The basic problem with the axioms of reconstructionism in paganism is that, as a descendant of Puritans, the religion of my ancestors turns out to be Unitarian Universalism.
Some gaps no amount of lore can fill.
Some gaps no amount of lore can fill.
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Or maybe the Anglicans. Much more pleasant. Except when they were dealing with the Scots...OH NO I AM A HERETIC TO MYSELF
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It is, after all, derived directly from the Roman system, which made precious little distinction between church and state. (;
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;-)
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maybe being a neurotic skeptic with existentialist/agnostic leanings IS my heritage. How else do you honor that?
And I give up on Wicca, I'm afraid.
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...I need a ministry icon, don't I.
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It's possible to argue that the roots of the split go back a bit further; in 1701, a group of Harvard alumni, unhappy with what they perceived as creeping liberalism at their alma mater, founded what is now Yale as a strict Calvinist alternative.
My own New England ancestors seem to have been Episcopalian even though some of them were here as early as 1640. My mother's old church, where I sing in the choir, will celebrate its 200th anniversary in 2013.
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Our kids were recently invited to church by some of their school friends. We've taken them a few times, and they've enjoyed it, but E & I are struggling a bit with feeling like hypocrites for attending church when we're not really believers ourselves, and didn't really plan for our kids to grow up with that. (UUs seem laid back enough that we wouldn't feel that way, but these friends are Presbyterian.)