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My mother is somewhat religious. My father and I and one of my brothers are all atheist and all became atheist independently. My other brother is very religious and my sister is nonreligious but believes in ghosts and psychics and all that nonsense.

2007-01-12 03:33:11 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

My parents were Jehovah's Witnesses and brought all four of us up in that faith. However, I ditched the lot when I was 21 and wandered around in a spiritual wilderness before finally (and willingly) becoming a Christian 10 years ago. Interestingly, my sister also left the JW's and found Christianity. One brother never embraced the JW teachings and has no Christian faith and another brother left the organisation some years ago. I conclude that it does not really matter what your parents believe. What is important is that people are allowed to think for themselves and make up their own minds about religion.

2007-01-12 03:39:02 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 3 2

My family is a mixture of religions:

Dad - Agnostic
Mom - Santera
Brother 1 - Jehova Witness
Brother 2 - Agnostic
Me - Atheist

2007-01-12 03:32:37 · answer #3 · answered by cannabia 3 · 2 1

Yes my father-in-law was raised atheist but he would be the first one to say lets go to church. I really wish he would get baptized.
He believes there is a higher power but can't explain it. So I think he believes in Christ but can't make his mind go with his gut instinct. He is a good and honest man and devoted husband and father, so you can't say he is evil either. Never cheated, never stole, he would give his shirt off his back if anyone would need it.

2007-01-12 03:36:44 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

my parents were Catholic. I am a former Catholic person who searched through many religions and philosphies and then became a born again Christian at age 33.. My two grown sons are also born again but don't attend church much (nor I but maybe more than them).

2007-01-13 01:00:49 · answer #5 · answered by janie 7 · 1 0

tell her you have not any purpose of dealing with confirmation because you've a unique conception. tell her that forcing you'll make you dislike the conception even more suitable to boot as lose appreciate for her. in the experience that they fairly favor you to do it, do only it as a opt for to them, like an act of love. clarify this obviously and assume them to do an same for you in the destiny.

2016-10-30 22:12:40 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I was raised as a Catholic - I was even an altarboy. But religion is mental filth and any god that most religious people can conceive if is not worthy of me.

My child goes to a catholic school because it is the best one in town by a mile, but she will be able to make up her own mind when she can..

2007-01-12 04:33:32 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

Mom was a lapsed Roman Catholic. Dad was Anglican, but became agnostic. I'm the one who always went to Church. I rode my bike there all on my own even when I was only 8 or 9 years old.

2007-01-12 03:31:55 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 3 1

parents - religious
me- Atheist

2007-01-12 03:44:12 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

My parents were Christians - I'm an atheist.

2007-01-12 03:31:20 · answer #10 · answered by Misha-non-penguin 5 · 2 2

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