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Amy Bruce's avatar

"I found that I didn’t want to be associated with the things Christianity had come to mean. But even before that, I stopped being able to believe the things that would make one a Christian… and since I had been taught since I was a child that it was belief that made you a Christian, well, I couldn’t be one anymore. (that’s a post for another day, I suppose). I can love a lot of elements of following Jesus, and I can love a lot of people who follow Jesus. But to identify with the title of Christian right now feels like a too-tight shoe I put on the wrong foot and am trying to run a race in."

This is exactly why I stopped identifying as Christian. Disentangling for me in the past 5 years or so has meant slow and cautious exposure to elements of Christianity to see if I could tolerate them. The group singing I love often takes place in churches, so being in them was the first step toward tolerance. And over time I've become more comfortable with listening to others talking about their faith journeys. At the same time, while outwardly I may seem composed, there is a red light pulsating inside me saying STOP! GO NO FURTHER. I listen, but I don't share back. Identifying as Jewish helps put the kibosh on talking about my journey with Christianity, but that doesn't feel totally honest either. "Oh what a tangled web we weave . . . " and I'm not trying to deceive, but that's what's happening. Guess I need one of those short, succinct sentences I help my patients uncover when they've identified a boundary. I'm so glad to have this space to open up in.

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Ivy Zeller's avatar

Deeply, deeply relatable post! For me this part really resonated: "What I want to do is try to navigate the tender line of deconstructing from religion that has actively harmed so many people – while also acknowledging that religion has been meaningful for lots of people, including people groups evangelicalism has actively oppressed, such as people of color and women – while ALSO recognizing how supremacist systems show up even in spaces that oppressed groups choose to belong to. Easy peasy, right?" It's such a journey, and I think my upbringing in fundamentalism isn't making it easy to acknowledge that the journey is about listening to and walking in solidarity with others, seeking to not do harm but acknowledging that I will at some point need to do repair for the harm I will cause sometimes (despite my best efforts). It's so hard for my brain to accept that the journey is not really about finding the right way to be (or not be) religious/Christian. But, my goodness, do I want a "right" way to be!

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