Hey all,
I really hope I’m not the only one who feels this way. I usually find atheists undermining my faith, and I don’t know why. For stupid reasons I get asked the same questions over and over, are you’re stupid, how could you believe that, you’re ignorant- and even ignorant sayings against Christianity like: Chridtianity has done nothing to help the world, we are just setting it back. I think the reason I get so angry about it is because they are such stupid things to say, Christianity has contributited more than anything else in the entire world, if it weren’t for the Catholic Church we wouldn’t have many scientific theories, colleges, schools, any basic education, equality, ect. We always get stereotyped into uneducated, medieval bigots who want to destroy the world with faith. How can I not get offended? I know I should turn the other cheek, but my religion is the basis of who I am, God was there for me at my weakest point, and is still there. What do you do when you hear things like this?
As a former atheist who has come back to Catholicism I can sympathise with your expressed comments. I find it is a better outcome if you know your content and gently ask questions. There are sensible, reasoned atheists, there are culturally ‘lost’ atheists, and there are evangelical atheists and there are atheists who have been formed by public education and the equivalent of old wives tales, where atheism is an identity of ‘reason’ and 'science that they cling to.
In all cases if you gently ask questions you get to see who is who pretty quickly and if you know your content the ones open to reason will hear you.
Example from a previous school where I taught,
Teacher colleague : It’s not like science and religion have a lot in common.
Me : Why do you say that?
Teacher colleague : Well it’s not like 15th century Popes were scientific.
Me : How many 15th century Popes have you read?
Teacher colleague : Well I mean the time when the Church was burning all those scientists at the stake.
Me : What are the names of some of those scientists?
Result : the teacher went home and looked into things and changed their thoughts regarding historical Christianity and science.
Another example with an evangelical librarian atheist was when she was talking about how the Church held back science and how the Spanish Inquisition wrecked Spain. I gently asked her whether she knew that the records of the Spanish Inquisition were opened in the 1990’s and that modern historians had studied them and come to some interesting and surprising conclusions. Or I asked if she knew much about the rise of science in medieval Europe and how it was supported by the establishment of universities and hospitals?
Or she would criticise the medieval Cathedrals for being ‘way over the top’ and I would gently question how much knowledge of science she thought was needed to build such structures.
She was more argumentative and didn’t like where the questions were leading her and atheism was more of an identity and life’s mission to her. Still the questions are there and if she is honest she will go away and study them. If people are not honest then in the long run they just become universally recognised cranks.
Sometimes a stick and hard response is needed when people are bullying others with mistaken history and what I call secular manufactured morality. But in one on one situations I find the technique of gently questioning to be the most effective.
So many of the young have become atheists by ‘working it out for themselves’ which in reality has meant they were directed by secular education and media with the removal and denigration of historical Christianity to move in certain ways and grasp certain concepts. Gently directing them back the other way, if only slightly, so they can ‘work it all out again by themselves’ I find is effective and also keeps yourself more calm and less exasperated.