- Sep 19, 2020
- 3
- 13
- Country
- United States
- Gender
- Female
- Faith
- Non-Denom
- Marital Status
- Married
- Politics
- US-Republican
I moved to a new town and want to start going to church, but as a married lady of 51 who suffers from anxiety and Aspergers, I don't know if I should for a few reasons.
1. I'd really like to walk through the door, find my seat and not be hounded by a ton of questions like what church I came from, what do I do, how many kids do I have, where's my husband, why did I choose that church, etc. I'm a very private person and would love to make new friends but I don't like talking about myself. Ironic, I know.
2. There's always some person (usually older with no manners) who has to give you a spiritual shakedown to see if you're worthy enough to befriend that keeps me from going. I don't know how to politely say I'd rather not answer that or why are you asking me all these questions? Obviously, if I come to your church, I'm looking to be fed from the Word and worship. That should be good enough but it never is. If you say you're uncomfortable answering questions, they think you have something to hide when I feel like they have no right or need to know.
Should I just stay home? Or would saying, "I don't know if I'm ready to share anything personal about myself until I get a feel for the church and want to come back." Would that be acceptable? Any more suggestions would be appreciated.
1. I'd really like to walk through the door, find my seat and not be hounded by a ton of questions like what church I came from, what do I do, how many kids do I have, where's my husband, why did I choose that church, etc. I'm a very private person and would love to make new friends but I don't like talking about myself. Ironic, I know.
2. There's always some person (usually older with no manners) who has to give you a spiritual shakedown to see if you're worthy enough to befriend that keeps me from going. I don't know how to politely say I'd rather not answer that or why are you asking me all these questions? Obviously, if I come to your church, I'm looking to be fed from the Word and worship. That should be good enough but it never is. If you say you're uncomfortable answering questions, they think you have something to hide when I feel like they have no right or need to know.
Should I just stay home? Or would saying, "I don't know if I'm ready to share anything personal about myself until I get a feel for the church and want to come back." Would that be acceptable? Any more suggestions would be appreciated.