Marcialou
We are stardust
I call myself an atheist because I don’t believe in an all-powerful, all-seeing, all-knowing, all beneficent, everlasting creator who has a plan for us and the universe. However, I do have an interest in religion and spirituality; that’s why I joined this forum. I’m not one to denigrate believers.
So on the occasion when I find myself in a religious setting, such as a wedding or a funeral, I try to subdue my atheism. When God is invoked I try to imagine something which reflects my spiritual values and makes what’s being said, meaningful for me. For example, at a funeral I attended recently, the rabbi made it easy. He spoke of how people often lose sight of God in the face of the death of a loved one, but how it’s important to find God somewhere within your grief. Then he said, “If you don’t believe in God, think of it as hope for the future.” That’s the sort of thing I try to do.
Does anyone else ever invoke non-traditional ideas of God, either to translate the God-talk into something you believe or because that’s how you really think of God?
So on the occasion when I find myself in a religious setting, such as a wedding or a funeral, I try to subdue my atheism. When God is invoked I try to imagine something which reflects my spiritual values and makes what’s being said, meaningful for me. For example, at a funeral I attended recently, the rabbi made it easy. He spoke of how people often lose sight of God in the face of the death of a loved one, but how it’s important to find God somewhere within your grief. Then he said, “If you don’t believe in God, think of it as hope for the future.” That’s the sort of thing I try to do.
Does anyone else ever invoke non-traditional ideas of God, either to translate the God-talk into something you believe or because that’s how you really think of God?