A Giant in the Sky

April 21, 2011 by  
Filed under Barbara Matousek, Family, Single Parents

By: Barbara Matousek

Modern family views on religion

“Maybe there is a big giant watching us,” he says as he pops the last of his cupcake into his mouth.

“You think so?” I say, piling the dishes into the sink and wiping the counter in front of him with a damp rag.

“And he’s moving the wind and the clouds so that sometimes it rains and sometimes it doesn’t.”

“Maybe that’s God,” I say.

“What’s God?”

Since before Sam was born I’ve been prepared for discussions about why our family doesn’t have a daddy.  I’ve made books explaining his conception and our story and what a gift he is.  But I’ve never even mentioned God to him?  God hasn’t ever come up when we snuggle at bedtime and talk about things we’re grateful for or the people we love?  Nobody has ever mentioned God to him?  How did this happen?

When my best friend was trying to figure out how to teach her young boys about God, whether to bring them to church, I admired the balance she struck between her beliefs and her husband’s beliefs, the way she wanted to educate her children about what others believed without forcing them to believe anything in particular.  A decade later when my sister grappled with the decision to send her son to a Lutheran pre-school, I understood her reluctance.  She and I had stood up during her children’s baptisms and vowed to raise her children in the Catholic church but at the time we both had our doubts and questions about religion and God.

Standing in the kitchen with a wet rag in my hand, all of my earlier pronouncements to my friends that “I want to teach my children about spirituality, not religion” come back to me.  How do I teach my child about God if I don’t know what I believe about God?

In Buddhist teachings there is a description of a huge net reaching in all directions called the Jeweled Net of Indra.  This net teaches about the interconnectedness of us all.  We are all part of something bigger than just ourselves, part of a whole that includes plants and animals and friends and neighbors, people across the world and people right next door.  What we do to the least of our brothers we do to ourselves.  I know I believe this, but how does my idea of God or a creator fit in with this?

I was raised in a Catholic home and from the distance of my adulthood I look back gratefully for the tradition and the community and the center the church gave our family.  My earliest and most pleasant childhood memory is of my head in my mother’s lap as she stroked the hair back behind my ears as the priest’s voice droned from the pulpit.  I look back and see how no matter what was going on in our lives, we made time for God on Sunday.  We got out of bed and got dressed and rode in the car together, whether it was raining or sleeting, whether we were healthy or sick, whether we were getting along or fighting.  Every week we traveled the short distance to St. Peter and Paul Catholic Church, and we sat in the pews together.  My Sunday memories include silver-dollar-sized pancakes at The Village Inn, peeling apples for pie, and watching football in the family room.  Together.

I’m still forming my ideas about the spiritual traditions our family will follow, but when I think about what I want my children to know about God and religion and spirituality, THIS is what I KNOW I want them to learn:  that we are a family, the three of us as well as the greater human race.  That there is no “us” and “them”.  That each human being has as much value as the next.  That those who have a different skin color or speak a different language or form families with two moms or ride in a wheelchair or follow the teachings of Mohammed or believe that Christ was the son of God or don’t believe in God at all are all human beings.  I want them to learn that families can come from anywhere, that what we do and say can influence others and we don’t always see the effects we have on others, and we’re all in this together.

I stand in the kitchen and look at the frosting smeared into Sam’s hair and the blue sprinkles caked to the corners of his mouth, and I do not even know how to begin to talk to him about God, how to even put a human word to something I consider to be so grand and awesome that even the act of naming it diminishes the greatness of God.  But I know that it is time for our family to begin forming our spiritual traditions, our Sunday memories.  Better late than never.

“God is love,” I say.  “God is all of us.  Together.  Love.”

It’s not perfect and it never will be.  And as my son grows he will develop his own ideas about God and religion and community and tradition and humanity and love.  So while it may not be perfect, it’s a start.  We are finally talking about God.

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Comments

8 Responses to “A Giant in the Sky”
  1. peggy says:

    However you decide to present spirituality and religion and–more importantly–faith, to your children will eventually take a backseat to what they decide for their own lives.

    The traditions are what matter. The traditions are those little pockets in time that reappear–for kids–with frightening consistency. They are the moments that peek their heads out of the piles of disposable Christmas wrappings and the cheap chocolates nestled in the artificial Easter grass. The traditions are what bind the teenagers–so bent on rejecting EVERYTHING that is important to their parents–to the parents. The traditions are comfort–the candles lit every Sunday of Advent, the party that occurs every Christmas Eve after the church service, the lamb that is roasted at Easter and the dinner complete with the grumpy old grand-dad–the traditions are what bind our kids to our faith. The traditions are what illuminate a different, bigger, life for our kids who are so bound to the present.

    Happy Easter, Barb!
    xo
    p

  2. Madge Woods says:

    I like the traditions too. My kids remember those and talk more about the family parties, the cookie making at the neighbors and the Hannukah Menorah lighting the decorations on fire. They remember playing dreydl and not the religious part which was not a part of our lives.

  3. Amy says:

    This brought a tear to my eye. God IS love. And I think it’s just as simple as that.

    You’re a good mom, Barb.

  4. Lovely post, Barb!

  5. Tara says:

    I like this post a lot…makes me happy.

    :)

  6. Lisa says:

    This is so beautiful, Barb!

  7. Barb says:

    Thank you everyone for all the kind comments. I was so terrified to put this out there… violating the don’t-talk-politics-or-religion rule… and I appreciate all the support. I know I have a lot of friends who are very committed to their faith and their beliefs, and I appreciate that even though we all have our differences, we are able to talk about this without it being mean or confrontational. God IS Love. :)

  8. Allison says:

    We made time for church every Sunday growing up too. No matter the chaos, I knew I could count on the same people, hymns, the same pew, and a warm hug from my pastor. Love that you say the greater human race is part of your family too. I may have to borrow that one.

    Great post!

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