My path to atheism: Yours? Rebuttals?

Discussion in 'Religion' started by Dinosaur, Apr 1, 2017.

Thread Status:
Not open for further replies.
  1. Fraggle Rocker Staff Member

    Messages:
    24,690
    I'm a third-generation atheist, so I had no trouble with my family attempting to fill my head with fairytales. When I was seven, a kid about my age began to tell me about this fellow named "God" who lives in the sky and can see everything we do. I thought it was a remarkable story that he had invented, and I laughed appreciatively.

    But he didn't appreciate my laughter, which confused me terribly. When I got home that afternoon, I told my mother about the encounter. She got a very sad look in her eyes and asked me to sit down.

    She told me that most adults grow up believing in this particular fairytale. I was right on top of it, and said, "But you told me the truth about Santa Claus, the Tooth Fairy and the Easter Bunny. Didn't these grownups learn the truth from their parents, like I did?"

    At this point, her face became even sadder. She told me that most people grow up believing that God is real, and if I ever tried to explain to someone that God is not real, they might actually start beating me with sticks and bricks.

    Fortunately, I understood that part of the conversation, so I never tried to talk a religious person out of his religion--well at least until the late 1960s, when religion was out of favor.

    And by now I understand that you simply cannot get a religious person to understand logic and science. They're morons, so the best you can do is to treat them like morons.
     
  2. Google AdSense Guest Advertisement



    to hide all adverts.
  3. harefarret Registered Member

    Messages:
    1
    I had doubts ever since I was a little boy.

    I was didn't like conforming to the youth group mold and robotic dressing up every Sunday to rush last second to wave my arms around and close my eyes and listen to a droning, rehearsed sermon. The beliefs seemed silly to me. I always had a deep love for nature, and I began to contemplate things like the "ark" and talking snake stories.

    In my house growing up, the parents always taught that evolution was wrong and very sinful to even consider. So for awhile I strongly adhered to that brainwashed notion. Finally around college I started to realize how real and wonderful this biological process was in our world and realized we too evolved from a common ancestor. This and other arguments Christians couldn't rationalize, like why God lets some kids die horrific deaths while others are somehow (and in disproportionately lower numbers) "saved" ---er, made better by medical care.

    I finally started to get comfortable being non religious in my 20's, maybe around 23-24. I'm 27 now. It is freeing to be fully comfortable in what you arrive at as truth. It's sad that being atheist/humanist or just plain non religious is so explicitly taboo in our country... But it's changing. Slowly but surely.
     
  4. Google AdSense Guest Advertisement



    to hide all adverts.
  5. Dinosaur Rational Skeptic Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    4,885
    From DaveC426913 Post #7
    I considered the request for Abraham to murder his son to be demonic, not a request from a god worthy of worship.

    When I mentioned my view to a Sunday school teacher, she tried to justify the request. This led to some arguments/discussions.

    The result of the arguments/discussions was my concluding that the Abraham story was some evidence of a demonic god.

    Later, the story of Job seemed like more evidence that the god of the Bible was not worthy of worship. Job’s family was slaughtered to test Job’s faith & win an argument with Satan. The perpetrator of this act does not seem like a good entity to me.

    The above were the thoughts that led to my becoming an atheist.

    BTW: The Job story indicates that old testament beliefs viewed the offspring of a patriarch as his property, rather than as human beings with rights to life, liberty, & the pursuit of happiness.
     
  6. Google AdSense Guest Advertisement



    to hide all adverts.
  7. sideshowbob Sorry, wrong number. Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    7,057
    I always hated going to church, so that probably contributed.

    As a teenager, I tried to prove that the stories of Creation and the Flood were scientifically correct. That was in the days before the deluge of creationist propaganda but I soon realized that it couldn't be done.
     
  8. sculptor Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    8,475
    Abraham was a flipping nutjob.
    (or a conman?)
    However
    That ain't the only path to "GOD", aka, the tao, the path, the great driving wheel of the universe.

    If a church fosters community, then it has done good.
    (That ain't always the case)

    I could well be without Abraham, without feeling the need to be without god(atheist).

    .................................
    ................................
    I liked church, but mostly because I liked and respected the shepherd of that flock, the right honorable Reverend Zinn.
     
  9. Jeeves Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    5,089
    What you don't seem to be getting is that it doesn't frickin matter to a ten-year-old modern Christian what excuses of time and culture the people
    in the bible stories may have used for their barbaric practices; it doesn't matter how many other primitive cultures practiced the same barbaric rituals;
    it doesn't matter whether the stories are historical, metaphorical, allegorical or mythological -
    all that matters is that they depict the horrible god of nasty people
    in the context of a 'holy book' that the modern children have been told is about the loving god of his chosen people....
    and whatever horrible things this loving god may decide to do to you
    is all your fault

    The only choices we have are:
    1. to worship a horrible god 2. pick out the nice bits and ignore or make excuses for the rest or 3. stop believing in any gods at all.
    Some of us find option 3 the most consistent with continued sanity.
     
  10. Michael 345 New year. PRESENT is 72 years oldl Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    13,077
    I don't know

    Never went to church with any family

    Did go to church around Christmas time as a student of Wilson's Grammar School London - all boys

    Age about 12 to 17

    Never any option to not go

    There were a few combined services with a close by all girls school

    Memories - singing

    While Shepherds Watch Their Flocks by Night

    which sounded like

    While Shepherds Wash Their Socks by Night

    Before that say age 6 to 8

    Sunday school won a book Pilgrims Progress for attendance

    Some sort of religious evening program

    Came home one evening proclaiming god was everywhere

    Grandmother looked at the ration book on the table and asked Is god there?

    When I said yes

    She said Tell him to put more stamps inside

    I don't know to today and don't think I ever will know something clicked and I never believed again

    I didn't say anything then and never after but strange all Sunday school and evening classes stopped

    Weird

    Please Register or Log in to view the hidden image!

     
  11. cluelusshusbund + Public Dilemma + Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    7,999
    On my way home from school some people was givin away free cool aid an cookies an said ther woud be more for anybody that showed up for sunday school... well i started goin an rarely missed... an then we was told that whoever went 6 weeks in a row wit-out missin woud win a little white bible wit gold on the edges of the pages an a little gold strang that hung down which was a bookmark... well after i won my bible i never went back cause durin that contest i learned that the sunday school teechers was Azz-Holes... an over 60 years later i still have ther little white bible... LOL.!!!

    That was a Baptist church... i then moved to a Methodist sunday school an had a good run thar wit more free cookies an cool aid.!!!
     
  12. Jeeves Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    5,089
    You were a cheap date. I'd rather sleep in or play soccer on a Sunday morning. Kool-aid is the beverage equivalent of those disgusting orange
    tooth-extractor candies people used to fob us off with on Halloween. Hardly worth the bother. Probably stale Girl Scout cookies, too.
    I got a big red illuminated & gilded bible at the Salvation Army thrift store, free. Have to wonder who gave it away. And why.
     
  13. cluelusshusbund + Public Dilemma + Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    7,999
    Mom an dad worked 6 days a week but we still didnt sleep in on Sunday... it was always in bed by 10pm an up early... an Sunday meals was a feast (mom did the weekly shoppin on Saturday after work)... an breakfast always included some sort of desert such as blueberry muffins... an my favort was All-Bran muffins... an sometimes a nabor wit no teeth woud come by for dinner an eat corn on the cop... ah... good times... lol... an i coud play any time i wanted but free cookies an cool Aid was to good to pass up... an them church cookies was usualy homemade sugar-cookie type stuff (perty good)... i dont thank i ever ate a girl scout cookie... to expensive... but i was in the scouts for a while an made it to "Bobcat" (i still have my Bobcat pin)... but after several scout meetins i found out the hard way that the treets at the scout meetins wasnt provided by the scout teecher... they was provided by the scouts who took turns... an on the day that was aparently "my turn" i didnt brang no treets so the teecher brout some of her own food to the basement for us... but anyhow... ther was always somethin that woud come up that cost to much money so i quit.!!!

    That free salvation army bible might have come from a dead person... just like sombody can have my little white bible after i die.!!!
     
  14. Jeeves Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    5,089
    I'm okay with a dead man's bible. Hope he went to Heaven, in spite of hardly reading it at all.
     
  15. cluelusshusbund + Public Dilemma + Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    7,999
    I woudnt wish heaven on someone i dont even know... after all... they might be a nice person.!!!
     
  16. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    18,959
    Indeed. The world is rife with fictional stories of real people.
    The fact that they existed doesn't necessarily mean the stories were real. There's surely some truth to them, but that is as likely to be an interpretation by the authors and the people of time.

    And that is why the scriptures have to be taken with a large grain of salt. They were written with an agenda in-mind "to make clear for people to understand [whatever it is they want people to hear]", so their historical accuracy is in question.
     
  17. kx000 Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    5,136
    This is all fine and dandy, but why not be a Christian despite this belief.
     
  18. Jeeves Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    5,089
    Because it's impossible. The whole concept it's based on is loathsome and unacceptable to a moral being.
     
  19. cluelusshusbund + Public Dilemma + Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    7,999
    When i was in 9th grade i had 2 buddies that beleived that each other was goin to hell cause they went to the wrong church... one was Church of Christ an the other was Baptist... an to me... that stoopidity was just anuther unnecessary nail in Jesus's Cross.!!!
     
  20. Jeeves Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    5,089
    I can't imagine Jesus would have liked most of his self-professed followers. So it's just as well he's imaginary himself.
     
  21. StrangerInAStrangeLand SubQuantum Mechanic Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    15,396
    Ditto to all that & to Dinosaur's reaction to the horror of Abraham agreeing to & preparing to kill his son.
    Your comment about farmers reminds me of people whose lives I saved thanking their imaginary fiend instead of me.

    <>
     
  22. Jeeves Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    5,089
    You know the joke about the Christian in the flood, sitting on the roof of his house, praying to be saved?
    Boat comes along, offers to take him on board, but his faith is strong; says: "The Lord will save me." and keeps praying.
    Rescue helicopter hovers over him, throws down a rope ladder. With unshakable faith, the guy sends it away: "The Lord will save me."
    Flood keeps on coming; guy drowns. Standing at the foot of the big throne, guy asks: "Oh Lord, my faith was absolute. Why did you not save me?"

    The real punchline was: Ì sent you a boat and helicopter, what were you waiting for?" - So God also takes credit away from the rescue workers.
    The punchline I prefer is: "I did. Here you are."
     
  23. StrangerInAStrangeLand SubQuantum Mechanic Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    15,396
    You have it backward. Why be a Christian.

    <>
     
Thread Status:
Not open for further replies.

Share This Page