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Atheist experiences in church

Started by Permissionslips, November 28, 2010, 06:56:49 PM

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Permissionslips

How many of you have attended church, a youth group, etc. as an atheist? Did others know you were an atheist? What did you think of the experience?

I have attended a few youth groups with a Christian friend who is fully aware of my views. My last name is Church and when my friend introduced me to others, they said, "Church? Oh, good!". My friend told me this church was progressive and "a lesbian even goes there". However, most people there spoke German (I don't) so it was difficult to gauge their attitudes. Most didn't know I was an atheist; those that did seemed indifferent to me.

MariaEvri

I go to church veryy often for weddings, christenings and the occasional funeral. At least my dad and bro know that Im an atheist. The rest, I have no idea (and I dont care really)
nothing interesting happens, those are very "to the letter" ceremonies. I just sit and daydream until its all over
God made me an atheist, who are you to question his wisdom!
www.poseidonsimons.com

Will

I've been an atheist since 14, and I stopped going to church at 15, but I didn't know there were other atheists on the planet until college.

So yeah, it was awkward.  :secret:
I want bad people to look forward to and celebrate the day I die, because if they don't, I'm not living up to my potential.

Matt

I'm still a minor and live with fairly religious parents who I have not yet notified of my lack of belief, so I attend bucketloads of Christian activities and get-togethers.  I even go to a Christian school.  During services I just sit and think about whatever's on my mind.  Before and after them, most talk isn't about anything religious and is just your normal small talk, so I don't have much of a problem.  I usually enjoy chatting with other members of the congregation.  School's a little more difficult because I have to actually participate in conversation about it or listen to students being taught to do/think things that are, in my opinion, very wrong.  In a lot of the things I am involved in discussion about I am able to point out flaws in specific beliefs, though I'm not able to provide an alternative to whatever it is that I've disagreed with because it would require that I divulge my disbelief or that I endorse a view about which I have the similar qualms as the original.

Asmodean

I've made out with a guy in a church...  :hmm:
Quote from: Ecurb Noselrub on July 25, 2013, 08:18:52 PM
In Asmo's grey lump,
wrath and dark clouds gather force.
Luxembourg trembles.

Gawen

I politely refuse. Church just pisses me off.
The essence of the mind is not in what it thinks, but how it thinks. Faith is the surrender of our mind; of reason and our skepticism to put all our trust or faith in someone or something that has no good evidence of itself. That is a sinister thing to me. Of all the supposed virtues, faith is not.
"When you fall, I will be there" - Floor

Inevitable Droid

I enjoy singing in public so I can enjoy myself at a church ceremony.  I have the ability to learn a melody by the end of the first verse, by reading the notes and listening to the choir and just opening my mouth and doing my best.  My singing is good enough that it is very common for someone to invite me to join the choir.  If they only knew. :devil:
Oppose Abraham.

[Missing image]

In the face of mystery, do science, not theology.

The Magic Pudding

Quote from: "MariaEvri"I just sit and daydream until its all over

That would be easier if they didn't make you stand and sit, stand and sit...
I gotta go now, another hymn is starting.

QuoteOh Lord please don't burn us
don't kill or toast your flock
Don't put us on the barbecue
or simmer us in stock,
Don't bake or baste or boil us
or stir-fry us in a wok.

Oh, please don't lightly poach us
Or baste us with hot fat.
Don't fricassee or roast us
Or boil us in a vat,
And please don't stick thy servants, Lord,
In a Rotissomat"

Sophus

I have a couple of times to the same church, although I don't know how many were aware I was an atheist, but a few certainly were. Wasn't anything particularly exciting.
‎"Christian doesn't necessarily just mean good. It just means better." - John Oliver

fazFwQo83

About 5 years ago (during a period of my life when I wasn't too sure of my beliefs either way), I prayed to god to let me know he was there. Like a sign or something. Not long after, an old family friend showed up on our doorstep for a visit. We hadn't seen him in years and he had completely changed his life. From a womanising alcoholic to a santa handing out presents to Aids orphans at chirstmas. He was a changed man and he was a catholic.

He told me they were running an Alpha Course (presented by Nicky Gumble) and I felt that, given the prayer, I should give it a chance. Things were fine and people were friendly until I was approached by a man who told me god speaks to him in his dreams. He told me that God was telling him that the church had become tainted by public opinion and had veered off course. He said god had charged him (amongst others) with the responsibility of setting the church right on a whole host of issues regarding women in the church, homosexuality, the way we celebrate christmas and easter, how worship is done, the misuse of praying in tongues and more. This guy had a problem with the way almost everything was being done in the church and tried to recruit me to his cause.

Not long after the attempted recruitment, a senior church member approached me with a warning. He had obviously seen this man and I talking and he said I should avoid contact with him at all costs. He believed this man was possessed by the devil and the other senior members had been trying to get rid of this guy for ages, but he just kept coming back (and "causing trouble" as they put it). Next he started quoting passages from the book of revelations about demonic possession and the end of days to try scare me into not talking to this guy.

Honestly, I've been avoiding contact with that church ever since. Now, I know this is not your run of the mill church story (or is it? maybe more common than I think?) but after this experience I put them all in the "loony" category and moved on with my life. Now, I'm just a happy atheist and glad to be free of religion.

Stevil

It's a strange experience for me going into a church activity. Internally I get annoyed at how they state things as if they are facts, I also get annoyed how much they talk about God and Jesus. If the activity is a wedding or a funeral then I feel it should be about the people getting married or remembering the person that has died. I want to hear more about them and less about the gods.
I went to an activity where they had international people putting on a performance, song and dance stuff. It was supposed to be non religious so it was good to see the ethnic performances but then between the performances, while the next group were getting ready,  the minister just couldn't help himself and got up on stage and started reciting religious stuff. I found it alienating and annoying.
One wedding I went to was very religious and I was extremely shocked with what the minister and people were saying. My feeling was that you had to be extremely immersed into religion to not be taken aback by this stuff. It seemed quite cult oriented and I was surprised that a couple of my well educated friends could be this much into it.

If it is a non Christian thing, e.g. Hindi or Bhudist then I am more interested because I don't understand the detail and find it a reasonably new experience. I was at an opening of a Bhudist temple once and one of the attendees asked me if I was into Bhudism and I said that I don't believe in Gods. They responded with "Oh, your are a Non Believer". It just felt strange at the time because all of a sudden someone was stamping a religious label on me. Up until that point I had never given myself a religious label. I just didn't believe in Gods. It is strange trying to write this down in this post as Non Believer and don't believe in Gods is the same thing. So it is hard for me to articulate my reaction to receiving a label. It felt odd at the time.

hismikeness

I get talked in to going to church with my folks from time to time. I make the "owp" eating noise that Homer Simpson makes when I recieve the Eucharist.
[youtube:16s8xlqf]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GDGp2nIf95k[/youtube:16s8xlqf]
No churches have free wifi because they don't want to compete with an invisible force that works.

When the alien invasion does indeed happen, if everyone would just go out into the streets & inexpertly play the flute, they'll just go. -@UncleDynamite

Thumpalumpacus

My most memorable church experience happened in Iran at age 9.  Because Southern Baptists are rare in that part of the world, Mom sent me off with my friend Kenny's family to Catholic services.  In the taxi on the way to church, Kenny kept on prodding me and teasing me and such, and driving me up the goddamned wall.  Then we get inside, and the priest starts delivering his homily.  Kenny is still teasing me under his breath and finally it gets to me, and I shout at the top of my lungs "SHUT UP!"

You could've heard the angels dancing on the head of a dropped pin.  

Then his mother Geri grabbed me by the ear, took me outside, and beat my ass something fierce.  Looking back, I'm surprised she didn't shave my skull looking for the Mark of the Beast.

It was only later that I realized she thought that I was shouting at the priest.
Illegitimi non carborundum.

Iydak

My experences at church were rather boring, I was only 9-10 the few times went to church, so to me it just seemed like another boring history class with the addition that took up some of my weekend time.


(Hi! I'm new!)

ElizabethPeart

I've been asked to attend church many a time since I became a freethinker, mostly for ceremonies such as a baptism or (in one case) a wedding, as well as Sunday service (after being asked by a friend to give it another go) and my opinion of the whole thing has really changed. I used to love attending church, and actively rushed to both the Sunday services each weekend. But the first time I attended church as a freethinker (in August), I was actively dreading and hating it.

 Now my old church was a Baptist church, and a fairly conservative one at that, and it saddened me when I visited it again to see many people, who have good education (including two professors) and an otherwise rational mind, believing this stuff as though it were fact. I also found it so frustrating to see the same apologetics answers and fudged facts offered as facts, and the Bible offered as solid history. I wanted to bring my Josephus texts, my Tacitus texts, Perseopolis texts and my Greek dictionary and prove them all wrong.

 I also found it frustrating that, when I DID get the opportunity to question some of the historical points using my extra-Biblical sources, the ministers and priests seemed actively unable to actually answer me, and rather than admitting it, they either said I had to 'have faith in God' or just to read the Bible, or that I was mistaken and that I needed to read 'X' apologist or 'Y' book.
 
 Possibly the only time I will now attend a church is for weddings, where generally there's less religious stuff and it's easier to wiggle out of prayers, singing hymns and other things I feel uncomfortable with doing. So far there's only been one wedding I've been asked to go to in which there was a lot of religious stuff and even then there was no pressure to join in.
[size=150]A long habit of not thinking a thing wrong gives it a superficial appearance of being right.[/size]
                                                                                                                                                           [size=150] -Thomas Paine[/size]