I suppose you could sum up the religious aspects of my boyhood by saying it was a time of life when I was taught the difference between right and wrong as it specifically applied to Catholicism.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
For my part, I do not much believe in the predilections of boyhood.
A child becomes an adult when he realizes that he has a right not only to be right but also to be wrong.
My parents were pretty lenient with me. But, they gave me morality while I was growing up. They taught me the difference between right and wrong.
I was raised to understand and know the difference between right and wrong.
Frankly, right is right and wrong is wrong, particularly when a parent is talking to a child. A bright line around moral responsibility is very important.
His faith perhaps in some nice tenets might be wrong; his life, I'm sure, was always in the right.
Jesus Christ tells us that a man cannot be wrong if he argues towards God from what he finds best in himself.
There is real confusion about what it means to be right and wrong - the difference between what spiritual beliefs are and what science is.
I was raised Catholic, and I can get incredibly guilty about mistakes.
I think the one thing that most stands out is that my father always did what he believed to be the right thing to do and he always told us that we had to go our own way even if he disagreed.