Ether's Bane
future Singaporean
- Pronoun
- he
Basically, how did you come to believe in the religion (or non-religion) that you do today?
Here's my story.
I was raised in a mixed-religious household. My father and grandmother are Christian, my grandfather is Buddhist, (yes, my grandparents live in the same house as me) and my mother is a general theist who doesn't follow a particular religion. I was not raised with a religion. Virtually everyone on my dad's side is a Christian, and one day when I was 6, one of my aunts (on my dad's side) took me to the Sunday school at her church. After that Sunday's session, I asked the Sunday school coordinator who God was and what he does, and she explained it in all the usual stuff. I thought of it as a load of bullcrap and closed the door in my mind to that belief, and until I was 10, I was a very strong atheist.
Then came that day in school. It was Ethical Studies period (that's a school subject in Malaysia), and we were learning about how religion makes everything better and stuff like that, and I mentioned that I didn't believe in God, as did one other girl. The teacher kept us back after class and "set us straight" about God. (Our teacher was a pretty serious Christian.) From what I can tell, that other girl remained an atheist, but in my mind, I felt that the teacher was always right, and I started believing in God.
When I went to secondary school, I went to (and still am in) a Catholic school. There, Christianity was presented in such an appealing way, and before long, I started accepting it, and soon, I was taking it fairly seriously - frequently going to church and all that, and I considered myself a Christian.
Then came the first bombshell.
One day, the pastor's message was basically a 90-minute anti-homosexuality tirade. Then, I thought to myself, "Okay, I'll just forget about that part and follow the rest of Christianity", not realizing that what he had said was hateful and bigoted. About a month later, I realized that the creation story in the Bible couldn't possibly be true, since there was so much proof for evolution, which I knew about. Despite these, I still considered myself a Christian.
Cue April 2010.
I was alone in my room, thinking to myself about things, when I wondered about my religion. Soon, I realized that there was no real reason that I believed in what I did. In the months that followed, I became a general theist, then an agnostic, and finally, this October, I became an atheist. I'm not as strong an atheist as I was when I was 8 or 9 years old, but I'm still one all the same, now.
Here's my story.
I was raised in a mixed-religious household. My father and grandmother are Christian, my grandfather is Buddhist, (yes, my grandparents live in the same house as me) and my mother is a general theist who doesn't follow a particular religion. I was not raised with a religion. Virtually everyone on my dad's side is a Christian, and one day when I was 6, one of my aunts (on my dad's side) took me to the Sunday school at her church. After that Sunday's session, I asked the Sunday school coordinator who God was and what he does, and she explained it in all the usual stuff. I thought of it as a load of bullcrap and closed the door in my mind to that belief, and until I was 10, I was a very strong atheist.
Then came that day in school. It was Ethical Studies period (that's a school subject in Malaysia), and we were learning about how religion makes everything better and stuff like that, and I mentioned that I didn't believe in God, as did one other girl. The teacher kept us back after class and "set us straight" about God. (Our teacher was a pretty serious Christian.) From what I can tell, that other girl remained an atheist, but in my mind, I felt that the teacher was always right, and I started believing in God.
When I went to secondary school, I went to (and still am in) a Catholic school. There, Christianity was presented in such an appealing way, and before long, I started accepting it, and soon, I was taking it fairly seriously - frequently going to church and all that, and I considered myself a Christian.
Then came the first bombshell.
One day, the pastor's message was basically a 90-minute anti-homosexuality tirade. Then, I thought to myself, "Okay, I'll just forget about that part and follow the rest of Christianity", not realizing that what he had said was hateful and bigoted. About a month later, I realized that the creation story in the Bible couldn't possibly be true, since there was so much proof for evolution, which I knew about. Despite these, I still considered myself a Christian.
Cue April 2010.
I was alone in my room, thinking to myself about things, when I wondered about my religion. Soon, I realized that there was no real reason that I believed in what I did. In the months that followed, I became a general theist, then an agnostic, and finally, this October, I became an atheist. I'm not as strong an atheist as I was when I was 8 or 9 years old, but I'm still one all the same, now.