I'm asking for some understanding here. In all seriousness. I do not get this.
I occasionally work with the public. I get along quite well with almost anyone and have quite a few people I regularly talk to about whatever their passion is. One of the regulars was talking with me a few nights ago, like she has been off and on for months.
In the middle of a conversation about my new work position she gets an odd look on her face and says, "Are you a Christian?" I was pretty taken aback. It didn't fit our conversation at all and it was a much more personal question than either of us had any business asking. But it wasn't a huge deal.
I explained that I believed in the Bible, believed that Christ was who He said He was, and I told her the name of my actual religion. She said she had never heard of it, so I explained it briefly and told her where she could look up more info if she was curious.
She continued to say things like, "Well are you saved?" To which I said yes. And "Jesus is the only thing that matters", to which I said, "I know, we believe Jesus was who He said He was". So I started to explain briefly the exact station that we believe Christ to be. She interrupted me twice to say Jesus was God.
Then I had to go, for work stuff.
I don't get what the goal was. Once it was established that I knew about the Bible and had my own informed opinions about it how does just blurting out Jesusy-sounding talking points contribute to anything? She knew that I knew all about her religion(it's America, who doesn't). She knew that she didn't know much of anything about my religion. So why keep at it? Has that strategy of telling people things they've already heard ever worked in the history of anything? It felt pretty invasive to ask at all, but at some point aren't you just being rude?
Why does this happen? Is this something you're taught to do? Try to proselytize to people of a belief structure you've never studied who already know what you believe?
Bookmarks