Is anyone else an atheist with BC besides me?

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  • AliceBastable
    AliceBastable Member Posts: 3,461
    edited January 2019

    Back in my searching-for-whatever days, I came across Scientific Pantheism and it really hit the spot. I still occasionally call myself a pantheist - just with a small "p". I think some of you might like this, if you haven't visited the site already.

    https://www.pantheism.net/beliefs/

    Jo6359, I am sorry for what your nephew is enduring - and your family with him. It's a head-scratcher how nature can suck and be so beautiful at the same time, but at least we non-believers don't waste time getting tied in knots assigning blame or credit to some gigantic airborne coin-flipper. It gives us more time to cherish our loved ones in the here and now. 💙

  • wanderweg
    wanderweg Member Posts: 549
    edited January 2019

    Alice - I toyed with the notion of identifying as pantheistic once, too. Ultimately, the inclusion of “theism” in it tripped me up. But when I talk about being spiritual, those values are exactly what I mean.

  • jo6359
    jo6359 Member Posts: 2,279
    edited January 2019

    alice-Nature can be so stunning it takes ones breath away. On the other hand there are times it really sucks. I'm thinking of tsunamis, earthquakes, volcanoes and other natural disasters which can be so beautiful they take your breath away. Yet the devastation is immeasurable. I'm not searching for answers from God or any other entity. Whilel sitting outside yesterday evening laughing at my dogs antics made me appreciate those moments of joy.

  • LoveFromPhilly
    LoveFromPhilly Member Posts: 1,308
    edited January 2019

    the Pantheism site is interesting but I get overwhelmed by too much teeny text and a poorly updated website 😂 I can’t look at it for very long - all the wordiness starts to look like the ramblings of a person with too much time on their hands or a person who may be experiencing a manic episode.

    I think that for me, I don’t want to label myself as one particular thing - so I don’t want to label myself as a Pantheist


  • DearLife
    DearLife Member Posts: 1,183
    edited January 2019

    Alice, I like pantheism, especially this: “It is only here that we will ever get the chance to see paradise.“

    And the statement of pantheistic principles resonates with me:

    • Reverence for Nature and the wider Universe.
    • Active respect and care for the rights of all humans and other living beings.
    • Celebration of our lives in our bodies on this beautiful earth as a joy and a privilege.
    • Strong naturalism, without belief in supernatural realms, afterlives, beings or forces.
    • Respect for reason, evidence and the scientific method as our best ways of understanding nature and the Universe.
    • Promotion of religious tolerance, freedom of religion and complete separation of state and religion.


    But as Jo said, nature can be devastating as well as beautiful. And illness can make it difficult to celebrate “our lives in our bodies as a joy". So how do we make sense of suffering and destruction?

    I don't have any answers, but wonder how others come to terms with this dark side of life. I think the promise of paradise is what leads many people to religion.

  • wrenn
    wrenn Member Posts: 2,707
    edited January 2019

    At my Callanish I have learned that everything is ok. The dark and the light. I was introduced to Mark Nepo there and love this poem of his.

    Adrift

    Everything is beautiful and I am so sad.
    This is how the heart makes a duet of
    wonder and grief. The light spraying
    through the lace of the fern is as delicate
    as the fibers of memory forming their web
    around the knot in my throat. The breeze
    makes the birds move from branch to branch
    as this ache makes me look for those I've lost
    in the next room, in the next song, in the laugh
    of the next stranger. In the very center, under
    it all, what we have that no one can take
    away and all that we've lost face each other.
    It is there that I'm adrift, feeling punctured
    by a holiness that exists inside everything.
    I am so sad and everything is beautiful.

  • DearLife
    DearLife Member Posts: 1,183
    edited January 2019

    Thank you Wrenn. That is very moving.

    ❤️

  • ananda8
    ananda8 Member Posts: 2,755
    edited January 2019

    This is my favorite poem;

    [i carry your heart with me(i carry it in]






    i carry your heart with me(i carry it in

    my heart)i am never without it(anywhere

    i go you go,my dear;and whatever is done

    by only me is your doing,my darling)

     i fear

    no fate(for you are my fate,my sweet)i want

    no world(for beautiful you are my world,my true)

    and it’s you are whatever a moon has always meant

    and whatever a sun will always sing is you

    here is the deepest secret nobody knows

    (here is the root of the root and the bud of the bud

    and the sky of the sky of a tree called life;which grows

    higher than soul can hope or mind can hide)

    and this is the wonder that's keeping the stars apart

    i carry your heart(i carry it in my heart)


  • Springflowers
    Springflowers Member Posts: 85
    edited January 2019

    Interesting stuff, nice poems. I like the non-theist label, if I need a label. Works for me.

  • AliceBastable
    AliceBastable Member Posts: 3,461
    edited January 2019

    I like "nontheist" too, it's less confrontational sounding. And as a bonus, it confuses people! 😀

  • ananda8
    ananda8 Member Posts: 2,755
    edited January 2019

    Living in a very religious state, we have been asked about what church we attend on more than one occasion.  I tell people that we are not religious.  That is so vague that it means almost nothing at all, yet seems to satisfy those that inquire.

    My state has one church for every 500 people and church is a big part of the culture.


  • wanderweg
    wanderweg Member Posts: 549
    edited January 2019

    I think that list of pantheistic proniciples would be endorsed by most secular humanists, without using a god term. Certainly they all fit for me. (They also fit, incidentally, for most Quakers I know.)

    Wrenn, what a lovely poem. I struggle with the idea that every thing is okay, but I can accept that everything is. The light and the dark just are.

    Ananda, I work in an area where the question of where you go to church is often the first thing people ask you about yourself. You can't throw a rock around here without hitting a little Baptist church.

    I generally call my self nontheist rather than atheist, but I prefer just to say “I'm not a theist." A weird distinction, maybe, but the reason I make it is that it irks me to have to have a word for not believing in a mythical being. The way I don't say I'm an atoothfairyist or an asasquatchist.

  • pingpong1953
    pingpong1953 Member Posts: 362
    edited January 2019

    Th pat list of pantheistic principles is almost identical to the 7 principles of Unitarian Universalism. The only thing that is missing is "respect for the democratic process." 

  • Spookiesmom
    Spookiesmom Member Posts: 9,568
    edited January 2019

    I just say I am unchurched if asked.

  • ananda8
    ananda8 Member Posts: 2,755
    edited January 2019

    Using the phrase "unchurched" in my area would result in people knocking on your door.  There are all sorts of strategies to reach the unchurched. 

  • illimae
    illimae Member Posts: 5,710
    edited January 2019

    Double funeral tomorrow for my former bosses parents (car accident). I will respectfully sit through all the BS and give my support but this is a pretty rare occasion for me.

    Side note: I wonder if the funeral will be extra strange, it’s my first one since diagnosis and death is a legit possibility sooner rather than later. I don’t care about being gone myself but I hate to see the sadness that remains.

    Also, I usually say I’m not religious too.

  • wanderweg
    wanderweg Member Posts: 549
    edited January 2019

    I agree with Ananda - saying you’re unchurched in my neck of the woods is just asking for an intervention!

    Illimae - I’m sorry about your boss’s parents. That’s sad. Life can sure turn on a dime. I imagine the funeral will feel different for you now. I’m only stage 1 but there’s something about chemo that makes mortality a much more real concept.

  • Trishyla
    Trishyla Member Posts: 1,005
    edited January 2019

    Thank goodness I live in pretty progressive part of California. The church question never arises. I did have it come up with my very religious in laws when I first met them 25 years ago. My MIL said to me: Even though my son doesn't believe in God, we both know he's watching. I just laughed and let her know that her son and I were on the same page when it came to not believing in magical sky fairies.

    Needless to say, it didn't go over very well. 😉 That, and the fact that we chose to not get married until our daughter was in high school, made for some very strained holidays.

    Even though I don't post much, I really do enjoy this thread. It adds to the sense of community for me.

    Trish

  • wrenn
    wrenn Member Posts: 2,707
    edited January 2019

    Coming up with labels is interesting to me since I have never been asked about my beliefs (live in Canada) and rarely know any friends or acquaintances beliefs. We never know whether our politicians or leaders have any religious beliefs either except for a few very conservative ones and even then they are careful. It is very private here.

  • Trishyla
    Trishyla Member Posts: 1,005
    edited January 2019

    Lucky you, wrenn. Used to be that way here. Until the conservatives took control of our government back in the eighties. After that all politicians (left, right and center) played the religion card. Very depressing.

  • Wren44
    Wren44 Member Posts: 8,585
    edited January 2019

    I'm lucky to live in Seattle. The majority of people here would rather be in the wilderness than in a building on Sunday. We can be on the ski slopes in a couple of hours.

  • AliceBastable
    AliceBastable Member Posts: 3,461
    edited January 2019

    If people ask, my first response is usually "I'm not churchy." If the other person escalates the conversation, I'll get as specific as necessary. Hmm, maybe I need to try "I'm not goddy."

  • magiclight
    magiclight Member Posts: 8,690
    edited January 2019

    Alice: I agree the second response is much more specific as I think many folks who are not 'churchy' are very 'goddy'.

  • SoCalLisa
    SoCalLisa Member Posts: 13,961
    edited January 2019

    I also live where noone really questions ones religious beliefs. And that's a good thing!

    I avoid funerals but sometimes I just really have to go. I just hate being preached to. And listening to all the prayers. But compassion for close friends and family overrides my personal beliefs.

  • AliceBastable
    AliceBastable Member Posts: 3,461
    edited January 2019

    I go to church weddings and funerals. I'm pretty good at having a movie playing in my head when I'm bored, so it's a handy trait to have! When it's time for Their Lord's Prayer, I quietly recite Wordsworth's My Heart Leaps Up (The Rainbow). The hard part, as a churchy friend who switched to an Episcopalian congregation put it, is keeping up with the choreography. 💃

  • illimae
    illimae Member Posts: 5,710
    edited January 2019

    I wish I could get bored, I can’t quit crying longer enough for that, lol. I’m in Texas, so lots of sad country music and some funny big hair. I cry when tv show series end, at retirements and funerals are the worst. I managed until wind beneath my wings played, it’s a big trigger for me of death by terminal cancer, so I stepped out briefly. Anyway, it was more stories than sermon, so that was nice.

  • Springflowers
    Springflowers Member Posts: 85
    edited January 2019

    I live in the "Bible belt" of Ontario surrounded by Mennonites. My husbands family either are or were Mennonite. The ones that were are now in fundamentalist groups. We get asked all the time "so where do you fellowship?". For many years I lied and said we were going to a church in the near by city ( not total lie we did go there years ago). No i just say no where. Then we get asked how our relationship is with the lord, my answer is usually fine, to avoid any sermon. Definitely would get a visit at the door if we said un-churched lol. Sad to say but we avoid family gatherings so we don't get asked and made to feel bad about yourselves. I know many of my husbands family think i lead him away for the lord but we dont care what they say.

  • KatyK
    KatyK Member Posts: 248
    edited January 2019

    Having been in churches maybe ten times in my life I feel a bit uncomfortable - I don’t know what to do! Also a bit worried I may spontaneously combust!😂. Glad you made it through the funeral, Illimae. I must admit I was relieved this fall to not attend a funeral. Not someone I was close to, a former colleague whose husband died of a heart attack. I may have gone but we had travel plans already. I also gaugemy emotional state on weddings, parties, etc. I don’t want to go if I’ll be very upset and ruin the celebration. Hasn’t happened yet.

  • jo6359
    jo6359 Member Posts: 2,279
    edited January 2019

    illimae- I'm pleased for you that the service went well. Wind Beneath My Wings always make me tear up. I haven't been to a funeral or memorial service since being diagnosed a year ago. A friend's mother died approx. 6 months ago. I politely declined attending the service. I figured cooking enough food for a hundred people for the repast was far easier than attending the service.

    We are still awaiting results from my nephew's tests. The bible-thumping crazies from Tennessee and Kentucky have all arrived. Then we need to throw in my sanctimonious sister-in-law (wife of the minister) . I am so thankful none of them know I have cancer. My Sil has not shown up or called to visit my nephew since he's been hospitalized. Now that the whole family is at the hospital she shows up with her Bible. Most of them mean well. When my former sister-in-law informed me today she was going to pray for my worthless soul anyhow because she's a good Christian. I believe a family member must have mentioned it to her that I didn't participate in one of the prayer circles. She made it very clear she prays for those heathens who don't deserve it only because God commands it. Im thankful there were 240 miles separating the two of us. Instead I politely told her to have a nice day and I hung up the phone. I'm going for a run now. I need to clear my head.

  • ananda8
    ananda8 Member Posts: 2,755
    edited January 2019

    jo6359,  What a crowd of believers! When I'm in a group like that, I pretend I am an anthropologist and they are a newly discovered primitive tribe. 

    I'm sorry your nephew has to go through the week end waiting for his test results.  I hope that the results show something easily fixed with ice cream.


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