7 February 2025

Reblog

Shirley and I are down in London for two nights - visiting Ian and Sarah and Zach. All being well,  we will be home on Sunday evening. This blogpost is in fact a scheduled "reblog". I originally posted it in November 2005 under the title "God". Hell, that was almost twenty years ago when we are all so much younger and the world we share was different in many ways and yet very much the same.

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When I was eleven - in my last year of primary school - I had to deliver a prepared assembly talk to the rest of the village school. The only stipulation was that the talk had to be on a religious theme. In my bedroom, I started to scribble down all the reasons why, at that age, I was pretty much convinced that there was no such thing as "God". Though I didn't know it then, one of the key thrusts of my argument had been given a title by philosophers, namely - "The Problem of Evil".

The night before the assembly, I became nervous - I hadn't talked to a soul about my speech plans but something told me that atheist ramblings would not be much appreciated in a Church of England school. I dropped the idea and quickly cobbled together a little presentation about Daniel in the lions' den - bland and safe.

At a younger age, I had had this mental picture of God as an enormous being with long white hair and a long white beard with a kindly face - "Our father which art in heaven..." and he floated in a cloudy white world far above our planet, looking down, always appearing on his side in repose.

Today, as an adult, I am more convinced than ever that there is no God. Though I wouldn't wish to go into details, I have been right down at the bottom, cold and desperate and when I looked into the abyss I realised that there was no one there - no one there to help me. No God. And I think of the Twin Towers and of the recent earthquake in Pakistan and of rape and murder, Waco - Texas and The Reverend Jim Jones in Guyana, Hurricane Katrina, the war in Iraq and the London bombings and babies that die of AIDS and the crashing of aeroplanes and of man's inhumanity to man and I know for sure that there is no God.

This world we are living in is so beautiful and this is where we have a chance to make heaven. Why should we ever be so presumptuous as to expect more than this? Marx was right - religion really is "the opium of the people". It prevents clear vision and it perpetuates the myth of an afterlife. It is an obstacle to being. Religion seems to be about bigotry and self-interest. In the twentieth century, it was the underlying cause of just about every military and social conflict from Bosnia to Northern Ireland and from Kashmir to Palestine.

I live without God in the certain knowledge that the years I have left on Earth are all that I will ever have. There is no one up there, no one listening. This is it. God is a nice story and if it were true, life would unquestionably be much easier to bear. As it is, we have to look after ourselves and our fellow human beings because nobody else is going to do this for us.

14 comments:

  1. I don't believe in God but I do believe in reincarnation and the feeling that you've had more lives and may get more lives: I think life is about learning and growing and understanding and we cannot always do that in one go-round.

    It also stems from my grandmother saying to me when I was very young, that I was an old soul back again.

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  2. You said all this much better than I ever could.

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  3. Your post about religion exactly echos my feelings about it as well. I think Felon 47 is a prime present day example of why there is no God.

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  4. And many people who profess being religious, fail to act on the core beliefs of kindness to others, helping the stranger, and forgiveness. Many people who claim to be christians, fail to act like christians. HWSNBN for a start.

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  5. Yes, the "problem of evil" clinches it, doesn't it? More evil has been done in the world in the name of religion than anything else apart from political ideology.

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  6. Nothing much there I can disagree with. I've always said that there is a gene for religion and I did not get it. It all seems so absurd to me.

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  7. Marx WAS right. You were probably smart to ditch your childhood presentation and go for something safer, though. :)

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  8. The other day I watched a TV program about quantum physics, and today I happened to turn on a radio program about multiple dimensions (far more than four) that we can't see but that are being "proved" by mathematics. I can't claim to understand one iota of all that, but what it does *not* say to me is that "there is no one up there"... (I don't think I ever really had that image of God as an old man in the clouds, though.)

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  9. I've given up on god too, although I'm still a fan of mother nature and mother earth. Much more sensible really, to revere the planet we live on. I wonder if every generation has felt like this? Humans haven't been living long lives or getting enough to eat, for all that long in history. And we came up with a god. The fact that god is male is off putting and sexist in it's own right. All the written words of god, written by men. The organized religions, a lot of which seem to hate women, organized by men. Seems like there is a theme here.

    I don't know what happens when we die, if we just become dust again, or if there is more for our souls, but I am curious to find out. Not today obviously, but sometime far in the future:)

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  10. Good post, good comments.

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  11. I can understand why you feel this way (based on your statements) and it doesn't bother me that you do. Am I allowed to say I totally disagree with you and can defend my beliefs without being ridiculed? Sadly, as one who claims to be a Christ follower, I'm automatically assumed to be like the vocal minority that give Christians a bad name in the world. No, I don't take the Bible literally, I don't believe the world is only 4000 years old, I'm not charismatic or evangelical (though that's not always a bad thing), etc. etc. I'm just an imperfect person who tries to follow the Golden Rule and be a kind person. I try not to judge (though that's in humankind's nature, regardless of beliefs), I try to always be accepting, and I don't try to force my beliefs on others. I'm not trying to change your mind about anything because I know I can't, anymore than you can change mine... but I just feel the need to say there are some "believers" in the world who are good people who try to act on the beliefs they profess. I'll get off my soapbox now.

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  12. Well said. Best bumper sticker I’ve ever seen said “pray for a secular world”.
    Xoxo
    Barbara

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  13. How did you get back from the abyss?

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Mr Pudding welcomes all genuine comments - even those with which he disagrees. However, puerile or abusive comments from anonymous contributors will continue to be given the short shrift they deserve. Any spam comments that get through Google/Blogger defences will also be quickly deleted.

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