In defense of Atheism

I have been on a mild anti-religion kick for the last few years. It’s not that I believe that all Christians are wrong, and that science is right. As an Atheist, I do not define myself by disbelief in the Christo-mythology, rather, I simply see no reason to believe it over any other religion. My argument comes from an absolute lack of faith in a higher power, not just the most well recognized one. After all, Christianity has been around for thousands of years (long time, right?) but that is just a drop in the bucket compared to some of the Eastern religions. And I don’t believe in them, either.
I find it hard to believe that a religion that has borrowed so much from previous religions can truly be anywhere near accurate, or fulfilling. Does anyone else find it odd that Easter, the “resurrection” of Jesus, happens to fall in Spring, a time of rebirth for much longer than Christianity was ever heard of, and just might have coincided with the Spring Solstice?
In fact, there is historical evidence on many levels, showing that Christians, when subjugating (yes, I said subjugating, they weren’t always nice people) adopted the belief systems of the cultures they conquered, then folded it into their own dogma to make it easier for the conquered peoples to accept. Christmas (a namesake holiday, at that) was originally known as Saturnalia, and was a celebration of the winter solstice, and celebrated the God Saturn. By “Pagans”, nonetheless. When the Christians came through the Roman Empire, they moved the date of their messiah’s birth to coincide with popular Roman beliefs. One can almost imagine the Romans saying “See? Look, their gods are the same as ours, their dates match up!” Additionally, this moved conception to March, and lined it up to almost exactly the same date as his crucifixion, living up to a belief in Judaism that a prophet has a fixed number of years to live.
By no stretch of the imagination does this mean that I do not celebrate Christmas. I do. I celebrate it with my family, some religious, some not. We don’t pray around the table, we don’t celebrate the virgin birth, and we don’t go to church for Mass, either. However, we still celebrate the spirit of goodwill, the giving of gifts, and Christmas dinner. To not celebrate Christmas, growing up, is to be ostracized from the other children in your school, and my parents didn’t want that for me, and when I have children, I will not want that for them. I suppose that is a form of “getting along for the sake of conformity”, but it is one that I am willing to accept.
A major problem I have with Christianity itself is the Bible, and the contradiction that it implies, just by its very existence. Let me clarify. The bible is “God’s word”, as told through the Apostles and various other accounts. If we accept this collection of stories (because that is what it is, a collection of stories, as told by “witnesses”), then we only accept the New Testament. Where did the Old Testament come from then? Obviously, it was “true” before there was even writing. So who wrote it? God would not have needed to write a thing. He was there for all of his creations and communicated with him directly.
If we look at the Old Testament, we see a vengeful God, who not only destroys his own creations, but proves himself fallible. If God was all knowing, all seeing, and all capable, then he could have corrected the problems well before it ever came to floods and pestilence. He could have literally blinked them out of existence.
Additionally, where does “The Devil” fall in all of this? If God blessed his creations with free will, and it separated them from the “Angels”, then how did Lucifer ever have the ability to rebel? And how did one third of the host of Angels have the ability to follow him? In the opening chapters of the Bible, Satan is already evil and tempting Eve. There is more before the Garden of Eden, including the Rebellion, Satan’s creation, and a woman that Judaism refers to as Lilith. There are gross omissions in our common version of the Bible.
Why publish a book when people of the time were illiterate? The bible as a book did not garner wide distribution until the invention of the printing press, and most people had to hear their religion from the mouths of priests, at services and mass. The Gutenberg Bible was one of the most controversial books of its time, because it put religion in the hands of the people (who, incidentally, could not read it anyway), and started a movement for literacy.
I, however, do not believe in Christianity as any form of truth any more than I believe that the Earth is a disc supported on the backs of four elephants and a giant sea turtle. There are simply too many holes and contradictions
Christians, however, point to their faith and say that some things are not ours to question, and that God has a plan, and we should trust in God…This, to me, simply says that they don’t have the answers, either, as to where we came from, and that looking too deeply into their own belief structure makes them uncomfortable. I am not saying that I have the answers, nor that Science does. I am simply saying that religion requires a belief system that is inherently full of holes, and not something that stands up to scrutiny.
I am not out to prove that Christianity is a sham or hoax, I simply believe that one should look at the histories of the other religions that pre-date it and compare and contrast. After all, if you never look at anything else, all you are doing is following. Following never got anyone anywhere first. There is no discovery in religion.
Dave Williams said,
February 1, 2008 at 6:23 pm
The title of your article seems a little illogical to me. Atheism by definition is disbelief. If you don’t believe in anything then you have nothing to defend. So what really is the point of your article if not to prove Chistianity is a sham or a hoax?
*** Fair enough, I stick by my title, though, as I believe that Atheism needs defense from people who won’t look past the confines of their faith (whatever their faith may be). I don’t see the need to believe in something to know that is needs defending. I will defend your right to faith to the death, without believing in the same God as you. I probably could have come up with a better title, but it was 4 in the morning my time… thank you for reading, though.
doubtingthomas426 said,
February 2, 2008 at 5:42 am
Hello, I’ve recently received a rather disturbing comment on my site from a Christian (whiteman0o0) on the issue of whether or not we are all born sinners. He stated that, yes, we are all born sinners. I argued that I believed babies and children are innocent and can’t and shouldn’t be judged based on the ‘sins’ of a couple of naïve children in the Garden of Eden. I brought up the tragic, unexpected death of a baby in its crib from SIDS (Sudden Infant Death Syndrome) and asked if this baby should burn in eternal hellfire because it never had the opportunity to accept Jesus as his personal savior or ask for forgiveness for his ‘sins’? Whiteman0o0 responded, saying, yes, babies and children can go to hell because (and here is where it gets crazy) God doesn’t judge them for their ACTUAL lives but for the lives they WOULD HAVE lived had they not died. In other words, God creates an alternate timeline where the baby/child didn’t die and sees if they would have become a Christian or not, what sins they would have committed, etc. and sends them to heaven or hell accordingly. I don’t know if anyone else is as put off by this scenario as I was but I am pleading and urging anyone who does find it disturbing, or even those who agree with it, to please visit the page where the comment appears. You can find it here:
http://doubtingthomas426.wordpress.com/2007/12/16/if-the-statement-is-true-your-religion-is-vile/
Please read the comments (you can ignore the original post), particularly mine (DoubtingThomas426) and whiteman0o0’s and leave a comment addressing this issue. I truly appreciate it.
Thank you and I apologize for taking up space on this page with my plea.
DoubtingThomas
http://doubtingthomas426.wordpress.com/
John Essex said,
February 5, 2008 at 12:20 pm
Hi,
I’m the webmaster for http://www.ratemyblog.co.uk and I’ve just read some of your blog posts as part of the review process for my site. All I can say is – wow – excellent blog and great to see well thought out and balanced arguements for what is a very sensitive subject. It’s always nice to see a blog such as yours, I get so many spam blogs submitted these days.
Keep up the great writing and I hope that maybe one of your readers will take the time to submit a review of your blog, it’s certainly worthy of it!
Best regards, RMB.