Your situation is a very familiar one to me as I've grown up in the Georgian Bible belt. My best friend and I began moving away from the church while we were in highschool because neither one of us could stand or share in the intolerance and ferver shared by our congregations.
When each of us in our own time expressed our religious beliefs to friends and family it went over in two completely opposite ways. We both started with our parents. Now I don't know what your current spiritual beliefs are (in case you are moving towards an atheistic or agnostic perspective of the spiritual and metaphysical) for me it was that while I believed in the existance of a higher power my beliefs were no longer of a Christian Perspective. Knowing our parent's beliefs we didn't out right say "Mom. Dad. I am not a christian anymore." What we told them was that we had problems with our Church. It didn't feel right anymore and that we felt we would better come to know the divine through our own private spirtuality."
My parents accepted that arguement. It was just important to them that I didn't shut the door on their faith. I still have not returned to Christianity, however, both I and my family are very happy and at peace with that.
My best friend had a rougher time of it. It was hard on her, but she stuck to her guns and did not let them pull her back from her convictions. Once though she made an effort to go out and visit other congregations and denominations her parents seemed to mellow. She has not returned to Christianity either, but after a long struggle her family is now accepting or her rights to choose her own faith.
Hang in there. There is no way to know whether this will be a hard or easy transition. You at some point just have to decide how strong these new beliefs are in you and if they are strong enough to start living them.
Good luck.
Wow. Deep!
Again, that's what I'm hearing - to be open and honest about it. I also don't want to imply that I am still Christian, however, ie., "yeah, I went to MCC the other day", which I have, but don't believe that Christ's death was necessary for the payment of sins, that God looks down on us and micromanages our lives.
In fact, I recently had a rather mystical experience where there was a repeating mantra - "we are not hear to judge you, but to heal you."
I am Buddhist, for people trying to better understand, and believe in a higher being, but not one that is portrayed in the Bible.
For anyone who has seen What the Bleep Do We Know, my beliefs are much closer to that (one priest says that to believe that God created us to toil, to praise and worship him, and avoid his wrath, with promise of a reward at the end of a day is not what God is about, but a blasphemy. However, most people hold this idea of God.)
But my mom watches the 700 Club, and believes Pat Robertson, if that is any indication of what I am up against.
But thanks. I agree that I have to just be open and honest. Their concern, I think, will be on a number of levels - that they believe that now, I am going to hell, that it is a poor reflection on them, that "the city" which they fear has changed me.
I will explain it as best I can, I suppose, but I remember the hour long conversation about how I didn't think the world was created in 6 literal days went.