Religion and family gatherings can be a tricky combination, especially when one person treats every barbecue like a mission field.
For one man, years of polite patience finally ran out during a Memorial Day cookout at his in-laws’ house.
While he and his wife considered themselves believers in a loose, cultural sense, neither of them was particularly active in organized religion.
That difference had long made them a target for one persistent family member.
His evangelical brother-in-law regularly encouraged them to return to church and “save” their souls. Most of the time, the comments were tolerated and brushed aside.
But on this particular holiday, after hearing the same sermon one too many times, the husband decided to respond.
And instead of arguing against religion, he used a theological belief from his own denomination to completely derail the conversation.

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The man explained that he was raised Presbyterian and baptized as a child. His wife came from a Lutheran background, though neither of them attended services regularly anymore.
They jokingly referred to themselves as “lapsed Protestants.”
His brother-in-law, however, was a committed evangelical Christian who felt strongly about church attendance and personal salvation.
To his credit, the brother-in-law wasn’t constantly preaching.
He wasn’t knocking on their door every weekend or flooding their phones with scripture. Instead, he would periodically bring up religion during family gatherings, birthdays, holidays, and other events.
The conversations followed a familiar pattern.
The brother-in-law would encourage them to start attending church again. He would talk about faith, salvation, and the importance of being spiritually prepared.
Usually, the husband let it slide.
This time was different.
Already irritated for unrelated reasons, he wasn’t in the mood for another discussion about the state of his soul.
When the brother-in-law once again encouraged him to get back to church and save himself, the husband laughed and responded that he never had to worry about salvation in the first place.
Naturally, that caught everyone’s attention.
When asked why, he explained a concept associated with some traditions of Reformed theology: predestination.
Specifically, he referenced the idea commonly known as “double predestination,” the belief that God has already determined the eternal destiny of every person before they are born.
The husband then took the logic to its most provocative conclusion.
If God had already decided his fate, he argued, nothing he did could change it. If he was destined for heaven, even terrible actions wouldn’t alter that outcome.
If he was destined for hell, a lifetime of good deeds wouldn’t save him.
His brother-in-law immediately objected.
A theological debate started brewing before the father-in-law stepped in and shut the discussion down.
Later, in private, the father-in-law admitted that most of the family found the brother-in-law’s constant evangelizing exhausting.
At the same time, he suggested the husband had intentionally poked the bear by choosing such a provocative response.
That left him wondering whether he had simply defended himself or crossed the line into unnecessary baiting.
Why Religious Debates Escalate So Quickly
Religion occupies a unique place in family relationships because it touches identity, morality, and deeply held beliefs all at once.
According to Psychology Today, discussions involving core values and belief systems often trigger stronger emotional reactions than ordinary disagreements because people perceive challenges to those beliefs as challenges to their identity.
This dynamic helps explain why seemingly simple conversations about faith can become heated so quickly.
In this case, the brother-in-law likely viewed his encouragement as an act of care. Many evangelicals sincerely believe that sharing their faith is a responsibility rather than an intrusion.
On the other hand, repeated attempts to persuade someone after they’ve shown little interest can feel disrespectful and exhausting.
The husband’s response wasn’t merely a theological observation. It was also a way of communicating frustration.
By using a doctrine from his own religious background, he highlighted what he saw as the futility of repeatedly trying to “save” someone who wasn’t seeking intervention.
The irony is that neither side was really debating theology anymore.
They were debating boundaries.
Reddit Had Plenty to Say About This One:
Most commenters sided with the husband, arguing that the brother-in-law had repeatedly introduced religion into gatherings where it wasn’t welcome.




Many felt that after years of unsolicited preaching, a sharp response was inevitable. Several readers noted that the husband wasn’t the one who initiated the conversation and simply answered the question that had been asked.




Others thought both sides shared some responsibility. While they understood the frustration, they argued that setting a direct boundary might have been more productive than engaging in a theological sparring match.









Family harmony often depends on knowing when to let a subject go.
For years, this brother-in-law continued raising the same topic, believing he was helping. Eventually, the person on the receiving end decided he was tired of hearing it.
Whether his response was clever, petty, or completely justified probably depends on how much patience someone believes is owed before a boundary gets enforced.
One thing is clear: if you repeatedly open the door to a debate, you can’t be too shocked when someone finally walks through it.
Do you think the husband simply defended himself, or did he deliberately provoke an argument that could have been avoided?


















