Hi all
This thread is prompted by a conversation I had with an atheist friend.
You never quite know how these threads run, but personally I am interested in hearing the opinions of atheist posters, rather than discussing or debating them.
So, here goes ...
I can understand that non-believers look at the wars, the in-fighting, the atrocities committed in the name of religion, and shake their heads in despair.
I can understand that non-believers might come to the conclusion that without religion the world might be a more peaceful place.
You see, I too see those atrocities committed in the name of religion, and I too am horrified.
But I also see the good that comes from people who are driven by religion.
Having this kind of conversation with my atheist friend, I came to realise that his concerns are not just around people doing bad things in the name of God - but that in his eyes the very idea of believing in a supernatural being without any underpinning scientific evidence is what he rejects and disagrees with.The very idea of believing without proof is what disturbs him - regardless of whether this idea prompts the believer to do good, bad or whatever ...
Do any of you have any thoughts on this?
I don't really know what it is I am trying to ask, because I cannot get my head around his thinking at all!
Perhaps one of you can enlighten me ...?
Peace
Salaam, Glo,
Before I became a Hindu, for many years I was disenchanted with religion. I too, was an atheist for a time. I don't understand why you can't get your head around his thinking that he needs proof that God exists. We live in a material world, where there has been much research, study and thinking done on cosmology and the nature of the universe. Our day to day life in Western society is based on scientific materialism. "I'll believe it when I see it"
Primitive people used to ascribe every mystery they encountered to a god of some kind. Now we know better, and have a scientific explanation for most natural phenomena. Perhaps, some day, we will have a useful scientific explanation of how the universe came into existence.
So, I believe your atheist friend is saying, that, just because we have no generally agreed upon scientific explanation for the existence of the universe, does not mean that God exists. Over the millenia, science has provided us with more logical explanations than the primitive peoples had. Therefore, I conclude that God does not exist.
You, on the other hand, are saying, because we do not have scientific proof that God exists, does not mean that s/he does not. I conclude, from my own perspective, and from my own personal experience, that God does exist.
My current position has a Hindu on the spiritual path, is that belief in God is subjective: it depends on one's own perspective and personal experiences. I do not believe that a belief in God automatically makes one a better person, nor do I believe the converse.
My belief comes down to this:
The Messenger of Allah (pbuh) said, “Shall I inform you of the best morals of this world and the hereafter?
They are to forgive he who oppresses you, to make a bond with he who severs from you, to be kind to he who insults you, and to give to he who deprives you.
If we could all do that, despite our religious differences, the world would indeed be a better place.
To me, whether it was said by Mohammed (pbuh) or Jesus, or Krishna, or any other messenger and/or deity, or it is a humanistic principle, is irrelevant.