Thank you for that clarification, Sisifo. Explained like that, it makes perfect sense. I have a similar stand-off with my parents. They know I am an atheist and we tacitly agree to avoid religious discussion for want of an easy life. But they can't help "god blessing" me from time to time and I make sure that I pull them up on it when they do. Not in a nasty way - I just let them know that they will be starting a full-on religious debate if they keep it up - they get the hint!Sisifo wrote:I said I was pulling her leg, because my arguments had hurt. I had attacked like if she had been a fundamentalist, and I tried to rectify some of it; especially the anti-catholic ones. That is mainly the point. I was not advocating reason; I was attacking religion which was unfair to a person who took religion internally and silently.Xamonas Chegwé wrote:A few things puzzled me about your OP, Sisifo. You finished by saying that you told her you were pulling her leg and took her to a church.
Firstly, why deny that you meant what you said? It is one thing to tread carefully around someone's religious sensibilities and quite another to pay tacit lip-service to them. By all means brush it off by saying that you are not trying to preach atheism and each to their own. But to claim that you were joking is going a little further IMO.
Secondly, did you just drop her at the church? Or did you attend the service with her?
I didn't attend the mass. It was clear after all, and I told her so, that I considered the religious belief an absurdity. That statement didn't bother her at all. That day I saw that I was less flexible to human diversity than I thought. As I put later, that I was/am an extremist, and I would like to fix that.
And I am glad you didn't actually attend the service with her (that was the way I initially read it! )