Kids don't have to attend church every week to have a full understanding of their faith. You many think otherwise, but this is my belief.
My strict Catholic upbringing is one of the reasons I rebel now as an adult. I want my kids to have an understanding of their faith which DS does, DD is just starting. Teaching faith can be done in numerous ways besides attending Sunday mass every week.
I don't think it is strict at all. Our faith is more than just Bible study. It is living it and celebrating on a weekly basis what Christ did for us.
I homeschool my children and use a homeschool religious ed and they go to Sunday school to spend time with other children.
I spend maybe--10--20 minutes a day TOPS with my children on the subject (no more than 90 minutes a week). We are not strict--by any stretch. But the religious ed component is what explains what the mass is about.
It is all meaningless out of practice.
Teaching faith can be done multiple ways, but the lax approach to avoiding church 50 weeks out of the year and sending your child to religious ed part-time (very few show up every week--I had one kid last year who didn't come to half of the classes)--is not a good approach.
There is a happy medium between daily rosary, mass, confession while going to CCD and the polar opposite which is sending your child to CCD to check off that parental baptism promise while doing nothing else to nurture your child's spiritual growth.
What that is--I don't know, but the argument that you don't need to go to mass misses a huge aspect of our faith.
And I am not tooting my own horn--but I do not do anything spectacular with my children as I am not a cradle catholic and am still in my own spiritual development. But it is pretty sad that with what little she knows--and without me prompting her ahead of time, she knew most of the answers to discussion questions throughout the year while all I drew from the rest of my class was blank stares.
I had 3rd graders who didn't know basic elements of the mass including some who were a bit lost on the Eucharist and its meaning despited having just completed their first communion. Evidently taking communion in 2nd grade and on Christmas and Easter isn't enough to cement the meaning into their memory.
Parents are free to catechise to their children as they wish. I just don't understand why they waste their child's time in a class that bores them to tears b/c they have no use for it in their real life application.
I hope that doesn't sound "strict" and "rule following"--but one has to ask themselves, why they are bothering to do something if they don't truly live what they are studying?
ETA: I didn't see your money comment. When we moved to our community, we got that vibe your son experienced from the first church we attended. So we didn't bother going again and instead chose a different parish. The first one--quite truthfully--felt nothing like a mass and more like a televangelist telethon. Very surreal.