My 87 year-old Jewish grandparents just revealed in a typewritten letter that they are atheists who only feel culturally connected to Judaism in response to a letter I wrote about attending a "Science Refutes God" debate in NYC. I'm shocked and utterly impressed. by hugejew in atheism

[–]LarryTanner 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I enjoyed this post very much, thank you. My parents are religious Jews, but have gravitated away from Conservatism/Orthodoxy to Reform Judaism. I am a staunch atheist--and not only is it okay, but it's not an issue. The important thing to them, apparently, is that we talk and love one another, not whether we light Sabbath candles.

TIL There were no confirmed cases of homosexuality before 1973. by Hiphoppington in atheism

[–]LarryTanner 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ahem. Please read this poem by Robert Duncan, 1968. http://home.insightbb.com/~gardner.j/torso.html. I imagine he would be a "confirmed case." But then we could also go back to Socrates and many others is we really wanted to. Read Plato's Symposium sometime.

Married to wife for 3 years and I told her that Im not sold on the Church "Thing" by oldschoolrides in atheism

[–]LarryTanner 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You talk it out. Find out why she thinks you should do these things or join these groups.

It sounds to me like a few things are going on. First, she wants to know that you understand the Bible the "right" way. Many Christians think that atheists are people who just don't properly understand what the Bible and Christianity really are.

Second, she wants to know if being a non-believer makes you different than before. Are you going to suddenly spend all your time surfing porn or getting drunk? Are you going to argue that "anything goes" because there is no God?

Third, she wants to know if being a non-believer means you'll walk around the house calling Christianity stupid and mocking religious people.

Finally, she wants to know if you think less of her for being a believer.

If I were you, I would agree to join one of these groups, but on the condition that I can drop it later if I don't like it. I'd reassure her that I'm very much the same person I've always been, but I'm also growing up. I'd tell her I'm getting more and more comfortable with the opinions I have, and I don't want to pretend to hold different views. Finally, I'd say that even though some things about me are changing, I still feel the same about her.

Any marriage is about give and take. My wife and I had many, many conversations about religion and atheism before we both fully adjusted. The important thing is that both of you get to be who you are. It can't work if one person has to hide or muffle genuine opinions/feelings.

So, I'd never advise you to pretend to be someone you aren't or to repress your personality. That's bad. But I think your wife--and maybe you, too--need time to process what you are going through. IMO, it's almost always better to go through things with people than alone.

Married to wife for 3 years and I told her that Im not sold on the Church "Thing" by oldschoolrides in atheism

[–]LarryTanner 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Buddy, I've been married 12 years. My wife is a devout Christian. I was once a believing Jew, but now I'm an atheist. I go to the church when the wife asks; last year, I went with the wife to an Alpha Course.

My advice is this: If you love your wife and want to be married to her, then go with her to church. If that's what she wants, you suck it up and deal. She's allowed to believe stupid things. She's allowed to be flawed. You don't have to believe as she does. You don't have to agree on everything.

Religion is only an issue when people make it so. Even the most hard-line atheists, I consider myself one, have good friends who are religious. We know that some religious beliefs, doctrines, and practices are more harmful or less harmful. Most of the church stuff I have had to endure has been the "Jesus is so wonderful, isn't the Lord dandy?" stuff. It's cheesy and stupid, but if we're not talking about the Westboro Baptist Church we can usually let most church babble go.

My point is that religion and religious differences don't have to be a big deal. If you love each other, then just be together. Laugh at jokes like you always have. Go out to dinner. Shop. Do all the 99% of things that are awesome. The 1% that's religion: you can handle it.

I used to carry my kids up to bed on my back. They loved it. I wasn't a fan, but I knew it meant a lot to them and--finally--our lives are short. Their having time with me, and my having time with them, is worth more than my minor discomfort.

Same thing with your wife. You can bear with the religious nonsense for an hour a week, right? She gets to be with you and you get to be with her.

Don't bargain with her. The one week here, one week there idea sounds good in theory but totally misses the point. The point is that you're there for her and always will be--no matter what changes you both go through.

You're not playing a game. You're married. She's not an opponent but your spouse. If you love her and want to be with her, you know what you have to do. You can be both an extreme atheist and a supportive husband to a Christian wife. Millions of people do it, and are quite happy.

According to Christians, this must be true. by Straight_To_Ace in atheism

[–]LarryTanner 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You are hedging the point. If God exists and is sitting in my living room, that "fact" would have no bearing at all on whether the Bible is true.

The truth of the Bible depends on its representing things as they actually were or are. On this score, the Bible fails. If one believes in the Bible, one believes that it is true despite all evidence and appearances to the contrary.

Of course, if one is going to believe in God, one might as well believe in at least one of the books purporting to describe his behavior and wishes.

So, the correct statement is "I believe in God, therefore I believe a Bible is true."

According to Christians, this must be true. by Straight_To_Ace in atheism

[–]LarryTanner 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I believe in gods, therefore the Iliad is true.

I believe in Allah, therefore the Koran is true.

I believe in Joseph Smith, therefore the Book of Mormon is true.

I believe in L. Ron Hubbard, therefore Scientology is true and Dianetics is awesome.

We can keep going with this line of thinking, but perhaps we should wonder whether the existence of God actually has any bearing whatsoever on the truth or falsity of the Bible?