I haven't posted this board in a while, but I've found all of the "Let's talk to an atheist" threads I once participated in have since been disappeared.
Of course, my own tradition thinks this is entirely appropriate. We need reminders of impermanence.
Mind if I join in? I'm effectively an atheist.
Hi, I would like to know exactly what you wish to discuss about Christianity.
Me, I'm most interested in how it informs your behavior. What do you do, (or not do), that you would not have done, (or done), had you not become a Christian?
Which forms of self-declared Christianity do you acknowledge as Christian?
Mormons?
Episcopalians (or mainline churches in general)?
Catholics?
Jehovah's Witnesses (not sure even I would be willing to go that far)?
Pentecostals?
Muslims (hey, they revere Jesus only second to Muhammad)?
And what about the splinter groups?
Young earthers?
Geocentrists? (No joke, there's a fairly vocal group claiming Galileo got off easy, and should never have been forgiven.)
Rapture readies?
Open theists?
UFOs are angels?
Not trying to be cute, here. Those are serious questions. It's just that they're directed to you, personally, as an individual Christian, or to anyone else who'd like to join in, but not as a representative of Christianity. Quite a while back I stopped asking individual Christians what it means to be Christian, and went for the data at the
Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life. Everything else is anecdote.
Do you acknowledge that Jesus died for being completely honest?
That's a fairly common Christian perspective, but it needs the reminder that it's based on theology generated from the Bible, but not in the Bible itself. The gospels give a quite specific, and very different, answer. Jesus was executed by Pilate as an insurrectionist. Honest or dishonest, it was all the same. As a rebel, he was a dead man if they caught him, and any of his associates earned the same fate. The Romans had a history of vicious suppression of rebellions.
Insurrection was very common at the time, and continued almost without abatement until 70 CE, when the Romans came with their legions and put a final and very bloody end to the uprising. Josephus left us a good chronicle of the period in
The Wars of the Jews, available with nearly all of his other writings at the link. He said the streets of Jerusalem ran red with blood. It was a slaughter.
How does that make you feel?
It makes me wonder why you asked.
And honestly, it makes me glad I'm not living under the Romans, too.
Do you believe the world is any different in this modern era?
We're not anywhere near as rife with kingdoms, and empires have pretty much bitten the dust. We've had to find ways to get along despite differences scarcely encountered in the insular world of first century Palestine, itself far more diverse than the period of Israel's first appearance from among the mountain tribes of Canaan.
What do you think Christianity means?
The best answer is, "Whatever the Christian to whom you're talking wants it to mean." Certainly, there are supernatural beliefs that are held in common by a statistical majority of Christians, such as the deity of Jesus and the resurrection of the dead. But most of the religious beliefs are too diverse to admit any majority when they show up as public issues involving Christian faith, such as gay marriage, the teaching of the theory of evolution, or access to abortion services.
So, what does Christianity mean, to you?
As ever, Jesse