- Mar 27, 2018
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I was a Christian on this board before I converted.
How long ago did you convert?
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I was a Christian on this board before I converted.
Why am I here?
1. I don't want to live in an echo chamber. Almost everyone I know and interact with regularly is an atheist, or at least irreligious. The internet is the most convenient resource for exposure to opposing viewpoints. I consume conservative religious radio, podcasts and youtube videos, and talk to street preachers, for the same reason.
2. It's interesting.
3. I consider the public scrutiny of ideas and the reasoning behind them to be a civic duty.
In that order.
It was a gradual process. I first adopted Buddhism as a practical philosophy of life, probably 5 years ago or so, and fully & formally accepted it about 2 years ago.
I know some people are here to forward their political agendas. Beyond that, I am just wondering why non-Christians join a Christian forum. Is it to troll? Is it to pull people closer to your world view? Are you looking for answers? Do you enjoy debating? Do you enjoy hearing different perspectives? Are you working for the company and generating new content? Is there something you hope to achieve?
I’m not asking as if I have a problem with you being here. I’m just trying to understand the mindset for better perspective.
I've been here more than 10 years now. I enjoy an intellectual discussion. It's a good thing to have your opinions challenged. And to formulate arguments in support of your ideas, and to express them with lucidity and conciseness. It's great brain exercise which improves both your cognitive abilities and your writing skills. And it's fun.
I was originally attracted to the E & M forum. My career was in health care, and I've always been interested in biomedical ethics. I served on my hospital's ethics committee for 10 years. One of our co-chairmen was an ordained Methodist minister, and the head of pastoral services. He knew about CF, and recommended it as a good on-line forum to discuss ethical and other issues. Art was a really good guy. Sadly, he passed away about 5 years ago. Even though he was a minister, and I was a non-believer, we got along famously. And we almost always saw eye-to-eye on the cases in which our committee was involved. Proof that people can have major religious differences, but still be buddies and collaborators.![]()
I also joined CF when I was a believer. I was gone for a few years but came back because it's a good place to talk about faith, theology, morality etc. Discussions are mostly friendly, and people often make solid arguments. I like to see if my thoughts and arguments hold up.
I find religion taps into many topics. I find belief a very fascinating thing. I also find it odd, that many will run their entire lives, as if they do not think, or even care if a God exists, until you instead ask them. Meaning, they live their lives one way, but then voice another. Not that these individuals are hypocrites. But instead, that many humans acts do not appear to line up with what they claim to be true.
For me, I was a believer for decades. After I finally read the Bible, I had many questions. Many in which I felt I was not getting very satisfying answers about. I first came here to ask a small sampling of these questions, to gain a wide and global perspective. And since then, CF has sucked me in
I just wish I did not only get answers from the same few people over and over againNot that I don't enjoy their responses. It's just that many of these posts receive thousands of hits, and yet very few seem to reply in comparison.
I enjoy reading many of your posts because I feel like your concerns are sincerely thought out.
I think we all have ideals that are hard to live up to. Humanity has always been brilliant at designing systems, but always has a hard time executing them when people are involved.
I look forward to future discussions.![]()
I know some people are here to forward their political agendas. Beyond that, I am just wondering why non-Christians join a Christian forum. Is it to troll? Is it to pull people closer to your world view? Are you looking for answers? Do you enjoy debating? Do you enjoy hearing different perspectives? Are you working for the company and generating new content? Is there something you hope to achieve?
I’m not asking as if I have a problem with you being here. I’m just trying to understand the mindset for better perspective.
I know some people are here to forward their political agendas. Beyond that, I am just wondering why non-Christians join a Christian forum. Is it to troll? Is it to pull people closer to your world view? Are you looking for answers? Do you enjoy debating? Do you enjoy hearing different perspectives? Are you working for the company and generating new content? Is there something you hope to achieve?
I’m not asking as if I have a problem with you being here. I’m just trying to understand the mindset for better perspective.
I joined this forum as a Christian, lost my faith about a year later and left this forum for about a year but came back because I missed having a Christian atmosphere.
I'm not sure I really enjoy talking about atheism and challenging theists. More awkward than anything. I am more interested in discussing spiritual concepts with others. Ironically though I think I converse with pagans and people of non-Christian religions more than Christians here, lol.
I think that Christianity is a false religion, and on top of that, its leaders have been committing grave harm upon the world for centuries. While I remain open to the miniscule possibility that someone can reasonably defend Christianity's core claims, and while it is not the worst evil in the world (it remains second to Islam), I'm still doing good deeds if I present facts, evidence, reason and logic while exposing lies.
When I first came here my goal was to push people to be either hot or cold, but I have learned that all Christians are lukewarm and that's just not the right approach.