Shad
Veteran Member
Why should atheists be receptive to the possibility of gods?
Define gods
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Why should atheists be receptive to the possibility of gods?
I like chip sticks and there is merit to there use.I do not know why you should except for personal reasons and to understand other people. It is a bit like understanding why Chinese people use chopsticks.
Because many atheists became Christians or theists
Why should atheists be receptive to the possibility of gods?
Why should atheists be receptive to the possibility of gods?
You are supposed to practice certain virtues when you use them, such as eating rice really fast.I like chip sticks and there is merit to there use.
And many more Christians or theists became atheists. Look at the complete disaster of religion in the west. It's dying a well-deserved death.
This is true. There is conversion both directions, and cultures adapt. They adapt or they fail, so they adapt.And many more Christians or theists became atheists.
It depends upon age group, life stage etc. What happens very often is that unless you have a stable secular culture you wind up chasing people back into church, and churches provide things that can be hard to find. Churches are family environments and community centers. People smile and believe in each other there. Where in population centers can you find a relaxed country atmosphere, where people trust each other and freely greet strangers? The answer is "In a church." Secular culture seems relatively cold sometimes, and I do not see religion coming to an end. I see it transforming and constantly updating.Look at the complete disaster of religion in the west. It's dying a well-deserved death.
Because so many folks claim to have connected with them in some fashion. To assess such claims fairly, one should be open to the possibility of them being true.Why should atheists be receptive to the possibility of gods?
Why should atheists be receptive to the possibility of gods?
Well I'm really sorry for you, I really am ;Oh for heaven's sake.
I'm a Christian but still open that there are no God(s).
It's been a long time since the Jesus saga and still no "end of this
system of things".
We're still merrily moping along mucking things up quite nicely
I was raised by a rather ignorant and not too bright mother who
became a J.W. and always scared the &hit out of sis and I with
"Jehovah's Revenge" for anything from getting bad grades to not
eating ANYTHING she cooked.
Not only could she NOT cook she left partially cooked food on the cold
stove for days then tried to get us to eat it.
We did eat it 'till we learned it was a really, really, bad idea.
Got sick don'cha'know.
Good thing dad could cook or we'd have surely died.
When I got older, about 12, I began to realize she was about five
fries shy of a Happy Meal.
Her brothers were also J.W.'s and really nice people 'cept they put
mother up to stealing things for them.
WHAT?
Yeah.
She worked where garage door openers were made. The tracks,
motors, gears, what not.
Her brothers put her up to STEALING the things for them.
Not something one could sneak out in a lunch box either.
Soooooooooooooooo, the employees had a theft network where
the units could be tossed over the fence into the weeds at night and
recovered under darkness.
In that way her J.W. brothers got FREE garage door openers.
Neat what?
Confusing as hell to a 12 year old boy scared to death to say a cuss
word for fear Jehovah would surely get me.
Ah, well, even J.W.'s are merely human what?
I have no resentments against 'em.
YES I DO!
They gave me such a ration of excrement over becoming a police
officer that it took years to get past GUILT feelings.
Now I had I been a drunken thief it would have been just fine?????
If you're interested in truth then you must always be open to such changes. Just like as a theist I not only have been an atheist before, but I'm certainly open to being shown that my reasons for believing our incorrect.
I'm open to the possibility that a deity or deities exist. I just don't see any evidence and due to that, find it unlikely. But I'm leaving the door open just a crack in case I'm wrong. I actually read apologetics and read about religion just to see if I can prove myself wrong.
ummm..Why should atheists be receptive to the possibility of gods?
But isn't your belief only faith based, like where is the proof, and not counting the scriptures which cannot be trusted, I would really like to know ?.Pretty wise for such a young person.
I mean that.
Let me say that IF we had evidence we'd probably ALL believe.
Faith requires no evidence.
Blind faith is another matter and to me kinda dumb.
But isn't your belief only faith based, like where is the proof, and not counting the scriptures which cannot be trusted, I would really like to know ?.
Thank you for sharing that, I hope all works out for you no matter what you want to believe, if it helps then that's great. I myself don't blame the alcohol, or anything that one becomes addicted to, you need an additive nature in the first place. This could be anything, it could be a period in our life when we were subjected to whatever, a bad parent, sexual abuse, raped, post traumatic stress, whatever, some of us are very fragile and therefore are effected much worse than the average person. We then self medicate our selves with whatever, as long as it pushed our pain away, and of course it doesn't, the only way I believe is to deal with it, to realize the past is no longer there, its all in our head. Because its in our heads or should I say the brain, the brain then need its fix, the receptors are continually wanting to be feed, so we become slave to our brain more or less.Good points!
I trust the Scriptures in our Christian Bible.
I've never really studied other Bibles. I only have a general knowledge about
other religions like Islam for instance.
Is some of that trust based on fear and superstition?
Yeah, I believe so.
I was raised by a J.W. mother and early in my life I recall being scared
to death of that god.
Much later in my life I began exploring, reading, opening my mind a bit,
and trying to displace that fear with curiosity.
I think I still believe in a Power greater than me out of fear and a bit
of superstition.
Understand I'm in what is called "recovery" from addiction.
Alcohol.
A family curse that claimed both parents and a number of relatives.
Nearly killed me more than once.
I fight addiction every stinking day!
God, or a Power greater than man, is essential for me to recover from
a seemingly hopeless state of body and mind. One day at a time.
I don't even dare think about more than today without my fix.
Addiction is flat out horrible.
Imagine this: Consciously or otherwise planning EVERYTHING around
the availability of a mind, mood, altering substance!
Everything, all the time.
Alcohol is legal. It's socially acceptable to drink the stuff so no one
much cares if a person drinks unless they see negative unacceptable
behavior.
Now if one wrecks cars, hurts others, or commits some offense because
of drinking then people begin to think that something isn't quite right.
FAITH that a Power greater than man is essential to recover from that
hopeless state of body and mind ONE DAY AT A TIME.
So some may say that FEAR is the driving motivating factor.
Well perhaps so. I don't know.
I DO know that without that faith in a Power greater than man I WILL
die an ugly, alcoholic death that claimed my parents and most of my
relatives.
Fear and pain are powerful motivators in the beginning.
Now I love that Power I call God.
I love being sober and deeply fear relaps.
Addiction is awful and fear is a powerful motivator.
I've been in three rehab facilities. Once I was admitted to a hospital
24 hours AFTER my last drink and my blood alcohol level was
still a .40%. Really?
The doctors said there is no way I should not have been in an alcoholic
coma leading to certain brain damage and death.
I attend at least five A.A. meetings a week pray at least two times a day
often more, avoid "wet" places and any occasion where there is liquor.
THAT is how powerful the addiction is.
I had a friend who tried to get sober. He did a 28 day program and the
very day he was discharged he stopped by his favorite bar to buy
rounds for his buddies.
He soon was back in a hospital and I visited him.
His skin was yellow, he was barely alive, liver failing.
He got out, went right to the bar, got drunk, and died the next day.
He was a wealthy man dead at age 40.
Powerful stuff what?
My friend Bert was in one rehab with me.
He couldn't stay sober.
He drank all the booze he had, was too sick to get more so he drank
after shave and rubbing alcohol and it killed him.
I found him dead.
I stayed sober a number of years but eventually the power took over
and I drank again ending up in yet another rehab.
If I don't go to at least five A.A. meetings a week, pray, give thanks
for being sober today I'm WILL drink and I WILL die.
That's raw isn't it?
It's also real.
Alcoholism is an inherited disorder but it can afflict anyone that drinks
too much, too long, too often.