A Matter of Faith
Oct. 16th, 2004 03:33 amI've been hesitant to bring this issue up, as most people I have on my flist I do not have this problem with, but here goes anyway.
As most of you probably know, I don't believe in God. Or the Goddess or Allah or any sort of Creator. I don't rule it out, but I don't believe it.
So don't ask me for prayers. I cannot give them. I have no address to give them to. I will offer sympathies and wishes and hope, but your prayers you will have to get elsewhere. This does not mean I don't care, but I cannot start believing just to give you that prayer.
Secondly, please don't talk about "saving" us non-believers. Don't assume all atheists live in ignorance and need to be set straight. And please, do not capitalise "Save". I find it offensive. I made my choice as others have, and who are you to say thus I'm somehow inferior and I need to be "Saved" from it? My life, my choices, my consequences. If I'm wrong, I'm wrong. But I cannot believe just to sort of be on the safe side. For better or worse, there is no organised religion for me.
So you might ask - what does the young Miss Camilla believe?
I believe compassion, mercy, justice and good deeds are human concepts, not Universal ones, but that this does not make them any less important to us. I believe in life and death and that you cannot have one without the other, but that life is so fragile we need not invent evernew reasons to bring it to an end. I believe we do not know everything and never will, but that searching for answers matters anyway. I believe simplicity can breed complexity and thus humans came to be. I believe my footprints in the sand will fade after I die, but they will still have been there. I believe the most important meanings in life you create yourself. I believe - that whatever your faith, it is what it gives you that matters. That will never be the same from person to person and none of us can know which is better (or even is there is such a thing as "better faith"). Nor can we know if any of us even needs to be saved. This I believe.
Of course, how well we live by our beliefs is another matter - perhaps one more suited for another day.
As most of you probably know, I don't believe in God. Or the Goddess or Allah or any sort of Creator. I don't rule it out, but I don't believe it.
So don't ask me for prayers. I cannot give them. I have no address to give them to. I will offer sympathies and wishes and hope, but your prayers you will have to get elsewhere. This does not mean I don't care, but I cannot start believing just to give you that prayer.
Secondly, please don't talk about "saving" us non-believers. Don't assume all atheists live in ignorance and need to be set straight. And please, do not capitalise "Save". I find it offensive. I made my choice as others have, and who are you to say thus I'm somehow inferior and I need to be "Saved" from it? My life, my choices, my consequences. If I'm wrong, I'm wrong. But I cannot believe just to sort of be on the safe side. For better or worse, there is no organised religion for me.
So you might ask - what does the young Miss Camilla believe?
I believe compassion, mercy, justice and good deeds are human concepts, not Universal ones, but that this does not make them any less important to us. I believe in life and death and that you cannot have one without the other, but that life is so fragile we need not invent evernew reasons to bring it to an end. I believe we do not know everything and never will, but that searching for answers matters anyway. I believe simplicity can breed complexity and thus humans came to be. I believe my footprints in the sand will fade after I die, but they will still have been there. I believe the most important meanings in life you create yourself. I believe - that whatever your faith, it is what it gives you that matters. That will never be the same from person to person and none of us can know which is better (or even is there is such a thing as "better faith"). Nor can we know if any of us even needs to be saved. This I believe.
Of course, how well we live by our beliefs is another matter - perhaps one more suited for another day.
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Date: 2004-10-16 03:18 am (UTC)She's taught me that I can't always be in my Killer Convert Mode- it does no good. Nobody is going to understand my enlightenment, or think any good of it, if I'm always trying to shove it down their throats. The number ONE thing that Bekka has done is demonstrate the massive, beautiful free will of humanity...her 'God' is a fat man that has rainbow toesocks.
In return for my being passive, I have gained the trust and friendship of a sweet and intelligent girl.
This being the reason I generally do not badger people who have already explained why they do not believe what I do. It is their choice. If they're open to discussion, fine. If not, what's the point?
--Just thought that train of thought kinda fitted in with yours. fondued jicama
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Date: 2004-10-16 09:46 pm (UTC)But if nothing else, an atheist might help you as a believer think a bit about why you believe what you believe and maybe even strengthen it. The opposite might also be true, who knows?
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Date: 2004-10-16 03:25 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-16 09:47 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-16 10:09 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-16 04:19 am (UTC)I believe my footprints in the sand will fade after I die, but they will still have been there.
Ooh... someone at the message board I frequent started a "favorite quotes" thread, I'm tempted to list this one...
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Date: 2004-10-16 09:52 pm (UTC)I have been an atheist for a long time, but it has taken me a while to realise why. Probably because it meant understanding how I think on some level too. That's not always an easy task, let me tell you ;)
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Date: 2004-10-16 10:55 pm (UTC)I don't know how long I've really been atheist, I think I was for a long while (perhaps starting when I was 8 or younger) and only admitted it to myself when I was 17. I tried to be Christian and said I believed in God and all, but none of it ever felt real to me, which I do consider important. Whenever I heard "God's voice" talking to me, I knew that those were my own thoughts reciting what I expected God to say. And, of course, there was the question of how I would have known or believed in God if I had never been conditioned by my family to that bothered me.
The Christian bigots I was really becoming aware of didn't help, either, and as I was getting used to the fact that I no longer was a part of the religion they claimed to be a part of, I guess I tried separating myself from them by ranting about how ignorant and horrible those hateful people were. Unfortunately, sometimes I didn't take care to say I meant only the bigoted idiots and not ALL Christians, and that made me sound just plain anti-Christian, which I will forever regret and remember to avoid doing in the future.
I love introspecting and analyzing why I think the way I do, and learning why others think the way they do. ^_^ (Though it can make me annoyingly wordy and nosy. Drat being an English major! :P)
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Date: 2004-10-17 12:04 am (UTC)There was a time in my life when I flung myself into Christianity because I needed something greater to believe in - but no matter how hard I tried, I could not feel it. I did not believe. I wanted to, I tried to... But it did not come. This is why I know there's no "Saving" me by showing me Christianity. Seen it, tried it - ultimately walked away from it. It is not for me.
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Date: 2004-10-16 04:57 am (UTC)I get so tired from time to time of people who label atheists as immoral, evil people -- at the same time, you get members of the religious clergy who are committing heinous moral crimes. It isn't what religion one belongs to, or does not belong to, that determines one's character. One of the wonderful things about religion is that it places an emphasis upon being a good person, but naturally -- like everything else that is human -- there will be corruption.
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Date: 2004-10-16 09:59 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2004-10-17 04:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-16 05:05 am (UTC)I personally always liked hot weather conditions ;)I've (it's my birthday, I'm allowed to rant about myself) always gotten driven up the wall because apparently I'm supposed to be against birth control and abortion and gay marriage and all that good stuff because I am a Catholic. That's just annoying (!) so I totally symphathize with you on that point of converters needing to get a clue and cease existing.
We - each of us - believe what makes us happy, gives us solace, etc. Sadly some need to impose their beliefs on others and consequently give the rest belonging to the same religion a bad name.
Had a lovely confession with you the other night, Madame. Find it very strange that you didn't give me penance (and absolution) but that's probably because I wouldn't stop ogling Nordic men ;)no subject
Date: 2004-10-16 10:04 pm (UTC)I suppose part of the problem with organised religion can be the hierarchy. The leaders impose their interpretation of the religion on those below in standing and so it goes. Becomes a habit after a while, I suppose.
Of course, some of this may come from the days of Dark Age Europe when most people could not read and thus not interpret and find their own meanings in the faith. But this is no longer true? Do we really need people to tell us what to believe anymore?
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Date: 2004-10-16 05:22 am (UTC)The most difficult thing I have had to deal with as a non believer is not the attempts at conversion. Its the pity, the whole patronizing attitude of "you poor unenlightened creature! I'm going to pray that you find God's love."
Not all religious folk behave this way thankfully. I have many Christian friends who are able to acknowledge that their way is not absolute and respect my beliefs without censure.
However, those who feel that their way is the only manner in which one should live and believe and all that deviates is wrong are not only delusional but dangerous. Get enough of people like those together and you have the Crusades, the Spanish Inquisition or the Bush administration. (heh)
The point is, belief or non belief should be nothing more than a personal choice. When it moves beyond that, it inevitably becomes intolerance.
If people want to honor their religion, they should do so through love, compassion and helping others, not by forcing beliefs upon them. That destroys the whole point of faith in my opinion. Being a good person is not based on the absence or presence of God in your heart, its in the way you treat others.
Until there is concrete, scientific, irrefutable evidence proving the existence of a God, a wise person and a tolerant one will accept and acknowledge the fact that they could very well be wrong.
The only true enlightenment is in realizing we don't know everything and probably never will.
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Date: 2004-10-16 10:12 pm (UTC)So I agree with you that religion is mainly of the private sphere. It can people define who they are and how they view the world. The problem comes when they try to bend the world into this definition. I refuse to live in Bush's definition of the world, same as with bin Laden. Their world is not my world and neither of us sit with all the answers. Sometimes, a little humility goes a long way.
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Date: 2004-10-16 08:01 am (UTC)I believe very soundly in this because it took me so much to break it from myself even when I had logically figured it out.
I did, however, discover last night that if the electoral college came to me and said, "If you pray to god, we will give Kerry the winning votes," I would say, "Hail Mary, full of grace..."
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Date: 2004-10-16 10:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-17 03:42 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-16 10:45 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-16 10:20 pm (UTC)Besides, you're cute. I forgive cute ;)
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Date: 2004-10-16 01:55 pm (UTC)I used to be *very* anti-religious, but then I realized that my "you are free to believe whatever you want"-philosophy rightfully should apply to religious people as well. Silly me.
I'm still suspicious towards religion, but at least I keep my thoughts to myself now-days (unless someone actually asks for my opinion).
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Date: 2004-10-16 10:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-16 03:08 pm (UTC)Hear, hear.
Though I would point out that wneh people offer prayers for you because of some crises you're going through, they really are just saying they'll keep you in their thoughts. I don't think it's meant to infringe on your beliefs, but if that's how you feel...
I tend to offer cyber-hugs-and-cookies, anyway. *offers*
...query: Is atheism a religious beliefe? Is white a color? The world may never know...
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Date: 2004-10-16 10:34 pm (UTC)Whether atheism is a religion or not depends how you define religion and who you consider atheists, me thinks.
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Date: 2004-10-16 10:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-16 05:40 pm (UTC)Also, do you celebrate Halloween in Norway? Just curious...
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Date: 2004-10-16 10:35 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-17 05:37 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2004-10-20 08:04 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-19 04:18 am (UTC)--Tathrin
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Date: 2004-11-01 08:31 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-11-02 04:16 am (UTC)