Atheism: Hell is No Longer a Threat

Donald Pennington

Throughout the history of mankind, we have always wanted to understand the mysteries around us of this beautiful world. Before the rise of science, the human mind defaulted to crediting everything to one sort of god or another. This reliance on some mysterious, supernatural entity was the norm for countless centuries of human history.

As of late though, more and more people are no longer accepting this as an answer. We are turning to various forms of science to understand our world. In the process of learning, we've found evidence of processes far more intriguing than anything religion could explain. (If someone needs support of the rise in the numbers of non-believers, visit this page from NPR, or this NBC affiliate. Here's one more.)

Where we once believed our planet to be the center of the universe, astronomy shows us we're really less than a speck of space dust, compared to the entire cosmos. Where we once held onto the belief that goodness only flows from some spiritual deity, biology now shows the human organism has an innate goodness - and that it is essential to the survival of our species.

Where once, any particular religious leader was the highest authority in any given region of the world, archeology proves mankind has had many competing gods. Even today, among any particular religion's followers, there is division. Christianity is credited with 34,000 denominations throughout history. Islam has 72 sects. Religion has - if nothing else - brought about more division than any other factor in history.

Religion held its power over the individual human mind by the power of fear, more than any other factor. In spite of attempted arguments to the contrary, love existed among all belief systems, so nobody's god can lay claim to it exclusively. No, it was a fear of eternal torment in hell which was used to gain followers. Too often, those who refused still were tortured and/or slaughtered as "heretics" or "infidels" - depending on which religion's terminology a person used.

But the various religious leaders are losing their power to kill non-believers, and they are powerless to stop the trend. Daily, more people around the world are coming to realize slaughtering their own is wrong.

For the most part, Christianity lost its carte blanche pass centuries ago, although there still remain pockets of religious persecution by Christians. Islam is losing its power before our very eyes. Ridiculous "honor killings" are prosecuted as the crimes which they are. This is good.

While each of the world's religious leaders is busy decrying others for not being more like them, we atheists notice you all sound the same to us - divisive, superstitious and lacking a philosophical leg to stand on. The threats of hell from any of you sound like the threats of hell from all of you - and we accept none of it from any of you. We've all come to learn that for all of us to survive, only love will work. As was once so eloquently stated anonymously, "Seeing now that the Bible was so wrong about where we came from, how can we trust it to tell us where we're going?"

Some day, as our future generations look through our history, they'll see that humanity finally woke up to the beautiful reality surrounding us all. They'll see the myths of an afterlife were what kept primitive man back for as long as it did. They'll be able to pinpoint the time wherein we finally realized we're all just people - and tribalism, racism and religions were just myths. They'll see we finally realized we need each other and nobody was terrorized into obeying any superstition.

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Published by Donald Pennington - Featured Contributor in Politics

Donald contributes on a wide variety of topics. Among his favorites are movie reviews, political commentary, divorce, and crime commentary. See something you like? Share it on Twitter!  View profile

15 Comments

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  • Jaipi Sixbear11/28/2011

    Thank You! I really needed this today. So many people do not realize that atheism sometimes represents love and acceptance more accurately than religion ever can.

  • Orchiolum11/23/2011

    I don't linger between the heavens and hells of men, or life's lobotomy, sin. I hadn't made it far beyond the 'begats' when I traded the cattle hype for sanity, science, sense. Captain Nemo did not discover hell, and the Hubble returned no photographs of heaven. For me, 'going home' is living on the surface of a stunning, beautiful planet which still journeys from the center, where human lives flash briefly. Too Briefly.

  • Donald Pennington11/23/2011

    Either way.

  • Han Van Meegerin11/22/2011

    Don, sorry for the delay in posting the response. Are you still anxiously awaiting it? Thank you for your patience.

  • Donald Pennington11/19/2011

    Nah. you're not going to write a response piece.

  • Donald Pennington11/18/2011

    I found a third, in case you want to know that, too, Han. They're all in the article.

  • Donald Pennington11/18/2011

    You go right ahead and latch on to whatever will bring you some page views Han. BTW, I added two more reports to the article to back up my claims that we non-believers are increasing.

  • Han Van Meegerin11/18/2011

    Hopefully, no more page views from me on this page. I will be writing a response piece.

  • Donald Pennington11/18/2011

    So, I guess in your weak attempt to try your best to find other holes in this - besides the premise of the topic - you're admitting I'm right about religion being pushed via terror, Han? That's what it sounds like to me.

    When you can't answer the point made, answer the one you wish they'd made? Right, Han?

  • Donald Pennington11/18/2011

    "Your article makes it sound like there are two groups, believers in a God and non believers."

    You have a better summary? No, Han. What you're going at is to use non-sequiturs, as usual. It's really the only trick you know.

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