Never pass up a chance to sit down or relieve yourself. -old Apache saying

Friday, December 26, 2014

An honest preacher?

I say "an honest preacher" because this guy, Ryan Bell, a Seventh-Day Adventist pastor, decided to see if he could go for a full year "without God." 

Turns out it was a piece of cake, and the guy is now an atheist, even though he's not yet totally comfortable with the term atheism.

This happens over and over, when someone decides to really think critically, they often end up as atheists.

Which suggests that believers still don't really "think" very much.  Thinking is really about all it takes. I'm not sure why thinking is so hard, except that the culture actually often discourages thinking.


After Year Of Atheism, Former Pastor: 'I Don't Think God Exists'


At the start of 2014, former Seventh-Day Adventist pastor Ryan Bell made an unusual New Year's resolution: to live for one year without God. This, reflecting his own loss of faith. He kept a blog documenting his journey and has a documentary crew following him.
After a year, Bell tells NPR's Arun Rath, "I've looked at the majority of the arguments that I've been able to find for the existence of God and on the question of God's existence or not, I have to say I don't find there to be a convincing case in my view.
"I don't think that God exists. I think that makes the most sense of the evidence that I have and my experience. But I don't think that's necessarily the most interesting thing about me."
Today, Bell has a new job at PATH, an organization dedicated to helping the homeless.
"It's, I think, an expression of really the part of me that hasn't changed. I'm still the same person deep down that I was before. I care about justice and equality and I want to see opportunities spread more evenly in our society," Bell says.
Bell says he still feels like atheism is "an awkward fit," and also feels uncomfortable around his former Christian friends who are adjusting to his new views.
One of his biggest lessons from the year is "that people very much value certainty and knowing and are uncomfortable saying that they don't know."
Now he thinks certainty is a bit overrated.
"I think before I wanted a closer relationship to God and today I just want a closer relationship with reality," Bell says.



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