An Atheist’s Journey

December 27, 2008

Not enough faith to attend Midnight Mass

Filed under: Introductory — admin @ 1:51 am

I didn’t go to midnight Mass on Christmas Eve.  I thought about it.  At about 9PM, I googled for Catholic churches in my area and found two that were each only about ten minutes away.  Neither was a cathedral-style church, and that kind of turned me off.  Still, I figured the Mass would be beautiful.  I thought about it.  I was dressed and ready to go…

The Catholic churches I attended as a child, in various small towns in the midwest, had high steeples, grand entrances, lots of stained glass, pews and kneelers, the stations of the cross all around the interior walls, and other architectural features which I’m not remembering right now.  From the outside they looked like *Churches*, not like recreation centers or branches of a modern public library.  They had bells that rang every hour and could be heard around the small town.  They inspired.

In my case, as a child, they inspired first fear, and then disrespect, both which I have outgrown.  For most of my first five years of elementary school, I attended a Catholic school, with nuns as teachers, Mass every day, and confession every week.

I was an altar boy for at least one of those years, though I remember little of the experience, except that I had to dress up in the white robe, and I never knew what I was doing.  And no, I was never abused by a priest.  The fact that some boys were is quite shocking to me.  Priests were almost as close to God as humans could get, except for bishops and the pope.  Priests could do no wrong.  Or so I thought at the time.

From sixth grade onward, I attended public schools.  Less religion in the school and no more Masses every day, but otherwise not much different for me.  Something about the Catholic education was worth it, however.  I got a first-class education, and then I excelled in the public school system.  But maybe that should be a discussion for another day.

In high school, I really came out as an atheist.  I found my voice.  I was almost *evangelical* as an atheist, arguing with anyone who would listen, never backing down, and “winning” every encounter, no matter what it took.  Most of my friends were also atheists, though some were not, that is, if they accepted me for who I was.

Senior year, late one weekend night, we toilet papered the Catholic church, or at least we tried.  If the church had been one of those modern public library things, we could have thrown the rolls of toilet paper over the building.  However, none of us could throw a roll over the magestic structure.  Instead, we toilet papered one of the statues in the court yard between the church and the building where the priest sleeps (can’t think what that’s called).  The priest watched from his window, but didn’t call the police.  We were mostly quiet and peaceful, and it was a different era when kids could be kids without getting hauled off to the slammer.  But it was also a time when kids didn’t do the attrocious things they sometimes do today.

I was married in the Catholic church.  That was in 1981.  When I was only twenty four years old.  Twenty seven years ago.  I guess the Catholic Church doesn’t recognize my divorce.  Maybe my marriage and divorce should be a conversation for another day.

Over the years, I have attended Catholic Mass a few times, mostly with friends or girlfriends, or out of curiosity.  But never because of a sense of obligation.

I didn’t feel a sense of obligation on Christmas Eve.  Maybe that was the problem.  Not enough faith.  Not enough reason to go.  Not enough feeling of religion.  Some might say: not enough spirituality.  But I don’t know the difference between religion and spirituality, though I’m learning at Journey.

And so I didn’t go to midnight Mass, and instead went to bed well before midnight.

December 24, 2008

Should religion be banished?

Filed under: Introductory — admin @ 3:12 am

It is just after midnight on the morning of Christmas Eve, 2008, as I write this.  I have just finished installing WordPress (an open source blogging package) on this new website, http://www.atheistjourney.com.  It has been bitterly cold throughout the U.S., and even here in Austin, Texas.  Nevertheless, I’m thinking about whether I might attend midnight mass tonight.

Religion is on the wane in the western world.  According to Evan Harris Walker, author of the book “The Physics of Consciousness”, religion has been on the wane since the time of Isaac Newton.  Though Newton was a devout Christian, one of the unintended consequences of his laws of motion, and his whole programme of classical mechanics, was the banishment of God from the cosmos.  The banishment was immediate, from the first utterence of his laws stating the relationship between force and motion, essentially between cause and effect, but it took the fabulous success of his programme, over the past three hundred years, for the banishment to be absorbed into the culture.  In another generation or two, at least in western culture, the banishment will be complete: God will be relegated to the history books.

As an atheist, a battle-tested, hard-core, life-long atheist, it has taken me many years to get to this point in my life where I might utter such a thought: I’m not sure that banishing God from the cosmos is a good thing.

This blog will be devoted to exploring why we might need God after all, and in what sense a God might exist.  I’m on a journey, whose end I can’t yet see.  I remain open to all reasonable ideas, and even unreasonable ones.  I am interested in exploring the nature and evolution of consciousness, and their relationship to conceptions of God.  I will look at how storytelling can define a culture, and how a culture can affect its storytelling, and how these things have to do with our understanding of God.  I have resisted those who have said that God exists in the quantum universe, even though I am a physicist, but now I am willing to take a look at that seemingly ridiculous idea.  I will look at logic, its strengths and limitations, and how it might still have something to say about this subject.

But mostly I will tell a story about how I have come to this point in my life, how I was raised in a strongly Catholic family, how I revolted at an early age, how I am now a member of a non-denominational church known as Journey, and how this church is affecting me emotionally, spiritually, and intellectually.

I don’t know where this journey will lead me.  But I invite you to join me.

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