oliver_denom wrote: ↑Mon Sep 11, 2017 11:43 amIf one parent creates a space for free thought, even planting the idea that choice exists, then most find their way out. If they go to a secular school, or skip seminary, then all the better. All it takes is one. The illusion is maintained more by what is hidden and shut out than what is actually said. The very existence of reality as it is contradicts much of what they teach.
I would like to add that creating that space for free, critical thought, allowing children to wonder and question and disagree (even if it's with you as the ex-mo or NOM parent), goes a long way towards mitigating the worst of the stifling indoctrination that the church is attempting. I feel like one of the worst things the church did was to make me complicit in my own repression. Nobody ever needed to censor me because I was so terrified of offending god by thinking or saying the wrong things.
If you teach your children not only that God gave them their wonderful inquiring minds but that he or she intends them to use it, well, you've opened the world to them.
My eldest son is on a mission, a passionate and committed elder. But I mostly feel ok about this, because rather than stats and fanaticism, his letters home are about things like the joy of lifting someone by just sitting and listening to them. He was excited this week because they visited someone with a severe disability and were able to help him do some work around his home that he was unable to do himself. Once he wrote apologetically that the McDonald's gift card I'd sent had been given to someone they talked to digging through a dumpster. His uncle, who's in the same ward, reports to us that he's "progressive." I'm not sure he meant it as a compliment, but I was greatly heartened to hear it.
While I have made no efforts to dissuade him from his beliefs, I have made myself available to him to talk, and by that I mostly mean I listen. I have made it as safe as I can for him to express himself freely, even when it makes me uncomfortable.
One of our venerable NOMS said that you don't even have to campaign against the church, you just give them the tools for critical thinking. I heartily agree. I think most of the time you're most effective without even bringing it up.