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Wednesday, September 06, 2006
Mike S. Adams :: Townhall.com Columnist
I don’t have enough faith to be an atheist
by Mike S. Adams
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Jimmy Duke was my pitching coach in 1976, the year we won the little league championship. I first met him at Clear Lake Baptist Church in 1973. That was just a year after I met his son Jim in Mrs. Ogden’s second grade class. Thirty-one years after we were first classmates, Jim would be one of the groomsmen at my wedding. I’ve been friends with him for 34 years now.

Jimmy stopped taking his family to CLBC after a tragic car accident killed the two little girls of a good friend. For him, God just couldn’t allow such a thing and still be worthy of worship and praise. The girls’ deaths were violent and the fatal accident seemed to take Jimmy’s faith with it to the grave.

Jimmy and his wife Sandra would divorce in the late 1980s and I would seldom see him afterwards. Glimpses of Jimmy’s life in recent years would come to me in little bits and pieces via the funny stories I would hear about him from family and friends. Jimmy’s sense of humor was a foundation for his great success as a businessman.

When his daughter Gwen married in the late 1990s he struck up a friendship with Pastor Roger of the local Hope Community Church. Roger would have lunch with Jimmy several times before he asked him, “Jimmy what are your thoughts on the Lord, these days?’ Jimmy’s answer to Roger was an instant classic: “As I understand it, you have to be Mother Theresa to get into heaven, and I’m not giving up my private airplane.” Roger laughed when he later told me that story.

However, there was nothing funny last summer when his ex-wife Sandy died suddenly and painfully of lung cancer. It would remind him, probably, of that car accident that killed two little girls and drove him from the church decades earlier.

After Sandy passed, I would have some long, tough phone calls with Jimmy’s son. How does one make the argument that a tragedy – especially one like the painful death of one’s mother – may some day be revealed as a blessing? How can such an argument be anything but offensive while the wounds of a loved one’s death are still fresh?

I tried unsuccessfully to compare my friend’s loss of his mother to the loss of my grandmother forty years before. The latter brought about the conversion of others though her life was cut short after 48 years. Could Sandy’s life bring about a similar change in others, too? Thankfully, his father Jimmy kept in touch with Pastor Roger.

Because Jimmy and his second wife Linda kept in touch with Sandy, too, it was possible for him to be influenced by her passing in a real and meaningful way. After Pastor Roger led the memorial for Sandy, he would speak to Jimmy again. When asked about his thoughts on the Lord, this time Jimmy said “It seems God in the Old Testament is a whole lot different from God in the New Testament.” Roger told him he wouldn’t live long enough to get answers to all his questions. But that one death reminded him of his mortality. And that is when his spiritual journey began.

Jimmy took a day off work to roam the aisles of Barnes and Noble to search out the perfect Christian apologetic. That day turned into two weeks as he couldn’t find the right book. Jimmy was looking for a book with numbers and charts. He wanted science and logic and archeological evidence all rolled into one package.

Finally, he decided upon a book by Geisler and Turek called “I don’t have enough faith to be an atheist.” He read that book, followed by another by Josh McDowell. Then he topped it off with a reading of the Old Testament. Continued...

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About The Author
Mike Adams is a criminology professor at the University of North Carolina Wilmington and author of Feminists Say the Darndest Things: A Politically Incorrect Professor Confronts "Womyn" On Campus.
 
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Subject: Fuzzy
No.
I choose something. I choose humankind. I choose to put my faith in the human potential. As far as making my own rules goes, I assume you are speaking in reference to how atheists are going to heaven. (A reference I made earlier) I was speaking for humor. Though if we think about it, How much more noble is it to "do the right thing" when there is no reward or threat of punishment? How much more special is it when a child cleans there room because they want to have a clean room, rather than because they will get candy if they finish it or 'time out' if they don't.
--I don't believe that I am smarter than your god, No more than you would go around thinking your smarter than buddah, or Krishna. He simply doesn't enter into the equation. I rely on myself and those around me to help create the society that we exist in. It is they and I who I hold responsible,not a deity. It is they who receive my thanks. The idea that it takes thousands of people to work together in order to assure that my food arrives safely and well prepared at my table, and then people want me to turn and thank some deity for that seems wrong. Humankind seems to have a low self-esteem problem. When someone does something good, it is attributed to a deity, when someone does something bad it is the person themselves. How sad. My belief is that people are good, the evil person is the exception. That science is a tool used by humankind in order to figure out how things work. Ritual and social behaviors are the spice of life, but not the reason for it.

RJ
So your best gamble is to choose nothing. Very logical! How could you possibly go wrong with that? Better yet, you make up your own rules on what gets you to Heaven, if there even is a God. Very clever! You state that being good & kind to your fellow man is what gets you there? Wow! Since you make the rules we should have all just consulted with you rather than wasting our time confering with the one who made us. What should we care what he thinks? He's an idiot compared to you and your irrefutable logic.

You have opened my eyes. I was blind but now I see.



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