"Why are there so many atheists on a Christian site?"
I can't answer for any but myself, and I was invited.
Running through what has clearly been a lively thread I find quite a few of "the usual suspects".
"...what is the draw?"
Keep your friends close, keep your enemies closer?
"I believe they are here because In their hearts they are seeking the truth. "
In one sense, believe away. In another, yes, but that is why I ceased to be a theist.
A large number of Christian psychics declare confidently that they know the contents of my mind.
Almost invariably they miss by a country mile, so their mind-reading is not all they think it is.
Straw man building, now that ability is often highly developed.
"Everyone who willingly got distanciated from Christ is deluded and fell on sin and on pride,"
If but only if your perspective and belief is correct. And it on this that we differ.
"...they seriously examined their beliefs and discovered that they were unfounded." offers an alternate perspective and possibility.
"Either way, sooner or later, a couple of them will come to Christ."
I went the other way, which is I know a theological issue in itself, which is covered later.
"Grimm, what makes you think [God] does[make mistakes]?"
Looking around I find the evidence for a cruel, capricious or non-existent deity far more convincing than for an omnipotent loving and benevolent one.
"Why do you think man and Satan are mistakes?"
I don't, for different reasons, but on the first from the bible perspective there is Genesis 6:6-7.
"A person who does not believe in God, or gods, also resents any power greater than them self."
Err. no. I call straw man on that. There are plenty of powers around greater than me. Wasn't that Canute's point (as popularly rendered)?
Resenting the tides, or gravity, or entropy seems pretty pointless.
"Pride is their motto.
Err, no. See above. I have several but "It's about putting smiles on other people's faces" covers most circumstances.
"Atheist belief in a Godless universe seems to be a rationalization for their fear of faith. "
I don't connect the two but on observing what faith is capable of (going off in *any* direction with no checks, balances or balancing reference to rationality) it meeds at the very least to be treated with extreme caution. Fear may often be appropriate.
"We have found God and he does exist."
No doubt? I've never found a way to eliminate epistemological uncertainty
"We have found [what we interpret and believe to be] God and [therefore say that] he does exist."
Surely this second applies (that does not rule out the *possibility* of it correct) unless human infallibility is being claimed?
"...the billions of people who have found God are just imagining things."
I'd consider that line less plausible if they could actually agree on the nature, purpose, edicts and desires of the God being believed in.
"Did you ever completely dedicate yourself to Jesus?"
Well, if I wasn't (not really) a Christian, then I don't see how anyone can be sure they are.
I can't think of anything they might cite in support that didn't apply to me, too, twenty-five years ago.
(Volunteering to be a Christian missionary in Kabul, at one point. No, I didn't pull out. The mission closed.)
"How do you know that I do not know the presence of the spirit of God."
I don't. It's that epistemological uncertainty again.
It's the absolute confidence of knowing that I am (almost) certain is misplaced.
I've been absolutely certain of things, and been absolutely mistaken about that.
Shocking incidents but good wake-up calls on the issue of "knowing."
" Believers not only see the worldly view, but also the spiritual view. "
I'd go for " Believers not only see the worldly view, but also [think or feel that they see] the spiritual view.
" I doubt an atheist would assert that the god I believe in, a pantheistic god, cannot exist."
This I take to be true. My debate with pantheists tends more to be on whether or not a pantheistic entity is appropriately titled in being called a god.
The term is heavily connotation-loaded.
"when we walk on the street and we see a beautiful painting, WE KNOW IT WAS PAINTED BY A PAINTER. but we cannot see the painter. So we know God exist because he gave us creation."
Is this line of thought still being employed and relied upon?
"The best arguments against religious belief are often the arguments used to support it."
"Nameless despair is mans only reward for living and toiling under the temporal sun of mortal existence. Each day of life slowly and surely tightens the grasp of a pitiless doom which a hostile and relentless universe of matter has decreed shall be the crowning insult to everything in human desire which is beautiful, noble, lofty, and good."
ALMOST spot on. You can certainly see from there why people, rather than face this, would prefer some more comforting world-view, be it true or not.
But the despair is not necessary. You can get to this by a variety of routes, but I'd recommend "The Robot's Rebellion: finding meaning in the age of Darwin" by Keith Stanovich.
"...Their disdain of spiritual matters"...
Maybe that fits some. It doesn't sit well with the most sincere ex-theists. Studying the bible has produced many atheists.
"New Living Translation. 2 Corinthians 4:4
Satan, who is the god of this world, has blinded the minds of those who don't believe. They are unable to see the glorious light of the Good News. They don't understand this message about the glory of Christ, who is the exact likeness of God.
Well, it would say that wouldn't it?
"Those who agree with us are wise, enlightened, good."
"Those who disagree with us are foolish, blind, evil"
It's a defensive meme found, in variations, in more than one religion, political philosophy, cause...
It produces a self-reinforcing divide: anyone thinking of leaving [whatever position is speaking] will be under a triple condemnation, and the "others" as so denigrated that anything they might say is pre-emptively devalued.
"What's interesting is that faith itself is a gift, it's some sort of spirit endowment."
So my faith in Invisible Pink Unicorns is a gift (Presumably from the Invisible Pink Unicorns? I mean, who else is going to do that?)
"There is a perfectly reliable test that anyone is invited to perform in order to obtain proof. You can test it yourself, if you are willing. Rev 3:20."
How would you know it was proof..? There remains an epistemology problem.
And I've been there, done that, believed it and tried to live it. And now I'm an atheist for what seem to me to be sound and adequate reasons.
"Here's where some might say that you were never a "real Christian." I've never been a Christian so I'm not sure what that's like but I imagine it doesn't feel too good to be told that."
Yes, I've met it regularly. It is a self-working trick with a logical weakness, but those employing it rarely spot these.
"My point is, we can really, really believe something be true and later on after we acquire knowledge, figure out, that it wasn't true.""Yes, I know. "Seeing is believing" - but what if our attachment to existing beliefs dictate what we will allow ourselves to see?"
That can happen, and can cut both ways or more, depending on the paradigms, traditions or beliefs in place.
-- Why are you painting white lines in the middle of the road?--
To keep the tigers away.
--But there aren't any tigers around here!--
Good stuff, isn't it?
Challenging beliefs in place, now that's tricky.
"I have asked why this person left Jesus without discussing it with Him first, because I have assumed that he did in fact have a relationship with Jesus as he has claimed. So I am not making the insinuation that you think I am, I am saying there is a reason for the fact that he does not nowadays have that relationship with Him..."
Have you entertained the possibility that the relationship, however firmly felt and believed, was/is illusory for both of you? Assuming the Christian position is correct does cast a marked bias on interpreting the action or choice of ceasing to believe.
"Atheism puffs up the self" I don't see how, except on some false notion than an atheist considers himself to be god.
" The creation itself speaks loudly and plainly of its Creator."
So the bible asserts. Does observation confirm this?
Personally I can look at nature and the night sky and *at the very least* see the clear possibility of an indifferent uncaring universe.
I can get there just by looking at the surface of the moon and applying a little thought.
If this planet, solar system, universe were created by design then there are some very very odd things going on.
And "mysterious ways" and "higher thoughts" don't even begin to cover it.
"Even your own body, Atheist, testifies of its creator, "
If I was designed and created than I'd like to have a world about a number of distinct design errors and flaws.
(Yes, I know the standard Christian "get out of jail free" card that often gets played at this point. It is remarkably conveniently convenient, and can never go wrong.
" I promise that He wants to and will demonstrate Himself to the honest seeker who has a sincere heart and real intent."
I would say I qualified there, did that. And believed for twenty years as an adult. Now I'm an atheist.
"Had you truly known Christ as your savior, you would still be such."
That is such an easy thing to say.
Odd thing is, I used to believe that too, when I was a Christian.
Now I can see the reason why it doesn't have the force I used to think it did.
It does assume leaving Christianity is the wrong thing to do, and fails to admit any other possibility.
"The truth that atheists seek to deny is incredibly painful, and won't be tolerated."
Hey, that's not on. I used to believe it, teach it, evangelise it.
I didn't set it aside because it was painful or difficult. I set it aside because given hard-tested new data I found it it weighed out as untrue.
"That is why when a faith child of God experiences the loving Father (who is within) they really cannot define that experience to the doubters."
But the faith element is non-directional. It will confirm *any* encounter/experience/transcendental moment.
If faith plus *experience* = valid, then many Hindu mystics are there, and Buddhists, and a range of New Age believers, too. And any number of fanatics of varied convictions.
OK, I surrender. When I got e-mail notification of this thread relevant to atheists, I thought I could play "catch up"
But it's expanding almost as fast as I can read through and find sections I wish to reply to.
This ex-Christian(yes, I'm prepared to defend that) atheist has done his best.
Read what I've written or don't.
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