Atheism and
me.
I am an
atheist. I do not believe in any god.
When asked by people about my atheism, I don’t give a slippery “I’m simply spiritual”
answer to get out of arguments with religious folks. I am not spiritual. I am
logical. I am rational. I don’t believe
in a human soul. I don’t believe in life after death, sin, hell, heaven, angels,
reincarnation, ghosts, magic, vampires, or any other supernatural event. I
don’t believe that there is a single, supernatural, magical event possible in
the entire universe. I believe the universe is natural, follows laws of
physics, and that no being or outside force created the universe.
How could I
believe such dangerous, blatantly heretical ideology after my 15 childhood
years as a devout, struggling Christian, raised in the church by devout
believers, in a family that ridicules me for such beliefs? I can easily tell
you what I believe, and why, because divorcing your mind from the belief system
hammered into you since birth is a difficult process, and requires great
deliberation and rationalization in order to become a whole and mentally
healthy individual. But part of my individual story is what led me to first
turn my back on my Christian upbringing and question ideas my parents and
myself held most dear. Therefore, I will share part of my history.
As a child,
my parents instilled in me a love of reading, science, and in general I
developed a curious and exploratory nature. Instead of little league and swim
teams, as a child I played with multiplication tables and math flash cards, the
game “memory”, and engaged in a delightful fantasy life with he-man, G.I. Joe,
army men, teenage mutant ninja turtles, and other 80s and 90s marketing
schemes. Good times, but perhaps a little low on the social interaction side of
things. In addition, a great portion of my time was dedicated to church and
religion. I was not one of those people who took religion lightly. Although my
dedication waxed and waned over the years, I read and studied my bible in great
detail, prayed to the lord to take away my earthly desires and forgive my sins,
and spent summers at church camp singing praise and worship songs, memorizing
bible verses, and re-enacting the story of the crucifixion. In high school,
just before I began to question my belief system, I was happy as a clam, went
back to church camp as a counselor, tried to lead children to the lord, and
even baptized a couple of kids and then later baptized one of my high school
classmates. (I have since apologized
profusely to the classmate)
In high
school, I really began to see that I was different than others, that I was a
social outcast, and realized that I was hated just as much for my intelligence
as for my lack of conformity to popular music and fashion trends, lack of
interest in organized sports, and even for my strong Christian beliefs. I brought my bible to school at times, sat it
on my desk, and instead of the intelligent debate or outrage I thought it would
cause, instead it just made me look like an extreme weirdo with no friends,
which is what I was. It isn’t easy being Christian amongst your high school
peers, I will grant you that. But then I graduated high school, and was thrust
into the world of college, for which I was ill prepared. As a Christian (and as a social outcast), I
had never been to any party, never tasted alcohol, never smoked cigarettes or
tried drugs in my life prior to college. I was never once invited to a single
party or tailgate drinking fest out at the lake during my entire high school
career. College was a chance to reinvent myself from scratch. As soon as I
recognized that fact, I was on a roll. I
got into some honors classes, and met people who changed my life forever,
although they might not have realized it at the time. Intelligent people who did
weird things like go to protests against native American sports mascots, go to
gay rights rallies, and were generally interesting people and more like myself
than anyone I had ever met before in my entire life. It was an easy and natural thing to become
swept up in the spirit of rebellion. I rebelled against my childhood belief
system, learned about other religions and belief systems, and gave just about
every religion a fair go. I very sincerely conducted various magical ceremonies
with silver pentagrams and colored candles, went to Wiccan holiday parties, and
made friends with fat ugly white people who claimed to practice polyamorism in
addition to having generally low personal hygiene. While I learned a lot about other cultures
and interacted with a lot of people, in general what I learned from all of this
is that nothing I have ever tried ever produced one visible shred of proof or
one single positive outcome that made me a true believer. Additionally, as far as I could see, after
reading a great deal about ancient Egyptian religion and other old stuff, most modern
religions are fairly similar in structure, and clearly ripped each other off as
new religions borrowed from the old and were absorbed into large cultures over
time. Therefore, I became bored with
organized religion in general, chalked it all up as hogwash, and decided it was
time to answer some serious questions for myself. What is truth? What do I believe in? What is the basis for right and wrong, and
how can I decide for myself?
At that
point I began to realize that I didn’t currently care whether or not I believed
in god, or in any particular religion. They were all the same. They could all
be a decent basis for moral instruction, and they could all be used as an
excuse for slaughtering millions of innocent people. Any religion could be used
by evil or good people. I wondered whether an atheist could possibly be a good
person. Why not just go around stealing and murdering. I started reading up on
the subject, and it turned out these were the most common, basic questions
asked about atheism. Since these are common questions, there are loads of good
answers to these questions. For example, most legal and moral classes do not
even include religion. For example, the famous class at Harvard, titled,
“What’s the right thing to do?” is available on you tube, and discusses morals
without even bringing up religion.
For me,
there are now more important arguments for atheism than the basis for a moral
system outside of religious dogma. The real question is, Why do you believe in
God? What is the point? Is it just because your parents told you it was true,
so therefore it must be true? In my
life, I have tried to reject every single idea and concept making up my
personality, and then I rebuilt myself from scratch. Several times. In fact, for many years, it was
a personal goal of mine, to take one belief or habit per month and totally
erase it from my personality, and replace it with another belief or habit. This
method of personality rebuilding was actually devised by a famous witch,
Aleister Crowley. (Yes, that is who Ozzy
Ozbourne was singing about.) This is not so crazy, and I came across a similar
idea when practicing yoga meditation. In meditation, you have to sit in a
semi-uncomfortable position for a long time, while not distracting your mind
with all the regular stuff: TV, music, daily worries and plans, etc. In
meditation, the idea is to focus with a clear and blank mind. The problem is,
most of us are barely sane, and have loads of hang-ups and personal failures
and regrets stacked up in heaps inside the back corners of our minds. So, when
you try to sit peacefully and focus, first you are distracted by all the crap
floating around inside your head. The day-to-day stuff. However, once you meditate enough, and you
learn how to quiet your mind and are able to sit comfortably, then you come
across an even bigger problem. All your regrets, past mistakes, failures, and
other negative emotions come rushing to the surface whenever you remove all the
barriers you have built over the years to keep such issues behind locked doors.
Now when you try to meditate, you are thrown upon a stormy sea of your past and
this again prevents you from properly meditating in order to find peace. So,
you have to deal with all of your issues. For me, while struggling with all the
weight of past while trying to meditate, I eventually came to a revelation that
changed my life forever. All that stuff I regretted, all the sadness and pain I
felt, or had caused other people, it wasn’t me. As I slowly was able to let go of each heavy
sadness, I learned that I am not the sum of my actions. No matter what I had
done or how many mistakes I regretted, those things were not actually “me” at
the very core of my being. No, there was
something more: there was the possibility for future change, there was the very
fact that I was alone in the universe, and that I was able to at least able to
say that I was alive. To me, mediation is the process of being able to let
everything go, to fully accept yourself, and to become at peace with the
concept that you, by nature, are actually alone in the universe. And I learned
that there is something, some force, at the heart of each human being that is
more than what you have done. This is not surprising, for without the element
of hope there would be no stories of heroes, no unlikely martyrs dying for a
good cause. I call it hope; others who
have come to the same conclusion as me may have called it “the soul.” I don’t
know. All I know is that throughout the decade-long process of destroying and
reinventing myself, I did a lot of stupid stuff, tried out a lot of various
lifestyles, and in the end decided that nearly all of it was unnecessary.
So, now the
reasons why I am atheist:
1.
Most important reason: I don’t believe in magic.
I don’t believe that any magical/supernatural claim can hold up to the most
basic scientific and logical scrutiny. For example: Vampires? Could they exist?
No. How could something that is dead,
without a heartbeat, not decay and rot?
How could muscles work without fuel? Why wouldn’t the blood just turn
into a gross rotten mess? What biological mechanism could possible make
sunlight fatal? For example: Can there
be a wizard who shoots fire out of his hands? No. that is stupid. How could
heat be generated from nowhere? Why wouldn’t he burn himself? Where did the
energy come from to start a combustion reaction? What exactly is combusting? Are there some particles in the air on fire,
or what? For example, can there be a god?
Answer no. why not? Because the
belief in god IMPLIES a belief in magic. That something can be created from
nothing, without any regard to the laws of physics and laws of every other
science. That god can cause things to happen “miraculously” and instantly
means, by definition, that all other magical beliefs such as vampires, werewolves,
and wizards are in fact possible and real. Similarly, since such magical
creatures do not exist, and in fact no single supernatural event has ever been
demonstrated to me, I induce that since god is a supernatural entity, he also
does not exist. Although that is not direct logic, it is, in the face of all
evidence, the most likely conclusion. If you accept the possibility of god, you
must also accept vampires. I cannot accept that. Therefore there is no Santa,
there is no god, and to me they are exactly equal. Equally silly, equally
impossible, and both having exactly no place in the mind of a rational,
thinking creature except as a nice fairy tale. One thing that really annoys me
is when religious people tell me, “when you are having problems, you will turn
back to god then” or, “as soon as things go wrong, I’ll see you praying then.”
This implies that my atheism is a vanity and an act of childish rebellion, and
that in the face of adversity I will turn back to the “truth.” In my darkest
hour, when I have nothing left to rely on, I will never once utter one prayer,
never ask god for one ounce of forgiveness or mercy, and never once ask any
supernatural power to save me from the natural course of events. That is
profoundly against the core of my being, and my beliefs, rather than just being
spoon fed to me as a child, were formed by difficult deliberation when I was an
adult. To me, it would make just as much sense to turn to Santa Claus for help
as it makes to turn to god or Jesus, because they are all exactly equal in
value to me. Going along with no
supernatural explanations, where is god? Does he have mass? Is he in a place,
or is he in a non-place outside of human existence? If god is in a non-place (no mass, no
physical dimensions, not in the actual universe), then that implies that there
could be other non-places. With other gods or whatever living in them. Also,
where is my soul? In my body? In a different non-place? Why would my soul need to be physically
inside of my body? Is it somehow
connected to me, like an umbilical cord? I don’t get it. To believe in souls or
god, you simply have to believe in magic.
2.
I don’t believe in life after death. Or, rather, I see no need to complicate
things by introducing an idea for which there is no evidence whatsoever. Some
people bring up the idea of ghosts of their beloved family members. See
argument #1. If there are ghosts, then there
are certainly werewolves. No supernatural creatures exist in my world. I personally feel that no advantage is gained
from the concept of a soul, eternal life, or any life-after-death whatsoever.
This is a human idea, created by humans in order to deal with the loss of loved
ones and the fear of death and the loneliness of old age. Since I have already
gained the proper perspective from my own experiences, I no longer need the
silly vanity that one day I will be reunited with my loved ones, that one day
everything will be made right, and that one day there will be no pain. No. I am
against that idea. I will try to right all my wrongs now, in this life, and
live up to my responsibilities, and will mourn the passing of my friends and
family with sadness that they are gone forever, and will honor them in word and
deed. I accept that pain. I think we only get one go-round and then that’s it.
3.
I don’t believe in hell. I don’t need the fear
of hell. Despite what preachers and
Sunday school teachers burdened my young mind with, the idea that if I did bad
things I would go to hell, I don’t believe in punishment after death. I don’t feel that fear is the best motivator
for good social behavior. To me, the
creation of hell in religious ideology is too similar to the philosophical
perfect prison, the Panopticon. The most evil men in the world (Hitler, Stalin,
etc.) have tried to employ the concept of the Panopticon. In this perfect
prison, every prisoner is separate and cannot see or communicate with any other
prisoner. Also, the prisoner cannot see the guard or know when he/she is being
observed. The fear of punishment is real, and examples are regularly made of
bad behavior. In this perfect controlled system, a single guard can control an
unlimited number of prisoners, because they learn to behave through fear. There
is no escape. They never know when they are being watched. Hell is a little too
much like the Panopticon for my liking.
4.
I don’t fully understand the Christian
conception of “god.” Logically, the idea
of god makes no sense to my mind. There are too many logical contradictions. However,
I don’t accept the argument that understanding of god is impossible, and that
humans are too small and insignificant to possibly grasp the concept of god. I will not blindly follow someone who seems to
be a contradiction to me. Reasons why
god makes no sense: If god is “supreme
being” of everything, and created everything, then why did he do it?
Loneliness? Boredom? Scientific Experiment?
Wasn’t he already complete, since he is “everything?” If he felt the
universe needed to exist because he felt incomplete, doesn’t that, by
definition, make him NOT the Supreme Being? Which reason terrifies you the
most? If God created everything, why did he stop? Is this it? Is the universe
“done?” It doesn’t really feel done to
me. Maybe god ran out of creative power, and now he just sits back, wondering
if he should have created more types of zebras instead of goddamn
mosquitos. I just don’t get it. Are we
his first crack at creating life, or were there 1600 failed experiments
first? Why even create a Garden of
Eden? Seems like that idea didn’t work
out too well. Isn’t the failure of the Garden of Eden a failure on god’s
part? I thought he couldn’t fail. The
whole creation story just seems silly to me, full of pointless contradictions,
and obviously has been twisted throughout history. Why put the two no-no trees
in the garden, treat your newly created humans like retarded children, and put
them in an obvious situation where any child would disobey? Man, god is kind of an jerk! Couldn’t he have
put the trees ANYWHERE else, for example, on the moon? What is the Garden of Eden
story even trying to convey? If god is
the creator, why does he need these magic trees of good and evil and knowledge at
all? What is the point of them? And why
such harsh punishment for such a silly, childish normal behavior. Try this
punishment on your own kids? “Oh, hey
kids, sorry I left that tray of brownies on your bed. Since you ate one, you
are now no longer happy and immortal, but instead you will die after a difficult
life, p.s. I’ve cursed the whole earth
so that all creatures will get old and die, it will be really hard to survive,
hard to grow crops, and generally very depressing. And women, oh damn, you are really screwed.
You have to have babies. No more rib-clones for you. There is now a 10% chance
of death for the next several thousand years before modern medicine is invented
anytime you want to have a new human.
Oh, also, menstruation. You are welcome.” Wow, god, you are mean. That
punishment seems a bit severe, don’t you think? For an apple? However, in the
Garden of Eden story, at least god acts like a nerdy, spoiled scientist
conducting a weird creepy experiment. This is how I would expect god to act,
like a creator. Playing with his
experiment. Making up stupid arbitrary
rules. Later in the bible, he is portrayed quite differently (different
personality), which also bothers me. But the main point is that I don’t see the
need for god in my explanation of the known universe. I don’t need to have all
the answers or know where everything came from. I’m fine not knowing.
5.
There is no real difference between the
Christian god and any other “pagan” gods/goddesses. Also, throughout the old
testament, god is portrayed as no different from any other ancient god,
jealous, vengeful, demanding sacrifices, murdering whole cities, taking slaves,
and generally I can see no real distinction between the Judeo-Christian god and
any random Egyptian god like Amen-Ra. In fact, if you read up on Amen-Ra, you
can see that the New Testament Jesus is practically an exact rip-off. The only
difference was that ancient Hebrews must have been particularly good warriors,
with advanced weaponry, and therefore their god got a good reputation for
winning battles. Therefore, other gods became unpopular. However, thanks to
modern archeology and the fact that so many religions wrote stuff down, we can
see that religions have included a “Jesus” resurrection god as far back as
recorded history goes. Pan, Amen-Ra, and
dozens of other, older examples of resurrection gods exist, who all die and
come back to life (sometimes even after 3 days!), originally signifying the
changing of the seasons. To me this means that the concept of Jesus is not new,
not unique, and has very little to do with Christianity. The writers of Christianity simply twisted an
old idea of spring rebirth into “erasing all the debt of evil in world.” Quite
a crafty move. My point is that if you read up on enough older religions, you
will see that Christianity is nothing new, and is simply a mishmash of previous
religions, taking all the components that are most useful in controlling a
large group of people through fear and blind devotion. This is a commonality in religions. It is not
my main point that I think religion has often been used to control people and
do horrible deeds. IT has, but my main point is that I can’t tell the
difference between different religions. For example, if I came here from
another planet, and gave all 10 major religions a fair chance to explain their
case to me and why I should join up, I probably would not pick Christianity or
any of the others. Despite most
religions claiming that they have the one true god, and that all 5000 gods of
the last few thousand years were the idols of primitive pagans, in reality any
of the 5 or 10 thousand choices of gods from human history have equal
likelihood of being chosen by an alien visitor. To me, it seems safer and easier
to assume that there is no god, rather than to pick one from all the mess.
6.
I don’t believe in divine forgiveness. I don’t
need anyone to pay for my crimes. The
idea of Jesus doesn’t sit right with me at all. If god is the Supreme Being,
what exactly is Jesus? The less Supreme Being? Why is Jesus god’s only
son? Does he have a supreme mother?
Supreme sister? Why do they use a human
relationship (father-son) to describe a non-human entity? What was Jesus doing before the New Testament,
just watching people murder each other down on earth? Why does Jesus not act like he knows
everything in the bible, but instead acts like a normal dude in the New
Testament? Did he temporarily lose his memory when he was magically implanted
into a teenager’s uterus? So many
questions. Anyways, I feel that I have to own up to my own mistakes. I believe
in personal responsibility. I don’t want to be saved. I don’t want someone to
make up for all my sins. I want to make things right with whoever I have
wronged. I don’t agree that Jesus even makes sense. What is so special about Jesus?
Why is his sacrifice greater than any human’s? For example, why couldn’t a
really nice guy have dies for the sins of the world? Why did it have to be this
Jesus character? Seems pretty ridiculous when I think about it. So, one guy,
apparently a god, or god’s son, or son-god, or sun-god as he was originally
called when his name was Amen-Ra, came to erase all the sin of the world
forever and ever? And all he had to do was be killed, be dead like 3 days, and
then that’s it? How does that make any
sense? The story makes such a big deal
about the fact that Jesus was separated for the first time from the power of
god, and therefore he made a really big sacrifice for me. Whoop-DE-do.
Sometimes I lose my phone and I’m cut off from my wife for up to 3 days, which
I feel is a much bigger sacrifice. And why is that good enough to erase all the
debt of the evil in world? It seems
like Jesus got off kind of easy on this one. He didn’t have to get killed 10000
times, each in a different way, until the end of 1000 years in the bottom of a
lake of acid or anything like that. No, they just killed his once, and then
he’s only out of action for like 3 days and then he gets to go back to being
super powerful and famous again. That’s like me agreeing to get kicked in the
balls once in exchange for getting all of Oprah’s money and houses. Seems like a pretty one-sided deal.
7.
I don’t believe that humans need the concepts of
heaven and hell (reward and punishment) in order to have a moral / ethical
system in place that acts as the backbone of civilization. The bible acts like
it had to tell us exactly what is wrong and what is right, and that we
shouldn’t question what is wrong and right, we should just do as we are told.
Again, I feel that this is a whitewashed, false view of the world. Even though
the Old Testament paints a pretty depressing picture of humans as sodomizing,
teen rapists who would murder their own family members in order to commit
incest, I’m not buying that. I think that most humans are not evil, and that this
human depravity is a myth cooked up in order to convince people that they can’t
possibly exist without the carefully controlled rules of organized religion. Again,
please watch the freely available series “what’s the right thing to do” in
order to at least get the idea that people have been making up civilized rules
of behavior without any religion involved for thousands of years, and actually
didn’t go around raping and killing 24-7, despite what the old testament
claims.
8.
I don’t believe that there is one set of rules
that is right for everyone to follow. The bible clearly states many rules
throughout, and I disagree with several of them. I also agree with several of
them. But mainly, I want the option to evaluate and reject rules that I find
objectionable. That is the basis of a democratic legal system. However, I take
it one step further, to say that perhaps it is okay for some individuals to
break rules that the majority of society follows in order to ensure that a
certain element of chaos and randomness exists in the world. Fringe behavior
may be helpful in the long run to ensure a society’s health and survival. And society generally tolerates small amounts
of fringe behavior. However, this is not really what the majority of Christians
believe, and most religions regulate behavior. One of the functions of many
gods is way of giving rules to society, and this is one reason I disagree with
the concept of any god-entity. Or any ruler that claims deity, or any dictator.
Same idea. Let me think for myself.
9.
I disagree strongly with the concept of divine
intervention. I’m not even exactly sure where modern Christianity stands on
this issue. Is god interacting with the world or not? Does he have personal relationships with his
slaves (followers) or not? Does prayer heal, or not? But I have great concern
for people who turn their troubles over to an invisible God in the hope that he
will help them, save them, or generally grant them good favor / not death. I
see no difference between Native Americans doing a rain dance, or a Methodist
asking her congregation to pray for her sick mother. The very concept of trying to have your
problems magically solved is abhorrent to me. Lazy, foolish, and cruel to even
encourage people to engage in such behavior. The day when you show me a
scientific experiment in which god specifically and 100% of the time answers
the prayers of a single church for 50 years, is the day when I will start
believing in god. This to me is not only one of the biggest examples of the
non-existence of god, but is one of the cruelest hoaxes ever played on the
dim-witted in history. Prayer? Are you serious?
So, if prayer works so well, then why would you ask other people to pray
for you? What is the point? Is god hard of hearing? Does he only answer petitions that have been
signed by at least 10000 voters? Either prayer works and god is real; or prayer
doesn’t work, and stop subjecting millions of people to a false hope, then
convincing them that everything that happens is the will of god. If everything that happens is the will of
god, then why pray? Why do anything? Why not sit down in a small town and just
watch TV every night, and never learn a single thing about the rest of the
world? Oh, wait, that is what actually
happens with most small town Christians. I forgot.
10.
I disagree with divine judgment. In most theologies, god judges human souls
after their death, in order to determine what sort of an afterlife they will
have. Most super heroes and comic books are to some extent a criticism or
exploration of the idea of divine judgment, and its pros and cons. For example,
superman, Spider-man, and batman do not kill, but simply hand over bad guys to
the legal system, in effect handing over judgment to god. However some
superheroes, notably wolverine, have no problem offing the bad guy. Another obvious example is the Punisher.
Although on the surface, it seems as though these characters are critiquing the
punishment of evil in the short term by the legal system vs. taking the law
into your own hands, many stories are more about the punishment of evil in the
long run. For example, the character ghost rider is the right hand man of Satan
and has the power to punish people’s souls. At any rate, I don’t feel that a
god I don’t agree with or believe in should have the power of divine judgment.
It just seems so stupid when you consider all the different religions and all
the different ideas about god. Do Muslims get judged by the same god as
Christians? I don’t see how this makes sense.
But, again, I feel that you are only alive for a short while on earth
and then you die. I don’t like the idea of divine judgment and feel it makes
god out to be some sort of Egyptian or Greek ancient god. It’s just a stupid and
unfair concept.
11.
I don’t believe in the end of the world. I
believe that humans are just are part of the life on earth, and that even if
humans were completely wiped out, life on earth would continue on unabated,
perfectly happy without us. Thus, I don’t think humans are the end of the line.
God in most religions is a human-centric persona, with life on earth being all
about the existence of humans. That is silly. We aren’t all that important. Humans
are not required on earth. On the other hand, certain categories of animals are
important to the cycles of the planet. Tree-movers. Damn builders. Corpse
eaters. Swamp plants. Etc.
12.
Any other explanation is as equally likely as
god is. What is the difference between “God” being the supreme creator, or on
the other hand, a super advanced race of aliens pretending to be god,
and simply causing “miracles” and “Jesus” and other religious things throughout
history by using super advanced technology? Maybe they are using cloaking
technology? Maybe they exist in subspace, another dimension, and they can see
us and affect us but we can’t see them? What would be the difference? How would
you know?
13.
I don’t believe in the weight of history. I
prefer to make up my own mind. For example, in philosophical arguments, people
ask how they can prove that they exist, that the world exists, and that time
exist. Answer: you can’t. We just
believe it to be true. There is, of course, no evidence against us existing,
that all this reality is real and not some holographic illusion like in the
Matrix, and that we weren’t born yesterday with fake memories implanted. But to
me, this idea raises an interesting question about god and religion. If you
found out tomorrow that everything you know is a fake memory, and that all of
human history, everything that you have ever heard about or read or were taught
in school, that was actually just fake memories implanted in your head yesterday. Everything you know about
god, they made it all up. Would you still believe in god? If you found out that
this was true, would you go on believing, or would you start a new life? To me,
this is similar to what every atheist goes through at some point. To reject the
weight of history, their childhood, their upbringing, in order to gain the
freedom to make up his or her own mind about things. And
it feels a lot like being told that everything was implanted in your head by
aliens.
These are
just a few reasons off the top of my head that I don’t believe in god.