Any Born atheists that are now Christians?

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Greg

I don’t think anyone is born atheist.

You are of course right in the strictest sense of the word.

Some atheists define atheism as the condition of being without faith, and nothing more.

In that sense, we are all born atheists (without faith). The reason for infant Baptism is to drive the atheist condition into retreat … to make it powerless by surrounding the infant with believers who renounce the hold of Satan and the stain of original sin on our immortal souls. Baptism is really a sort of exorcism, or cleansing of the soul, so that Satan does not have easy access to the early life of the child.
 
I was raised by Christians but I wasn’t really taught anything about the religion. Then Jehovah’s Witnesses corrupted me, then I left them and became Atheist for a couple of years. Then I rocked back and forth between various religions and Atheism until I settled on Catholicism (for great reason too) recently.

Bear in mind that I’m only 17, so this wasn’t a period of decades. But I guess you can say that I was born Atheist (more like Deist) and am now a Christian.
 
A claim I have heard from some atheists that if you are not indoctrinated into religion as a child, you will not believe it later in your life? Is this true? I can’t think of any famous Christians that where born atheists. C.S. Lewis was raised a Christian, then became an atheist before he came back to Christianity.

PAX
can you give an example of anyone who was born an atheist, any more than being born a Christian? A person must be baptized into the Christian faith, not born into it. A person learns from others the concept of God, as well as the concept of no-god, it is not something present at birth.
 
A claim I have heard from some atheists that if you are not indoctrinated into religion as a child, you will not believe it later in your life? Is this true? I can’t think of any famous Christians that where born atheists. C.S. Lewis was raised a Christian, then became an atheist before he came back to Christianity.

PAX
Madeleine Murray O’Hair’s son William became a minister. O’Hair was the famously-vehement atheist. Her son’s conversion put a strain in their relationship. That was good for him, because if he remained close to her, he might have been killed with her, as his brother was.

Kirk Cameron also claims he was an atheist before; he’s a Christian now, but I don’t know if he was born into atheism.

Also digged this up for you
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Converts_to_Christianity_from_atheism_or_agnosticism
 
antroji

*It may be curious, my question, but it does bring with it the swarm of questions as evidenced in other threads about how and why we espouse the religion that we do, or why we change to or from it from any direction and by whatever agency. I continue to maintain that most of us don’t sufficiently or honestly examine our conscience as to those events by dint of the habitual momentum of our Faith. *

This is certainly true, and at least partly accounts for the fact that so many Catholics are so ignorant about the values and beliefs they are supposed to hold.
 
Yes, for my part I don’t much go in for the “I was born into it,” “because I said so” or “just have faith” approaches.
 
Sir William Ramsey was one of the top archeologists of his time and he was raised an atheist. He went on a famous archeological expedition to refute the historicity of the gospels. He came back from his expedition and rocked the skeptic-atheist world on its heels when he converted to christianity because of his expedition. this info can be found on many sites and not just conservapedia.

conservapedia.com/William_Mitchell_Ramsay

Sir William Mitchell Ramsay (15 March 1851 - 20 April 1939) was a British archaeologist and New Testament scholar. Educated at Oxford, he held several prestigious professorships, including “First Professor of Classical Archaeology” and “Lincoln and Merton Professorship of Classical Archaeology and Art” at Oxford, and “Regius Professor of Humanity” at the University of Aberdeen. He received gold medals from Pope Leo XII, the University of Pennsylvania, the Royal Geographical Society, and the Royal Scottish Geographical Society, and was knighted in 1906.

Atheism and conversion
Mitchell was raised as an atheist and as an archaeologist was convinced that the Bible was fraudulent. “He had spent years deliberately preparing himself for the announced task of heading an exploration expedition into Asia Minor and Palestine where he would [find] the evidence that the book was the product of ambitious monks, and not the book from heaven it claimed to be. He regarded the weakest spot in the whole New Testament to be the story of Paul’s travels. These had never been thoroughly investigated by one on the spot. Equipped as no other man had been, he went to the home of the Bible. Here he spent fifteen years digging. Then in 1896 he published a large volume, Saint Paul, the Traveler and the Roman Citizen.”[1]

Ramsay was struck by the accuracy of the book of Acts. In his quest to refute the Bible, he discovered many facts which confirmed its accuracy. He concluded that Luke’s account of the events and setting recorded in the narrative were exact even in the smallest detail.[2] Of Luke, he wrote: Luke is a historian of the first rank; not merely are his statements of fact trustworthy…this author should be placed along with the very greatest historians.[3]

“The book caused a furor of dismay among the skeptics of the world. Its attitude was utterly unexpected because it was contrary to the announced intention of the author years before. For twenty years more, book after book from the same author came from the press, each filled with additional evidence of the exact, minute truthfulness of the whole New Testament as tested by the spade on the spot. And these books have stood the test of time, not one having been refuted, nor have I found even any attempt to refute them.”[4]

Ramsay shook the contemporary intellectual world by declaring that he had converted to Christianity, having found himself accepting the Bible as God’s Word because of the evidence of his explorations and discoveries.

References
1.↑ McDowell, Josh Evidence That Demands a Verdict, Volume 1: Historical Evidences for the Christian Faith (Thomas Nelson; Rev. ed. 1992) ISBN 0-8407-4378-5
2.↑ The Bible and Archaeology “The Good News” November/December 1998 ISSN 1086-9514
3.↑ Ramsay, William M. “The Bearing of Recent Discovery on the Trustworthiness of the New Testament” (1915) ISBN 0-8010-7677-3
4.↑ McDowell, Josh op cit
 
Sir William M. Ramsay (1851-1939) served as the first professor of classical art and archaeology at Oxford University. At the turn of the century, he engaged in extensive exploration of the antiquities of Turkey and contributed to the study of classical archaeology, geography, and New Testament studies. He is the author of many books, including historical commentaries on Galatians, First Corinthians, and the Pastoral Epistles.

this guy was a heavy hitter in his field. Many people liked his book :St. Paul the Traveler and Roman Citizen . I think people of all beliefs and non beliefs should check it out.
 
A claim I have heard from some atheists that if you are not indoctrinated into religion as a child, you will not believe it later in your life? Is this true?
Negative.

First, this lovely error would quite happily demonstrate that humans were originally indoctrinated from the beginning in some form of religion, otherwise religion would simply not exist or be dominant at all. It would be a chicken and the egg argument, and one an ahteist would have to lose. Of course, peer-pressure like propaganda - the predominant form of indoctrination today - can have heavy influences on people ; nonetheless, when faced with critical scrutiny or when the light of Truth or facts is set-up against it, this man-made system of doctrine tends to fall to pieces.

Second, no one is “born” atheist or Christian for that matter. Children are blank slates, and learn as they grow, and come to believe things by series of personal decisions and choices.

Last, I was as close to a “born atheist” as one could get. I am now firmly Roman Catholic. Catholicism was well known for its drawing-in of “atheists” during the early years ; namely, philophosers, who were the stubborn, liberal vanguard of the “englightenment” of antiquity. You’ll notice in many secular and humanist circles the near deification of certain of these philosophers, like Socrates (Plato’s master) and the elevation of their pagan gods, like Prometheus, to role-model status. This gives-away their intellectual lineage, and as we know in times past the Christian religion combatted (intellectually) these folks, and triumphed, we have no reason to fear the likings of their prodigy, like Hawkings et al.

Pax,
Tim
 
Negative.

First, this lovely error would quite happily demonstrate that humans were originally indoctrinated from the beginning in some form of religion, otherwise religion would simply not exist or be dominant at all.
Well, some skeptics would argue that man had to make up beliefs to explain how the world works, since they didn’t have any science to work with.
 
C.S. Lewis was raised a Christian, then became an atheist before he came back to Christianity.
CS Lewis became an atheist at age 15. He didn’t “come back” to Christianity until he was 33, when he was already a professor at Oxford. His doubt was slowly destroyed by conversations with JRR Tolkien (Catholic) and Christian works like George MacDonald’s Phantastes. It’s not like he just dabbled in atheism - he was a staunch atheist for the first portion of his adult life and he converted VERY reluctantly.

From Surprised By Joy:

“You must picture me alone in that room in Magdalen, night after night, feeling, whenever my mind lifted even for a second from my work, the steady, unrelenting approach of Him whom I so earnestly desired not to meet. That which I greatly feared had at last come upon me. In the Trinity Term of 1929 I gave in, and admitted that God was God, and knelt and prayed: perhaps, that night, the most dejected and reluctant convert in all England.”
 
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