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RE: Young Christians are leaving churches and some athe... - 4/14/2013 5:28:44 AM   
leonine


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quote:

ORIGINAL: GotSteel

quote:

ORIGINAL: http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/supernatural
: of or relating to an order of existence beyond the visible observable universe; especially : of or relating to God or a god, demigod, spirit, or devil
2
a : departing from what is usual or normal especially so as to appear to transcend the laws of nature
b : attributed to an invisible agent (as a ghost or spirit)

quote:

ORIGINAL: crazyml
I'm an atheist.

In common with some of the atheists you refer to - I'm not averse to the notion that there's something supernatural out there - You know... something must have started "it all" etc.


Looking at the definition you could sort of say that the other dimensions in string theory would count as supernatural if they turn out to exist. But I don't think that's how they're going to get labelled. I expect that our understanding of the natural world would expand to encompass them, like we did with quantum physics.

It would count as supernatural in the usual sense of the word if it proved to be the cause of phenomena that cannot be accounted for by the existing physical laws. But for most people that only counts if the phenomena in question are clearly visible in the macrocosm, not a matter of obscure findings at the sub atomic level.

That is, we'd have to find that hidden dimensions could account for "unexplained" things like hauntings, or miracle cures, or why machines work better if you shout at them.

But previous centuries wouldn't have had trouble with incorporating that into science. The Enlightenment tried very hard to incorporate astrology into their scientific framework.


_____________________________

Leo9


Gonna pack in my hand, pick up on a piece of land and build myself a cabin in the woods.
It's there I'm gonna stay, until there comes a day when this old world starts a-changing for the good.
- James Taylor

(in reply to GotSteel)
Profile   Post #: 61
RE: Young Christians are leaving churches and some athe... - 4/14/2013 9:50:10 AM   
Fightdirecto


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quote:

ORIGINAL: crazyml
It's very interesting that the growing crisis in religion should be combined with some silliness on an atheist website in an attempt to create some "Believer vs Atheist" controversy. I have to say, Fightdirecto, that I am detecting a little hostility towards atheists in your posts. If you really care about god, you ought to be addressing those 6 reasons....

I suppose this could be a defensive response on my part, but you know - I'm very happy that my believing friends have their faith. Indeed, I'm prepared to admit to being a little envious of them at times.

But, there's a vague sense that you're trying to put all atheists into the same pot - You know the arrogant Dawkins-eque "I'm an atheist because I'm ever so clever and if you believe in god it's because you're not as smart as me" bullshit.

Well I'm not in that group - I know a lot of people a lot smarter than me who are theists.

In my 62 years of life experience, most religious people generally are inclined to mind our own business, follow our own consciences and expect others to do the same.

But just like there is a vocal minority of evangelical religious people, there is a vocal minority of evangelical atheists (your reference to Richard Dawkins highlights an example of "evangelical atheists"). And those vocal minorities who do not want the majority to follow their own consciences and want to dictate to others what they should or shouldn't believe sometimes make it difficult for the majority of religious and the majority of atheists.

IMO, the majority of religious and the majority of atheists have a vested interest in working together to stop the vocal minorities within the religious community and within the the atheist community from controlling everyone's public and private life.

Actually, I kinda like agnostics ("Maybe there ia a diety - maybe there isn't a diety - I don't know") as neighbors - they are the least likely to be offended by either religious people or atheists.


_____________________________

"I swore never to be silent whenever and wherever human beings endure suffering and humiliation. We must always take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.””
- Ellie Wiesel

(in reply to crazyml)
Profile   Post #: 62
RE: Young Christians are leaving churches and some athe... - 4/14/2013 12:35:43 PM   
Powergamz1


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Which is why of course, half the advances in medicine, science, and society etc. have come directly from church doctrine, and half the genocides, wars, and atrocities have been orchestrated by atheist organizations such as Dawkins represents... because atheists are soooo smug. Snort.

Nice try, but still bullshit. The issue is believing or not believe in a deity. And people give up their belief for the same reasons they finally tell their 38 year old kid to move out and get a job...

Faith in something that deserves it, isn't stripped away just because someone else disbelieves.

In the case of religious demands for faith, it goes away because people start to see that there is no deity. Like finally giving up on a failed relationship, some people get tired of the promises, and the threats, and theresults that never change, and they move on. Other people never give up and keep enabling the situation.


quote:

ORIGINAL: Fightdirecto

quote:

ORIGINAL: crazyml
It's very interesting that the growing crisis in religion should be combined with some silliness on an atheist website in an attempt to create some "Believer vs Atheist" controversy. I have to say, Fightdirecto, that I am detecting a little hostility towards atheists in your posts. If you really care about god, you ought to be addressing those 6 reasons....

I suppose this could be a defensive response on my part, but you know - I'm very happy that my believing friends have their faith. Indeed, I'm prepared to admit to being a little envious of them at times.

But, there's a vague sense that you're trying to put all atheists into the same pot - You know the arrogant Dawkins-eque "I'm an atheist because I'm ever so clever and if you believe in god it's because you're not as smart as me" bullshit.

Well I'm not in that group - I know a lot of people a lot smarter than me who are theists.

In my 62 years of life experience, most religious people generally are inclined to mind our own business, follow our own consciences and expect others to do the same.

But just like there is a vocal minority of evangelical religious people, there is a vocal minority of evangelical atheists (your reference to Richard Dawkins highlights an example of "evangelical atheists"). And those vocal minorities who do not want the majority to follow their own consciences and want to dictate to others what they should or shouldn't believe sometimes make it difficult for the majority of religious and the majority of atheists.

IMO, the majority of religious and the majority of atheists have a vested interest in working together to stop the vocal minorities within the religious community and within the the atheist community from controlling everyone's public and private life.

Actually, I kinda like agnostics ("Maybe there ia a diety - maybe there isn't a diety - I don't know") as neighbors - they are the least likely to be offended by either religious people or atheists.




_____________________________

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" About damn time...wooot!!' Me

(in reply to Fightdirecto)
Profile   Post #: 63
RE: Young Christians are leaving churches and some athe... - 4/14/2013 12:56:42 PM   
GotSteel


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quote:

ORIGINAL: JeffBC

quote:

ORIGINAL: GotSteel
Sounds like your an apatheist. I've been there. For many the transition from apatheist to "evangelical atheist" is the result of meeting too many religious asshats.

Actually not really. My reasoning goes like this.

Whether or not god exists and there's a soul and an afterlife and all that is going to be totally inscrutable in THIS life.


Your position on souls and any other supernatural stuff besides gods is irrelevant. If you believe in god(s) your a theist, if not your an atheist. If your the sort that doesn't give a shit that's apatheism. That's all there is to it, souls, afterlives, unicorns, etc. all separate issues.


P.S. What do you think a soul even does, because it's one of those god of the gaps where the gap has already been filled?


(in reply to JeffBC)
Profile   Post #: 64
RE: Young Christians are leaving churches and some athe... - 4/14/2013 1:06:49 PM   
GotSteel


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quote:

ORIGINAL: gotsteel
I'm quite comfortable saying that there's nothing supernatural out there not because I think there isn't anything the label could be applied to but because our civilization doesn't use that label for real things.


quote:

ORIGINAL: crazyml
Oh I'm quite certain that all of these things will be explainable, but I'm not averse to the notion that there may be something supernatural. That'll be my open mind at work perhaps?


You get the position I'm taking is one of labels. The portion of our civilization that actually figures out how things work (instead of just making stuff up) will not label phenomenon supernatural. We just plain won't, hence we have quantum physics instead of meta physics.

< Message edited by GotSteel -- 4/14/2013 1:07:14 PM >

(in reply to crazyml)
Profile   Post #: 65
RE: Young Christians are leaving churches and some athe... - 4/15/2013 7:44:08 AM   
GotSteel


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quote:

ORIGINAL: crazyml
quote:

ORIGINAL: gotsteel
The label supernatural has become a dumping ground for conspiracy theories involving magical thinking. I'm quite comfortable saying that there's nothing supernatural out there not because I think there isn't anything the label could be applied to but because our civilization doesn't use that label for real things.


Can you see how that position might be seen as somewhat "dogmatic"?

Well there are people who will see your position as Satan worship, so sure certain people will see all sorts of things in my position.

Here's another example, alchemy. We can actually turn lead into gold at this point but that isn't ever going to get called alchemy. That labels been ruined by way too many absurd supernatural assertions and magical thinking, scientists aren't going to go anywhere near the alchemy label.

quote:

ORIGINAL: crazyml
My Atheism is a total rejection of the idea of "God" as defined by pretty much any belief system. I'm also a materialist by you definition, although I think it's possible to hold a materialist standpoint while also respecting that "spirituality" is a very natural (and real) thing.
quote:

ORIGINAL: gotsteel
My atheism is more about considering certain definitions of faith to be synonyms for gullibility.

Then don't complain when theists argue that certain definitions of atheism are synonyms for arrogance and hubris!

Hey there have been theists trying to discredit atheism through personal attacks long before atheists started demanding an equal right to free speech.

quote:

ORIGINAL: Psalm 14:1
Only fools say in their hearts,
“There is no God.”
They are corrupt, and their actions are evil;
not one of them does good!


Hiding in a closet isn't going to get me equality. The data I've seen suggests that speaking up more will fix the problem not less. Sure I've said something that the faithful likely won't be too happy to hear but that doesn't make it any less true. I'm only saying what I think most of them already know at least on some level, they don't have good reasons for their belief. If they did they wouldn't need to talk about faith all the time.

quote:

ORIGINAL: gotsteel
Spirituality on the other hand is such a vague word that it can mean just about anything. Under some definitions plain old introspection and contemplation would count. Depending on how one looks at that word the average atheist can be considered to be way more spiritual than the average person.

quote:

ORIGINAL: crazyml
Sure. sure.

So I get the impression you're of Dawkins school when it comes to your atheism. That's ok.

As long as you acknowledge that he comes across as a bit of a wanker...

If we're picking famous people to attribute our own positions to I'd like to say I'm from the Christopher Hitchens school of atheism.

“Faith is the surrender of the mind, it's the surrender of reason, it's the surrender of the only thing that makes us different from other animals. It's our need to believe and to surrender our skepticism and our reason, our yearning to discard that and put all our trust or faith in someone or something, that is the sinister thing to me. ... Out of all the virtues, all the supposed virtues, faith must be the most overrated”

― Christopher Hitchens

The Thing about Richard Dawkins is sure he's not a theist, but what he is, the position he actually holds, well the guys a biologist. He goes around our country speaking and writes books to try and lessen the damage superstition is doing to his field of science. The guy's out there promoting the fact of evolution against crocoduck and young earth superstitions. It's not arrogance to tell young earth creationists that their position has no business in science class or hubris to tell the crocoduckers that they're ignorant of what evolution's actually claiming.

That said the guy isn't well rounded, when he gets too far away from his field of expertise well he isn't an expert. However, take this example of being a "wanker":

quote:

ORIGINAL: http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2012/09/10/richard-dawkins-romney-a-massively-gullible-fool-for-practicing-mormonism/
Evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins on Sunday asked how anyone could vote for a “massively gullible fool” like Mitt Romney who could not see that Mormonism’s founder was a “fraud.”


Frankly I wouldn't expect to be seeing the same condemnations if he was talking about a modern kooky cult and if you look at the origins of Mormonism it's very much the story of a kooky cult. Why isn't it ok to say that? Is there any reason other than too many people have said that the shorter line is longer?


< Message edited by GotSteel -- 4/15/2013 7:46:21 AM >

(in reply to crazyml)
Profile   Post #: 66
RE: Young Christians are leaving churches and some athe... - 4/15/2013 8:46:00 AM   
tomguy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: FunCouple5280

Once anyone gets too far from center, they all begin to sound too much alike. With the growing percentage of independent voters I am sure both political parties are scratching their heads wondering why people don't join up after they leave the other.

I think you are going to see more and more youth leave the churches as they further isolate themselves ideologically. The atheists, until they get a charismatic all-inclusive spokes person, will remain on the little whiney island they have made for themselves. Yet, it would be very un-atheist to organize themselves in such a fashion, so maybe they should stop crying about it.


Maybe they are sick of hearing both sides battle it out. I like Christmas and all the other holidays, but I don't go to church, nor do I give a rat's ass about someone's need to have a close relationship with god or be stuck up their own ass knowing sure as non-hell that they are the highest form of existence in the universe. We need a new unified church of "I don't give a fuck, I'm opening Christmas presents on the 25th, So fuck off". Also there's no building cus no one goes to it anyway...

PS- I personally want a nativity scene on every street corner solely to offend those who would be offended. It is THEIR fault that there is any conflict at all.

(in reply to FunCouple5280)
Profile   Post #: 67
RE: Young Christians are leaving churches and some athe... - 4/15/2013 1:26:05 PM   
Kirata


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quote:

ORIGINAL: GotSteel

I'm only saying what I think most of them already know at least on some level, they don't have good reasons for their belief. If they did they wouldn't need to talk about faith all the time.

I'm sure you sincerely believe that, but don't you think it could be an example of "the surrender of reason"? Why are almost all of the religion threads started by Atheists?

K.

(in reply to GotSteel)
Profile   Post #: 68
RE: Young Christians are leaving churches and some athe... - 4/15/2013 2:27:19 PM   
cordeliasub


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I've actually never met an Atheist in real life who felt they needed to go on a crusade to make other people Atheists. I have also never met an Atheist who presumed I had a single digit IQ and married my cousin just because I believe in God. They must all be on the internet because I've never encountered one in my day to day life LOL

I have encountered a couple of Atheists and agnostics who are bitter....but when they share exactly how they were treated by the church....I kinda don;t blame them, and that is sad.

(in reply to Kirata)
Profile   Post #: 69
RE: Young Christians are leaving churches and some athe... - 4/15/2013 2:48:49 PM   
Kirata


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quote:

ORIGINAL: cordeliasub

I've actually never met an Atheist in real life who felt they needed to go on a crusade to make other people Atheists. I have also never met an Atheist who presumed I had a single digit IQ and married my cousin just because I believe in God. They must all be on the internet

Seems that way to me, too. My experience has been the same.

K.

(in reply to cordeliasub)
Profile   Post #: 70
RE: Young Christians are leaving churches and some athe... - 4/15/2013 2:50:07 PM   
Hillwilliam


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I've never met an "Evangelical Atheist" either.

_____________________________

Kinkier than a cheap garden hose.

Whoever said "Religion is the opiate of the masses" never heard Right Wing talk radio.

Don't blame me, I voted for Gary Johnson.

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RE: Young Christians are leaving churches and some athe... - 4/15/2013 3:54:40 PM   
Fightdirecto


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Hillwilliam

I've never met an "Evangelical Atheist" either.


I wish I could say I've never met an "Evangelical Atheist" - but I've met some.

My "favorite" was the one who told my Dad, who was a American Baptist Convention minister, that he should be institutionalized until he was "cured" of his belief in "God". It was at a fund-raising event organized by an interfaith group to raise funds to help homeless people.


_____________________________

"I swore never to be silent whenever and wherever human beings endure suffering and humiliation. We must always take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.””
- Ellie Wiesel

(in reply to Hillwilliam)
Profile   Post #: 72
RE: Young Christians are leaving churches and some athe... - 4/15/2013 7:05:33 PM   
GotSteel


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quote:

ORIGINAL: tomguy
Maybe they are sick of hearing both sides battle it out. I like Christmas and all the other holidays, but I don't go to church, nor do I give a rat's ass about someone's need to have a close relationship with god or be stuck up their own ass knowing sure as non-hell that they are the highest form of existence in the universe.

I'm not sure who you've been learning about atheism from but it doesn't sound like it's been from atheists.

quote:

ORIGINAL: tomguy
We need a new unified church of "I don't give a fuck, I'm opening Christmas presents on the 25th, So fuck off". Also there's no building cus no one goes to it anyway...

Once again it sounds like you've been listening to anti-atheist bigotry instead of actual information. Your average atheist is going to be at least as into presents as you are. You'll actually find way more Christians against that practice.

quote:

ORIGINAL: tomguy
PS- I personally want a nativity scene on every street corner solely to offend those who would be offended. It is THEIR fault that there is any conflict at all.

Couple of things Christians have been warring against Christmas for a long time.

Further I think you'd actually be quite surprised by how strongly the atheist communities would stand up for and defend your free speech rights to have a nativity scene in your yard. The issue that some atheists (and religious people) have is when one and only one particular religious perspective is given free advertising on government property.

They just want the same rights to put up their own free advertising, you know equality and all that.

(in reply to tomguy)
Profile   Post #: 73
RE: Young Christians are leaving churches and some athe... - 4/15/2013 7:32:24 PM   
GotSteel


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Fightdirecto
In my 62 years of life experience, most religious people generally are inclined to mind our own business, follow our own consciences and expect others to do the same.


Bullshit.

Look at a hot button social issue and you're very likely to find religious magical thinking bringing us to an impasse, the war on women, gay oppression, contraceptive, abortion, teaching science in science class, stem cell research...

As much as the rest of Christianity likes to scapegoat the Evangelicals it's not just them. A whole lot of Protestants, Catholics as an institution and the Mormons have taken superstitious positions to the detriment of many who don't share their faith.

quote:

ORIGINAL: Fightdirecto
IMO, the majority of religious and the majority of atheists have a vested interest in working together to stop the vocal minorities within the religious community and within the the atheist community from controlling everyone's public and private life.


Frankly if you and yours hadn't completely screwed the pooch at accomplishing that there wouldn't even be an atheist community. You'd never have heard a peep from us.

(in reply to Fightdirecto)
Profile   Post #: 74
RE: Young Christians are leaving churches and some athe... - 4/15/2013 7:47:38 PM   
njlauren


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Phoenixpower

Over here a fair amount of people leave church to avoid having to pay church tax...

Now...I am carrying the desire with me to leave catholic church and to join the protestant church (as I am not against the church taxes themselves) but as in my current field the majority of employers demand being part of the catholic church (at least in southern Germany) it would right now put me at risk to do me more harm than good...

So for now I am leaving that aim to leave it and hope to do so in a few years time, but at least I will make sure that if I have kids one day, that they will not be part of the catholic church....but the protestant church instead...as there are just too many things in the catholic church which I am very much against.


I guess we didn't get rid of Nazism entirely in Germany....it is sad when a supposedly well educated society like Germany maintains religious persecution like that...but not surprising, in Southern Germany the public schools have crucifixes in them, because it is heavily Catholic..which didn't seem to do all that much good during the Nazi area, the good Catholics there and the protestants up north all seemed to do the same thing, go on a paroxysm of violence and evil I hope the world never sees again. On the other hand, from what I know from talking to friends in Germany, the young people there are like the rest of Europe, and the employers who demand you belong to the church are probably all older men in their 50's and 60's forcing their beliefs on others.

(in reply to Phoenixpower)
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RE: Young Christians are leaving churches and some athe... - 4/15/2013 7:49:40 PM   
Kirata


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quote:

ORIGINAL: GotSteel
quote:

ORIGINAL: tomguy

Maybe they are sick of hearing both sides battle it out. I like Christmas and all the other holidays, but I don't go to church, nor do I give a rat's ass about someone's need to have a close relationship with god or be stuck up their own ass knowing sure as non-hell that they are the highest form of existence in the universe.

I'm not sure who you've been learning about atheism from but it doesn't sound like it's been from atheists.

Interesting that you perceive a connection between Atheists and someone "stuck up their own ass knowing sure as non-hell that they are the highest form of existence in the universe."

quote:

ORIGINAL: GotSteel

it sounds like you've been listening to anti-atheist bigotry instead of actual information.

Or maybe he's been listening to Atheists?

In the history of the world, nothing has been the catalyst of more grief, hatred, war, and crime than religion. Religion allows a person to hate, kill, torture, or steal, while allowing him to recuse himself of all blame. Religion causes people to break the laws of ethics and morality in the name of a god.

Religion dulls the mind and weakens the senses. It makes "God did it" seem like a reasonable answer to anything at all, squelching questions of why, how, and when, and replacing these questions with repeated mantras and prayers to nobody....

Religion spreads like disease through societies, rarely coexisting with pre-existing mythologies, rather preferring to conquer or be conquered. Religion is anything but tolerant... American Atheists is not afraid to point out that which is true: religion is ridiculous. Mythology and religion are synonymous, and none is better than another. Religion is malicious, malevolent, and unworthy of respect...

We're respectful of the American people's individual rights to practice as they see fit (equal to our rights to do the same), but this does not mean we have to respect the decision. If you choose to ignore logic and knowledge in order to believe in an invisible magic man in the sky, or Santa Claus for that matter, you've made a ridiculous decision and we're not going to pretend it's "just another way of looking at things."


~American Atheists / FAQ / Religion

K.

(in reply to GotSteel)
Profile   Post #: 76
RE: Young Christians are leaving churches and some athe... - 4/15/2013 7:53:34 PM   
Kirata


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quote:

ORIGINAL: GotSteel
quote:

ORIGINAL: Fightdirecto

In my 62 years of life experience, most religious people generally are inclined to mind our own business, follow our own consciences and expect others to do the same.

Bullshit.

I don't think you're qualified to call bullshit on someone else's experience.

Wouldn't this be an example magical thinking?

K.

(in reply to GotSteel)
Profile   Post #: 77
RE: Young Christians are leaving churches and some athe... - 4/15/2013 7:59:58 PM   
njlauren


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quote:

ORIGINAL: CynthiaWVirginia

quote:

If you are an atheist, does it bother you that young people are leaving the Church - but still remain spiritual, still remain religious - but still haven't "converted" to atheism? Aren't your arguments good enough?


When I stopped going to churches it wasn't because some atheist convinced me that there was no God. I was upset with Him for allowing everyone have free will...which meant that some of us had to suffer the consequences of someone else's free will. Child abuse, etc. It took me a while to figure that part out and spent many years saying, "How could you let this happen?"

I couldn't find answers in churches I went to (only several dozen across half a dozen states). Mostly they met my needs until I turned about 15 years old. Instead of being a fun, joyful place to get away from home...I noticed they were too busy selling God, trying to corner the market on Him, and that bible lessons were a jumble of single sentences taken from many different chapters and...taken out of context. One church I went to (as an adult) didn't use the bible at all and told me that if I wanted to learn more about the bible I needed to start reading it at home.

I did.

I rarely go to churches because of the reasons the author mentioned. Unlike many other Christians in my area, I don't have a problem with God's days being millions of days long and His having created dinosaurs before letting them become extinct. (Maybe He liked dinosaurs for a while.) But the churches did. Around here, many also had a problem with Harry Potter (my son and my mom were crazy about HP for half a dozen years), and Pokemon. It's kind of hard to take your kid to a church that's screaming that liking HP or Pokemon means that you're allowing your kid to be invaded by demons. Sometimes I think folks selling God feel the need to wake up their congregation by giving them something to feel threatened by and something to fight over. (Maybe I'm wrong.)

Teenagers are smart enough to see when adults are selling something, and IMHO, denying science and dinosaur fossils...deserves an eye roll.

An old high school buddy of mine is a pastor. Mom wanted to enjoy a debate with her over several issues in the bible...my friend turned her down, saying that she didn't actually read the bible. Mom asked her how in the world did she teach other people about God's word if she didn't even read her own bible...and the friend answered that she read "tracts" written by others and that her preaching was "God inspired".

A pet peeve of mine. I get tired of groups that teach their congregation that it's okay to use the bible in ways God never intended, as a pedestal, and as a weapon to bash other people over the head with.

Sometimes I feel like our churches have abandoned us and not the other way around. Tithes were not meant for...ensuring that the pastor's wife could wear only $700+ dresses, nor for "our" building looking better/fancier than that other denomination's... Also, a nine year old child should not NEED to fill out some form that asks how much money their parent makes (I was the only one in my family going to that church at that time. Some of my friends from the neighborhood went and I wanted to go with them).

IMHO, churches need to open themselves to their communities more, let their behavior show that they are followers of Christ by loving their neighbor and teaching by example. Lack of kids in the church? Kids are easy to get if one thinks of giving back to the community. Free child care while mothers are at work, free tutoring, teach those teenagers to cook in the church's kitchen and then take meals to people in their community who have just come home after a surgery or have had a new baby. Teach the older kids about babysitting (the Red Cross used to teach a class and I'm sure there are some old books available on the internet) and then have these kids listed as available within the congregation and neighborhood as (paid) babysitters, asking them to volunteer some times during emergencies. Praise them...give small trophies for their "community service". Some kids and other volunteers can be organized for yard work, to assist elderly or physically disabled people who can no longer take care of mowing their own lawns. Most of the people who helped me keep my sanity when I was a teenager were "old people" on my paper routes, and my favorite person back then was a woman whose grandchildren had grown up and moved away...she was a retired school teacher. (I would gladly have helped to mow her lawn in exchange for whining privileges, advice, and some tea or lemonaide.)

Churches around here are buildings that only get used one day per week for a few hours...what a shame that they don't encourage their members to come by for board game nights, religious debate teams, movie and popcorn and soda pop (with movies that have Christian beliefs or stuff to grow on without being "preachy"), and...how about free dance lessons so the kids and adults have an alternative to the current bump and grind dirty dancing? In Ohio, my aunt belonged to a place that taught ballroom dancing, and non-members only had to pay $5 so she would bring her adult grandson with her as her partner. One of the schools I went to when I lived in California...made us 5th graders do "folk dancing"...it was GREAT knowing how to dance once I caught up with the rest of the class. There can be challenges and rewards, like memorizing all the names of the books in the bible, with rewards like...being taken bowling or to the community swimming pool...believe me, masses of kids with working moms would come.

Personally, I don't think churches should be a "sacred place"...they need to reach out to their communities, offering service and welcoming any person into their social activities.

Btw, bo's mom broke her hip a few weeks ago. He has been with her almost 24/7 since she came home. It would be very...Christian...of people in his community to bring over a batch of frozen casseroles or donations of store brand Ensure, offers to help with some of the house work and watching her once or twice per week to give him some respite. Her condition is temporary, not permanent, and they cannot ask for help because from past experience...they know that anyone sent over will not be truly helpful and roll up their sleeves and get to work, but will instead hop up on that soapbox and spend their entire time there "witnessing".

The same happened to my friend Carin while she was dying from cancer. I signed her up for hospice after being told of all the wonderful things they would do for her (including getting her into a wheel chair and taking her outdoors for some fresh air every day). Nothing they promised was actually done. I know, I was present and confirmed for myself what Carin told me. All the woman did was preach, trying to get Carin to "be saved". In the end, Carin said yes just to shut her up and let the woman have her bragging rights. There was no use in telling the hospice worker that Carin was already a Christian since she was a little girl, the woman was blinded by the belief that only her type of Christian was the right type of Christian.

It's a shame, but yeah, as a teenager I had to leave churches in order to find God. I really don't care why an atheist would THINK leaving/rejecting a religion would mean that I rejected my God...and it's kinda funny that some atheits might be like some Christian denominations that try to convert people to their way of thinking (like carving notches on a bedpost, lol).






Cynthia-
Your point is right on, it is one of the things I looked for in a church and didn't find it, community, and that is so important. I belonged to a very liberal church, that literally accepted all, was not dogmatic, very inclusive, you name it (used to get hate mail, and some jackwagons from an evangelical church decided they were going to teach our church a lesson in being Christian and were going to throw rocks through our stained glass window, and from what I know, but cannot prove, the douchbag who was their pastor knew about it....real Christian, don't ya think?)..but it failed, because it was all theoretical, they would rather see me as a trans person as some sort of abstract idea of radical acceptance, rather than a person looking for a place to have friends and fellows and provide something for my family. The church had a lot of people who had been hurt, recovering alcoholics and drug addiction, people who had a horrible time accepting themselves, gays struggling to beat AIDS..you name it, really hurt people, a lot of them skittish like feral cats..and the church didn't provide that, it was all theory with no substance. That same church a couple of generations ago was a community center, literally, they had youth basketball, laborers could use the shower facilities because their apartments didn't have hot water, they had all kinds of groups for the town.....

What church has turned into in a lot of mainstream churches is go to church on sunday, hear a sermon, pay your tithe, have a cup of coffee, then go home and totally ignore what was told you in church.....some of the evangelical churches understand the concept of fellowship, but it is warped, they offer a lot for their members, but they also create this insular culture where they are supposed to interact only with themselves and 'their kind'.

When I was forced to abandon transition, on the cusp of going full time, going through a major issue with unemployment and trying to figure out how to keep my family going, the church I belonged to was absolutely useless, there was no support, no pastoral care, and in fact when I made the decision to revert, basically because I realized if I didn't, it would cause my family to split up and destroy my son's dreams, plus I loved my spouse, and probably would mean economic privation for them if we split up (me, I could care less, if I was single it would have been a no brainer), and what I got was a lot of derision, not love and compassion and understanding..and this was a liberal church......

These days people are looking for some way to connect, but the churches sure as heck aren't doing it, and they are leaving it to facebook and the like, which is pathetic.

(in reply to CynthiaWVirginia)
Profile   Post #: 78
RE: Young Christians are leaving churches and some athe... - 4/15/2013 8:11:52 PM   
njlauren


Posts: 1577
Joined: 10/1/2011
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Fightdirecto

quote:

ORIGINAL: crazyml
It's very interesting that the growing crisis in religion should be combined with some silliness on an atheist website in an attempt to create some "Believer vs Atheist" controversy. I have to say, Fightdirecto, that I am detecting a little hostility towards atheists in your posts. If you really care about god, you ought to be addressing those 6 reasons....

I suppose this could be a defensive response on my part, but you know - I'm very happy that my believing friends have their faith. Indeed, I'm prepared to admit to being a little envious of them at times.

But, there's a vague sense that you're trying to put all atheists into the same pot - You know the arrogant Dawkins-eque "I'm an atheist because I'm ever so clever and if you believe in god it's because you're not as smart as me" bullshit.

Well I'm not in that group - I know a lot of people a lot smarter than me who are theists.

In my 62 years of life experience, most religious people generally are inclined to mind our own business, follow our own consciences and expect others to do the same.

But just like there is a vocal minority of evangelical religious people, there is a vocal minority of evangelical atheists (your reference to Richard Dawkins highlights an example of "evangelical atheists"). And those vocal minorities who do not want the majority to follow their own consciences and want to dictate to others what they should or shouldn't believe sometimes make it difficult for the majority of religious and the majority of atheists.

IMO, the majority of religious and the majority of atheists have a vested interest in working together to stop the vocal minorities within the religious community and within the the atheist community from controlling everyone's public and private life.

Actually, I kinda like agnostics ("Maybe there ia a diety - maybe there isn't a diety - I don't know") as neighbors - they are the least likely to be offended by either religious people or atheists.




The only difference is while I don't like people like Richard Dawkins is that the worst you can accuse them of is being boors, their language is disrespectful, but I have yet to hear of any radical atheists bombing churches or trying to pass laws so that evangelicals are second class citizens...which you cannot say for the other side, and it isn't just the evangelicals. We have supreme court justices like Alito, Scalia, Roberts and Thomas who basically outright say that religious morality as law is legal (especially if it is their church behind it, all are true believer Catholics). Equivocating Richard Dawkins and Chris Hitchens with the GOP's crusade against gays and abortions and trying to force basically a Christian theocracy is not a fair comparison; in rhetoric, maybe, in action, it is evangelicals 1000, atheists 0. The conservatives who run around supporting these losers ar just as guilty, they need the religious wrong, so they cater to them, while claiming to be libertarian......

(in reply to Fightdirecto)
Profile   Post #: 79
RE: Young Christians are leaving churches and some athe... - 4/15/2013 8:16:56 PM   
njlauren


Posts: 1577
Joined: 10/1/2011
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Powergamz1

Which is why of course, half the advances in medicine, science, and society etc. have come directly from church doctrine, and half the genocides, wars, and atrocities have been orchestrated by atheist organizations such as Dawkins represents... because atheists are soooo smug. Snort.

Nice try, but still bullshit. The issue is believing or not believe in a deity. And people give up their belief for the same reasons they finally tell their 38 year old kid to move out and get a job...

Faith in something that deserves it, isn't stripped away just because someone else disbelieves.

In the case of religious demands for faith, it goes away because people start to see that there is no deity. Like finally giving up on a failed relationship, some people get tired of the promises, and the threats, and theresults that never change, and they move on. Other people never give up and keep enabling the situation.


quote:

ORIGINAL: Fightdirecto

quote:

ORIGINAL: crazyml
It's very interesting that the growing crisis in religion should be combined with some silliness on an atheist website in an attempt to create some "Believer vs Atheist" controversy. I have to say, Fightdirecto, that I am detecting a little hostility towards atheists in your posts. If you really care about god, you ought to be addressing those 6 reasons....

I suppose this could be a defensive response on my part, but you know - I'm very happy that my believing friends have their faith. Indeed, I'm prepared to admit to being a little envious of them at times.

But, there's a vague sense that you're trying to put all atheists into the same pot - You know the arrogant Dawkins-eque "I'm an atheist because I'm ever so clever and if you believe in god it's because you're not as smart as me" bullshit.

Well I'm not in that group - I know a lot of people a lot smarter than me who are theists.

In my 62 years of life experience, most religious people generally are inclined to mind our own business, follow our own consciences and expect others to do the same.

But just like there is a vocal minority of evangelical religious people, there is a vocal minority of evangelical atheists (your reference to Richard Dawkins highlights an example of "evangelical atheists"). And those vocal minorities who do not want the majority to follow their own consciences and want to dictate to others what they should or shouldn't believe sometimes make it difficult for the majority of religious and the majority of atheists.

IMO, the majority of religious and the majority of atheists have a vested interest in working together to stop the vocal minorities within the religious community and within the the atheist community from controlling everyone's public and private life.

Actually, I kinda like agnostics ("Maybe there ia a diety - maybe there isn't a diety - I don't know") as neighbors - they are the least likely to be offended by either religious people or atheists.




While I agree with your point, don't conflate religious people with automatic moronicism (if that is a word). Galileo was a religious man (unlike the putz who was Pope), he really believed, the Big Bang theory was proposed by George Le Maitre, a Belgian monk, and when Pius XI (the one before the Nazi pope) exclaimed this proved the existence of God, Le Maitre wrote a letter back to him, chastising him for saying so, and said all it was was God unveiled a little bit of the curtain of the universe's workings....there are people of very strong faith who also create fantastic things, though I will add that evangelicals as a whole create nothing, because most of them are pretty stupid, they are the least educated of almost any religious group, and proud to be, too (I am talking fundamentalists here, the great believers, whatever you want to call them)....and there are atheists who are so smart, they fail to appreciate what is in front of them, either:)

(in reply to Powergamz1)
Profile   Post #: 80
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