Kindest Regards, hammer, and welcome to CR!
hammer said:
I have a deep-rooted fear of religion. I don't like it or trust it at all. I guess I feel threatened by it.
That is not necessarily a bad thing.
I guess the first thing I would have to ask is what you mean by the term "religion."
When people approach me about their religious beliefs I feel uneasy, when people are richeous about their beliefs I feel aggressive. I don't uderstand how people can give up their right to free thought and base their entire life on ONE set of teachings. I see organised religion as an evil thing that brainwashes people and causes a lot of pain and suffering in the world.
You see, right here you use the term in two distinct ways and confuse the two. I do not think you do it intentionally, it happens a lot. In my humble opinion, you are wise not to trust "organized religion." However, there is a second connotation you cannot escape, what you called here "religious beliefs." This is religion on a personal level, and it is free to operate independent of organized religion. Atheism is but one more religious belief in this sense. So, while you (and many others) see learning, observing and following religious teachings as "give(ing) up their right to free thought," I here posit that a wise and learned person chooses to observe and follow religious teachings precisely because they have thought the matter through to its logical conclusions.
Now, I will grant that not all followers of any faith have such wherewithal. By far in my experience, most are quite willing to be told how to conduct their lives. I can only guess they believe that they will then not be responsible for their souls. The old "I was just following orders" argument.
I suppose that an atheist could argue that there is no soul. And I could then posit Pascal's wager, in that if I am wrong, I have lost nothing, if you are wrong, you have lost everything. But for the moment I will refrain, and say that even the most ardent atheists I have met still experience moments in their lives they cannot explain. Science and logic, for all of the great contributions they allow, are seriously lacking in describing the totality of reality. Soul, by whatever name it is known, resides among these mysteries.
Anyway.......my feelings here are causing me a lot of pain and anguish. I'm not sure that I need this fear in my life. Am I alone in my feelings? Is it normal for an Atheist to fear religion?
I suspect your anguish is not too severe, or you would not be here at this site. It is not my job, nor my intent, to convert you. You already practice a religion, whether or not you choose to call it by that name. To be concerned about abuse of power by authority, be it ecclesiastical or governmental or otherwise, is a sign of wisdom. To deny one's inner guidance however, is not. The still small voice exists in all of us. Even the most ardent atheist was once a child. To be as a child, is to remember and listen to that voice within.