NHdisneylover
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Feb 26, 2007
- Messages
- 18,120
I agree it is an amazing program. I am not kidding when I say that not having access to it is one of my biggest regrets in moving.This just in--not all churches are bible-based.
My children have attended this program (Unitarian-Universalist) and it is amazing.
You're talking about fundamentalism, which is a tangent from the current conversation.
I can buy into the idea that some of the mnior Biblical principles are outdated. I believe someone earlier on this thread said something about the Old Testament forbidding the Jews from eating pork (could've been that I read that somewhere else and I'm remembering it wrong), and that was good advice back in the days when they were wandering the dessert without benefit of refrigeration -- but doesn't really apply to our lives today.
I can also buy into other "gray areas" such as working on Sunday. Some people say that the concept is what's important, that God knew that man needed to rest and focus upon just spiritual needs one day out of the week. Sunday is traditional, but you can certainly garner the same benefits on Monday. People also point out that this is the only one of the 10 commandments that isn't repeated in the New Testament.
I can buy into those things.
But in the case of this program, what I'm hearing is that this program has no Biblical basis and is in direct contradiction to a rather important (of course you might disagree with the modifier "important") instruction that's given multiple times in the Bible.
I really expected that it was based upon something in the Bible -- something that could be interpreted in multiple ways -- and I'm surprised to see that it seems to be based upon modern morals.
See, I would argue that just as pork can be better cooked now and therefore that prohibition is outdated, living in a society with multiple birth control and the abilities for women to work themselves and support their children (and much more acceptance by men now to raise someone else's kid as their own) that the rules against premarital sex are equally outdated.
Regardless, it is great that your church works for you and that mine and Magpie's and Pigeon's work for us. I love that about living in a time and place where I can choose my religious to match my beliefs. Don't you?

I like that we both get to parent according to our beliefs too. So, you can teach your children that they should abstain from sex until marriage and you can teach them this is a religious thing. I can teach my children that sex is a physical and spiritual things and what guides when is emotional maturity, type of relationship they are in, and ability to prevent STDs and unwanted pregnancies. Now, if your child ever dates my child we might run into some issues
but generally I love that we can each raise our children with our own beliefs--makes the world so much more interesting doesn't it?
Aparently my great grandfather was terrible in bed and my great grandmother wanted to make sure that my mother wasn't stuck in a similar marriage. Talk about awkward but really before divorce I can see where she was coming from, either way making sure you are compatible ahead of time can save a lot of heart ache.