Atheist
Manifesto:
Why do we believe? A
question asked by those willing for centuries, and many answers have come forth.
This essay will take a historical look at religion preceding and leading
into Christianity, a logical look at it, and finally a psychological look at it.
Religion is known to have existed for at least 7000 years, and it is
thought to have begun around 10,000 years ago.
The first signs of religion are found in gravesites of early humans/late
Neanderthals in Eastern Europe. These gravesites were found to have very clean
fossils, with flowers, dyes, and later, pottery placed around the body of the
deceased. The Aborigines of
Australia are believed to have formed religion around 2000 years later, around
the same time as the peoples of Eastern Asia and Central Africa.
Before this time, as discovered in Eastern Asia’s ‘Peking Man’,
deceased members of a group were often cannibalized and the remains were placed
in the back of the groups dwelling (most often a large cave) along with other
waste. These late pre-humans all
are found to have identical bone structures and brain capacities as those of
modern men. In fact if one were to
place a Neanderthal in modern society, give him a clean shave and a quick
English lesson, it would be impossible to distinguish him from other modern men.
They are classified as pre-human only by their lifestyle and lack of
complex tools and social grouping.
Gravesites, the beginning of religion it can be said, are still a key
element of all religious people today. Virtually
every religion has an intricate ceremony to ensure an easy journey into the
afterlife, or the next life. People
could not, and still cannot, determine what happened to a ‘person’ after
they died. Humanity had evolved
past the unknowing cannibals witnessed in Eastern Asia, and now feared death,
and the implications involved.
Next
came natural phenomena such as meteors, volcanoes, earthquakes, floods, etc.
The first known priests of South America used their ability to predict an
eclipse of the sun as a display of their connection with the Gods.
The priests of Greece told the people that lightening was due to the
anger of Zeus, the King of the Gods. So
again, religion was used to explain: first death, now the natural world.
It was in these early times that mankind first began to question the
origin of things, such as the earth and of mankind itself.
From this came the various ‘Origin Myths’ of today.
From the Native American’s eagle and serpent to Christianity’s 7
Days, these were the stories told to the people by the priests, backed by the
priests claim to ‘Divine Right’ or ‘Divine Influence’.
The priests claimed that they were told these stories by God, or various
Gods. Soon man had an explanation
for almost everything, backed by God, or in most cases, a God for each
phenomenon. Priests, the only ones
with the ability to predict what the Gods would do next, using weather and
astrological signs for predictions, became very powerful, next to kings, and in
some cases they ruled as or above the kings.
In
the time of Christianity the priests of Judea had become highly corrupt, they
were closely connected with the kings of the time, owned lavish palaces, and
lived lives of luxury. The priests
used their divine right to persecute those who did not follow their teachings,
calling them evil, sinners, and heretics. Such
persecutions abound in the Bible, written as orders from God to murder the
nonbelievers. Jesus appeared as a
leader of the people, preaching to the poor, the outcasts.
This gained him great popularity among the poorer Jews, but the others
rejected him, pointing out that he often spoke against the scriptures and did
not fulfill the prophesy of the true messiah.
Those who knew the scriptures of the past rejected Jesus, while the
ignorant, the outcast, and the needy clung to him as the man who would deliver
them from their dejected place in society.
Jesus saw himself as the messiah, sent to bring the word of God, his
father, to the Jews in an attempt to revitalize the church for the end-times,
which he saw as coming within the lives of some of his disciples.
So, before his death he gave them the order to spread his word, to hurry,
because the end-times were near and God would only accept 12000 from each of the
12 tribes of Judea, with the disciples as the leaders of each of these 12 tribes
after the Armageddon had taken place. (Bible
Placements to be added)
The
disciples then went out, preaching to the Jews, but saw poor results.
They then decided to preach also to the gentiles, knowing that these
people accepted new gods readily, most already having a pantheon of gods to
explain various phenomena in their lives. The
disciples won many converts at this time, promising paradise after death, a
privilege previously reserved to high priests, to all who believed in this new
God with them. Nearly 40 years
after the death of Jesus the first Gospel, that of Mark, was written,
chronicling the life of Jesus as it was told to its author(s).
It wasn’t until much later that the other books of the Gospel and
following records that make up the New Testament were written.
Logical
and Psychological arguments are still in the works – But read my original
Manifesto below for a summary of these and other Historical arguments.
It
is my view that the belief in god is illogical.
The belief is today, as it has always been, a way to explain the
unexplained and to attribute our weaknesses and strengths to a being other than
ourselves. We as humans 10,000
years ago (YA) began to wonder about death, it is believed.
This is the spawn of religion, the unknown.
We did not know where we went after death and this frightened us.
For century’s when people died, they were (as observed in Peiking man)
often cannibalized and their bones placed in the back of the cave or dwelling
area. The Neanderthal’s of
Eastern Europe were the first believed to prepare the dead for some form of
post-death existence. We have found
graves with intricately placed flowers, and later, pottery.
From this evolved our modern beliefs about the after-life.
These include reincarnation (Hindu), eternity with god (Heaven), eternity
in absence of god (a kinder definition of Hell), nearness to Ala, and so on.
Basically it is believed by most religions that if you are a good
believer that you will face eternal happiness after death, and if you are a poor
believer or non-believer you will be faced with eternal suffering.
It is the belief of myself as an Atheist that we go to the same place
that we were before birth, nowhere.
An argument once posed to me by a Christian friend of mine is that we cannot
become “nothing”; at least our soul cannot, due to the basic characteristics
of matter. “Matter and energy
cannot be destroyed,” she brilliantly conveyed, “It can simply change form,
we know that the flesh can decompose, but your atheistic belief cannot account
for the soul.” Need I even state
what I said to her? Well, might as
well. I told her that the soul has
no matter, it has no energy, it is nothing, like the ideas we had in our head
before we died. Sure it would be
nice to think that when we die, our soul (containing all the information in our
brain I suppose) would be whisked away to some “higher place.”
Once we (humans) had solved the big after-life mystery, we went on to explain
things like earthquakes, disease, thunderstorms, volcanic eruptions, pretty much
anything not caused by man. They
were all simply the acts of god. This
was thousands of years ago, and although we have advanced greatly in many
things, we still believe that many things are acts of god.
As an Atheist, one of my religious beliefs is that science is the most
powerful thing man has created, even more powerful than any of the gods we have
created. Not to sidetrack too far,
but I do state that man created god, not visa-versa because there is no proof of
the existence of god, nor is there any evidence that any other life form
believes in god. Science has over
the last 2,000 years, and incredibly increasing over the last 100 years,
replaced many of the beliefs of religion. Therefore,
my beliefs are slowly but surely replacing those of religious people.
We can now say that thunderstorms are caused by colliding air masses and
that earthquakes are caused by sliding tectonic plates, but there is NO way to
convince an ignorant theist that god is not making these air masses and plates
move. It’s really that simple.
These beliefs may or may not be held by all Christians or Muslims or Jews
but if they are, how do you tell them they are wrong?
How can I convince an ancient Greek that Atlas is no longer responsible
for holding the earth up, and harder yet, that he never was?
To them this is blasphemy, heresy, and lies.
As
children most of us believed in Santa Clause, because that is who our parents
told us brought us our presents each year.
And most of us believed in god, because he was used to explain many
things that otherwise could not be explained to us.
If our mom had told us that Uncle Albert was responsible for all of these
things, you would believe it. So
what happened to Santa Clause? We would defend him to the best of our ability
any time a peer would tell us he didn’t exist, and perhaps cry if a cruel
older brother or sister would tell us that mom and dad had “just made him
up.” And at some point we asked
our mom and dad, and if they felt we were old enough, they would tell us the truth…
he was all made up. We were
not stupid because we believed in him, just ignorant, or to put it nicer, ill
informed, as is the case with god. Mom
and dad never told us he didn’t exist, because nobody told them, or
when they did, they defended god to the best of their ability, or went to their
own mom and dad to attempt to discover the truth, which they never got.
As
a believer in science I admit that the existence or nonexistence of some things
cannot be proved. This is not a
major flaw in most cases, but with god, it seems to be a pretty major hang-up.
Scientists can only rely on their own beliefs to determine results.
These beliefs are spawned from thorough testing, and seeing the same
results time after time, whereas the existence of god cannot be proved or
disproved by any testing or research.
Neither can the existence of invisible flying dragons or a wide range of
other things, but we atheists put these things all in the same category.
The only reason that we’ve “disproved” the existence of Santa
Clause is because supposedly he delivers presents to all the good little boys
and girls every year at Christmas, and we’ve seen clearly that he does not in
fact do this – or maybe he does but none of us were ever good enough to
actually receive presents from him, so our parents had to buy us stuff and tell
us it was from him, much as we now do with our own children.
So I guess Santa Clause can go in that magical category with god and
invisible flying dragons.
So
why do people believe in god? There are simply still things that cannot be
explained.
The first two I
find to be two of the best, both used commonly by the outspoken radio talk show
host G. Gordon Liddy. He, like many
people who today speak against agnosticism and atheism was once himself
agnostic.
His first argument
is that without god, there is no explanation for the beginning of the universe,
‘the uncaused first cause’ he calls it.
Scientists have formulated several theories about how the universe began,
most prominently the Big Bang theory. This
theory states that a great explosion of matter created the universe
approximately 5 billion years ago forming our galaxy and perhaps millions others
just like it. Of course this
crushed the Christian belief that god created the Earth approximately 6000 B.C.
But most intelligent Christians accepted that their own belief could not
compete with that of science and adapted this as their own belief, simply
stating that God had made the big bang happen.
More recently however, a theory of Big Bang, Big Crunch has been put
forth stating that the original big bang could have taken place basically
‘forever’ ago. It states that
after the first big bang the universe expanded, as it is doing currently, to a
critical point at which antimatter formed at the original center would cause a
black hole of enormous proportions that would cause the entire universe to
contract. Eventually the whole
universe would contract into one great ball of mass and energy, and then there
would be another big bang, and so on, for eternity.
This is today a very widely accepted theory, none of its arguments have
been disproved and thus far all evidence supports it.
That is the
wonderful thing about science, that the best ideas are accepted, but ceaselessly
challenged. Scientists even
challenge their own beliefs, because scientists know that new evidence will
constantly be collected, and this new evidence will create new theories.
There is no scientific dogma, only theories that are most widely
accepted, including evolutionary theory.
Second, Liddy
argues that without a belief in god there is no reason for morality.
This directly contradicts the view put forth by a leading southern
Baptist minister on Larry King Live during a discussion on the southern
Baptists’ practice of campaigning heavily to convert Jews to Christianity.
His conversation with a leading Jewish Rabbi went something like the
following:
Minister:
It is the words of the bible that say only the acceptance of Christ as
your savior can lead to your salvation; otherwise you are condemned to Hell.
Rabbi:
So a man can be evil and unkind his entire life and on his deathbed
accept Christ and be saved?
Minister:
This is not something I have made up; this is the writings of the Bible.
Rabbi:
So you’re saying that the children burned and gassed at Auschwitz are
condemned to eternal suffering and those who burned them are in Heaven?
Minister:
- no reply -
It
is points like this that turn more and more people toward Atheism each day.
Not that any religion is responsible for people being stupid or racist or
cruel, but it gives them an excuse for it.
I feel that religion is great for many people because it gives them great
guidelines for living a loving, kind life.
But these guidelines can be taught just as easily by parents, as my own
parents did, telling me not that I would go to hell for stealing, but telling me
that its wrong, and I would be held responsible for my actions, both good and
bad.
Other
Arguments:
I'm
sure many are out there, I just can’t think of any right now.
Got any?
Most
of my own anti-religious arguments are aimed at Christianity, simply because
it’s the religion that I know the most about.
I was raised a Catholic, until the age of 12 or so, when my questions
became too complicated for the answers that Christianity provided.
I know that Muslims have done amazingly cruel things such as using
children to clear minefields by telling them that they would be instantly
promoted to heaven if they were to die ‘for their people’ or ‘die in
battle’. From what I have learned
about Jews, they are very peaceful in religious practice.
The Rabbi from the Larry King Live show stated that nobody could
live a truly righteous life, but that people should try to live a good, moral
life and they will be rewarded with Heaven after death.
My studies of Hindu and Muslim religions have been minimal, but both are
primarily peaceful. As
a whole I believe that religion is neither good nor bad, but a powerful means of
doing both. Would Mother
Teresa have not done so many great humanitarian deeds if she weren’t a
Christian; would I be a better person if I were? No.
It in no way brings us together as a people, but separates us into
categories that can be subjugated, discriminated, and ultimately annihilated.
Still, one of the most powerful arguments for religion is to explain the
unexplained. People speaking in
tongues, sightings of the Virgin Mary, bleeding Crucifixes, the healing of a
chronic illness; these are all ‘miracles’ witnessed by people, prompting
them to thank God, and affirming (at least to them) that there is no doubt now
that God does exist. But in many
cases speaking in tongues has been proven to be complete fraud and sometimes
brainwashing, there have been more sightings of little green men than of the
Virgin Mary, and magical people called doctors are responsible for more healings
than any prayers. As for the
bleeding Crucifixes, most occur only once, are never allowed to be
scientifically tested, and those that are have never held up.
People seem to ‘need’ their religion. To
lean on it in times of need. Philanthropists
have exploited this need with messages such as “Help others and He will help
you.” People in great conflict
seem to think god is their only way out. People
try to treat alcoholics by sending them to church.
Yes, this does work, but so does the all holy AA.
Christians believe that much of the time they simply cannot do something
“without God’s help.” This
seems like such a cop-out to Atheists.
I will not rule out the possibility of God or perhaps several Gods existing, just as I will not rule out the invisible dragons and unicorns, but I won’t devoutly worship any of them either. God came about through human kind's curiosity and insecurity, it is time that we grow out of it.