How do I (17M) tell our youth leader that Iā€™m an agnostic and that I wonā€™t be part of the music team?

As the title suggests, Iā€™m an agnosticā€”meaning that whether or not God exists, He/She/It cannot be fully proven. To me, it makes sense that science neither proves nor disproves God or the supernatural. So while Iā€™m agnostic regarding the general concept of God, Iā€™m essentially an atheist when it comes to Christianity.

That said, I donā€™t hold extreme views about Christianity. I donā€™t think Christians are delusional for believing in God, nor do I see Christianity as inherently oppressive. My doubts arenā€™t personal; theyā€™re more about the epistemology of belief (which Iā€™ll explain in the comments).

My Background and Faith Journey

Iā€™ve been in an evangelical church my whole life 17 years now. When I was around 13-14, I genuinely sought God on a deeper level because I didnā€™t want to be just another passive, lukewarm Christian. I wanted to carry my cross daily, deny myself, resist worldly desires, deepen my theological knowledge, and try my best to devote my life to Christ. (I also watched a lot of John Piper and Christian commentary).

However, as I explored my faith intellectually, doubts emerged. At 14, I leaned toward Catholicism I remember crying while praying to God about how much Catholicism made sense and how my life up to that point felt like a lie. I even planned to get baptized in the Catholic Church even if my parents are againt it. But after months of watching countless debates, reading articles, and engaging in online discussions, I eventually concluded that Christianity, in general, isnā€™t true. That realization didnā€™t hit me as hard as my shift from evangelicalism to Catholicism probably because the first domino was the one that mattered the most because I couldnā€™t believe that it made so much sense.

So My family has been part of this church for two decades (they were formerly Catholics), and I grew up there. People see me as a devoted Christian, and I genuinely like the people thereā€”theyā€™re nice and not particularly judgmental. So Iā€™ve never had a ā€œMan, these Christians are hypocritesā€ type of experience.

My Youth Leader and the Dilemma

My youth leader, Chris, is about 28-29 heā€™s been a youth leader (not a pastor) since he was 21 (Iā€™ll explain it much later). Iā€™ve known him for around 10 months, and 1-2 times a month during fridays, he, my close friend (whoā€™s 16), and I go out for a Bible study (though only if my friend goes too) but I donā€™t feel any discomfort with Chris at all except when I have to talk about my experience with God which I donā€™t have so I just vaguely talk about it the same way I would explain it when I was 13-14 (which only happens during fridays). Honestly we just talk about random stuff after during sundays. And one thing I should mention is that there arenā€™t that many guys our age who regularly attend church just about five of us so my participation in the church means a lot.

So, Chris is an easygoing guy and is nice, but I donā€™t want to burst the bubble that Iā€™ve actually been an atheist-agnostic for the past two years. He used to live a rough life, he was deep into drugs, involved in street fights, and hit rock bottom when he overdosed. At his lowest point, he prayed to God as a last resort and felt a renewed sense of purpose, which led him back to faith. I think thatā€™s a beautiful transformation for anyone.

Naturally, he has a lot of assumptions about why Christians leave the faith. Once, he talked about a Hillsong songwriter who became an atheist, and I could feel the disappointment and disgust in his tone. However, he also mentioned that, like Samson, God still used that person in his younger years to write Christian music. Thatā€™s probably the most judgmental Iā€™ve seen him beā€”otherwise, heā€™s easygoing.

Now, hereā€™s the issue**:** I donā€™t know if I should tell him I canā€™t be the lead guitarist for the churchā€™s music team. For the past two months, both Chris and my friend have been hyping me up for the role (my friend plays rhythm guitar), and because Iā€™m too much of a people pleaser, I signed up last Sunday.

Theyā€™re not forcing me, but I feel like the pressure has been building because I havenā€™t been upfront about my beliefs. Now Iā€™m stuck. This is my lowest point (exaggeration) but itā€™s still a tough situation for me.

So what do I do?

Link to Subreddit Post

  • over_clox@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    My advice, take it with a grain of salt thoughā€¦

    Donā€™t put the focus on your beliefs, just sing like a banshee scratching fingernails on a chalkboard.

    Just a thought, you can pursue any future musical career later.

  • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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    3 days ago

    Wait, did you just copy and paste a random post from there or are you the OP from there?

    Just say you changed your mind. Refuse to elaborate. You donā€™t need to say anything else. You certainly donā€™t need to elaborate on your faith.

    • MouthMouse@lemm.ee
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      3 days ago

      Their only post on this community, that doesnā€™t have a redirect, says they are a trans woman. Itā€™s possible they may have forgotten. That being said, in the open Christian subreddit there is this post with the exact wording + update. I think itā€™s more likely they just forgot, but I digress. Regardless I think this post is just a repost. This may be an attempt to widen the subreddit community/give an alternative platform.

      • Teknevra@lemm.eeOPM
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        3 days ago

        @MouthMouse@lemm.ee

        This post (and others) ared meant to help widen the Community/Subreddit so that there is content in the Lemmy community.

        I even added links to the OG Subreddit posts.

  • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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    4 days ago

    This doesnā€™t even need the religious aspect.

    What youā€™re facing is a common thing for everyone, but particularly younger folks. Itā€™s about setting boundaries and enforcing them.

    Ideally when someone applies social pressure, youā€™d politely state that you arenā€™t interested, and that it wonā€™t change, but youā€™re past that. I only mention it to remind you that itā€™s okay to say no, and itā€™s rude to pressure someone after theyā€™ve said it. Even at 17, you should get the basic respect of having your NO honoured.

    But, you already said yes.

    This does mean youā€™ll disappoint people you care about, but thereā€™s only one way you fix the issue. You go to the youth leader and you say straight up that you only agreed because you didnā€™t want to disappoint anyone, but that it isnā€™t something youā€™d be doing for the right reasons, so you couldnā€™t give it your best effort. Then you apologize for the confusion and extra difficulty, and enforce that new boundary by gently telling anyone that tries to apply pressure that you canā€™t agree to do something you couldnā€™t give your best effort to.

    If they then continue, you say something along the lines of ā€œIā€™ve said no, and given my reasons. A friend isnā€™t going to keep trying to convince me to do something I donā€™t want to do, please stop.ā€

    Your religious/spiritual beliefs arenā€™t really relevant to that part of things. If you want to bring that part up, thatā€™s fine, but it is a separate thing with its own complexity.

    Since it would also involve withdrawing (at least in part) from the community you seem value, Iā€™m not sure Iā€™m the best person to advise you.

    That being said, Iā€™ve lived in the bible belt my whole life, and was never more than a titular Christian, even when I still went to church as a kid. Iā€™ve found that in dealing with friends and family, just being calm and persistent in rebuffing attempts to convert me works the best in preserving relationships I value with Christians.

    It becomes another boundary. Iā€™ll remind them that Iā€™m not open to attempts to convert me, and that if they continue, Iā€™ll have to distance myself from them. And you may end up having to do just that to have your boundary respected. I know thatā€™s very difficult, because the road to learning not only that itā€™s okay to do, but how to do it and stay calm and loving while enforcing boundaries was a bumpy one.

    It is, however, a road that must be traveled. Itā€™s a vital skill for anyone, and the younger you start developing it, the better. No is a perfectly valid response to almost anything.

    That wonā€™t necessarily help you figure out exactly where your limits are, what is and isnā€™t ā€œtoo farā€. And it certainly wonā€™t help you navigate ā€œcoming outā€ as not being christian. I know mine, and I also know that not everyone has the same limits.