percent of the population,7 and fewer than half of American millennials now identify as Christian of any sort. Pew doesn’t ask the survey respondents why they left. But references to the growing toxicity of white evangelicalism in particular comes up in many anecdotal accounts, like those in Empty the Pews and numerous podcasts.
It’s not just Donald Trump and the Christian nationalists who stormed the Capitol on his behalf. It’s not just purity culture, Westboro Baptist Church, or the Moral Majority. The Bible has been contorted to justify the dominance of the Western empire for centuries. Boston University scholar Christopher Rhodes examines these close ties as they show up in day-to-day news. In an October 2019 post entitled “Why 1492 Was Even More Important Than You Learned in History Class” he wrote this:
Columbus, for his part, saw himself as not only an explorer but also a Crusader, who sought to spread Christian influence to the Indies and use the wealth he expected to acquire to fund a new round of Crusades to retake the Holy Land. The Church blessed these efforts … to now assert the influence of Christendom on the world. This process would lead to conquest of the Americas and set off a larger colonial project that, over the next several centuries, led to European powers cooperating and competing to conquer much of the rest of the world and create circumstances and institutions that reverberate today.8
Those institutions include slavery, exploitative economies, and destabilized governments, and most rely on the social construction of race to justify all of this exploitation. Race and racism have led to boundless suffering, often at the hands of the very same church. In just the last one hundred years racism has not merely infected but actually shaped our public sphere. Our schools are shaped by segregation and redlining, banks by predatory and exclusionary lending, courts by mandatory minimums and underfunded public defenders. Ridding ourselves of racism isn’t as simple as anti-bias training. It requires reshaping in the most practical of ways.
Rather than speaking against all this injustice, the biggest pulpits in white America consistently undermine the cause of social justice. From the op-ed that elicited Martin Luther King Jr.’s “Letter from a Birmingham Jail,” to John MacArthur’s Statement on Social Justice, white Christians have publicly and consistently sided against racial progress, and in doing so they have held down the white women, children, and poor people who stand to benefit from it as well.
I sympathize with that desire to disavow the embarrassing members of the family. In fact I do it regularly. I have published national op-eds criticizing John MacArthur and Nebraska Sen. Ben Sasse for their thinly veiled white supremacy and misogyny. I don’t want to believe in the same God the crusaders did. Or the segregationists. Or the Trump army. Whatever plague made them that way, I don’t want to catch it.
Some people are more tenderhearted. They are grieving, because a faith that nurtured them so well has been so ugly to others. My six-year-old often tells me, “I’m acting mad, but underneath I’m sad.” Maybe that’s me too. Maybe I’m sad and scared, afraid my faith is fundamentally toxic. Thankfully, the true spiritual father of my generation, Mister Rogers, told us to look for the helpers. Christians have done awful, terrible things in the name of Jesus for millennia. But they’ve also done wonderful things. Hospitals. Food pantries. Preachers who supported abolition. Martin Luther King Jr. The YMCA. The YWCA. Mother Teresa. Dorothy Day. Sojourners.
Clearly, being a Christian doesn’t make you a good person, but it also doesn’t make you a bad person. There are other forces at work: politics, compassion, greed, racism, justice, fear, ambition, tradition, love, disposition, and pride. The Bible might speak to these, but they also speak back, influencing how we interperet, understand, and live faith.
In his famous 1927 “Why I Am Not a Christian” address to the South London Branch of the National Secular Society, British logician Bertrand Russell argued that fear was the thing speaking back: “It is partly terror of the unknown, and partly, as I have said, the wish to feel that you have kind of an elder brother who will stand by you in all your troubles and disputes. Fear is the basis of the whole thing—fear of the mysterious, fear of defeat, fear of death. Fear is the parent of cruelty, and therefore it is no wonder that cruelty and religion have gone hand in hand.”9 I think he oversimplifies, but in practice, he’s not entirely wrong. Sometimes that cruelty is as big as genocide. Sometimes it stays in the family.

Hurt

Spiritual hurt can be the acute pain of specific rejection and bu...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Dedication
  5. Contents
  6. Introduction: Baptism and Burritos
  7. Part 1 The Icy Road
  8. Part 2 Exit Ramps
  9. Part 3 Forks in the Road
  10. Conclusion: Paedobaptism-ish
  11. Discussion Questions
  12. Acknowledgments
  13. Notes
  14. Selected Bibliography