We’ve been talking a lot about this and we’re starting to lean towards some sort of middle of the road compromise. Is such a thing possible? Can we educate our prospective children in both faiths, properly, and allow them to make their own decisions?
In the RCC, Jesus is the Messiah. In the Jewish tradition, they are still waiting for their Messiah. That’s a pretty significant difference.
Also, I’m not sure how you’d deal with religious education. Would the kid attend religious ed at the parish on one day and religious ed at the temple on another? Will you go to her temple one day and mass the next day? How would that make sense to the kids? I mean, if the goal is to raise the kid properly and in the tradition…I don’t even want to think about the kid being school age and trying to decide on the right religious school (if that’s what you want.)
I’m not sure how you’ll educate a kid in both traditions and do it very well. Kids simply don’t have adult brains. It’s sounds nice to allow the kids to make their own choice about religion, but they don’t have the same context that an adult would have making that choice.
As a convert and the parent of a young one, my kid is being raised in the Catholic tradition. He doesn’t have one parent that goes to a protestant and another parent that goes to the RCC. My husband doesn’t attend church at this point, so it’s my responsibility to give my son experience w/church (if he’s going to get it at all). I’d rather not have him confused as to why mom and dad do different things. He’s 5. Things are really simple when you are 5. If he decides at a later point not to go to church, then we can discuss that w/in the context of why he doesn’t like the Catholic church and guide him as he struggles to find his place as a Christian.
That would be much harder if my husband and I had different faiths.
Also, as a Catholic, I’d see Messianic Judaism as a step down. I attended a Messianic Judaism congregation for a short time here in Detroit and the people are friendly and they are Christians, but they still are more like Protestants. They don’t teach anything about Mary or the Saints. They worship Jesus in a Jewish context - which is beautiful, but they don’t teach the whole truth. That should matter when teaching your kids faith.
Catholicism gets a lot of its ritual and tradition from the Jewish faith. However, both Judaism and Protestantism don’t teach the whole truth. Judaism lacks the truth about the resurrection of Jesus/ his divinity. Protestants don’t have the whole Bible/neglect Mary/the Saints/church history and have theological problems.
Me, personally, I really want to share in communion and the sacraments with my husband and my son. I can’t imagine having a different faith than they do. It was okay when we didn’t have kids. He did his thing and I did mine. That attitude changed once my son was born. I want to worship with my husband and son and if that’s going to happen, it’s going to be in a Catholic church because he won’t go anywhere else.
People can make these situations work, but it takes a lot of extra work and effort to be successful.