I’ve heard similar stories (each one at least second-hand); there seems to be a binary split in the kind of people who go on to study theology in university: those who believe hard and those whose faith is already teetering.
It’s also similar to my own experiences; while I never took a university-grade theology class, I did go through the Finnish school system and the associated nine years of exposure to religion.
I’ll say this for religion and teaching it at school in a predominantly secular country: it’s a great way to get people thinking. It was because of those religion classes that I first went out to find out about (read: “scratch the surface of”) logical argumentation and fallacies of reasoning.
If only there were a way to predictably accomplish the same effect without all the collateral damage.
I’ve heard similar stories (each one at least second-hand); there seems to be a binary split in the kind of people who go on to study theology in university: those who believe hard and those whose faith is already teetering.
It’s also similar to my own experiences; while I never took a university-grade theology class, I did go through the Finnish school system and the associated nine years of exposure to religion.
I’ll say this for religion and teaching it at school in a predominantly secular country: it’s a great way to get people thinking. It was because of those religion classes that I first went out to find out about (read: “scratch the surface of”) logical argumentation and fallacies of reasoning.
If only there were a way to predictably accomplish the same effect without all the collateral damage.