Pararousia said:
So can you share with us or email me privately and say what it was that hurt you or discouraged you from the body of faith? Did you ever have a born-again experience? Or was it simply a practice you fell into and then fell out of? I'd like to know more about your upbringing because it seems like something in your life went terribly awry. Do you still believe in God?
Speaking of my experience, it seems that many true Atheists (like me) have had a very religious upbringing. In fact, philosophically motivated Atheism usually happens in reaction to the conflicts between religious teachings and the reality or rational logics. It may be that some people do not have the "right mind" to intuitively perceive the irrationality of religions (in this case Christianity), while others do.
There are three main reasons (subcategorised) for which I cannot accept any form of Judeo-Christian religion (or other religions) :
1) a) There are too many different versions of the Holy Bible, each contradicting each other at varying degrees.
1) b) There are two many different dogmas according to one's "branch" of Christianity (Catholic, Orthodox, Evangelist, Unitarian, LDS, Jehovah's Witnesses, etc.). If the scriptures are divinely inspired, then why is it so difficult for humans to agree on their intepretations, the various rites and validity of the "original" texts ?
1) c) There are dozens of major religions worldwide, and each of them contradict each others. Some (like Christianity and Islam) typically claim that they have the sole and exclusive truth. Forcedly, if that is true, all religions are wrong except one. If not the religion that claims exclusive faith becomes self-invalidated.
2) Exclusive (=intolerant) religions like Judaism, Christianity and Islam have caused many conflicts and wars ever since they were created (it is for a reason that the Romans destroyed Jerusalem and persecuted the Christians).
Exclusive faiths end up by fighting each others. It has started with the Jews denouncing Jesus to get rid of him, then with the Christians unwillingness to recognise Roman Emperors as their sovereign (although later and until today, Christians don't mind paying taxes and obey someone else than god !), then the Islamic Jihad, then the crusades and schism between Catholic and Orthodox churches, then the wars between Catholics and Protestants, etc.
3) Logic and sciences (two very different things) cannot accept many of the so-called "divinely inspired" truths of the Bible, such as the Genesis (Creation, Adam & Eve, Human-like god, Earth=center of the universe, etc.). With the Genesis disproved, the foundation of the Judeo-Christian faith collapse. It would be too easy to just say "oh, but you know, this was wrong, but the rest was
really divinely inspired".
Relativism, intercultural studies and psychological analysis also show how human-made the values of the Bible are. In fact, many things are very contradictory, like the vengeful and angry god of the OT vs the compassionate and kind loving of the NT (visibly coming from the mind of different "prophets").
Going further than that (these are just things I had discovered before turning 15 years old - most even before 12), we could discuss metaphysics and why it is logically absurd to have an beginning and an end to the Universe, if the Universe includes all existence. How can one (e.g. God) want terminate all existence without erasing itself as well ? (or part of itself if you suppose that god is not part of this Universe-existence, as he would have to delete his knowledge of it to actually stop it existing). What is more, god could logically not be "outside" "everything that exist" (= the Universe). If so, god does not exist by definition. If God is within the Universe (or all the universe as the
Pantheists believe), the it could not have created it without creating itself. There can be no beginning (no Creation) and no end (no Apocalypse).
I could also explain why the very concept of "soul" is now scientifically invalid, or unnecessary to explain human emotions, reasonings, memory and "sense of self". It requires a good grasp of neuropsychology though (not something given to anyone).
I have already written about some related topics here :
Soul, life after death, universe
Hell/Heaven, concept of good/evil