2021/09/06

Christian atheism - Wikipedia

Christian atheism - Wikipedia

Christian atheism

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Christian atheism is a form of Christianity that rejects theistic claims of Christianity, but draws its beliefs and practices from Jesus' life and/or teachings as recorded in the New Testament Gospels and other sources.

Christian atheism takes many forms:

Beliefs[edit]

A man promoting Christian atheism at Speakers' Corner, London, in 2005. One of his placards reads: "To follow Jesus, reject God".

Thomas Ogletree, Frederick Marquand Professor of Ethics and Religious Studies at Yale Divinity School, lists these four common beliefs:[1][2]

  1. The assertion of the unreality of God for our age, including the understandings of God which have been a part of traditional Christian theology.
  2. The insistence upon coming to grips with contemporary culture as a necessary feature of responsible theological work.
  3. Varying degrees and forms of alienation from the church as it is now constituted.
  4. Recognition of the centrality of the person of Jesus in theological reflection.

God's existence[edit]

According to Paul van Buren, a Death of God theologian, the word God itself is "either meaningless or misleading".[2] Van Buren contends that it is impossible to think about God and says:

We cannot identify anything which will count for or against the truth of our statements concerning 'God'.[2]

The inference from these claims to the "either meaningless or misleading" conclusion is implicitly premised on the verificationist theory of meaning. Most Christian atheists believe that God never existed, but there are a few who believe in the death of God literally.[3] Thomas J. J. Altizer is a well-known Christian atheist who is known for his literal approach to the death of God. He often speaks of God's death as a redemptive event. In his book The Gospel of Christian Atheism, he says:

Every man today who is open to experience knows that God is absent, but only the Christian knows that God is dead, that the death of God is a final and irrevocable event and that God's death has actualized in our history a new and liberated humanity.[4]

Dealing with culture[edit]

Theologians including Altizer and Colin Lyas, a philosophy lecturer at Lancaster University, looked at the scientific, empirical culture of today and tried to find religion's place in it. In Altizer's words:

No longer can faith and the world exist in mutual isolation…the radical Christian condemns all forms of faith that are disengaged with the world.[4]

He goes on to say that our response to atheism should be one of "acceptance and affirmation".[4] Lyas stated:

Christian atheists are united also in the belief that any satisfactory answer to these problems must be an answer that will make life tolerable in this world, here and now and which will direct attention to the social and other problems of this life.[3]

Separation from the church[edit]

Thomas Altizer has said:

[T]he radical Christian believes that the ecclesiastical tradition has ceased to be Christian.[4]

Altizer believed that orthodox Christianity no longer had any meaning to people because it did not discuss Christianity within the context of contemporary theology. Christian atheists want to be completely separated from most orthodox Christian beliefs and biblical traditions.[5] Altizer states that a faith will not be completely pure if it is open to modern culture. This faith "can never identify itself with an ecclesiastical tradition or with a given doctrinal or ritual form". He goes on to say that faith cannot "have any final assurance as to what it means to be a Christian".[4] Altizer said: "We must not, he says, seek for the sacred by saying 'no' to the radical profanity of our age, but by saying 'yes' to it".[5] They see religions which withdraw from the world as moving away from truth. This is part of the reason why they see the existence of God as counter-progressive. Altizer wrote of God as the enemy to man because mankind could never reach its fullest potential while God existed.[4] He went on to state that "to cling to the Christian God in our time is to evade the human situation of our century and to renounce the inevitable suffering which is its lot".[4]

Centrality of Jesus[edit]

6th-century mosaic of Jesus at Basilica of Sant'Apollinare Nuovo in Ravenna

Although Jesus is still a central feature of Christian atheism, Hamilton said that to the Christian atheist, Jesus as a historical or supernatural figure is not the foundation of faith; instead, Jesus is a "place to be, a standpoint".[5] Christian atheists look to Jesus as an example of what a Christian should be, but they do not see him as God, nor as the Son of God; merely as an influential rabbi.

Hamilton wrote that following Jesus means being "alongside the neighbor, being for him"[5] and that to follow Jesus means to be human, to help other humans, and to further humankind.

Other Christian atheists such as Thomas Altizer preserve the divinity of Jesus, arguing that through him God negates God's transcendence of being.

By denomination[edit]

Protestantism[edit]

In the Netherlands, 42% of the members of the Protestant Church in the Netherlands (PKN) are nontheists.[6] Non-belief among clergymen is not always perceived as a problem. Some follow the tradition of "Christian non-realism", most famously expounded in the United Kingdom by Don Cupitt in the 1980s, which holds that God is a symbol or metaphor and that religious language is not matched by a transcendent reality. According to an investigation of 860 pastors in seven Dutch Protestant denominations, 1 in 6 clergy are either agnostic or atheist. In one of those denominations, the Remonstrant Brotherhood, the number of doubters was 42 percent.[7][8] A minister of the PKN, Klaas Hendrikse has described God as "a word for experience, or human experience" and said that Jesus may have never existed. Hendrikse gained attention with his book published in November 2007 in which he said that it was not necessary to believe in God's existence in order to believe in God. The Dutch title of the book translates as Believing in a God Who Does Not Exist: Manifesto of An Atheist Pastor. Hendrikse writes in the book that "God is for me not a being but a word for what can happen between people. Someone says to you, for example, 'I will not abandon you', and then makes those words come true. It would be perfectly alright to call that [relationship] God". A General Synod found Hendrikse's views were widely shared among both clergy and church members. The February 3, 2010 decision to allow Hendrikse to continue working as a pastor followed the advice of a regional supervisory panel that the statements by Hendrikse "are not of sufficient weight to damage the foundations of the Church. The ideas of Hendrikse are theologically not new, and are in keeping with the liberal tradition that is an integral part of our church", the special panel concluded.[7]

Harris Interactive survey from 2003 found that 90% of self-identified Protestants in the United States believe in God and about 4% of American Protestants believe there is no God.[9] In 2017, the WIN-Gallup International Association (WIN/GIA) poll found that Sweden, a majority Christian country, had second highest percentage (76%) of those who claim themselves atheist or irreligious, after China.[10][11]

Catholicism[edit]

Catholic atheism is a belief in which the culture, traditions, rituals and norms of Catholicism are accepted, but the existence of God is rejected. It is illustrated in Miguel de Unamuno's novel San Manuel Bueno, Mártir (1930). According to research in 2007, only 27% of Catholics in the Netherlands considered themselves theist while 55% were ietsist or agnostic deist and 17% were agnostic or atheist. Many Dutch people still affiliate with the term "Catholic" and use it within certain traditions as a basis of their cultural identity, rather than as a religious identity. The vast majority of the Catholic population in the Netherlands is now largely irreligious in practice.[6] However, a 2010 study failed to locate any atheist Catholic priests.[12]

Criticisms[edit]

In his book Mere Christianity, the apologist C. S. Lewis objected to Hamilton's version of Christian atheism and the claim that Jesus was merely a moral guide:

I am trying here to prevent anyone saying the really foolish thing that people often say about Him: 'I'm ready to accept Jesus as a great moral teacher, but I don't accept his claim to be God.' That is the one thing we must not say. A man who was merely a man and said the sort of things Jesus said would not be a great moral teacher. He would either be a lunatic—on the level with the man who says he is a poached egg—or else he would be the Devil of Hell. You must make your choice. Either this man was, and is, the Son of God, or else a madman or something worse. You can shut him up for a fool, you can spit at him and kill him as a demon or you can fall at his feet and call him Lord and God, but let us not come with any patronising nonsense about his being a great human teacher. He has not left that open to us. He did not intend to. [...] Now it seems to me obvious that He was neither a lunatic nor a fiend: and consequently, however strange or terrifying or unlikely it may seem, I have to accept the view that He was and is God.

Lewis's argument, now known as Lewis's trilemma, has been criticized for, among other things, constituting a false trilemma, since it does not deal with other options (such as Jesus being mistaken, or simply mythical). Philosopher John Beversluis argues that Lewis "deprives his readers of numerous alternate interpretations of Jesus that carry with them no such odious implications".[13] Bart Ehrman stated that is a mere legend that the historical Jesus has called himself God; that was unknown to Lewis since he never was a professional Bible scholar.[14][15]

Notable people[edit]

  • William Montgomery Brown (1855–1937): American Episcopal bishop, communist author and atheist activist. He described himself as a "Christian Atheist".[16]
  • John Dominic Crossan (b. 1934): Crossan identifies as a cultural Christian while he has also affirmed he does not believe in a literal God.[17][18]
  • Thorkild Grosbøll (1948–2020): Danish Lutheran priest, publicly announced in 2003 that he did not believe in a higher power, in particular a creating or upholding God. Would continue to function as a priest until 2008 when he retired early.[19]
  • Alexander Lukashenko (b. 1954): President of Belarus. Describes himself as an Orthodox atheist.[20]
  • Luboš Motl (b. 1973): Czech theoretical physicist
  • Douglas Murray (b. 1979): British author, journalist and political commentator. He is a former Anglican who believes Christianity to be an important influence on British and European culture.[21][22][23][24]
  • Anton Rubinstein (1829–1894): Russian pianistcomposer and conductor. Although he was raised as a Christian, Rubinstein later became a Christian atheist.[25]
  • George Santayana (1863–1952): Spanish-American philosopher, writer, and novelist. Although a life-long atheist he held Spanish Catholic culture in deep regard.[26] He would describe himself as an "aesthetic Catholic."[27]
  • Dan Savage (b. 1964): American author, media pundit, journalist and activist for the LGBT community. While he has stated that he is now an atheist,[28] he has said that he still identifies as "culturally Catholic".[29]
  • Frank Schaeffer, son of theologian Francis Schaeffer describes himself as "an atheist who believes in God".[30]
  • Richard B. Spencer (b. 1978): American Alt-right and white nationalist personality, says that he is an atheist,[31] but described himself as a "cultural Christian".[32]
  • Andrew Tompkins, lead singer and bassist of the Australian Christian-themed doom metal band Paramaecium. Tompkins responded to questions of his faith by stating "...As to whether I'm a practicing Christian, I usually tell people I'm a practicing Christian but not a believing Christian."[33]
  • Gretta Vosper (b. 1958): United Church of Canada minister who is an atheist.[34]
  • Bogusław Wolniewicz (1927–2017): Polish right-wing philosopher, called himself as a "Roman Catholic nonbeliever".[35]
  • Slavoj Žižek (b. 1949): Slovenian philosopher who self-identifies as a Christian atheist in the opening line of his book, “Pandemic: COVID-19 Shakes the World.”[36]
  • Richard Dawkins (b. 1941): A prominent New Atheist who said, "“I would describe myself as a secular Christian in the same sense as secular Jews have a feeling for nostalgia and ceremonies.”[37]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Ogletree, Thomas. "professor at Yale University". Retrieved 6 April2017.
  2. Jump up to:a b c Ogletree, Thomas W. The Death of God Controversy. New York: Abingdon Press, 1966.
  3. Jump up to:a b Lyas, Colin. "On the Coherence of Christian Atheism." The Journal of the Royal Institute of Philosophy 45(171): 1970.
  4. Jump up to:a b c d e f g Altizer, Thomas J. J. The Gospel of Christian Atheism. Philadelphia: The Westminster Press, 1966.
  5. Jump up to:a b c d Altizer, Thomas J. J. and William Hamilton. Radical Theology and The Death of God. New York: The Bobbs-Merrill Company, Inc.,1966.
  6. Jump up to:a b God in Nederland' (1996–2006), by Ronald Meester, G. Dekker, ISBN 9789025957407
  7. Jump up to:a b Pigott, Robert (5 August 2011). "Dutch rethink Christianity for a doubtful world"BBC News. Retrieved 2 October 2011.
  8. ^ "Does Your Pastor Believe in God?"albertmohler.com.
  9. ^ Taylor, Humphrey (October 15, 2003). "While Most Americans Believe in God, Only 36% Attend a Religious Service Once a Month or More Often" (PDF)The Harris Poll #59. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 6, 2010.
  10. ^https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2015/04/14/map-these-are-the-worlds-least-religious-countries/
  11. ^ https://static.attn.com/sites/default/files/Screenshot%202016-01-06%20at%201.36.34%20PM.png?auto=format&crop=faces&fit=crop&q=60&w=736&ixlib=js-1.1.0
  12. ^ Dennett, Daniel; LaScola, Linda (2010). "Preachers Who Are Not Believers" (PDF)Evolutionary Psychology1 (8): 122–150. Retrieved 14 February 2015.
  13. ^ John Beversluis, C.S. Lewis and the Search for Rational Religion(Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1985), p. 56.
  14. ^ "The Problem with Liar, Lunatic, or Lord"The Bart Ehrman Blog. 17 January 2013. Retrieved 23 November 2020.
  15. ^ "If Jesus Never Called Himself God, How Did He Become One?"NPR.org. 7 April 2014. Retrieved 23 November 2020.
  16. ^ "U.S. Heresy Trial. A 'Christian Atheist.'". The Times (43667). 2 June 1924. p. 13. col C.
  17. ^ Craig, William Lane; Copan, Paul (ed.) (1998). Will the Real Jesus Please Stand up?: A Debate between William Lane Craig and John Dominic Crossan. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books. ISBN 978-0801021756OCLC 39633978.
  18. ^ Blake, John (27 February 2011). "John Dominic Crossan's 'blasphemous' portrait of Jesus"CNN. Retrieved 1 July 2019.
  19. ^ "Tidligere sognepræst og ateist Thorkild Grosbøll er død - 72 år"TV 2 (in Danish). Ritzau. 11 May 2020. Retrieved 11 May 2020.
  20. ^ "Belarus president visits Vatican"BBC News. 27 April 2009. Retrieved 26 June 2010.
  21. ^ "Studying Islam has made me an atheist". December 29, 2008.
  22. ^ "This House Believes Religion Has No Place In The 21st Century". The Cambridge Union Society. 31 January 2013.
  23. ^ "On the Maintenance of Civilization". November 22, 2015.
  24. ^ Holloway, Richard (7 May 2017). "Sunday Morning With..." BBC Radio Scotland. Archived from the original on 7 May 2017. Alt URL
  25. ^ Taylor, 280.
  26. ^ Lovely, Edward W. (2012). George Santayana's Philosophy of Religion: His Roman Catholic Influences and Phenomenology. Lexington Books. pp. 1, 204–206.
  27. ^ "Santayana playfully called himself 'a Catholic atheist,' but in spite of the fact that he deliberately immersed himself in the stream of Catholic religious life, he never took the sacraments. He neither literally regarded himself as a Catholic nor did Catholics regard him as a Catholic." Empiricism, Theoretical Constructs, and God, by Kai Nielsen, The Journal of Religion, Vol. 54, No. 3 (Jul., 1974), pp. 199–217 (p. 205), published by The University of Chicago Press.
  28. ^ "If Osama bin Laden were in charge, he would slit my throat; my God, I'm an atheist, a hedonist, and a faggot." Skipping Towards Gomorrah: The Seven Deadly Sins and the Pursuit of Happiness in America Dan Savage, Plume, 2002, p. 258.
  29. ^ Anderson-Minshall, Diane (September 13, 2005). "Interview with Dan Savage". AfterElton.com.
  30. ^ Winston, Kimberly (June 13, 2014). "Frank Schaeffer, Former Evangelical Leader, Is A Self-Declared Atheist Who Believes In God". Huffington Post
  31. ^ Spencer, Richard. "The Alt Right and Secular Humanism"AltRight.com. Archived from the original on May 27, 2017. Retrieved January 28, 2017McAfee: Are you religious? Do you support the Separation of Church and State? Spencer: I'm an atheist.
  32. ^ Spencer, Richard. "'We're Not Going Anywhere:' Watch Roland Martin Challenge White Nationalist Richard Spencer"YouTube.com. Retrieved May 5, 2017Martin: Are you a Christian? Spencer: I'm an cultural Christian.
  33. ^ "Paramaecium". Vibrations of Doom. Retrieved 22 July 2016.
  34. ^ Andrew-Gee, Eric (16 March 2015). "Atheist minister praises the glory of good at Scarborough church"Toronto StarVosper herself is a bit heterodox on the question of Christ. Asked if she believes that Jesus was the son of God, she said, ‘I don’t think Jesus was.’ That is, she doesn’t think He existed at all.
  35. ^ S.A., Wirtualna Polska Media (2009-02-27). "Radio Maryja znów skrytykowane za antysemityzm"wiadomosci.wp.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2018-06-03.
  36. ^ "PANDEMIC! COVID-19 SHAKES THE WORLD".
  37. ^ "Richard-Dawkins-I-am-a-secular-Christian".

Further reading[edit]

  • Soury, M. Joles (1910). Un athée catholique. E. Vitte. ASIN B001BQPY7G.
  • Altizer, Thomas J. J. (2002). The New Gospel of Christian Atheism. The Davies Group. ISBN 1-888570-65-2.
  • Hamilton, William, A Quest for the Post-Historical Jesus, (London, New York: Continuum International Publishing Group, 1994). ISBN 978-0-8264-0641-5.

External links[edit]

---------------------------
    Christian Chiakulas
      Contributor
        Writer, musician, activist, single father from Chicago.
          What Does It Mean to Be a Christian Atheist?
            12/23/2015  Updated Dec 06, 2017
              https://www.huffpost.com/entry/what-does-it-mean-to-be-a-christian-atheist_b_8866378

                Since I came into my spiritual identity, I have identified as a progressive Christian.  I have always been fascinated by Jesus, by his message, by his mission, and I have dedicated my life to it, whatever form that may take.

                    But I have never been completely comfortable as a progressive Christian.  Yes, the term helps somewhat to alleviate the sense people sometimes get that I’m some kind of crazy, bible-thumping evangelical trying to convert them.  “A progressive Christian?” most of them ask.  They’ve never heard of it.
                      But even among the online communities of progressive Christians I belong to, people who are converted, people who know the struggle between the living word of Christ and the twisted abomination that is conservative Christianity, something feels off.  While we usually agree on politics, even us open-minded and supposedly intellectually mature progressives disagree on who, or what, God is.

                          This question is the source of my discomfort, the catalyst for the battle raging inside me.  What is God?

                              I have decided it is finally time to stop fighting this battle and accept myself for what I am:

                                  I am an atheist.

                                      A Christian atheist.


                                          2015-12-23-1450847295-3926141-christianatheism.jpg

                                              This guy gets it.

                                                  One of the reasons it’s been so hard for me to come to terms with this is that I often find myself at loggerheads with members of the commonly named “New Atheism” movement.  I detest their snide superiority, their lame attempts at humor (“imaginary friend” jokes especially), their outrageous claims that religion is the source of all evil in the world, and the surprising levels of misogyny among New Atheism’s adherents.

                                                      But this is not what atheism means.  Atheism is a lack of belief in a God or gods, but this is inadequate.

                                                          I still believe in “God.”

                                                              What I do not accept is belief in a theistic deity, a “being” that created the universe, holds the universe together, or exists in or apart from the universe.

                                                                  Many progressive Christians believe in what they call “panentheism,” the belief that A.) the universe is within God, and B.) God is still greater than the universe.  I at one point accepted this view, but I am afraid even it no longer holds sway for me.

                                                                      Bishop John Shelby Spong long ago welcomed “the death of theism” and what it meant for Christianity (see his A New Christianity For A New World), and in that most literal sense, I can finally accept and embrace that I am a Christian atheist.

                                                                          Yes, I believe in the Divine.  I believe in the Sacred, in what Spong calls the Ground of All Being, in that in which we live and move and have our being.  If that is what you mean by God, then yes, I believe in God.

                                                                              But in a theistic deity, even a mind-bogglingly transcendent being that encapsulates the entire universe and more?  I cannot, with all my reason and spiritual acumen, conceive of such a being.  God is not a being, but Being itself.

                                                                                  The world, this universe, is all that there is for us.  Through Jesus of Nazareth, Jesus Christ, we experience transcendental Being, spiritual alertness, and the power of ultimate love.

                                                                                      This is why Jesus’s worldly message of distributive economic and social justice is so important.  The living God, not the theistic God of the past, connects and surrounds us all, and as long as some among us live in poverty, in destitution, in oppression, we fall short of the glory of God, of our ultimate potential.  To put it shortly:  the Social Gospel is spiritual.

                                                                                          I’m sure I will still traffic with the progressive Christian movement (they’re a welcoming lot, for the most part) and support its emergence in the world of American Christianity.  It is the next step towards a new theology, a new approach to the spiritual, and hopefully, a truly just and egalitarian world.  A world where everybody has enough, a world free from the white supremacist capitalist hetero-patriarchy, a world where reason, science, and progress lead to the betterment of all humankind.

                                                                                              The kind of world Jesus wanted.
                                                                                              ===

                                                                                              What is Christian atheism?

                                                                                              Christian atheism

                                                                                              Christian atheism, also called non-realistic Christianity, is a bizarre form of quasi-spiritual philosophy that keeps the forms and practices of Christianity while denying God’s existence. Christian atheists attempt to “de-mythologize” Christianity, doing away with all belief in the supernatural yet maintaining liturgies and corporate worship experiences as meeting humanity’s need for socialization and the communication of lofty ideas.


                                                                                              Christian atheism has roots in the 1960s’ “Death of God” movement, which claimed God actually did exist at one point, but died. According to “Death of God” proponents, when God became incarnate and died on the cross, God ceased to exist as a being independent of the universe. This was the position of Thomas Alitzer, one of the earlier proponents of Christian atheism. Modern adherents of Christian atheism generally believe in a more literal atheism in the sense that they disbelieve that God has ever existed. Of course, in Christian atheism, Jesus is not divine.

                                                                                              Christian atheism, like most esoteric spiritual approaches, can be difficult to explain in brief terms. There are multiple interpretations and no particular definition to bind them all together. In broad strokes, Christian atheism is a spiritual approach using the teachings and example of Jesus while denying the existence of a literal God. As a result, Christian atheism is entirely focused on earthly concerns and earthly justifications. Religion is a purely human endeavor, and God is simply a projection of a person’s mind. Belief in an afterlife is incoherent within a Christian atheist framework. In fact, Christian atheism generally holds that Christianity, like all religions, is nothing more than a “benevolent lie,” a fiction that makes life easier to understand and control.

                                                                                              All of this is interesting in theory, but, in practice, Christian atheism is really just atheism. Christian atheism is a non-religious, non-spiritual, and non-Christian worldview that borrows biblical terminology and ideas without actually believing in them. Non-realistic Christianity is not really Christianity at all.

                                                                                              What is concerning is the surprising number of people who identify as orthodox Christians yet hold beliefs similar to Christian atheism. It is easy to find clergy who do not believe that Jesus was actually God. Many churches teach that Jesus was merely a good example. Some churchgoers participate in religious practice while openly doubting that God exists. It seems that Christian atheism is not an uncommon approach today, and non-realistic Christianity has made inroads into the church.

                                                                                              The Bible warns against those who, in the last days, possess “a form of godliness but deny its power. Have nothing to do with such people” (2 Timothy 3:5). Christian atheism denies the Father and the Son, a rejection of truth that brings a stern scriptural rebuke: “Who is the liar? It is whoever denies that Jesus is the Christ. Such a person is the antichrist—denying the Father and the Son” (1 John 2:22; cf. 1 John 4:2–3).

                                                                                              Christian atheists see themselves as intellectual sophisticates who are smarter than your average churchgoer, who might actually believe that God is real and that the miracles in the Bible happened. But what Christian atheism rejects as “fairy tales” the Bible calls “many convincing proofs” (Acts 1:3). And what the Christian atheist considers an intellectually superior position the Bible calls foolish (Psalm 14:1).

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                                                                                              What is Christian atheism?