To the Greeks, an atheist didn’t necessarily reject the existence of the gods. He merely acted as though the gods did not exist or were unaware of his actions. Unfortunately, this historical connection between lack of belief and lack of morals is one that still plagues atheism today, despite studies showing atheists to be, as a whole,
less prejudiced, less willing to
condone violence, and
more tolerant of sexual, ethnic and cultural differences than many faith communities."
I found that to be quite enlightening. While it's easy to target the Christian church, the use of atheism to denote those who "live as if there were no gods", seems a cultural thing handed down throughout the ages.
When I target the Christian church, it is not for being the originator of the idea that atheists are immoral. It's for being the principle vector for spreading that slander in the West for millennia now. If the modern secular humanist would like to push back against that, it won't be by turning his attention to Greece.
Also, notice that atheists define themselves as people with no god belief, who, naturally, live as if there are no gods. The meaning is completely different from that ancient concept that the atheist is defined not by unbelief, but by being outside the boundary of the morally acceptable.
Have you seen the scriptures from the Christian Bible that define unbelievers listed together? I've collected several
[1] "The fool says in his heart,'There is no God.' They are corrupt, their deeds are vile; there is no one who does good" - Psalm 14:1
[2] "But the fearful, and unbelieving, and the abominable, and murderers, and whoremongers, and sorcerers, and idolaters, all liars, shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone, and all and the enemy of a good god." - Revelation 21:8
[3]"Do not be yoked together with unbelievers. For what do righteousness and wickedness have in common? Or what fellowship can light have with darkness?"- 2 Corinthians 6:14
[4] Who is the liar? It is the man who denies that Jesus is the Christ." - 1 John 2:22
[5] "Whoever is not with me is against me" - Luke 11:23
What does that teach? The Bible calls unbelievers corrupt, vile, wicked, abominable, liars, godless vessels of darkness in the service of evil, the embodiment of darkness, not one of whom does any good, to be shunned, and all of whom are fit to be burned alive forever as enemies of a good god and the moral equivalent of murderers and whoremongers.
Atheism is a step forward morally, from the god of fundamentalism, that god of fear.
Agree, but that is just the beginning. Replacing such ideologies with secular humanism was a giant step forward. Christianity updated the angry, jealous deity of the Old Testament with a kinder deity or demigod (the theology is quite varied there as to just what Jesus was), but as you can see from what followed, it didn't produce an ideology that generates better people or promotes unity. It gives lip service to those, but telling people to love one another and claiming to be the religion of love just isn't enough, especially when one considers many of the acts called love in the scriptures.
God so loved us that he built a torture pit for those who don't love Him back, by which is meant to submit to biblical commandments and to praise God. As a further act of love, there was a extremely painful and protracted blood sacrifice. Apparently that was part of the love - making death worse for no apparent reason (I don't believe that animal sacrifices were tortured to death, but they were still acceptable to the Lord).
It kind of reminds one of the love that led to most of terrestrial life drowning, which also seems gratuitously cruel, especially since humanity was the intended target. This God of love is a god of intolerance, of what is not acceptable to it, what it cannot abide and will not tolerate.
And this is the way this love is expressed from many Christians. It's how they love the atheists and gays (but hate the sin). There is no love there and no Golden Rule.
Yet those are actual values of secular humanism embodied in the thoughts and deeds of secular humanists daily. You see them on these threads, and if one can get past the faith-based confirmation bias that these are the horrible people their Bibles and clergy tell them they are, you can see that they actually do promote love and tolerance. Understand that the tolerance of secular humanism is for the tolerant only, not the intolerant. The church is intolerant of multiple classes of law-abiding people for being out of step with its values. Secular humanists oppose that, not embrace its source.
You've seen all the memes about Biblical Jesus vs. Republican Jesus? Considering the rank hypocrisies, gay hating, immigrant hating, poor hating, otherism permating their leadership and ranks, I call them Jesucans, Right Wing Republicans with Jesus flags. That's not the Jesus of the Beatitudes, and certainly not the Jesus of the Golden Rule.
Yes, and that's a nice illustration of the differences between Christianity and secular humanism. It's not what's on paper or what an ism claims for itself. It's value (or lack thereof) is in its output. Ask yourself who it is in America that is the champion of the atheist, the LGBTQ, women, immigrants, and people of color? Yes, some Christians join the humanists there and champion the same values, but it seems most don't.
Modern humanism is really just an attempt to get back to these core spiritual principles of "Love your neighbor as yourself"
That and more. Humanism is also an attempt to replace faith-based thought with reason. Faith-based thought is doing a lot of damage in the States now. It's why people choose to go unvaccinated, believing by faith that the virus is more dangerous than the vaccine. It's why people poo-pooed climate change for so long, some still doing so. It's why people stormed the Capitol holding the by faith the false belief that an election had been stolen. It's why people want to take abortion rights away from women. It's why a former president said that he doesn't consider atheists patriots. Faith, faith, faith, faith - that error of thought that causes people to forsake reason when we need them to be reasonable more than ever.
The sooner the religions that teach people that faith is a virtue and who its god considers abominable, the better the world will be.
But if God as a symbol has a lot of baggage, then whatever that 'higher power' beyond the ego is for you that enacts that within us, is all that really matters. Anything that shrinks the ego and gets it out of the way is accomplishing 'the will of God' so to speak.
Actually, I have never known what is meant by shrink the ego. Exactly what kind of thinking is being discouraged, and how is it harmful? I never think in such terms. There's nothing that I want that I don't have. I couldn't use any more power, so I have no will to control anything but my life and immediate environment - not even my wife. I am not in conflict with anybody. Is this what others mean when they say to suppress the defeat the ego? If so, I never suppressed anything except behaviors that I saw weren't facilitating my goal for myself, which was to create a satisfying life. That includes being at peace with my conscience and my environment.
This is the power of rational ethics. One applies reason to moral intuitions to facilitate their intended purpose. Thus, secular humanism doesn't merely say love one another. It considers rationally just what that means or ought t mean, and how to effect that purpose. Where the Baha'i on RF are frequently talking about world unity, I don't see them tackling any of the issues that underlie that division with more than platitudes.
Back to ego: I have a strong sense of self. I could not be more confident. Perhaps that is what some object to. I am also not meek. I assert myself often. Is that what others mean by ego? If so, why should I want to change that? The Sermon on the Mount calls meekness a blessing, but I call it the unwillingness to assert oneself when one should. It is not humility or politeness or cooperation. Those are distinct concepts with their own words. Meekness is the opposite of confidence.
I also don't think in terms of higher powers. Gravity is a pretty high power, but I don't think of it that way. That language is problematic, since it triggers a god concept in too many people when they hear it, and yes, that is undesirable baggage.
Isn't humanism the jettisoning of all of that baggage? What remains is pretty powerful once the baggage is stripped off. The baggage of phrases like higher power and God keeps bringing people back to faith and worship, which just isn't working as a way to enculturate people if one wants to generate smart, kind, and wise people in larger amounts. Faith keeps anchored to ancient moral systems that are terribly flawed by todays standards.
And where did those standards come from, such as the rejection of the divine right of kings and the rejection of slavery (why is that never called an abomination in scripture)? Not scripture. It came from the application of reason to the Golden Rule.