Business & Finance6 mins ago
Grandparents
Why do grandparents think they have any rights concerning their grandchildren?
My in laws went mental when I told them my partner and I had absolutely no intention of baptising our daughter.
Neither of us believe in god and therefore it would be hypocrisy of the highest order to do so.
They were also unhappy with our choice of name - cheeky b4stards.
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by flanker. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.My son was not christened. His grandmothers (no grandfathers unfortunately) made no comments at all. We did not christen him as we have no particular religious beliefs and thought it should be his own choice.
The only remark we got was from a neighbour who reckoned that it was terrible not to christen him in case anything happened to him and he died young! I quickly told her that if there was a god that punished young children because their parents did not christen them, then he wasn't a god I wanted anything to do with!
I can totally understand your anger but if you can stay calm & indifferent to their opinions they'll get the message a lot quicker than if it blows up into a big row.
I'm not christened, my sons aren't either. There were some mumblings about not being able to have a Christian burial (I don't want a burial anyway) but does anyone actually ask you whether you were christened when you die? Or at any other time in your life for that matter?
I can sympathise with you, flanker. I've come across many interfering grandparents (in-laws) - as well as great ones too. I think some people can't let their children grow up and some live seem to need to live their lives through their children and grandchildren.
This is manipulative behaviour to mock the choice you chose for your child and to try to make you feel uncomfortable or to get mad with you if you don't get your child baptised.
People have weird views and superstitions about baptisms. One of them, as Fakeplastic, points out is the view that children need to be baptised young in case anything happens to them. I agree with Fakeplastic, that if this was what God was like then I would want nothing to do with God whatsoever.
I tend to view Christening/Baptism as a sign of welcome into the Christian community/the church. It is not something that should be done to keep the grandparents happy etc.
A few years ago I was absolutely livid when a woman came to my church and asked if I would baptise her grandchild. I said that she should get the baby's parents to come and chat to me. She said: "Oh I don't want them to know about it. They don't want her to be christened. I'm looking after the wee one when they are on holiday and I thought I'd get the wee one 'done' while they were away!" aaaaarrrgggghh
I couldn't believe it! I told the woman in no uncertain terms that this was not her decision and that she should respect her son and daughter-in-law tin whatever they decided.
Hear Hear RevShirls, good for you - I'm a lapsed Catholic: my parents bordered on being fanatical Catholics, and as a result throughout my childhood and early teens I had catholic dogma shoved down my throat all the time, and then they were killed: It is, I think, for these reasons that I have rejected religion completely.
But, that said, I do respect peoples beliefs, and have been to a number of christenings and baptisms lately as a result of making friends with other parents at the ante-natal classes, and have enjoyed every one of them.
People (my in laws) should just respect the fact that me and my partner choose to live secular lives.