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Is God dead? Atheism finds a market in U.S
Reuters ^ | 10/18/06 | Michael Conlon

Posted on 10/18/2006 5:25:05 PM PDT by wagglebee

CHICAGO (Reuters) - A fresh wave of atheistic books has hit the market this autumn, some climbing onto best-seller lists in what proponents see as a backlash against the way religion is entwined in politics.

"Religion is fragmenting the human community," said Sam Harris, author of "Letter to a Christian Nation," No. 11 on the New York Times nonfiction list on October 15.

There is a "huge visibility and political empowerment of religion. President George W. Bush uses his first veto to deny funding for stem cell research and scientists everywhere are horrified," he said in an interview.

Religious polarization is part of many world conflicts, he said, including those involving Israel and Iran, "but it's never discussed. I consider it the story of our time, what religion is doing to us. But there are very few people calling a spade a spade."

His "Letter," a blunt 96-page pocket-sized book condensing arguments against belief in quick-fire volleys, appeared on the Times list just ahead of "The God Delusion," by Richard Dawkins, a scientist at Oxford University and long-time atheist.

In addition, Harris' "The End of Faith," a 2004 work which prompted his "Letter" as a response to critics, is holding the No. 13 Times spot among nonfiction paperbacks.

Publishers Weekly said the business has seen "a striking number of impassioned critiques of religion -- any religion, but Christianity in particular," a probably inevitable development given "the super-soaking of American politics and culture with religion in recent years."

Paul Kurtz, founder of the Council for Secular Humanism and publisher of Free Inquiry magazine, said, "The American public is really disturbed about the role of religion in U.S. government policy, particularly with the Bush administration and the breakdown of church-state separation, and secondly with the conflict in the Mideast."

They are turning to free thought and secular humanism and publishers have recognized a taste for that, he added.

"I've published 45 books, many critical of religion," Kurtz said. "I think in America we have this notion of tolerance ... it was considered bad taste to criticize religion. But I think now there are profound questions about age-old hatreds."

The Rev. James Halstead, chairman of the Department of Religious Studies at Chicago's DePaul University, says the phenomenon is really "a ripple caused by the book publishing industry."

"These books cause no new thought or moral commitment. The arguments are centuries old," he told Reuters. Some believers, he added, "are no better. Their conception of God, the Divine-Human-World relationship are much too simplistic and materialistic."

Too often, he said, the concept "God" is misused "to legitimate the self and to beat up other people ... to rehash that same old theistic and atheistic arguments is a waste of time, energy and paper."

Dr. Timothy Larsen, professor of theology at Wheaton College in Illinois, says any growth in interest in atheism is a reflection of the strength of religion -- the former being a parasite that feeds off the latter.

That happened late in the 19th century America when an era of intense religious conviction gave rise to voices like famed agnostic Robert Ingersoll, he said.

For Christianity, he said, "It's very important for people of faith to realize how unsettling and threatening their posture and rhetoric and practice can feel to others. So it's an opportunity for the church to look at itself and say 'we have done things ... that make other people uncomfortable.' It is an opportunity for dialogue."

Larsen, author of the soon-to-be-published "Crisis of Doubt," added that in some sense atheism is "a disappointment with God and with the church. Some of these are people we wounded that we should be handling pastorally rather than with aggressive knockdown debate."

These are also probably some of the same people Harris says he's hearing from after his two books.

"Many, many readers feel utterly isolated in their communities," he said. "They are surrounded by cult members, from their point of view, and are unable to disclose their feelings."

"I get a lot of e-mail just expressing incredible relief that they are not alone ... relieved that I'm writing something that couldn't be said," Harris added.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Extended News; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: anncoulter; anncoulterisright; antichristian; atheism; atheismandstate; christianbashing; christianity; churchofliberalism; existentialism; god; godless; intolerantatheists; islaminamerica; modernfools; moralabsolutes; nihilism; religionisobsolete; religiousintolerance; secularjihad; socialclubs
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To: wagglebee
A major component of modern atheism is the unwillingness to admit that certain things are sinful, and not just sinful "for some" (as they love to opine), but sinful for everyone.

Close...

A major component of MAN is the unwillingness to admit that certain things are sinful, and not just sinful "for some" (as they love to opine), but sinful for everyone.

141 posted on 10/19/2006 6:36:15 AM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going....)
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To: FormerLib

Actually, those verses are direct quotations from the King James version. You quote another version, which is, indeed, quite differently phrased.

In any case, the quotations are taken out of context and, thus, are useless for any purpose.

It's easy to find individual verses in the Bible, in whatever translation, that seem to contradict other verses. It's also dishonest to so use them.

You may have known that the KJV included those verses, or you may not. However, your quotation of them from a different translation doesn't make them go away from the most widely-used English translation of the Bible. It's not a good argument.


142 posted on 10/19/2006 6:36:18 AM PDT by MineralMan (Non-evangelical Atheist)
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To: hripka

Civilization gives men the means for the weakest to kill the strongest. Murder is a legal definition of the nature of a particular type of homocide.

Not all people agree on what murder is... Abortion is homocide without a trial by a jury of the victim's peers; it is a ritual murder, a human sacrifice on an altar of conceit performed before an idol of vanity.

Capital punishment is a legally adjudicated, jury approved act of homocide.


143 posted on 10/19/2006 6:36:22 AM PDT by Sir Francis Dashwood (LET'S ROLL!)
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To: Elsie

And now....


BREAKFAST!


144 posted on 10/19/2006 6:36:44 AM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going....)
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To: hripka; antiRepublicrat
How about this thought experiment for you: Tell me why murder is wrong, but don't use God in the explanation.

Golden Rule. Just because you haven't thought much about this, that doesn't mean nobody has.

145 posted on 10/19/2006 6:38:43 AM PDT by Senator Bedfellow (If you're not sure, it was probably sarcasm.)
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To: hripka

I went through that line of reasoning in my late teens and early 20's. The fact is there is no moral right or wrong unless established and enforced by God or (for sake of arguement...there being no God....) the stronger more cohesive groups of humans who can forcefully impose their visions of morality on weaker groups of humans!

The book "Lord of the Flies" paints a dark and horrifying vision of what humans do when all restraints are taken from them! There again it's only dark and horrifying to my "point of view"....it may be idyllic to another's point of view.

The strongest "point" of view too often in our world is often an example of co-ercion via gun "point"!

Democratic Republics are fragile constructs...the World fears the US for not what it is but what it could become....Imagine Rome with Nukes and the ability to project lethal force as far as the moon when deemed expedient...that is what the World really fears!


146 posted on 10/19/2006 6:39:02 AM PDT by mdmathis6 (Save the Republic! Mess with the polling firms' heads!)
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To: Elsie

Well said, thanks for the reminder! :-)


147 posted on 10/19/2006 6:39:33 AM PDT by wagglebee ("We are ready for the greatest achievements in the history of freedom." -- President Bush, 1/20/05)
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To: Elsie

Elsie, dear, you're so cute when you're off your meds!


148 posted on 10/19/2006 6:41:24 AM PDT by Junior (Losing faith in humanity one person at a time.)
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To: mdmathis6

So, by your line of reasoning, prisons should be full of atheists, right?


149 posted on 10/19/2006 6:42:40 AM PDT by Junior (Losing faith in humanity one person at a time.)
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To: antiRepublicrat
If you believe what you've just written, you are closer to understanding than you know. You want to know what it means and you feel uneasy inside about it. it's the question that drives you.. You are right, He is omnipotent and if you ask Him (seriously) He will answer.
150 posted on 10/19/2006 6:44:09 AM PDT by PrepareToLeave (Fight on Christian soldiers!)
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To: wagglebee

Jihad...teaching sin in schools as "human rights"....atheism....the Devil has been very, very busy lately.


151 posted on 10/19/2006 6:44:24 AM PDT by DesScorp
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To: Junior
Elsie, dear, you're so cute when you're off your meds!

And when I'm ON them, I'm downright BEAUTIFUL!!

Elsie is SO cute!

152 posted on 10/19/2006 6:53:07 AM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going....)
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To: meandog
I think that God the Father is mighty P.O.ed with us in allowing Satan so much control..

Well, I think that God the Father is P.O.ed because WE give satan so much control. The Bible says that if we resist Satan he will flee from us. Many Christians avoid the sins you mentioned. The temptations from satan are powerful and he attacks us in our most vulnerable area, but Christ in us is more powerful and we are more than conquerors.

153 posted on 10/19/2006 6:54:32 AM PDT by PrepareToLeave (Fight on Christian soldiers!)
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To: Junior

I was responding to a question regarding whether there exists an intrinsic sense of "right or wrong' within the behavioral centers on humans or is "right and wrong" an exogenously applied mental/moral construct for every person.

As for prisons, they seem to have become a rising breeding ground for radical Islam, an extremely agressive religion that enshrines the worst of vices in a quasi religious shell!


154 posted on 10/19/2006 7:04:24 AM PDT by mdmathis6 (Save the Republic! Mess with the polling firms' heads!)
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To: antiRepublicrat

Jesus embodied the very consciousness of God in Human form.

Jesus was God's thumbprint stamped into our matter universe. When Jesus transitioned from life to death, God the father experienced the very consciousness of that death transition, God the father experienced the full physicality of being in a human body..."he was tempted at all points" as the apostle stated.

The full Godhead is forever marked as it were by its experience of being human, but in this process a way was opened up for humans to experience the essence of the Godhead.

So it is more than just "God goes back home to continue his rule." God goes home with his heal "bruised by the serpent, but he goes home with the serpent's head crushed!"


155 posted on 10/19/2006 7:12:59 AM PDT by mdmathis6 (Save the Republic! Mess with the polling firms' heads!)
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To: RedStateRocker
With the greater acceptance of alternatives to mainstream Judeo/Christian practice - atheism, Wicca, and othe occult - we are seeing in an overt form what has probably existed since shortly after Peter preached, or at least since the time of Constantine.

It is no coincidence Islamic pagans hate Israel, Jews, Christians and Western Civilization. The entire basis of Western Civilization is Mosaic Law, something both the Neo-Pagan Left and the pagan Islamic thugs cannot abide and wish to destroy.

The very idea that human beings have individual rights not subject to the whims of an earthly monarch, but subject to the laws of Yahweh, is directly from Moses.

Historically, this is proven over and over again with the successive conflicts between the forces of paganism and the Judaic culture. (This includes the idolatry of cultural Marxist paganism.)

156 posted on 10/19/2006 7:17:21 AM PDT by Sir Francis Dashwood (LET'S ROLL!)
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To: pcottraux
No, I don't get the general idea at all. I fail to see how any of it is a "slight inconvenience," considering that God willfully chooses to remember the pain and suffering

I don't remember that bit in the Bible, but we'll say you're right. Again, how is even that amount of suffering anything to the all-powerful, infinite creator of the universe?

157 posted on 10/19/2006 7:25:05 AM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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To: wagglebee
For Christianity, he said, "It's very important for people of faith to realize how unsettling and threatening their posture and rhetoric and practice can feel to others. So it's an opportunity for the church to look at itself and say 'we have done things ... that make other people uncomfortable.' It is an opportunity for dialogue."

************

This poor man sounds emotionally fragile.

158 posted on 10/19/2006 7:28:53 AM PDT by trisham (Zen is not easy. It takes effort to attain nothingness. And then what do you have? Bupkis.)
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To: trisham

No, he is simply one of Satan's minions.


159 posted on 10/19/2006 7:30:06 AM PDT by wagglebee ("We are ready for the greatest achievements in the history of freedom." -- President Bush, 1/20/05)
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To: js1138
In the event that anyone cares:

Res ipsa loquitur= "The thing itself speaks"

160 posted on 10/19/2006 7:37:28 AM PDT by trisham (Zen is not easy. It takes effort to attain nothingness. And then what do you have? Bupkis.)
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