Raised religious? How did you come to realize that what you were taught as a child was not true?
Here’s a quick summary of my story: I was raised Catholic and grew up believing in the whole shebang... it’s what I was told and taught all my life. My tiny suburban town was predominantly Catholic and I went to Catholic school until High School. To be embarrassingly honest, I was unaware that there were other religions until I was 12 or 13. In 1993, at age 14, I started studying other religions of the world much to the chagrin of my mother. I had to go to the library and read about them in secret. In 1996 I stopped believing in Catholicism and refused to go to mass anymore. Then in 1998, I fell in love with Buddhism. I considered myself “spiritual, not religious” for a long time after that. In 2009, however I went through a brief period where I started attending church again. It was a non-denominational Christian Church, and very different than the Catholic Church I attended in my youth.
However, a few years ago, I began questioning what kind of God would allow children to be tortured and innocent people to be slaughtered daily - and it just didn’t add up. If God is all powerful, all knowing, and all loving, why not stop the atrocities? Why not make himself known?
Then, in 2016, I heard the term cognitive bias and starting considering that I may have been seeking proof of my own beliefs all along, while ignoring all other, opposing views. I started reading about the brain and specific out of body experiences (something that had always fascinated me and that I considered proof of the spiritual realm) but this time, I tried examining this phenomenon from a secular/scientific standing, and I discovered that so-called spiritual experiences, like seeing the light at the end of the tunnel, can be recreated in a lab with electric impulses.
Nowadays, I am a straight-up skeptic. Honestly, I’d like to believe in a God, life after death, and so forth (it was comforting) but the reality is there’s just not enough evidence to convince me.
I think your experience, in general, applies to most of us..
I don’t feel as though I was lied to. I know they believe this therefore it’s not a lie. It’s just different than my beliefs.
I now think as Robert Heinline said in his book, Time Enough for Love' that, "History does not record anywhere at any time a religion that has any rational basis. Religion is a crutch for people not strong enough to stand up to the unknown without help. But, like dandruff, most people have a religion and spend time and money on it and derive considerable pleasure from fiddling with it."
He also said, and I love this one, "God in omnipotent, omniscient, and omnibenevolent --- it says so right here on the label. If you have a mind capable of believing all three of these divine attributes simultaneously I have a wonderful bargan for you. No checks please. Cash and in small bills."
My own is this. Religion is a scam, " Oh, here let me take that sacrifice for you. I'll make sure God gets it!"
The day will come when you will not like to believe in life after death, sin punishment, eternal damnation, and so forth...
I was raised by Christmas and Easter catholic parents. I was made to go to church and catechism but was never taught the bible. I had doubts since my teens, but reading the bible is what cemented my atheism.