baby

"Why I had to say no to being the godparent of my friend's baby."

 

Can you be a godparent if you’re an atheist?

*Cue gasps, looks of shock and pearl clutching* Oh my stars, surely not… it’s right there in the title!

And yet it’s a safe bet that most modern godparents have no bloody clue what’s in the job description.

So when one man turned down his friend’s request to be a godfather to his newborn baby, he left his former friendship in ruins and sent the internet into a flutter.

Listen: Holly and Andrew discuss the godparent dilemma on the latest episode of This Glorious Mess.

Sharing his anguish, the self-confessed atheist asked Slate’s agony aunt Dear Prudence for advice.

“Recently, I was asked by a good friend to serve as a godparent to his child,” he wrote.

“I felt the godparent role wasn’t something to take on casually as a mark of friendship. I would genuinely be responsible for that child’s religious education, if the worst were ever to happen. So I explained I’m not Catholic and didn’t think I was the right person, but expressed how much I want to be a fun and supportive ‘uncle.'”‘

But his friend’s response wasn’t fun or supportive. The reluctant godfather was uninvited from the baby’s christening (because obviously it’s no place for an atheist!) and cut out of his friend’s life.

Way to ruin a friendship, kid. Image: Getty.
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"I feel very hurt and excluded... What’s your take?" he asked, desperate for advice to mend the relationship.

While some might say he's better off without the god botherers, 'Prudie' has some much more tactful and helpful advice. She suggests that 'Reluctant Godfather' see the role of godparent as more like a fun uncle. I'm assuming that means tease them senseless until they become teenagers, then sneak them beers under the dinner table.

"Declining godparent duties does not mean 'I hate your baby and don’t want to attend a christening or eat barbecue with you,'" she writes.

Phew.

So while you can refuse to be a godparent, you should probably talk to the parents first. Find out whether they're looking for a godparent more along the lines of a fun uncle or an aspiring priest who will recite scriptures by the child's bedside. You could be in the clear for a lifetime of doing the bare minimum and just hanging out with the kid. That's not so bad, right?

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For me, godparents are one of those outdated traditions we can do away with.

I was christened alongside a cohort of cousins, and a couple of awkward adult relatives who I assume had recently found god. Our parents doled out aunties and uncles for godparents like they were lollies and we greedily accepted them, thinking more along the lines of extra birthday presents than our religious education.

Time to step into the confession booth now, I don't think any of our parents had ever taken us to church (and still haven't to this day.)

To further add to the desecration of any religious sanctity of the day, as the priest held the holy water aloft and my godparents watched on (mildly disinterested, I'm assuming) my two-year-old sister got up on her pew and shouted, "can we go to the pub now?"

My godfather has been AWOL for the last decade or so, and I'm still waiting on that spiritual guidance from my godmother.

Have I been missing out on something? Maybe. But my godparents could definitely have turned down the gig and saved themselves a trip to church. No hard feelings.

Would you say no to being a godparent?

For more curly questions and hilarious parenting stories, listen to the full episode of This Glorious Mess here:

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