Gosh, I haven’t taken the time to read everything on this thread, but I have read enough to understand why someone would be an atheist rather than accept all the wild, miracle stories that often are peddled under the aegis of Catholicism.
** Take, Padre Pio, for example, Believe all the miracles about him if you can, but I simply can’t.** What troubles me is this. Most of the preposterous claims of incredible miracles are from centuries ago, when people also believed in ghosts, witches, banchees, elves and all sorts of other bizarre creatures. I discount most such claims, but I understand why they were so widely accepted. That was an era before a microscope and before a decent telescope. Humanity had no idea of the immenseness of creation. They thought the earth was it - the center of everything. Now that we know that there could be million or even a billion solar systems, each with countless stars - wow! those primitive ideas seem simplistic (bto be kind).
** But Padre Pio is a relatively modern person**. This bilocation business and many more suoernatural works by him are crazy. Sorry. If I had to believe them or be an atheist, I probably would have to be honest and an atheist.
**B] The good news is that one can be a Christian (I certainly claim to be), believe in God, accept Christ as our window into spirituality, seek to follow Jesus and his Sermon on the Mount, anticipate life eternal, etc., yet not be burdened with doctrines and practices rooted in ancient understandings but alien to the modern, educated mind. **Millions of Christians, especially among mainline Protestants - Episcopalians, Methodists, UCC, Presbyterians, etc. - are devout Christians but ignore those doctrines, even Biblical accounts, that contradict reason, science, morality, etc. How can a consistent Christian, for example, believe that God demanded that Saul slaughter every living Amalakite? That is genocide, totally at odds with Christianity. And don’t tell me that if God ordered it, it must have been okay. No. I would never accept this view of God.
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**Millions of Catholics remain in the Church and have the same doubts and practice the same selective Christianity**. They find comfort and strength in their faith but simply ignore beliefs and practices that they cannot accept. The wise course for the hierarchy is not to push them too hard or they will lose millions more. Thinking Christians demand the right to ponder, weigh, investigate, disagree, etc. They will not be confined to a straight jacket supplied them by any Church. Ditto for mainline Protestants.
** As for traditionalist Catholics (most CAFers seem to be of that group) and fundamentalist Protestants - let them believe whatever.** I certainly have no objection to Hindus or Buddhists or Sikhs or Jews or reasonable Muslims or those of any faith who hold on to their traditions, and I certainly don't condemn for a moment Christians of any and all varieties and degrees of belief. It's just that I choose not to be spoon-fed my religion. Call it egotism, rebelliousness, the devil's work - whatever you wish.
**But God bless everyone, including atheists** who I hope will not view Christianity as a narrow, bigoted faith that does not permit independent thinking. Christianity is a wide berth with room for all who love God and one another and choose to be part of it. Fortunately, the Lord is loving, also, as well as forgiving, full of compassion - and surely with a sense of humor, too