Brian63
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2001
- Messages
- 1,639
- Location
- Michigan
- Gender
- Male
- Basic Beliefs
- Freethinker/atheist/humanist
This is from a few weeks ago, but I do not find any discussion of it on this forum. Still newsworthy.
https://twitter.com/ThinkingAtheist...4z3ukwMVCFsZsenxYQ4lvQ4AHnvxxFsHoot9sxbkhjHd0
He writes a very good testimony describing:
1. What he believed.
2. Why he believed it.
3. What things did not make sense.
4. How he was stunned that many of his closest friends privately were thinking the same things, but were all afraid to say so.
5. Why he came out publicly.
6. What he believes now.
7. And more.
One thing think is inappropriate is him declaring how many of his closest friends were privately admitting to him about having the same thoughts. He should not have revealed that publicly, because now a lot of them will in turn be put in a very difficult situation.
He also mentions how both he and his wife never really enjoyed the Christian culture, how it felt very forced and manipulative. I am curious what her views are on a god's existence, but it is never explicitly stated.
For the last several months I have been posting semi-regularly on Ray Comfort's Facebook page (yeah), and usually the debates involve a regular and consistent handful of posters. When Ray made a post addressing Steingard's change though, the response was dramatically different. The responses came flooding in very fast and furious from Christians. They were made from new people who were not regular posters. They overwhelmingly reacted to the news with a "No True Scotsman" fallacy, quickly and easily disassociating him from themselves. He was never saved apparently, as hundreds of people apparently felt compelled to repeat again and again. It was amazing to see how reflexive that reaction was among the large majority of people. They just do not know how to process this change any other way.
https://twitter.com/ThinkingAtheist...4z3ukwMVCFsZsenxYQ4lvQ4AHnvxxFsHoot9sxbkhjHd0
Christian music vocalist Jon Steingard just posted on Instragam that he no longer believes in God. A brave stand, especially for someone with such strong ties to the Christian community. All our best in his journey.
He writes a very good testimony describing:
1. What he believed.
2. Why he believed it.
3. What things did not make sense.
4. How he was stunned that many of his closest friends privately were thinking the same things, but were all afraid to say so.
5. Why he came out publicly.
6. What he believes now.
7. And more.
One thing think is inappropriate is him declaring how many of his closest friends were privately admitting to him about having the same thoughts. He should not have revealed that publicly, because now a lot of them will in turn be put in a very difficult situation.
He also mentions how both he and his wife never really enjoyed the Christian culture, how it felt very forced and manipulative. I am curious what her views are on a god's existence, but it is never explicitly stated.
For the last several months I have been posting semi-regularly on Ray Comfort's Facebook page (yeah), and usually the debates involve a regular and consistent handful of posters. When Ray made a post addressing Steingard's change though, the response was dramatically different. The responses came flooding in very fast and furious from Christians. They were made from new people who were not regular posters. They overwhelmingly reacted to the news with a "No True Scotsman" fallacy, quickly and easily disassociating him from themselves. He was never saved apparently, as hundreds of people apparently felt compelled to repeat again and again. It was amazing to see how reflexive that reaction was among the large majority of people. They just do not know how to process this change any other way.

