Why is it that Christians insist that non-Christians who de-converted from Christianity were never Christians?
The general story goes: an atheist comes and says how they were a devout Christian for years and experienced God in such a strong way and prayed and loved Jesus so deeply and was engrossed in theology and Bible history but then, over time, came to see things from a different perspective due to perhaps various new influences, experiences or relationships. Over a period of time, this devout Christian slowly slips away from the Christian circles and stops going to church and reads some books on different religions and so on and one day this Christian no longer "feels" God and then goes on to become an atheist who thinks his/her past life was more of a delusion than a reality.
The atheist then comes on to this forum or elsewhere and tells the story and the first thing out of the Christians' mouth is: "Well, you weren't a real Christian because you deconverted!" Then they usually quote a Bible verse somewhere along the lines of 1 John 2:19.
I don't understand this. Why isn't the general consensus of the Christians after hearing such a story something along the lines of: "Hmm, perhaps this person did have a very real emotional relationship with God and then stopped working at it due to various personal and/or circumstantial experiences." After all, if you stop working at a marriage or a friendship, you slip away and one day you realize you don't even love the person anymore despite loving them in the past. This is why the majority of divorces happen: one or both members stopped putting the effort in. Rarely do you find divorcees being accused of never loving the person even while in the marriage. Its usually quite obvious that at some point in their relationship, they were deeply in love and had quite a strong conviction that it would last. No one gets married expecting a divorce.
I think that de-converters had all the same experiences with Christianity as you are having today. But the only reason they are no longer Christians is not because they never were, but because they stopped working at the relationship and let it slip away. Why is this not a more common view?
Why is it so hard for Christians to believe that de-converters did experience God in a very real way?
Can we stop having Christians accuse de-converters of being "fake Christians" prior to deconversion?
The general story goes: an atheist comes and says how they were a devout Christian for years and experienced God in such a strong way and prayed and loved Jesus so deeply and was engrossed in theology and Bible history but then, over time, came to see things from a different perspective due to perhaps various new influences, experiences or relationships. Over a period of time, this devout Christian slowly slips away from the Christian circles and stops going to church and reads some books on different religions and so on and one day this Christian no longer "feels" God and then goes on to become an atheist who thinks his/her past life was more of a delusion than a reality.
The atheist then comes on to this forum or elsewhere and tells the story and the first thing out of the Christians' mouth is: "Well, you weren't a real Christian because you deconverted!" Then they usually quote a Bible verse somewhere along the lines of 1 John 2:19.
I don't understand this. Why isn't the general consensus of the Christians after hearing such a story something along the lines of: "Hmm, perhaps this person did have a very real emotional relationship with God and then stopped working at it due to various personal and/or circumstantial experiences." After all, if you stop working at a marriage or a friendship, you slip away and one day you realize you don't even love the person anymore despite loving them in the past. This is why the majority of divorces happen: one or both members stopped putting the effort in. Rarely do you find divorcees being accused of never loving the person even while in the marriage. Its usually quite obvious that at some point in their relationship, they were deeply in love and had quite a strong conviction that it would last. No one gets married expecting a divorce.
I think that de-converters had all the same experiences with Christianity as you are having today. But the only reason they are no longer Christians is not because they never were, but because they stopped working at the relationship and let it slip away. Why is this not a more common view?
Why is it so hard for Christians to believe that de-converters did experience God in a very real way?
Can we stop having Christians accuse de-converters of being "fake Christians" prior to deconversion?
ABBA'S FOOL,