There is something profoundly
wrong about the religious indoctrination of children.
It is theft and I will
tell you why. When a child is born they are born free from everything, they are
born as empty slates, clear minds. As they grow they turn into little
scientists; watch any child play and soon you will realise that it is not idle
play, they are constantly conducting experiments; what happens if I put this
ball in this cup? What happens why I put it in that cup? If I throw sand in the
air, what happens? If I make annoying sounds, how long will it be before daddy
gets mad? How much does this weigh? Why can I not reach that? Everything
interaction is an experiment, every event studied intently to learn more about
it, every sound listened to, every taste savoured and every touched sends a
spike of inquisitiveness to the infant mind. They are adventurers with infinite
imagination on a never ending quest for new knowledge. Their world is one full
of wonder and discovery every day. This constant questioning and discovery is
made possible because they are not limited in the scope of their understanding;
their universe is as it should be to them (and likely how it is in reality) –
infinite.
When all questions are
reduced to one simple answer there ceases to be great moments of discovery; Why
has the giraffe got such a long neck? God. Where did the world come from? God.
Why are some stars brighter than others? God. Where once there was a rich and
colourful gallery of explanations there is not one plain answer to everything –
God. For adults this can be rationalised but to reduce everything to just God
in a child’s mind is stealing that discovery and wonder from them. It limits
their once infinite scope to the boundaries of God. It squashes their naturally
inquisitive minds; it removes the adventure and wonder because now it can all
be explained so easily, it is all reduced to God.
Imagine a library. Maybe
situated in a fantastically interesting old building, a maze of wood panelled
rooms and heavy oak doorways inside of which sit towering bookshelves brimming
with thousands of books by thousands of authors. Walking through it you notice
all the different books on different subjects; factual books, fictional books,
comedy, satire, reference, children’s stories, history, academic journals
maybe. You notice how they are all bound differently in different colours. The
library is a canvas of colours and titles stretching on forever, covering every
subject known to humanity, every thought, every invention, every event in every
language. The shelves bow under the weight of the work of thousands of years of
discovery and imagination. You can smell it in the air, that wonderful papery
smell of books – the smell of knowledge and understanding.
Now remove all those books,
sweep them off of the shelves and into some abyss never to be seen again. Take
all the knowledge and imagination and cast it away. In its place, amongst the
empty shelves where only the dust outlines of the spines remain, place on a
table a single religious tome. This is now your library. This is maximum scope
of understanding and imagination available to you – your library has been
reduced to God.
There is no denying that
religious texts are indeed useful and should have a place in every library both
figurative and real. They are useful because they provide insight into human
history; those people who put together Genesis, for instance, tried to figure
out the world was made. After all, they didn’t have much later scientific advances
to rely on, so they did their best. Later stories were added to try and form
some sort of treatise on morals and human interaction and through hundreds of
years these religious texts began to take shape. However, as time advanced there
became a following, a stoic and dogmatic following of these texts. They became
preached pieces that were no longer about explaining the world but were about
political means and ends and financial gain, they were, and still are, about
control. Take the Bible for instance, it features the ten ‘commandments’, not ‘the
ten suggestions’ or ‘the ten good ideas that you might want to use’ they are
commands. More and more organised religion became about them and us, being
either with it or against it. It became narrow minded and has stayed that way
ever since.
Children do not need narrow
minded thought being introduced to their infinite universes. They do not need
to be told everything they are going to burn in hell for or how God will hate
them if they do this, that or something else and they do not need a warped
version of emotional blackmail masquerading as morality. They need morality and
ethics based on real human interactions not ancient doctrines that condone
rape, murder, discrimination and hatred as long as God says it is alright. What
children need is encouragement in the things they are good at and a free world
to explore and discover with no limitations imposed on their imaginations by
anyone, imaginary or not.
They deserve to be shown that the world is even more fascinating and amazing than they could imagine; they deserve better than to have their infinite universes reduced to God.
#LogicShotgun
A.R. Bell 2015
Twitter: @ARB_itrary
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