secular saints
I was having a conversation about family religions with some lab colleagues. One told a story of her Roman Catholic father and Protestant German mother, and how she was raised with some question about whether Protestants were really Christians. Another lab-mate shared his story about an old high school classmate who is now a Republican organizer, who claimed that "90% of Christians who attend church every Sunday are Republicans", but when pressed, conceded that he was talking about Protestants, not Christians.
I realized that I don't have this perspective on family religion. In my house, I was raised with a collection of venerated icons on the walls of the house, as I imagine that some families might put up small shrines to Saint Michael or Mary Mother of God. Except that in my house, the icons were selected from the radical pantheon: Mohandas K. Gandhi, Emma Goldman and Che Guevara; Bernice Johnson Reagon, Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger; Fanny Lou Hamer, Robert F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Junior.
I'm lucky -- most people who find their way to this pantheon have to reject the family line, whether that be faith in government, religion, or sexism. I am blessed by being born into a family that already sees the way of engaged compassion as something to strive for.
I realized that I don't have this perspective on family religion. In my house, I was raised with a collection of venerated icons on the walls of the house, as I imagine that some families might put up small shrines to Saint Michael or Mary Mother of God. Except that in my house, the icons were selected from the radical pantheon: Mohandas K. Gandhi, Emma Goldman and Che Guevara; Bernice Johnson Reagon, Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger; Fanny Lou Hamer, Robert F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Junior.
I'm lucky -- most people who find their way to this pantheon have to reject the family line, whether that be faith in government, religion, or sexism. I am blessed by being born into a family that already sees the way of engaged compassion as something to strive for.

no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
It's funny -- and kind of scary -- how deep some of the basic ideas and mindsets can go, even when neither of you has believed a word for it for a very long time.
Being raised Protestant, though, my family was definitely not much for the concept of saints, secular or otherwise.
no subject
I'm Jewish but was raised without too much of the religion of the religion, though alot of the community (I grew up in a nice, educated liberal Massachusetts area north of Boston, on the shore). Oddly, I've been pretty fixated on female saints lately.
no subject
My parents raised me in a pretty atheist way, my dad pointing out how wacky he thought christianity was, and my mom feeling so guilty for her Original Sin (which I never understood) that she couldn't go to church. My dad created his own "church" which was a handy tax-write-off and his own personal protest against the rhetoric that was instilled in him by the Episcopalian church and my mom began to feel a little better about herself when she got involved with the Quakers. That was how they could cope with what they had struggled with.
no subject
no subject