Most people baptise their children at a very young age. By doing this, aren't you deciding what your child should believe in, instead of leaving it to be his or her choice?
When children are so young, their brain is not developed to tackle such hard issues, that we as adults cannot even come to agreement with. When you sell this story to children, they will easily believe in it (which could be a possible explanation to why anyone is religious at all). When doing this, you are by definition, indoctrinating a defenseless child; which I would argue is psychological abuse.
Question: Are Baptising and teaching religious doctrine to children morally wrong? On that grounds that it interferes with his freedom to choose.
Baptising a Child
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- McCulloch
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Re: Baptising a Child
Post #2There are no Christian children, Muslim children, Hindu children or even atheist children any more than there are Conservative, Liberal, Marxist or neo-Keynesian children. There are children of Christian, Muslim, Hindu or atheist parents. However, parents will and should be expected to, instill in their children the values that they hold to be true and valuable.
Examine everything carefully; hold fast to that which is good.
First Epistle to the Church of the Thessalonians
The truth will make you free.
Gospel of John
First Epistle to the Church of the Thessalonians
The truth will make you free.
Gospel of John
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Post #4
As a Christian, I have one thing to say if it is morally correct. My answer is, It is ABSOLUTELY WRONG to baptize a young child. Being baptized is supposed to be willfully done, and before you are baptized, you need to know what it means. I do agree with you there. Catholics do that. Not to completely be mean, but what they are doing is wrong. VERY VERY WRONG. I'm a Church of Christ member, and it doesn't matter where you are, or what day it is, or whatever. If you truly believe that you are ready to be baptized, you will be baptized (of course, in water, completely submersed).
- Fallibleone
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Post #5
Protestants do it too. If in fact 'baptism' is synonymous with 'christening'.
''''What I am is good enough if I can only be it openly.''''
''''The man said "why you think you here?" I said "I got no idea".''''
''''Je viens comme un chat
Par la nuit si noire.
Tu attends, et je tombe
Dans tes ailes blanches,
Et je vole,
Et je coule
Comme une plume.''''
''''The man said "why you think you here?" I said "I got no idea".''''
''''Je viens comme un chat
Par la nuit si noire.
Tu attends, et je tombe
Dans tes ailes blanches,
Et je vole,
Et je coule
Comme une plume.''''
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Post #7
I think that baptising is not a decision that parents should make for their child. however it doesn't have any effect. I know full-blown atheists that have been baptised as a child and raised as a christian. I was also raised as a christian but not baptised.
I think raising children/school and religion should not go together at all. the child should be able to make it's own choice regarding religion.
I think raising children/school and religion should not go together at all. the child should be able to make it's own choice regarding religion.
Post #8
I agree. Baptizing a child is meaningless. A child cannot truly repent of their sins, and to baptize them without true repentance is senseless. Also, they will not fully know what is going on, and it may actually frighten them. To be baptized requires a full commitment to God, which you will not get from children.mineman43 wrote:As a Christian, I have one thing to say if it is morally correct. My answer is, It is ABSOLUTELY WRONG to baptize a young child. Being baptized is supposed to be willfully done, and before you are baptized, you need to know what it means. I do agree with you there. Catholics do that. Not to completely be mean, but what they are doing is wrong. VERY VERY WRONG. I'm a Church of Christ member, and it doesn't matter where you are, or what day it is, or whatever. If you truly believe that you are ready to be baptized, you will be baptized (of course, in water, completely submersed).
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Post #9
Baptism is only a ritual that makes the participants feel warm and fuzzy. The Baptism of a child is not for the child's sake, it is for the parents sake.jenna wrote:I agree. Baptizing a child is meaningless. A child cannot truly repent of their sins, and to baptize them without true repentance is senseless. Also, they will not fully know what is going on, and it may actually frighten them. To be baptized requires a full commitment to God, which you will not get from children.mineman43 wrote:As a Christian, I have one thing to say if it is morally correct. My answer is, It is ABSOLUTELY WRONG to baptize a young child. Being baptized is supposed to be willfully done, and before you are baptized, you need to know what it means. I do agree with you there. Catholics do that. Not to completely be mean, but what they are doing is wrong. VERY VERY WRONG. I'm a Church of Christ member, and it doesn't matter where you are, or what day it is, or whatever. If you truly believe that you are ready to be baptized, you will be baptized (of course, in water, completely submersed).
Rituals are important to the participants. All else is irrelevant.
“What do you think science is? There is nothing magical about science. It is simply a systematic way for carefully and thoroughly observing nature and using consistent logic to evaluate results. So which part of that exactly do you disagree with? Do you disagree with being thorough? Using careful observation? Being systematic? Or using consistent logic?�
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Post #10
Except that, as part of the ritual, the child is now considered Christian.goat wrote: Baptism is only a ritual that makes the participants feel warm and fuzzy. The Baptism of a child is not for the child's sake, it is for the parents sake.
Rituals are important to the participants. All else is irrelevant.
TC