Cradle Roman Catholic. Unlike most raised in the Catholic Church, I still practice, too. I was going to agnostic route for a bit there, but then I heard my Dad explaining some little-known Catholic Church theology and such to this protestant neighbor of ours (My Dad has a doctorate in theology and is one of the ranking member of the Catholic Church -- he is as high in the Church as a layman(not ordained priest/deacon) can go on a local level) The Catholic Church actually has this rule (it has this fancy name I can't remember) where you can actually disagree with some of the practices of the Catholic Church (because the Catholic Church believes the majority of your faith is between you and God), and that as long as you don't preach these disagreements to other members of the Church, then you're free to disagree, and even encouraged to do so. He also explained to her that she didn't need to take the bible literally (she was from a Christian sect that did), and was actually not supposed to, since Hebrew was such a complex language that no matter how precise the translation, multiple shades of meaning were probably lost, and that even without that the bible was more of a guideline/parable, rather than an actual rule. (He illustrated this with the places in the bible it says to stone your children, never shave your beard, to murder your wife if she commits adultery, etc) Obviously if you disagreed or didn't believe in the core aspects of the Catholic Church (for example, anything in The Nicene Creed), then you would probably be better off in a different religion, but it would still be alright if you stayed.
I had disagreed with some practices and minor theological issues of the Catholic Church, and just knowing I was allowed to disagree suddenly made me view my Church in a slightly more positive light, and made me feel less bad. Because at my heart, I love my Church. I wanted to agree with it, and most definitely wanted to be a part of it. I love the tradition of it, and the knowledge that no matter where I go in the world, the Mass will remain exactly the same, albeit in a different language. There is something just so fundamentally comforting in that. Whenever a protestant friend of mine moves and is like, "yeah, I need to find a new church one of these days" I die inside for them, because just the thought of finding a new belief system like that all willy-nilly is so terribly sad.
So yeah, I'm a cradle Catholic, and I love my religion, even though I disagree with some practices and theologies of it.
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Does the walker choose the path, or the path the walker?