Even if you do not notice, religion is everywhere. Common elements of religion include collective activities, ethics, behavior, rituals. It may not be like it, but religious factors are related to our daily lives including my life. After learning more about religion, I began to notice how much it has affected me everyday. Regarding group activities, I tend to be involved in school. My professor occasionally assigned me to the group to work on projects and presentations.
Due to the lack of religion in my life, people sometimes try to find out what they believe or who they are. For me, the lack of religion in my life actually produced space to concentrate on my other elements. Life grows and thrives. In fact, religion and faith have come back extensively and extensively in my mind, and it truly re - emerged before I went to college. All my youth spent in public school, and finally I was in the Jesuit college for 4 years. Theological courses are necessary, but philosophy is also the same (also for the Jesuits). Since faith is a concept of outpatience to me, I think religious courses are very interesting. I chose some basic knowledge such as Catholicism, but I also participated in religious courses of the world to better understand the world around me. But it is philosophy that really adheres to me.
Introduction to my Christianity is the beginning of my relationship with Jesus. In the summer in front of the university, I asked Taylor of my close friend a heavy lecture on the Bible. I am interested in philosophy and religion and experience the most serious depression in my life. I bought an English Bible, went to Taylor 's house and attended class. A couple of weeks later, I spent the day singing in front of a healthy band about singing on the water, holding a flannel and a cup of coffee with both children with white college students with both hands on Sunday morning.
I have Buddhists. Or I would like to think about it. Religion has no effect on my life, except for morning school prayers, once a year ceremonies, and occasional trips to the temple for social reasons. My parenting is not to hate religion, but to ignore it. In short, I am secular. During the process of growth I was fortunate to be relieved not to be frustrated, and as a romanticism and exaggeration of the actual event that happened, all supernatural (including the religion of my parents) I was taught a certain aspect.
Religion does not affect my life. I thank my parents for their support. They do not want their three children and all the girls to suffer from religion. But religion is more than just observation. It is also an identity, it seems to move toward becoming a terrible way to the identifier. My technical identity is that I am an Indian Sunni Muslim who grew up in Kuwait. There is no religious belief in my childhood, but there is Muslim around me. Even today, I have relatives of religious beliefs. I have even faraway relatives wearing scarves and doing quite fundamentalistic views.