One day, when I was six years old, I was standing in the playground of my infants school. This was in the early 1970s. I can remember exactly where I was standing. I could still take you there today. It was November, a beautiful sunny day…and I had just realised that God didn’t exist.
I can’t remember exactly why I had this “epiphany” … I think it was around the same time that I realised that Santa Claus wasn’t real. (I had accidentally found a present from Santa in a wardrobe at home.) I fell into a great depression, because I was now convinced I was going to Hell. I knew that was where people who didn’t believe in God went when they died. I was only 6, and hadn’t really thought this through. It took me a while to work out that if God didn’t exist, then Satan and Hell didn’t exist either. But even with the incredibly frightening idea of going to Hell going through my mind, I couldn’t convince myself to believe in a God I knew didn’t exist.
Now, my parents never talked about religion. And to this day I really don’t know what they believed, although I suspect they were agnostics. But they sent me to Sunday School anyway, because I think they wanted me to make up my own mind. But I never realised this, and I continued to go to Sunday School because I thought they expected me to believe in God.
Not that it was a completely bad experience. I loved the minister at my Church who would tell us the story of Pilgrim’s Progress. It was fantastic to hear him tell the story, and to this day I still try to live my life based on the lessons I learned from hearing the tale. But on the other side of the coin there was a miserable old man who used to take us for bible study, and who once slapped me for questioning the validity of the Bible. That was the day I decided to “come out” as an Atheist to my parents. Of course, when I did “come out”, they were fine about it and I no longer had to attend Sunday School. All those years of secret guilt vanished in an instant.
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I dont understand (as an atheist) how christian people are the most judgemental if 'Jesus' tells them to love everybody? Gays, feminists, blacks, immigrants, asylum seekers etc not exactly on their nice list...
The biggest mistake we make when evaluating the existence of God is to base our decision on the conduct of people. People who have faith are no more perfect than those who don't. People of faith are still people, trying to make their way through the decisions of life. Yes, they look to God for help at times, but it doesn't mean that their choices are God's choices or that their actions are endorsed by God. If one is truly seeking God, look beyond people and see the intricacies of our world, the intricacies of our humaness, and first and foremost, read the Bible in depth, it is after all God's heart on paper.