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WHAT WAS YOUR AHA MOMENT?

I entered college as a pre-ministerial student, but my initial studies raised flags I could not justify, so I drifted in and out of religion for a number of years.

It wasn't until I read Desmond Morris' "The Naked Ape" that I finally put it all together and evolved (pardon the pun) into a full-fledged Atheist.

How about you?

jeshuey 8 Aug 3
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11 comments

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1

Many of the people whom I most admired claimed to be atheists. My aha moment occurred when I finally accepted their claims.

1

The Richard Dawkins quote, "We are all atheists about most of the gods that societies have ever believed in. Some of us just go one god further."

1

It was the expectation that two people populated the world. I knew that was genetically impossible at a young age. There was also the lack of evidence to back up most, if not all, stories.

1

As a kid I was sitting in church with my grandparents who were hardcore Catholics. It just seemed like the priests were no different from the rest of us and I never felt a divine presence or anything at all for that matter. I tried to go to masses with evangelicals to see "speaking-in-tongues", but it honestly just felt like people babbling incoherently.

1

My parents were not religious. I never really believed.

2

When I was young I saw all the people around me with their own flavors of religion and just assumed everyone had one they fit into so I searched. I got really into studying religion as a preteen but as I saw how people ascribed to their faiths I just got jaded I guess, seeing how they only held to the tenants they or their society already valued. Then I began looking into the holes in the stories, found science, never looked back.

1

I had my first real doubts when I was about 12 when I read the Children's Illustrated Old and New Testament...it was graphic to my innocent mind.

What stood out was the violence and numerous contradictions that even a young mind found difficult to swallow...

1

Probably at primary school, aged about 7 or 8, when I was told that not going to church was a mortal sin the same as murder. As soon as my vocabulary had developed enough I found that the word bullshit was the most appropriate. From that age on I found everything questionable and the more I looked into it, and I did for many years, the more I realised it (religion etc) didn't stand up under the slightest scrutiny.

2

Virtually every George Carlin comedy special as I was growing up.

3

There was no defining moment. My once-cherished beliefs just melted away under the bright light of scientific facts and their own absurdity. They just could not be sustained even under the burden of a lifetime of indoctrination.

1

I was lucky, I wasn't raised in a religious household, So I've been a non-believer since birth.

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