Hello and welcome to the adventures of your everyday atheist! I stand for social justice and am completely pro-equality, but I strongly disagree with the tumblr-type social justice warrior bullshit. Also, my ask box is always open. No but really, it is open to anything and everything.
For a blog with less of a point, I have a personal account: thelifeandtimesof-amanda.tumblr.com

 

teachthemhowtothink:

confrontingbabble-on:

The bible writers could not make up their minds…would a god love mankind, or would he hate us.  So they looked around at the world, and saw that one good person could have everything life could offer, and then a little while later, for no reason whatsoever, from disease or natural disaster, be reduced to a shriveled shell of suffering…while another good person could be living a life of abject misery, and then suddenly strike it rich. So they wrote a lottery god…that both loved and hated mankind, to the very extent that they made Jesus say that not everyone that called him Lord, would go to heaven…You pays your money, and you takes your chances!

This probably shouldn’t have made me laugh… but it did.

teachthemhowtothink:

confrontingbabble-on:

The bible writers could not make up their minds…would a god love mankind, or would he hate us.  So they looked around at the world, and saw that one good person could have everything life could offer, and then a little while later, for no reason whatsoever, from disease or natural disaster, be reduced to a shriveled shell of suffering…while another good person could be living a life of abject misery, and then suddenly strike it rich. So they wrote a lottery god…that both loved and hated mankind, to the very extent that they made Jesus say that not everyone that called him Lord, would go to heaven…You pays your money, and you takes your chances!

This probably shouldn’t have made me laugh… but it did.

A list of reasons why I consider myself anti-theist

Many people say it is not religion’s fault that it is so violent. Just bad people using religion for evil, and there are bad people who would do evil things with or without religion. However, I find that it is religion’s fault because it is in the texts themselves acts of violence and evil. People aren’t getting this from nowhere, they’re getting it form the Bible itself. 

I not only see many problems (that I expand on in a previous post) with the story of Noah’s Ark from the Old Testament, but also a quote from the New Testament about Jesus in Matthew 10:32-39.

There are also a few more example of violence in the Old/New Testament, such as God’s request for Abraham to sacrifice his son, God being rather cruel to Job, a rape victim being forced into marrying her rapist, the fact that Hell exists and an all-powerful or at least quite powerful and benevolent God doing nothing about this, and the permission to own slaves even with specific rules on how to mark them. Those are just a few off the top of my head. 

Actually, there is quite the list of violent acts in the Bible. And, before you make this point, one cannot simply add a separate list of the good God had done to justify the bad He had done. If God is aware of evil and chooses not to fix it, He himself is evil. If God is unaware of all these evil acts, he is impotent and not worthy of any praise. 

If I may also add, violence is not the only problem I have with the Bible. The texts also include several incorrect facts (false claims about insects, the value of pi, and the age of the earth), advocate against knowledge (the story of adam and eve where God cautioned them against eating the fruit from the tree of knowledge), maintain the idea that women are inferior and should be treated as such (1 Timothy 2:12 and 1 Corinthians 14:34), are hateful towards any other opposing views (Matthew 10:32-33), create shameful guilt for thousands of people even today because they say non-procreational sex is a sin (Genesis 38:9) and that women must remain virgins until marriage (Hebrews 13:4 and Deuteronomy 22:13-21), and, worst of all, are not at all backed by evidence!  

My thoughts on the story of Noah’s Ark

I was told by my Rabbi that people had only committed minor sins, but that these sins became so commonplace that the people eventually failed to recognize them as sins. Thus God felt the need to destroy them all because they could not distinguish between good and evil. I fail to see why God could not have simply educated them on the evil of their ways instead of punishing them all, let alone drowning them all. Also there is no Mosaic law at this point, so I don’t see how the people could have known any better.

In the story, God killed many innocent people, for surely, not everyone on the entire planet was committing whatever crime it was that God thinks should be punishable by death. In fact, everyone except Noah (and his wife?) were drowned, along with so many innocent animals. To me, this seems unnecessary and exceedingly violent.