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scouter01 wrote:Well yes, but should I put that my religion over schoolwork and just pray that I have a good life?
You are correct, but if there was some way that scouting and Duty to Counrty conflicted, Duty to Country would take priority and that was my point; in any conflict between Duty to Country and something below Duty to Country, Duty to Country takes priority.scouter01 wrote:You age out of Boy scouts before you are eligible for drafting.
Usually but sometimes they may not. I know that Confirmations and Baptisms can happen at almost any point in time depending on age and other factors so it is logical that there could be a confliction between two. That being said you are correct in that most happen before you take an AP Test. But what about other school tests? Public schools usually don't delay their tests or alter test schedualing because of Religious events.scouter01 wrote:fyi: bar mitzvahs and baptisms ( some at least) occur way before you take an AP test
Before everything.scouter01 wrote:But if it came down to it, I am suppoesd to put my religion before school?
I think a good education will have more of an impact then god.
scouter01 wrote:
On a new subject ( that came to me while I was posting) perhaps Bsa's numbers are dropping because most kids don't consider themselves religious and you need to be for Boy scouts. Hmmm
pipestone1991 wrote:scouter01 wrote:
On a new subject ( that came to me while I was posting) perhaps Bsa's numbers are dropping because most kids don't consider themselves religious and you need to be for Boy scouts. Hmmm
The BSA membership is fine. Not dropping drastically. Anyway, I doubt that's the reason. I have an Athiest Eagle Scout friend who says he's reverent to his family. I'm not about to rat him out for it. And to answer your previous question as to whether religion is better than a good education, I'm sure in many cases it is. I'm not sure if those who are Jewish believe in an afterlife (but I think so) but I know for sure Muslims and Christians do. Those who worship these two massive religions must be generally good to God in life to achieve entrance into Heaven/Paradise.
Pipestone,pipestone1991 wrote:I have an athiest Eagle Scout friend who says he's reverent to his family. I'm not about to rat him out for it.
AquilaNegra2 wrote:pipestone1991 wrote:scouter01 wrote:
On a new subject ( that came to me while I was posting) perhaps Bsa's numbers are dropping because most kids don't consider themselves religious and you need to be for Boy scouts. Hmmm
The BSA membership is fine. Not dropping drastically. Anyway, I doubt that's the reason. I have an Athiest Eagle Scout friend who says he's reverent to his family. I'm not about to rat him out for it. And to answer your previous question as to whether religion is better than a good education, I'm sure in many cases it is. I'm not sure if those who are Jewish believe in an afterlife (but I think so) but I know for sure Muslims and Christians do. Those who worship these two massive religions must be generally good to God in life to achieve entrance into Heaven/Paradise.
By not 'ratting him out', you're missing the HONOR part of Scouting.
Also, point of correction: Christians believe that your goodness is irrelevant to your salvation (Rom 3:10).
Additionally, since 86% of adults in the USA claim to be religious (80% Christian, or 78.5% if you count out Mormons), I would find your assertion that most children are not religious to be highly improbable.
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