Atheist Churches are an
Admission that Atheism is a Religion
by Jerry Newcombe
There’s an old joke that
says: How do you describe an atheist at his funeral? “All dressed up with no
place to go.”
Now, all jokes aside,
there is a place atheists can go on Sundays. There’s a new type of “atheist
church” that has been founded by a couple from England, and apparently it’s
taking off.
Writing for the AP
(11/11/13), Gillian Flaccus penned an article called, “Atheist ‘mega-churches’ are now a
thing in the U.S as popularity spreads from U.K.” These groups, write
Flaccus, are “people bound by their belief in non-belief.” They have had
large gatherings in Los Angeles, “San Diego, Nashville, New York and other U.S.
cities.”
The founders are
“British duo Sanderson Jones and Pippa Evans,” who are on a “tour around the
U.S. and Australia to drum up donations and help launch new Sunday Assemblies.”
The services consist of
singing secular songs, inspirational talks, and times of reflection.
Basically, it’s religion
without God.
It’s a free country,
because of our Judeo-Christian base (and that of England), so the atheists are
free to assemble or not, just as anyone else is. Only in nations tied to a
Christian base does that freedom exist. (It certainly didn’t exist in the Soviet
Union, which was based on atheism.) But why accept a cheap imitation
when you can get the real thing?
These atheist churches
meet on Sunday mornings, the traditional day of corporate worship. It’s a
fact that the Jewish sect known as Christianity worshiped Jesus because all the
earliest Christians (who were Jewish — Peter, Paul, and Mary, and the Apostles)
believed Jesus had risen from the dead on “the first day of the week,” i.e.,
Sunday.
The
idea of atheists going to church brings home to me the notion that we are all
hard-wired by the Creator to worship.
We all worship
something. According to the Bible, we’ll ultimately worship Jesus, or we’ll
worship something less; we’ll worship the creature rather than the Creator
(Rom. 1:25).
The 17th
century French mathematician and Christian apologist, Blaise Pascal, said
there’s a God-shaped vacuum in every heart, just waiting to be filled.
The Bible says God
created us, and we will give an account before Him one day. In the fourth
century, St. Augustine wrote in his classic book, Confessions, “You have made us for Yourself, Oh God, and our
hearts are restless until they find their rest in You.”
The shorter catechism
from the Westminster Confession of Faith from the 1640s asks: “What is the
chief end of man? The chief end of man is to glorify God and enjoy Him
forever.”
I remember years ago
when an atheist acquaintance told me he loved to watch a certain preacher on TV
every week. He loved his sermons because they were filled with motivation,
goal-setting, uplifting stories. If the preacher mentioned God, the atheist
would just edit that out in his mind.
Unfortunately, many
Christian churches have unwittingly done the same, removing essential tenets of
the Christian faith. It’s sad to think that in some of our Sunday
assemblies of professing Christians, there is no longer an emphasis on Christ’s
atoning death for sinners and His resurrection from the dead. But that is the
heart of the Christian message — from Day One to the present. Note
the ancient creed, still repeated in many churches to this day: “Christ has
died. Christ is risen. Christ will come again.”
In one sense, a
“cross-less Christianity” makes just as much sense as an “atheist church.” The Apostle Paul said to the
Galatians, Do you think I’d still be facing all this persecution if it weren’t
for my preaching the cross? He also said to the Corinthians, My goal was to
preach Christ and Him crucified.
Meanwhile, the whole
idea of organized atheism (especially the militant, full-time kind) seems
contradictory: Because they spend all their energies fighting against God, whom
they claim does not exist. If they really believed it, they wouldn’t care.
With Thanksgiving
coming, and “atheist churches” apparently on the rise, I’m reminded of what G.
K. Chesterton once said: “The worst moment for an atheist is when he
is really thankful and has no one to thank.” He also said, “If there were no
God, there would be no atheists.”
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