J
jmcrae
Guest
I remember that a friend of mine who attended a Baptist Sunday School seemed to be “learning” a lot of very weird stuff, not only about Catholics but also about the form of Protestantism that I practiced, as well. All of it was negative, and in the tone of “we are so much better than they are; they should become like us.” He kept trying to convert me, because my religion was “too much like the Catholic Church.” (It wasn’t even close, actually - we practiced infant baptism, but as far as I know, that was the only similarity, back then - later on, in the early 1980s, we got into the liturgical calendar, and started putting coloured stoles on our members of clergy, but back when I was a kid, we were still doing the Psalms and the Books of Genesis and Exodus, followed by the works of St. Paul, with maybe a couple chapters of the Gospel of John thrown in at Easter time, and about half a chapter from the Gospel of Luke at Christmas, and our clergy wore nothing but black, with red stripes for those who hadn’t completed their doctoral degrees yet. The sermons also lasted about 40 minutes, and we always sang all 25 verses of every hymn and anthem.)Hi, what kind of things were taught in Baptist sunday schools in the 20th cen? Did they teach anti Catholic things? The reason I ask is my grandmother attend their sunday school, and she makes lots of anti Catholic remarks.She always said she developed her faith there , looks like she was taught alot more as well. Id like to see if these things were and still are taught? If they were how could you ever hold your head up high, going to a church like that? I dont blaim any baptists on this forum, I blaim those in my town and baptists of the past!!
By contrast, the Sunday School that I attended didn’t mention other faiths very much at all, other than to mention that our denomination had been founded by a coalition of Presbyterians, Methodists, and Congregationalists. Nobody went into much detail about what (if any) differences there were between them - the emphasis was on the common ground between them, and on being faithful disciples of Jesus Christ.
We also had a lot of stories about some kid named Jimmy who was always getting lost, or crying about something, or getting into fights with his friends, or lying to his Mom, and then being asked to solve his problems for him.
TemplarJPN :knight2: