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UU Parenting with Michelle Richards, author of Tending the Flame: The Art of UU Parenting

A discussion about parenting and liberal religion, with Michelle Richards, author of Tending the Flame: The Art of Unitarian Universalist Parenting. | Welcome | Subscribe

The unique challenges of Unitarian Universalist parenting

Unitarian Universalism offers a different parenting experience than many other religious traditions do—and not just because of our diverse theologies. Parents raising their children in our faith frequently face situations that other parents may never encounter.

During the five years I served a congregation in the Midwest as director of religious education, and in my years since as an author and religious education consultant, I have visited many congregations to present workshops and speak with many parents, ministers, and religious educators. Some parents are seeking to recreate the specialness of the religious traditions they remember from their own childhoods; however, having rejected the faith of their youth, they are unsure how to adapt those traditions or how to develop new rituals for their families.

Other Unitarian Universalist parents have had little or no exposure to a religious faith during their childhood years but still desire to “do religion” with their children.  They seek to give their children the experience that many Christian, Jewish, and Muslim parents give to their children without any apparent effort—a special sense of their religious faith and a deepening sense of spirituality expressed through their family life. Even parents who were raised as Unitarian Universalists may still be challenged in this regard; many of them were raised in a time when fear of indoctrination made it taboo to expend much effort instilling a Unitarian Universalist identity in children.

Unitarian Universalist parents have had ethical dilemmas about whether to allow their children to participate in a school play that depicts Native Americans in a stereotypical fashion, whether their sons should join the Boy Scouts in spite of that institution’s stance on non-believers and homosexuality, and whether to confront a teacher who presents misinformation or biased religious ideas in a public school classroom.

Parents need resources and information to create and share meaningful religious experiences with their children at home and meet the unique challenges of raising children as Unitarian Universalists.  This is why I wrote the book Tending the Flame: The Art of Unitarian Universalist Parenting and will be keeping this blog over the next few weeks. In the book I have written, and through this blog, we will address how parents and children can live their Unitarian Universalist faith everyday—from engaging in social action projects as a family, to exploring the natural world and the feelings of awe it evokes, to appreciating the interdependent web of life, to searching for truth.

Please share your questions, thoughts, and ideas as well as we address what it means to raise children as Unitarian Universalists.

Because whether a family chooses to light a chalice as they share meaningful words, engage in a regular meditation practice, pray together, or walk a labyrinth, they are choosing to give their children a special gift for the future, the gift of a faith tradition. And in doing so, parents are also giving something special to themselves, the gift of a close, connected family drawn together by religious faith.

  • http://www.KidsAreReading.com/ Annette

    What an excellent introduction pointing out issues I hadn’t even thought about. I am looking forward to reading this book to help guide our family though the many issues we are facing (and will face) as parents of two very inquisitive and caring girls! Thank you, Michelle, for taking up this project. There is clearly a need for this information in the UU community as well as the greater community. I hope that your work promotes understanding, appreciation and celebration of our wonderful UU faith!

  • http://twitter.com/RevCyn Cynthia L. Landrum

    Thank you for writing this blog. I’ve encountered many ethical dilemmas similar to the ones you mention. In my parenting life, they’ve ranged from scouting issues around religious beliefs, to the heteronormativity being taught at a class “wedding” event, to struggling with the religious messages woven into extracurricular activities. As a minister, community members have talked to me about the problems in school choirs, where all the music was religious, and struggles with classroom celebrations of Christmas, and how educate children in scouting about our ethics while supporting their desire to be in scouting.

  • Anonymous

    It’s important to me for my son to learn about ALL religions/spiritualities. I’d actually like it if all UU churches were open and accepting to all faiths and/or beliefs (including paganism; buddhism; and atheists.)

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1193505972 Anonymous

    Interesting timing; I’ve been thinking about how UU’s raise their children recently. Some preliminary observations:rn- UU parents tend to be authoritative rather than authoritarian;rn- we have less easy answers to kids’ questions; a tough question can set us off on a 10 minute, rambling answer that looks at various sides of an issue (black-and-white perspectives are so much easier to impart);rn- we tend to give our kids more “leash” than others, trying to maintain control on important issues such as integrity, while less concerned with decorum.rnrnDon’t know if this is just self-serving justification of my own perspective, but I see it reflected back to me in others’ lively kids…

  • http://www.facebook.com/johnstanley John Stanley

    Great idea for a blog. We have been incorporating secular “graces” into our mealtime and our daughter really enjoys the little ritual each evening. Looking forward to more posts.

  • Anonymous

    This is great. Every day of my parenting seems to be filled with “Teachable Moments” and huge successes, like when my son told his father to stop making fun of his stepmother’s beliefs. At seven, this little boy told the most important man in his life:” Dad, it’s important that everybody find out for themselves what they believe. You can’t make fun of someone’s thinking.”rnrnOr the time, after a long discussion about the scouts, a meeting with our minister and chats with gay parents of some of his closest friends, my boy told me “Mom, I think standing up for what I believe in is more important than any badge the scouts could ever give me.”rnrnI am truly blessed to be a part of a community that helps me raise such a thoughtful boy.

  • Anonymous

    One of our biggest issues where we live (South Carolina) is kids at school who ask our kids about religion and where they go to church. We’re working hard at our congregation to give our kids UU identity and to feel good about whatever is they believe.

  • Anonymous

    One of the challenges we face where we live (South Carolina) is our kids being asked about their beliefs on the playground at school. Our RE chair has been working hard with the kids to help them learn UU identity but it is definitely a challenge for all UU parents!

  • Chris Walton

    Thanks for leading this conversation, Michelle!

  • kellywagg

    Glad to see this blog! I attend Northern Hills Fellowship in Cincinnati. We have a great group of UU parents, and discuss these issues a lot. I look forward to reading more.

  • shay_shay37

    Thank you for your encouraging comments. I do believe that UU Parenting takes us on a different road with challenges which are not generally faced by others. Its good to know that we are not alone and that good friends as well as our religious communities can give us support, understanding and encouragement as we take this journey.

  • shay_shay37

    I would like to see this, too. Every UU church has its own “flavor” or atmosphere, but regardless of this, the congregation should be open to accepting diverse theologies and others who think differently than many in the church do. Unfortunately, this is an ideal which is not often lived up to in reality. I hope you can find a church home which is comfortable for you and is supportive of many religious beliefs and spiritual practices.

  • shay_shay37

    I am continually amazed at the wisdom imparted by even relatively young UU kids. It's comments like these that make me think its working. They really get it, and that is a very good thing.

  • shay_shay37

    I believe this an issue for any parent raising a UU kid outisde of the east and west coasts, and particularly in the Bible belt. Where I live in Indiana, it is a big issue, too. I intend to post an upcoming blog on this very issue, so keep following!

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=659155502 facebook-659155502

    I just posted word of the blog on our congregational Facebook fan page. Thanks for starting it!

    I have a 15-year-old daughter who has been raised UU. When she was nine, we moved from a small Idaho city (and its small fellowship, which I helped start), to Boise, which has a much larger fellowship.

    Natalie was the first baby in our small fellowship, and she spent nine years in a near-familial situation in that setting. We never had more than about a half-dozen families with young children, but it was very tight knit and nurturing, a great atmosphere in which to learn UU values in the preschool and early elementary years.

    However, we were blessed to move to Boise just as she neared adolescence. Our small-city fellowship simply couldn't provide the assets that a larger one can. Natalie was able to take part in our fellowship's excellent junior high programs, including OWL, Coming of Age, and a trip to Boston. She's now part of the less-structured but still excellent senior-high program. At the same time, she is starting to move into more adult roles within our fellowship, such as singing in the choir. And I can't forget to mention the outstanding experiences she has had at the UU summer camp (Eliot at Seabeck) that we've attended all but one year of the past six years.

    My point is that while my husband and I have tried to model UU values within our homes and lives, these experiences in the wider UU world have really helped shape our daughter's faith journey. Kids need a variety of adult role models, and – done well – our congregational programming for children and youth can give them a good look at a variety of ways they can carry their UU values into adulthood.

  • http://www.facebook.com/joseph.e.reilly Joseph E. Reilly

    I don't usually read parenting blogs, but I'll be keeping up with this one. I attend Outlaw's Bridge Universalist Church in rural NC, and I am interested in what you have to say, Mrs. Richards. Thanks.

  • http://www.facebook.com/Qwertyuiopasd AJ Bennett

    As a 17 year old active in my churches Youth Group (president, in fact), active on the Joseph Priestly District level, and the first member of my family completely raised on UUism, I'm very interested to see where this blog will go.

    The fear of indoctrinating kids into UUism makes me laugh. I can see how it would've been a legitimate concern, but since UUism is inherently pluralistic and welcoming, and all about questions, it's impossible to fully indoctrinate, even if you try. We could never say to our kids “This is the way it is.” and expect that to be a full explanation. Even being raised UU, it's something you ultimately have to come to yourself. I wasn't really aware that I was UU, or what that really meant, until I was in maybe 5th or 6th grade RE. It's much like a religion I simply found in my childhood that sounded good, and I've grown into.

    Also, this is part of the reason we'll always “lose” kids around high school. My congregation has OWL at 8th grade, so a lot of parents make their kids come until then, but don't bother making them come for senior high. Take into account teenage laziness/sleeping in, and pretty soon a fair number of youths don't attend anymore, but not for any reason of disagreeing with the religion.

    But yeah, I don't think it's possible to indoctrinate kids into UUism, and I don't think any parent would try something that extreme, or have to, in any case. You've heard of UU Jihad, right? :P

    RE: Concern about talking about church with kids at school. It may go more in depth in certain places in the bible belt, but where I live, being UU is almost too easy, because I'll say “Oh, I have church on Sunday.” and unless I get really into detail, it sounds like any other church, and if I do, people get confused, or converted. :D Though this is at the high school level, it could be a bit more awkward for younger kids.

    However, one thing I've observed is a family that was traditionally UU, but didn't have a congregation they were actively attending. No crime there, but when their 7 year old daughter had friends asking question about church, or talking about going to church, she started asking questions, and wanted to go to church. I think it's great that UUism is out there for this kind of situation. Even agnostic families may want to expose their kids to religion in some capacity, so the UU “church” is there to be a church, have that similar experience of RE or Youth Group, while being the enviroment the parents want.

    I suppose my point is that even in the Bible Belt, it's easier than being atheist. :P

    And this comment is long enough already, but a quick anecdote about awesome young UU kids. There's a family at my church of wiccans (or at least the mother is, the father likes it and all, but it's really her thing), and they have a 5 or 6 year old now. She was relating to me her elation at his reaction to the story of Adam and Eve. I don't remember where he heard it, wether it was in school, or in RE, or from her. In any event, he instantly saw the logical fallacies. “Why would God put it in the garden if he didn't want them to eat it?” “Snakes don't talk.” “Why was God surprised if he knew everything?”

    See, it's not that kids are stupid, it's that they just easy to manipulate/indoctrinate. However, it's very possible to do it the UU way, and you get fabulous results. :D

  • Michelle Richards

    I am so glad that your daughter was able to find a youth program that meets her needs and that she is finding roles to play in the congregation at large. While religious education programs and connections to UU congregations are important for younger children, they become crucial for our UU kids once they move into adolescence. I will post another blog entry in the weeks to come about UUism and adolescence and how involvement in a youth group can make a real difference for them.

    Unfortunately, many of our smaller fellowships don't have many teens to draw from, but they can still offer an enriching experience for youth. If there are other fellowships nearby, it may be possible to join together to offer monthly or periodic youth events like overnights or other social programs. Some districts encourage congregations to combine forces to offer OWL programs and Coming of Age opportunities. And even if there are no other UU congregations nearby, youth have felt affirmed by being encouraged to be a part of the overall UU community by helping with worship services, RE programs for younger children and singing in the choir (among other things).

    UU summer camps are also a tremendous experience for our adolescents. My own daughter feels her involvement in a UU camp has changed her life. I only wish there were more opportunities for UU youth to attend camp together , and maybe that is something we need to work on as a denomination or dedicate energies toward making more experiences like this available on a regional level.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Veronica-Hosking/697887420 Veronica Hosking

    My husband and I became UUs before we were married. Our girls have been raised as UUs. I haven't seen any struggles with my youngest; she and her friends don't seem to discuss religion at least not yet. But my oldest daughter did come home one day to tell me she had a friend who told her they couldn't be friends anymore because my daughter didn't believe Jesus was god. My daughter didn't understand this and neither did I. A few days later the friend came up to her and said, my mom says we can still be friends as long as we don't talk religion. Okay her parents were afraid she was going to be converted.

    Now my oldest daughter has friends who are Catholic, Mormon, Jehovah Witness, and Hindu. She has come home with some interesting details about other religions. I think she may be the only person her friends feel comfortable talking about their beliefs, because my daughter listens and doesn't say, you believe what? They talk and then do a compare and contrast. I definitely did not know half the things about other religions she does at her age.

  • http://www.facebook.com/hafidha Hafidha Acuay Osuna

    I have been terribly slacking on bringing UU spirituality into my young tot's life. One of my first lessons as a parent – it has to be in your life before you can bring it into your child's. Does your book have ideas for small, daily actions like “grace” before meals, and such?

  • Michelle Richards

    Yes, Hafida, my book will include lots of small ways we as parents can bring UU spirituality into our daily lives with our children. Just like our many diverse theologies, there may be some information in the book that doesn’t fit with your family, but other things will. I believe its helpful to understand what the possibilities are and to be able to pick something that’s meaningful for you, your children and your family as a whole — or perhaps these ideas will spark some creativity in you that will encourage you to create something new or remind you of something you always wanted to try.

  • Michelle Richards

    Wow, AJ, its great to see how active you are in youth activities and clearly your UU faith is crucial to your life. I know many youth who have a strong sense of UU Identity and for them, it is an essential part of who they are as individuals.rnrnI don’t think indoctrination is possible, either, but you might be surprised by how many parents are reluctant to share what they believe with their kids (mostly with the young ones) because they are afraid their kids will just adopt their parents’ beliefs and not formulate their own. These parents tend to be ones who rejected the religion of their childhood, and they have decided that their children will be able to freely decide what to believe on their own. But many adults don’t know what they believe. How can we expect preschoolers to figure this out without guidance? Even if its “I don’t know,” parents can still communicate deep truths about life to their children, and their children need this as a foundation for their own religious journeys.rnrnI love the story about the boy who had all those questions about the story of the Garden of Eden. I don’t believe we can either indoctrinate our children in UUism nor should we neglect to teach them about the Bible, and do it from a UU perspective. If nothing else, understanding the Bible is simply cultural literacy, and our kids are smart enough to know things could not have really happened that way. Young ones may not know the word “metaphor” but after the age of 7 or so, they are generally able to distinguish fantasy from reality yet pull meaning from a story or parable with a moral lesson.

  • Darry Madden

    Hi Hafidha,

    Rejoice Together from Skinner House Books offers some table graces (http://www.uuabookstore.org/productdetails.cfm?…), and How to Bury a Goldfish, also from Skinner House, is full of ideas for small, daily actions and rituals that families do together (http://www.uuabookstore.org/productdetails.cfm?…).

    Also, the UUA Bookstore carries a book entitled Bless This Food: Ancient and Contemporary Graces from Around the World (http://www.uuabookstore.org/productdetails.cfm?…).

    I hope this is helpful!

    Darry Madden
    Skinner House Books
    Unitarian Universalist Association

  • karikopnick

    This is a fabulous blog and a fabulous discussion, Michelle! Thank you so much for hosting it, and I really can't wait to read your new book!

  • debjsd

    I would like to mention that there is a wonderful alternative to scouting–Campfire USA (used to be Campfire Girls many years ago but is now co-ed). They state on their web site that they are inclusive of everyone. Their focus is on getting kids to enjoy nature. Maybe UU's could start Campfire troops where there is none.

  • cooperzale

    Michelle & anonymous commentor…

    I can testify how important the UU youth camps, district and national assemblies, and weekend “cons” were to my two kids (now 24 and 20) in their development. Now as young adults they both have a circle of UU friends that shared that YRUU experience with them. My son continues to be very involved in the budding UU young adult community as well.

    We too have a small congregation (SUUS aka the “Onion) a well in the San Fernando Valley of Los Angeles that has mostly lacked the critical mass of numbers for an older teen group. That's where the larger district YRUU experience has been so important.

    What has been particularly unique about the UU older youth camps and “cons” is that they have been almost completely run by the youth, which is a truly profound experience in liberty towards the development of real agency that is so lacking in most of our society, particularly our UU inspired (Horace Mann's dream) public education system.

  • http://www.facebook.com/hafidha Hafidha Acuay Osuna

    Thank you! I will check out these books!

  • lynnburns

    I am so happy to see this blog and I look forward to checking in and reading your posts. My husband and I both come from Catholic families. I had been UU for 15 years when we met and after a discussion realized he was more UU than Catholic. It was a revelation to him. Both of us are very attached to our Church, which is inclusive of all faiths and teaches from most. What has shocked me is how much religion is something my now 6 year old picks up on the streets so to speak and discusses with her peers. She's had arguments of theology and has been asked if she's Jewish or Christian. We she's answered both because we celebrate Chanukkah and Christmas she's been told she can't be both she has to choose one. What a unique road we travel as UU parents trying to raise open and questioning children.

  • http://www.KidsAreReading.com/ Annette

    Sort of like a UU version of AWANA. I love this idea!