• Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:
    • Reply to discussions and create your own threads.
    • Our modern chat room. No add-ons or extensions required, just login and start chatting!
    • Access to private conversations with other members.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!

U.S. Atheists Know More About Religion Than U.S. Christians

Hockeycowboy

Witness for Jehovah
Premium Member
It’s funny, the way your thread is seen in the ‘New Threads’ box:

“U.S. Atheists Know More About....
Skwim”

But then, nothing!

Grief, I was hoping to learn more about you!
 

Skwim

Veteran Member
It’s funny, the way your thread is seen in the ‘New Threads’ box:

“U.S. Atheists Know More About....
Skwim”

But then, nothing!

Grief, I was hoping to learn more about you!
That is amusing, but because I'm pretty close with personal information---witness protection program and all ;)---I doubt you'll ever learn much.

.
 

Hockeycowboy

Witness for Jehovah
Premium Member
That is amusing, but because I'm pretty close with personal information---witness protection program and all ;)---I doubt you'll ever learn much.

.
WitSec! Cool! Did Arnold Schwarzenegger help you get secreted away?
 

Altfish

Veteran Member
I see to remember that there was a survey about religious knowledge of the various religious (and non-religious) adherents, and atheists cam top closely followed by Jews. Needless to say Christian Fundamentalists trailed in last.

Having said that the overall results were fairly close.
 
Why do atheists know more about religion then the actual religious? It makes more sense that the practitioner of a said religion would know more about it then an atheist. You learn more by hands on experience anyhow.

But also, why do atheists spend so much time learning religion in order to bash it IF they are so sure its all wrong?

In that case, why dont they go spend there time enjoying there ONLY ONE LIFE they got. Why do they WASTE so much time studying religion?
 

Anthem

Active Member
Why do atheists know more about religion then the actual religious? It makes more sense that the practitioner of a said religion would know more about it then an atheist. You learn more by hands on experience anyhow.

But also, why do atheists spend so much time learning religion in order to bash it IF they are so sure its all wrong?

In that case, why dont they go spend there time enjoying there ONLY ONE LIFE they got. Why do they WASTE so much time studying religion?
Some of them think religion is dangerous and they're just trying to save our souls.

What confuses me is that they think their own souls are safe. Like, based on what?
 

Kenny

Face to face with my Father
Premium Member
This is too funny. It appears that atheists know so much and yet know so little.
 

Subduction Zone

Veteran Member
Why do atheists know more about religion then the actual religious? It makes more sense that the practitioner of a said religion would know more about it then an atheist. You learn more by hands on experience anyhow.

But also, why do atheists spend so much time learning religion in order to bash it IF they are so sure its all wrong?

In that case, why dont they go spend there time enjoying there ONLY ONE LIFE they got. Why do they WASTE so much time studying religion?
Many atheists were Christians. They did not make the switch based on ignorance, or a stubborn refusal to face the problems of a belief system. They did not become atheists until it was obvious that the Bible was wrong, again and again.
 

jonathan180iq

Well-Known Member
Why do atheists know more about religion then the actual religious?
Because religious thought is a fascinating subject to study. When observed from the outside, religion is very bizarre. I, for one, want to know how/why people can believe so strongly in something that's so odd.

It makes more sense that the practitioner of a said religion would know more about it then an atheist.
One would think, right?
But one of the intellectual shortcomings of religious acceptance is that it requires practitioners to stop asking critical questions and simply accept the time-hardened responses as truth. When's the last time you were in a church service that openly questioned the primary tenets of the faith and didn't have misleadingly positive and supportive answers on-hand?

You learn more by hands on experience anyhow.
It's a mistake to assume that atheists don't have first hand experience with religious teachings.

But also, why do atheists spend so much time learning religion in order to bash it IF they are so sure its all wrong?
Check out the overall number of users on Religious Forums. It's a crap ton. That's even more true of religious practitioners in the real world. Religions, of all types, play a huge role in the human experience. Not learning about them seems almost as ridiculous as not learning how to walk or drive a car...


In that case, why dont they go spend there time enjoying there ONLY ONE LIFE they got. Why do they WASTE so much time studying religion?
See above.
 

Anthem

Active Member
But one of the intellectual shortcomings of religious acceptance is that it requires practitioners to stop asking critical questions and simply accept the time-hardened responses as truth.
Except that it doesn't.

I have never been told to believe anything in Church.
 

jonathan180iq

Well-Known Member
Some of them think religion is dangerous and they're just trying to save our souls.

What confuses me is that they think their own souls are safe. Like, based on what?
This is a great example of what I was talking about above.

The concept of a soul is readily accepted in religious circles as something that:
A) Exists
B) Needs to be saved

I'd ask what that basic assumption is even based on.
What makes you think there's a soul?
Why do you think that?
What makes you think it needs to be "saved"?
Why do you think that?

To the religionist, these questions seem needless and their answers self apparent.
 

jonathan180iq

Well-Known Member
Except that it doesn't.

I have never been told to believe anything in Church.
So, you imagined and accepted the concept of God requiring a blood sacrifice in order to bring cleanliness to your soul before entering into his Kingdom purely on your own?
 
Top