From the age of eight until a couple of years ago I was an atheist. Now, at 69, I realise I have been wrong.
There is one post on this board that I want to take issue with, and this is done with all due respect to the poster. There is a picture in one of the photo galleries of a sign that supposedly defines atheism. Reducing the message on the sign to it's basic meaning, it says that atheists believe that nothing plus nothing results in something, and that it all happens by chance.
This is not what atheists believe. While you may be comfortable in the thought that atheists base their beliefs on such nonsense, the truth is that you will find it impossible to reach an atheist so long as you have so little understanding of their view of existence. Many times over the years I had Christians try to witness to me, but with such a total misunderstanding of my beliefs that their words were meaningless.
Here is an example. Often a Christian would ask me if I believed in evolution, and when I said I did, he would then launch into a long argument about how the great variety of life we see on Earth could have come about by chance. I would laugh and walk away, because none of the theories of evolution are built on the notion that anything happens by chance.
Again, concerning the so-called 'big bang', a Christian would ask me how I could believe that nothing suddenly exploded and became everything, again exposing a complete misunderstanding of what I believed.
This is one reason why I remained an atheist for nearly 60 years. Had any Christian, over those years, made a real effort to understand what I believed and why I believed it, my life probably would have been very different. As long as you approach atheists believing that they believe what is on that sign in the photo gallery, you will have little luck in witnessing to them.
My own change in beliefs has come as I have studied the latest findings in quantum mechanics and their relationship to the theory of electricity. As a child I was taught that negative particles called electrons moved in clearly defined orbits around the positively charged nucleus an an atom, much as the planets in our solar system move in clearly defined orbits around the sun. Today there is some uncertainty about whether such a particle even exists except when we go looking for it. There is a good chance that almost everything we thought we knew about electricity is wrong.
As I have studied the subject, I have begun to see that the questions about who we are, why we are as we are, and what our final destiny will be have answers that lie far beyond the comprehension of the physical sciences we have relied on for so long.
The road home is long, and I may have but a short time left for the journey, but I have, at least, taken the first step.
There is one post on this board that I want to take issue with, and this is done with all due respect to the poster. There is a picture in one of the photo galleries of a sign that supposedly defines atheism. Reducing the message on the sign to it's basic meaning, it says that atheists believe that nothing plus nothing results in something, and that it all happens by chance.
This is not what atheists believe. While you may be comfortable in the thought that atheists base their beliefs on such nonsense, the truth is that you will find it impossible to reach an atheist so long as you have so little understanding of their view of existence. Many times over the years I had Christians try to witness to me, but with such a total misunderstanding of my beliefs that their words were meaningless.
Here is an example. Often a Christian would ask me if I believed in evolution, and when I said I did, he would then launch into a long argument about how the great variety of life we see on Earth could have come about by chance. I would laugh and walk away, because none of the theories of evolution are built on the notion that anything happens by chance.
Again, concerning the so-called 'big bang', a Christian would ask me how I could believe that nothing suddenly exploded and became everything, again exposing a complete misunderstanding of what I believed.
This is one reason why I remained an atheist for nearly 60 years. Had any Christian, over those years, made a real effort to understand what I believed and why I believed it, my life probably would have been very different. As long as you approach atheists believing that they believe what is on that sign in the photo gallery, you will have little luck in witnessing to them.
My own change in beliefs has come as I have studied the latest findings in quantum mechanics and their relationship to the theory of electricity. As a child I was taught that negative particles called electrons moved in clearly defined orbits around the positively charged nucleus an an atom, much as the planets in our solar system move in clearly defined orbits around the sun. Today there is some uncertainty about whether such a particle even exists except when we go looking for it. There is a good chance that almost everything we thought we knew about electricity is wrong.
As I have studied the subject, I have begun to see that the questions about who we are, why we are as we are, and what our final destiny will be have answers that lie far beyond the comprehension of the physical sciences we have relied on for so long.
The road home is long, and I may have but a short time left for the journey, but I have, at least, taken the first step.