Matthew Lee Anderson on Questions: “We need some kind of formation to get our explorations started…. ‘Home is where one starts from,’ T. S. Eliot wrote. We do not enter life as though it were formless and void: we inherit a framework, an intellectual shelter from which we explore the world. Every child is indoctrinated in a way of seeing things. The only question is, which one? … We do not begin our lives by choosing our beliefs because we do not “possess” our beliefs at all. They are not pieces of clothing that we pull off the rack and replace with ease. Our beliefs possess us, establishing a pattern for our lives and shaping our desires and dispositions. We inhabit our beliefs like we do our homes, and changing them can often be extremely painful.”
Catechized by a Peculiar People
David Lyle Jeffrey on his baptism in the Scottish Baptist Church in rural Canada: “A feature of baptism in our tradition that I continue to value is that it makes you think about the meaning of it quite a lot, both before and after the experience. One of the questions that friends would ask me is, “Do you feel any different?” My Catholic friends especially, since they had the luxury of having just a few drops on their heads when they were too young to remember, wanted to know. Actually, I did feel different, though not perhaps in quite the way they may have expected. It wasn’t euphoric. Rather, I felt as though I had entered into the community of grownups in some way.”