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I have had an odd notion for awhile now. Definitely out of the box, but I suspect it might be highly effective in promoting tolerance for non belief and critical thought.

Suppose those of us who were raised in religion but reasoned our way out, after they have recovered from the after effects so many suffer from . . .

Suppose they got together in small groups to attend churches, particularly those functions like Bible studies which welcome "seekers", questioning people. At these places they seek to convince others and reinforce their own beliefs . . .

In my experience I would much rather deal with a "spiritual" person in society, a Deist or some such, than any fundamentalist evangelical. So rather than promoting "No God" or a lack of belief . . .

Make them instead question that God's nature and why these men are right about the great unknown, but those men are wrong. . .

Then further suppose that we ask them those uncomfortable questions. Nicely, peacefully, calmly . . .
All the while employing the Socratic Method (Street epistemology)

Attempt to nudge them from Fundie to "spiritual".

Granted we may be dis-invited in a hurry or tossed out on our ears, but how many ripples of critical thought would we create and how far would those travel?

What do you think about such an idea?

Is it viable?
Do you think it would have a positive or negative net effect on things?

Davesnothere 7 Dec 3
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30 comments

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6

I don't think they would listen. The thing about being raised in a religion is they literally put the fear of god in them from the earliest age. After being told repeatedly that questioning the myth will send you to hell a great majority of them can't. I always doubted the whole thing but it wasn't until I was in college and got facts that I was able to see religion for what it is. A scam. A myth. A way to keep people giving time and money to very real men in the name of an imaginary sky daddy.

5

Good luck with the brainwashed.

5

I would rather put my energy into converting believers into advocates for human rights. You believe in god? You believe all people are made in god's image and deserve to be seen as human beings worthy of dignity? Then act on your beliefs. You see that detention facility? The one that's run for profit and siphons taxpayer money to corporate executives while actively ignoring the basic human rights of detainees? The detention center that's over crowded, children sleeping on concrete floors, families being separated, children being removed from families and funneled into a for-profit foster care system...you see that? It's happening at the border and in our own communities. Demand Congress defunds these concentration camps, or implements meaningful oversight so our brothers and sisters who've come here legally to escape persecution in their home country are treated according to laws of man and god: With dignity.

There are thousands of ways churches and their congregants can be living their supposed values. They can tackle homelessness, our funding of weapons and war, our child-extraction system, our mass incarceration policies, ad nauseum. You can try to plant a seed to make a believer question religion or god. Or you can plant the seed that they must act as god or their church preaches: To love and respect and treat all humans as sacred beings.

4

Seems a little devious to me; if that were reversed and an evangelizing Christian joined an agnostic group under the pretense of being a searcher I think we would see him/her as a fraud. I would hope agnostics & atheists would be more honest.

I would say it is a little devious, as I would have no other reason to go at all.

However is not legislating, stacking courts and preaching politics from the pulpit also devious?

@Davesnothere Yes; for sure.

4

A noble idea - to a degree, it's already out there, a "person on the street" type thing - I believe someone already posted a YT video on it.

I, myself, don't wear my atheism on my sleeve in public. I object to 'witnessing' of all sorts, so that would include atheism - I have to respect that no one would want me coming into their church parking lot and start doing that.

Live and let live is this Cat's deal. If someone is truly interested, they can always ask.

I used to hold that same position.
Unfortunately, "live and let live" doesn't work.
The believers actively worth to influence public policy at all times, which
effects me, and others who do not share their religious delusions.
I can't sit back and tolerate that anymore. I have to be vocal in my
resistance to it whenever I have the opportunity.
Passivity leads to dominance. I refuse to be dominated, by anyone, EVER.

@KKGator - Yes, part of the process is that the fundamental religious right will infiltrate aspects of the public sector and get laws passed in their favor or to further their agendas. Prohibition in the US followed closely on the heels of the Charismatic movement. But laws do change.

The Wedge strategy is alive and well in this day and age. I do know all this.

But there are other ways to get in there and fight the battle (if you so choose). After Kitzmiller v Dover, the entire school board of religious zealots were voted out. Confrontation doesn't feel that effective in this day and age, being outside the shouting rabble feels more effective to me.

Fact is - this Cattus won't get in anyone's face about it. I don't have to.

@LatentumCattus You do you.

@KKGator - 🙂 Always - like I said, live and let live.

@LatentumCattus Just don't cry when (not if) that attitude comes back to bite you.
Because it will.

@KKGator - a fair warning, but you present it as an either/or 'argument' with no other alternatives. What knowledge do you have of me suggests that I couldn't or wouldn't defend myself should my rights become infringed? Why should I become reactionary because you see Christian jackboots at your throat and I do not?

It feels like you are assuming that just because my atheism is not militant that I am also apathetic in every event. The foundation is faulty.

@LatentumCattus I prefer Jefferson, "as long as it neither breaks my leg nor picks my pocket"

3

I don’t have the energy, spent it already on the last decade. Very dedicated, I think a few would hear you, but some would follow you out to your car & you might get more then a tongue lashing, lol. Be careful.

3

Been there, done that.
It's an exercise in futility since studies show that fanatics lack the capacity for metacognition, and are unable to recognize their errors, even when faced with facts.

Do you think all believers are rabid fanatics?

@Davesnothere White evangelicals seem to act the most fanatical, since they are defending their white patriarchy turf.
[culturacolectiva.com]

@birdingnut They are also the most political. Have you seen how they took control of HS textbooks, inserting creationism?

3

I dunno, that might earn you an unwanted and unwelcome exorcism!

Haven't been threatened with Exorcism as yet, but have been 'sprinkled ' with 'holy water' by a few Catholic Priests before when I've tried to 'enlighten the Congregation.'

@Triphid I can just imagine. Be careful, when they get the restraints out, RUN. 😁

@CarolinaGirl60 Can't run that well BUT my t-shirt usually manages to stop them in their tracks.
And now I also have Agnostic.com t-shirt as well.

@CarolinaGirl60 yes, they like a crazy label too much😬, & will invest a lot of time trying to discredit that logic. But it’s not wrong to hope, or have a dream. Still, I can’t help comparing going into church with the report where a missionary went to an isolated cannibal tribe where the cannibals ate the missionary for coming into their territory. I don’t think it would go well going directly to most churches to introduce atheism or agnosticism.

3

I can see that doing this may open some eyes, but it would have to be handled with diplomacy and respect. You're in their space; they can easily feel threatened if challenged, and that would just defeat the purpose.

2

The only person I can control and change is myself.

Trying to get someone to change is an exercise in futility.

So trying to change any aspect of society or politics is all futility?
While it is true change comes from the inside, do you discount all human affects on others?

@Davesnothere

Don't be ridiculous. I was talking about individual people. Not society or government.

You cannot force someone to change if they don't want to.

As a parent of a strong-willed girl, I was a chiefly a loving role model. We disciplined Claire with grounding and removing privileges. No hitting or spanking.

@LiterateHiker Yes, but the comparison between a child or human we love, and a vast demographic of organized people, who routinely denegrate and villanize us is not the same animal.

I see it as more akin to Jews in 1930 discussing Nazis. When one group is so denegrated from the pulpits the parishioners begin to see that demographic ina less than us, less than human way. It is the de-humanization of us which increasesthe danger to all of us, more so some than others depending on geolocation.

Nor would the idea be to force others to change, but to see us as HUMAN, equal and of another opinion.

2

No I don't think that's viable. It assumes that speaking nicely and logically would eliminate the delusional thinking that they accept as reality. Especially if you allow for the continued belief of a god as that belief is the central focus of the delusion.

No it does not assume that a conversation (or 1000) will suddenly change entrenched thinking.)

It actually mirrors the way a lot of folks did reason their way out later in life, by exposure to critical thought actually applied to a religion they accepted before they had critical thought. Nor is the idea to remove someones faith based world view.

ONLY to get them to consider why they believe it.
For many of us that is what changed us from a believer to a non believer, learning and understanding some facet of the religion which they did not know and were NEVER taught. That makes folks PAUSE and wonder, and that is the begining of a "considered faith", which for most of us who broke free was the begining of the end.

@Davesnothere I didn't say that speaking nicely and logically about the falseness of their beliefs assumes anything "suddenly" would happen. I said the idea assumes it would do a specific thing (eliminate delusional thinking) regardless of a time period. Christianity has been around for 2000 years. Do you honestly believe that no one else has made the attempt in the past 2000 years to speak nicely and logically to dismiss belief in a Christian god and that it's a new idea?

Regardless, nothing in your comment explains why a logical, calmly defined argument hasn't worked to change the minds of theists in the past but has suddenly become viable. Nor have you demonstrated why ridiculing the "God delusion" is incorrect or doesn't work.

@redbai Certainly not no one else< BUT there has never before been a large social/digital movement and organization of public non believers actively questioning faith in religious assertions.Until recently religion held the stage and all the microphones.

Nor am I saying debate or ridicule do not work (not in the original OP context, there it would just cause ejection)

What I am saying is
WE ARE VILLANIZED-even to the extent that avg believers think we cannot have morals without religion.
WE ARE OUTNUMBERED--we are a minority in the overall population
and
The Theocrats, evangelicals and their supporters in the Congress, Senate, and White House are actively seeking policies which affect us, and are driven by their religious worldview. In such a world view WE ARE VILLANIZED.

If we do not find a way to humanize ourselves then we are targets.

@Davesnothere I think the issue with your position is that you think that the solution is that atheists need to change their ways to be more acceptable to people who are suffering under a delusion and forcing it onto others. You are making it the atheist's responsibility to be more accepting of a delusion and it's affects instead of addressing getting rid of the delusion by any means possible short of physical violence.

Also, unless they are locking people up where you live for being an atheist, I don't see the villanization that you are talking about. And if they are locking people up where you live, I don't see how being calm and polite will mitigate that at all as they will still lock you up for heresy, whether your calm and polite or angry and rude. Can you name a single human rights issue that was resolved because the oppressed were "calm and polite"? Personally, I can't think of a single example where that worked anywhere in the world.

2

Wouldn't work. They're not gonna give up on their feel good fantasy by reasoning with them. It might also be difficult to maintain a polite and respectful facade for long. After awhile, all that forced tolerance of ideas that you actually find ridiculous may crumble and end up in an audible *"You people are nuts."

2

I don't think we can make them do anything.

2

I think it would work, but it seems unlikely there will be a good return on investment.

Effectively, time is money. This seems like too great of an investment per convert.

Another person from Agnostic was doing this. But, they did it digitally. They went rouge into religious sites and more or less planted logic bombs.

IMO, maybe it is better to start a thinking statement which becomes popular on a macro level.. Like the one, "If good is everywhere, was it in the room when a priest raped a child?"

2

it’s not up to me or anyone else to infiltrate a church and convince strangers to believe differently. that’s honestly ridiculous. they can have their spaces as long as they don’t try to force the rest of the world to become their space too.

That's just it though, isn't it?
They ARE actively trying to make the entire world their own.
Most of the world has already succumbed.

@JohnnyQB yes i’m aware. i was raised christian, somewhat fundamentalist, and i know the mindset. i know what they’ve done/are still doing to the rest of the world, especially communities like mine, the grsm/lgbtq+. that doesn’t mean i want to go to church, drag up all my old trauma, make everyone in my life think i’m “coming back” to their god, and sit through bigoted conversation and sermons. my line is drawn at the door to the church. if you guys want to play double agent, go for it, but it’s not going to help. the more things you say that are “out of line,” the more likely they are to avoid and eventually shun you anyway. and you’ll give evidence to their belief that they’re under attack by the “worldly.”

@JohnnyQB Just more intentional blindness to reality. The believers have
been infiltrating and influencing public policy for as long as there have been believers. They aren't letting up. In fact, they're getting worse because
they feel threatened. They're even more dangerous now than they've ever been.
Which is precisely why I believe in fighting fire with fire.
I cannot condone passivity.
I certainly won't engage in it.

Not denying anyone their space.

My intent is more "Lets take street epistomology rightinto the Newbies Bible study classes, and see what ripples in critical thought we make"

In the context of "Let US try to understand them by asking them why they believe as they do"
WHILE letting them understand why you are not convinced by that.

The Other aspect of the notion is "I am BATHED in your religious world view, by tradition, but you have a poor idea of ME, as a human being"
As long as Atheists and Agnostics are OTHER, they can be easily villified.

THIS is exactly NOT what I was thinking . . .
" that doesn’t mean i want to go to church, drag up all my old trauma, make everyone in my life think i’m “coming back” to their god,"

IN NO WISE should those who have broken free go back to their old stomping grounds. I see little to no upside to that and a slew of downsides.

Such folk, in small groups (for mutual support and emotion checking (Street Epistomology can be tiring) could go to other churches, other denominations if they felt confident to do that.

For some people it would be too much, for others it might be cathartic.

2

I think I have better issues to deal with than disturbing people in their delusions as long as they are not legislating, adjudicating or executing their delusions or attacking people.

g

Fair enough, but I think they are doing as you say. . .

2

Not my circus, not my monkeys! I firmly believe we would ALL be better off Minding Our Own Business at all times!

Is this a sybling of not in my backyard?
Not your issue, not your problem?

Is that still true when they, as a block, manipulate the levers of gov to determine what is in the school books?
Or what medical care women are allowed to have?

@Davesnothere 1. That's "sibling"...try Googling it!
2. I am as opinionated as it gets, on here & on Fb, but did you take one second to check into that before you launched into attack mode? Methinks Not!
3. How the hell did "medical care" enter? You lost or ?
4. Why not try Minding Your Own Business?

1

I often talk at length with people of all religious beliefs, some of whom are close friends. We discuss their notion of god, I offer my viewpoint, we question each others beliefs ... over the years a few of them have converted to atheism, but most do not ,,,, but we can still talk rationally .. just differences of opinion and belief

1

Thanks again for all your input.

1

Eer, have tried the 'attending church/Sunday School thing ' before numerous times but went at it alone and received the " Bum's Rush" for my efforts, especially from the likes of the Catholics, the Anglicans and the Mormons in particular.
Though I will say that I have had far better receptions at the "invited to talk sessions" that happen at the very progressive Public School a few minutes walk from my house.
Which reminds me that I have another " invited to talk" session listed for next Friday at 1.00pm.

Me too in the past (30 odd years ago)

@Davesnothere My last attempt was about 14 months ago, still ended up the same way though.

1

If you (and others) could pull it off, that would be a terrific start.
To be honest though, I think it would be like you said, and you'd be thrown
out of whatever church you were using, pretty quickly.

Doesn't mean it wouldn't be worth trying.
Good luck.

I would think that would be sadly common.

I am more concerned that the world would see it exactly as David above said, that it was prostelitizing, when it really would not be.

But it might be seen as such and have an overall negative effect because of that perception.

My idea is more "Lets take street epistomology rightinto the Newbies Bible study classes, and see what ripples in critical thought we make"

1

That's some good thinking. I think it would help open some eyes, and minds.

1

I’m not sure what I’d get out of educating someone out of their religion; and how can I be sure they’d be better off? It might totally upset their reality. I’d rather they ask me questions.
I wish I was braver or more confident that it’s the right thing to do.

Not trying to educate anyone out of a belief
It would be trying to have people actually consider what they believe, which leads to less extreme religious views.

@Davesnothere thinking for yourself is pretty radical for some people it seems 😉

0

I would say that most christains understand that people with other beliefs exist and can be good people. The disconnect is that no matter how good nonchristains are; they are going to hell and are worth only a quick preaching at and nothing more.
I think it is a interesting idea to subtly test christains thinking skills; but having grown up in churches, i can tell you that you would quickly become an "unclean" that nobody will spend any time with.
Hell we had a church split because some people thought personalities could predict which position a person might be best suited for in the church! You can only imagine how a critical thinker would be treated!

0

Kudo's to your thoughts for getting people together, however I think you are incredibly brave as once you are there you will not be welcome. At least that is my thought.

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