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they simply don't believe (I keep trying to explain this to an Evangelical friend who worries about my lack of belief in a personal devil). Nor can anyone be talked out of something they sincerely believe. The problem in relations between atheists and believers, at least here on DU, is a lack of respect. Atheists, well, a good many of them. feel a need to belittle believers, to refer to sincere beliefs as nothing more than coping devices or something we just need to get by. Actually, my faith does NOT make my life easier. In positing the existence of a loving God, I am left to figure out the problem of evil, the relationship of science to faith, a good many other questions that would be easier answered by simply declaring there is no God. That seems, to me, the easy way out. Grappling with the questions is a bigger challenge. But I digress.
If believers and non-believers would REALLY be respectful of one another, there'd be no need for apologies. A wise man once suggested we do unto others as we would have them do unto us. Or as we used to say in Campfire Girls, "Want a friend? Be a friend."
You're free to say you're an atheist. You're free to be an atheist. The key to keeping Christians and others as friends is to be respectful.
Off to do a funeral! (Who does funerals for atheists, btw?)
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