I am amazed at the numbers of perrsons who believe that if one is not a christian (or jew or muslim) then one must be an atheist. If we do not believe in Creation by the biblical creator, then we must believe in evolution. If we find the jewish god repugnant, then we must cease believing in god. If the proofs of theism fail, which they miserably do, then we must live without religion. If we oppose the morals of control, then we are immoral.
There are a number of religions that do not include belief in a god or a creator. Buddhists generally do not believe in god. Irish religion has no creator. Now I know that there will be those that argue with this point and claim that the creation myth of the Irish was lost. They do so without evidence and through revisionist history. Certain tribes in asia did not believe in gods. Naturalists, secular humanists and others do not believe in dieties or creators. Pagans often do not believe in the christian or jewish gods (gods because while claimed to be the same deity they are clearly different when one reads the sacred books of both peoples, not to mention the original language terms like elohim verifying the polytheistic tendencies of hebrews) and yet they have their own deities.
The options of belief, morals, deities, are plentiful and abounding everywhere. We are not locked into a choice of believing in Jesus or atheism. Nor are we forced to deny deities or accept them fully.
For example, I have many labels. I am atheist. Not agnostic, as some suggest. I do not believe in the existence of deities. I however do not deny that deities might exist. Some beleive this is agnosticism. Even several dictionary definitions contribute to this belief, stating that agnostic is:
broadly : one who is not committed to believing in either the existence or the nonexistence of God or a god
Atheists however, who define themselves, define atheism more aptly as:
The definition for atheism that we use, put simply, says that atheism is the lack of a god-belief, the absence of theism, to whatever degree and for whatever reason. The one thing that all atheists have in common, according to this definition, is that they are not theists. One either believes one or more of the various claims for the existence of a god or gods (is a theist) or one does not believe any of those claims (is an atheist). Though we do not recognize any "middle ground," we do acknowledge the agnostic position, which spans both theism and atheism: a theistic agnostic thinks one or more gods exist but can say no more on the subject than this (is a theist); an atheistic agnostic doesn't know if any gods exist (lacks a god belief, and is thus an atheist). Noncognitivists think all god-talk is meaningless, and thus lack any god beliefs (are atheists).
I am atheist thus. Nor am I atheist agnostic though. I say this, because while I state that deities might exist, I do not believe they exist. I believe so and so holds a certain opinion based on their actions. I allow that they might not hold that opinion, but I still believe that they do. So too with deities. I do not believe in their existence. Since I am not attempting to prove that they do not, I allow that they might. I do not however allow the claims that are made about deities, as in the case of christianity's god. The proofs used fail horribly.
I do not believe in creation. I do believe in certain claims of evolution. I see no difference in the two. In order for something to exist, something must always have existed. To put it another way, in order for existence to be, existence must always have been. Some will state god as a first cause, others the big bang and energy and so forth. I believe in no first cause. There are first causES... such as I had a first cause when I came to be. The laptop I am typing on had a first cause. The present universe had a first cause, perhaps the big bang. But before the big bang there was something. Perhaps a collapse from a previous universe which then was from its own big bang. Perhaps not.
My belief is not to stretch back to the infinitum. Only to recognise that there is existence, which simply is. In being, then, it has always been. Merely the form has changed from one time to another. Some will find this incomprehensible, as do I, and thus they need to create a deity to be a first cause. Well the existence of that deity is no less incomprehensible than existence itself. The lack of a first cause in general is no more difficult for the mind to conceive than the lack of a first cause for a specific deity, almighty, or a first cause for a collection of deities.
Now that we have gotten that out of the way, let me complicate matters a bit further. It is clear I do not believe in deities. Yet I worship them. Huh? Yes you heard correct. I worship Bridhe, Isis, Set, Osiris, Cu Chulain, Medh, Sol, to name a few. I especially worship Angelina Jolie (may she be praised). I worship myself. I worship songs and singers, movies and actors, directors and cinemtographers. I worship speech writers and makers.
The best definition for me is most likely pagan. Here it is from the dictionary merriam websters:
Main Entry: pa·gan
Pronunciation: 'pA-g&n
Function: noun
Etymology: Middle English, from Late Latin paganus, from Latin, civilian, country dweller, from pagus country district; akin to Latin pangere to fix -- more at PACT
1 : HEATHEN 1; especially : a follower of a polytheistic religion (as in ancient Rome)
2 : one who has little or no religion and who delights in sensual pleasures and material goods : an irreligious or hedonistic person
3 : NEO-PAGAN
- pagan adjective
- pa·gan·ish / -g&-nish / adjective
I am a follower of polytheism, though I am an atheist. My deities are real, real persons, and real things, the sun, the air, and symbols and myths and fables. I delight in sensual pleasure and material goods. A definition it no longer carries is one who does not believe in gods.
Main Entry: 2 heathen
Function: noun
Inflected Form(s): plural heathens or heathen
1 : an unconverted member of a people or nation that does not acknowledge the God of the Bible
2 : an uncivilized or irreligious person
- hea·then·dom / -d&m / noun
- hea·then·ism / -[th]&-"ni-z&m / noun
- hea·then·ize / -[th]&-"nIz / transitive verb
Main Entry: neo-pa·gan
Pronunciation: -'pA-g&n
Function: noun
: a person who practices a contemporary form of paganism (as Wicca)
- neo-pagan adjective
- neo-pa·gan·ism / -'pA-g&-"ni-z&m / noun
There are some more specific defintions and a history. I use this term mostly in reference to myself because I encompass in my world view so many differing views. I practice rituals. I deny deities. I worship deities. I believe in the physical and thus am closer to a naturalist. Yet I believe in the power of myth. I deny Jesus historicity. Yet I realize he is powerful and exists and existed. The power of these fables is not in their actual historicity. It is rather in their ability to effect human beings. Superman is real, he is far more real than I am, though he never existed. Ritual, words, myth, fable, beliefs, prayers, chants, morals, and the plethora of philosophies and actions that make up religion are not constrained to christianity. Nor are they forbidden to atheists. Life is sacred. People are holy. And that without or with christianity.
Goddess Bless (Thyself)