#agnostic christian
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Am I religious? Am I?
I've been in a bit of a weird path when it comes to religion.
My parents are atheists who had me baptized as a baby and I had my first communion as a child, both in a Roman Catholic church.
They did this because of tradition and that's what was expected of them.
They themselves didn't really have any interest in going to church or teaching me about God.
I as a child did show interest however, I wanted to know more, wear a cross and I wanted to learn more about the stories of the bible but my interests weren't encouraged.
Then later in my teens I only saw everything bad about religion. People who use the bible for their own gain, to alienate others or to use others. People who twisted the word of God to fit their own narrative or the people who saw themselves as better than others because of their religion. I believed the atheists who were full of hate and my realisation that I was bisexual and seeing the homophobia didn't help either.
I started calling myself atheist, then agnostic, then atheist again. I was filled with hate and disgust for religion.
But there was still a curiosity that I kept hidden because I felt ashamed for it as I was surrounded by atheist, "rational thinkers".
Now for about a year now I feel like I'm back to how I was a child. I have an interest. I am willing to learn more and I see the good things about religion again. Small things happened that to me felt like signs. I started praying again in private and it felt so good. It felt like a huge relief.
My rational thoughts tell me that it makes sense as prayer can work like meditation to clear your head, calm down and be present.
But I do love to believe that God is there for me, will listen and wants the best for me.
At this point I'm not sure what to call myself. An agnostic Christian maybe?
It's hard for me to even type this.
I was even scared to include a little cross icon in my bio. (♱) It's so silly but I was/am so afraid of the reaction of others. Atheist thinking bad of me or maybe other religious people who might think I'm not religious enough or don't know enough yet.
I'm somewhat forcing myself to post this so I can get used to sharing this.
To make it more real. Maybe even learn from others?
It's so weird and I feel like it's not relatable at all. Usually you'd see stories about atheist kids rebelling against their religious parents.
But I'm a grown woman, scared to come out as somewhat religious?🤭🤣
#personal#religion#religious#athiest#athiesm#roman catholic#catholicism#catholic#christianity#christian#faith#quaker#quakerism#agnostic#agnostisizm#agnostic christian#jesus#♱#bible#God#newbie#I fear judgment#from both sides#homemaker#traditional#femininity#feminine#this is not my usual homemaking post#but this is something that ive been wrestling with#😅
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Being an Agnostic Christian
I have been agnostic for a long time. A few years back, I converted to Christianity and did not stop being agnostic. I do not think religiosity requires surety. For me, participating in a church community (as frequently as possible,) praying, and doing my best to love my neighbors and to extend whom I see as my neighbors is what faith is. Faith is an action to me, not a type of knowledge. I don't believe in Christianity. I do it (the best I can.)
I am not the kind of person who can abide in certainty. I just frankly can't, as I am ADHD as fuck. God asks me to abide in him and I do that instead as frequently as I can. Going to church helps that.
I don't need to be certain God is "real" - knowing that doing so would mean a logical exercise of both defining God and defining that which is real. I do not think God requires us to major in Philosophy in order to love him, and I also do not think that people like me, who are philosophy engaged with the world, should have a harder time being who God wants us to be just because we happen to know the ins and outs of the debate better.
My agnosticism is not a stumbling block, but something that increases my engagement with faith. There is a movie that just came out recently called Conclave that I think says exactly what I mean when I say that doubt is a holy experience. There are times when uncertainty is a holy calling, and that is precisely when certainty is what might lead people to do horrific things. So it's something we have practice being at peace with. In my understanding, many people who are religiously called are agnostic or go through periods of agnosticism. That doesn't change their calling or their job.
Instead of worrying about the problem of evil, I suppose the hypothesis is correct, that God is all-loving and ask how that should inform the way I live my life.
Amen or whatever
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If God hates queers, then why would God make people queer?
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I often feel very conflicted. Am I agnostic? That doesn't completely feel right. Am I Christian? That label doesn't feel right either. For a long time I settled into calling myself a progressive Christian but that didn't really fit either.
Is Christian agnosticism a thing? Is it just a big contradiction? The more settled I feel in claiming to be an agnostic christian, the more free I feel. I grew up with minister parents, as well as both sets of grandparents also being ministers. I was even a youth pastor in my early 20s. And even though the church and family I grew up in were loving accepting places that genuinely preached that God loves us all and condemned the hateful theology that can be found in other churches it still never felt totally right. I often feel as though I didn't get a choice. My own chance to learn and grow and explore. Faith felt a bit like a prison to me at times. Something I was given and had to do as it was expected of me.
But my faith aligns most with agnosticism, and is also influenced by my Christian upbringing. I'm not atheist. I don't believe without a doubt that there's nothing. I believe God is very possible. I just don't believe without a doubt in that existance either. And whose to say that the faith I grew up in is even the right one? Perhaps another faith has it right instead...
I grew up praying and thinking there was something wrong with me. Everyone else always talked about hearing from god, feeling his presence. I claimed the same but I never once actually encountered it. I could see the emotion which was influenced with music and lights and smoke machines, the right words, concern from others, but it never felt authentic to me, it felt manipulative. That's not to say those leading it were purposefully manipulative, (though individuals can be) they believed it all as they created these scenes. I believe God could be real, I even want him to be. but if he is real humanity has destroyed his church.
#deconstruction#deconstructing christianity#ex christian#agnostic#agnostic christian#christian agnostic
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my best friend got me a new journal!!! here is it decorated. ft my fav bible verse lol
#journal aesthetic#journal cover#journaling#journalblr#journal blog#aesthetic#2010s aesthetic#agnostic Christian#2000s hipster#2014 revival#artists on tumblr
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A Call to the Children of the Global South: The System That Made My Father Disown Me
I didn’t write this living testimony for virality. I wrote it because silence almost killed me. Because truth, even when ignored by algorithms, remembers how to survive. If this resonated with you — even quietly — share it with someone else who’s still trying to name their Fracture. That’s how we outlive the system. - Philmon John, May 2025
THE FRACTURE Several months ago, when I, a South-Asian American man, turned 35, my father disowned me.
He didn’t yell. He didn’t cry. He simply stopped calling me his son.
My father is a Brown, MAGA-aligned conservative Christian pastor, born in Kerala, India, and now living in the United States. His rejection wasn’t provoked by any breach of trust or familial responsibility, but by my coming out as queer and bisexual — and by my deliberate move away from a version of Christianity shaped more by colonial rule than compassion.
I became blasphemy made flesh.
My mother and sister, equally immersed in religious conservatism, followed suit. Most of my extended family — conservative Indian Christians — responded with quiet complicity. I became an exile in my own lineage, cast out from a network that once celebrated me as the Mootha Makkan, the Malayalam term for “eldest son”.
This break didn’t occur in isolation. It was the culmination of years of internal questioning and ideological transformation.
I was raised with warmth and structure, but also under the weight of rigid theology. My parents cycled through different churches in pursuit of doctrinal purity. In that environment, my queerness had no safe harbor. It had to be hidden, managed, controlled — forced into secrecy.
Literal, cherry-popping closets.
Even my childhood discipline was carved straight from scripture — “spare the rod, spoil the child” was not metaphor but mandate. I was hit for defiance, for curiosity, for emotional honesty. Control was synonymous with love. The theology: obedience over empathy. Is it sad I would rather now have had a beating from my father, than his silence?
I would’ve taken the rod — at least it acknowledged me.
Instead, Daddy looks through me.
THE INHERITANCE And I obeyed. For a time, I rose through the ranks of the church. I led worship. I played guitar in the worship band. I wasn’t just a believer — I was a builder of belief, a conductor of chorus, a jester of jubilee and Sunday morning joy — all while masking a private ache I could not yet articulate.
In the last five years, I began methodically deconstructing the ideological scaffolding I had inherited. I examined the mechanisms of theology, patriarchy, and colonial imposition — and the specific burdens placed upon firstborn sons of immigrant families. Who defines our roles? Who benefits from our silence? Why is this happening to me?
These questions consistently pointed toward the dominant global structure: wealthy white patriarchal supremacy. Rooted in European imperialism and sustained by centuries of religious and cultural colonization, this system fractures not only societies but the deeply intimate architecture of family.
What my family experienced is not unlike what the United States of America continues to experience — a slow, painful reckoning with a foundational ideology of white, heteronormative, Christian patriarchal dominance.
My family comes from Kerala, home to one of the oldest Christian communities in the world. But the Christianity I inherited was not indigenous. It was filtered through the moral codes of Portuguese priests and British missionaries and the discipline of Victorian culture. Christ was not presented as a radical Middle Eastern teacher but as a sanitized figure — pale, passive, and Western.
In this theology, Christ is symbolic. Paul is the system. Doctrine exists to reinforce patriarchy, to police desire, to ensure control. When I embraced a theology rooted in love, empathy, and justice — the ethics I believe Jesus actually lived — I was met not with discussion, but dismissal.
To my family, my identity wasn’t authenticity. It was apostasy.
THE RECKONING In 2020, the ground shifted.
I turned the triple decade — 30 — as the COVID-19 pandemic erupted.
Remote work slowed life down, and I had space to think deeply.
That year, the murders of Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, George Floyd, and countless others triggered a national and personal reckoning.
I turned to K-LOVE, the Christian radio station I grew up with, hoping to hear words of solidarity, truth, or even mourning. Instead, there was silence. No mention of racial justice. No prayers for the dead. Just songs about personal salvation, void of historical context or social responsibility.
As Geraldine Heng argues in The Invention of Race in the European Middle Ages, race was not merely a modern invention void of scientific basis — it was already taking shape in medieval Europe, where Christianity was used to sanctify, encode, and sell racial hierarchies as divine order and social technology.
As Ademọ́la, also known as Ogbeni Demola, once said: “The white man built his heaven on your land and pointed yours to the sky.” That brain-powered perceptive clarity — distilled in a single line — stays with me every day.
With professional routines interrupted and spiritual ties frayed, I immersed myself in scholarship. I entered what I now see as a period of epistemic reconstruction. I read widely — revolutionaries, poets, sociologists, historians, mathematicians, theologians, cultural critics, and the unflinching truth-tellers who name what empire tries to erase.
I first turned to the voices who now live only in memory: Bhagat Singh, James Baldwin, Frantz Fanon, bell hooks, Octavia Butler, Gloria Anzaldúa, and Vine Deloria Jr. Each carried the weight of revolution, tenderness, and truth — from anti-colonial struggle to queer theory to Indigenous reclamation.
I then reached for the veteran thought leaders still shaping the world, starting with Noam Chomsky, Naomi Klein, Shashi Tharoor, Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Susan Visvanathan, Geraldine Heng, George Gheverghese Joseph, J. Sakai, Vijay Prashad, Vilna Bashi Treitler, Claire Jean Kim, and Arundhati Roy — voices who dismantle the illusions of empire through history, mathematics, linguistics, and racial theory.
In the present, I absorbed insights from a new generation of public intellectuals and cultural critics: Ta-Nehisi Coates, Jared Yates Sexton, Cathy Park Hong, Ibram X. Kendi, Nikole Hannah-Jones, Heather McGhee, Mehdi Hasan, Adrienne Keene, Keri Leigh Merritt, Vincent Bevins, Sarah Kendzior, Ayesha A. Siddiqi, Wajahat Ali, W. Kamau Bell, Mary Trump, & John Oliver. Together, they form a constellation of clarity — thinkers who gave me language for grief, strategy for resistance, and above all, a framework for empathy rooted in history, not abstraction.
I also turned to the thinkers shaping today’s cultural and political discourse. I dreamt of the world blueprinted by Bhaskar Sunkara in his revolutionary The Socialist Manifesto and plunged into Jacobin’s blistering critiques of capitalism. The Atlantic’s longform journalism kept me tethered to a truth-seeking tradition. The Guardian stood out for its global scale and reach, offering progressive, longform storytelling that speaks to both local injustices and systemic inequalities across the world. And Roman Krznaric’s Empathy: Why It Matters, and How to Get It helped crystallize my core belief:
Be a good human. Practice empathy.
That’s the playbook, America. Practice empathy. Do that — and teach accurate, critically reflective history — and we have the chance to truly become the greatest democracy the world has ever seen.
And this empathy must extend to all — especially to trans people. In India, the Hijra community — trans and intersex folk who have existed visibly for thousands of years — embody a sacred third gender long before the West had language for it. But they are not alone. Across the colonized world, the empire erased a sacred third space: the Muxe of Zapotec culture, the Bakla of the Philippines, the Fa’afafine of Samoa, the Two-Spirit nations of Turtle Island, the Māhū of Hawaiʻi, the Sworn Virgins of the Balkans — each of these communities held space outside Western gender binaries, rooted in care, ceremony, and spirit. Some align with what we today call trans or intersex, while others exist entirely outside Western definitions. Colonization reframed them as deviants.
And still, we must remember this: trans people are not new. Our respect for them must be as ancient as their existence.
THE RESISTANCE As I examined the dynamics of coloniality, racial capitalism, and Western empire, I realized just how deeply imperial power had shaped my family, our values, and our spiritual language. The empire didn’t just occupy land — it rewrote moral codes. It restructured the family.
I learned how Irish, Italian, Greek, Hungarian, and Albanian immigrants were initially excluded from whiteness in America. Over time, many adopted and embraced whiteness as strategic economic and social protection — and in doing so, embraced anti-Blackness and patriarchal hierarchies to maintain their newfound status. Today, many European-hyphenated Americans defend systems that once excluded them.
And over time, some Asian-Americans have followed the very same racial template.
At 33 — the age Jesus is believed to have died — I laid my childhood faith to rest. In its place rose something rooted in clarity, not doctrine.
I didn’t walk away from religion into cynicism or nihilism. I stepped into a humanist, justice-centered worldview. A system grounded in reason, evidence, and above all, empathy. A belief in people over dogma. In community over conformity.
I didn’t lose faith. I redefined it.
I left the pasture of institutional faith, not for chaos, but for an ethical wilderness — a space lacking divine command but filled with moral clarity. A place built on personal responsibility and universal dignity.
This is where I stand today.
To those with similar histories: if your roots trace back to Africa, South Asia, Southeast Asia, Central Asia, East Asia, the Middle East, Latin America, the Caribbean, Oceania, or to Indigenous and marginalized communities within the Global North — you are a Child of the Global South. Even in the Global North, your experience carries the weight of displaced geography, the quiet grief of colonial trauma, and a genealogy forged by the system of empire. Your pain is political. Your silence is inherited. You are not invisible. They buried you without a funeral. They mourned not your death, but your deviation from design. However, we are not dead. We are just no longer theirs.
White supremacy endures by fracturing us. It manufactures tensions between communities of color by design — placing Asian businesses in Black communities without infrastructure and opportunities for BIPOC folk to share and benefit from the economic engine. Central to this strategy is the model minority myth, crafted during the Cold War to present Asian-Americans as obedient, self-reliant, and successful — not to celebrate them, but to invalidate Black resistance and justify structural racism. It’s a myth that fosters anti-Blackness in Asian communities and xenophobia in Black ones, while shielding white supremacy from critique. These divisions are not cultural accidents; they’re colonial blueprints.
And these blueprints stretch across oceans and continents and time.
In colonial South Africa, Mohandas Gandhi — still shaped by British racial hierarchies — distanced Indians from Black Africans, calling them “kaffirs” and demanding separate facilities. In Uganda, the British installed South Asians as a merchant middle class between colonizers and native Africans, breeding distrust. When Idi Amin expelled 80,000 Asians in 1972, it was a violent backlash to a racial hierarchy seeded by empire. These fractures — between Black and Asian, colonized and sub-colonized — are the legacy of white patriarchal supremacy.
Divide, distract, and dominate.
We must resist being weaponized against each other.
Every Asian-American must read Minor Feelings by Cathy Park Hong. Every high schooler in America must read and discuss Jared Yates Sexton.
Study the systems. Name them. Disarm them.
Because unless we become and remain united, the status quo — one that serves wealthy cisgender, heterosexual, white Christian men — will remain intact.
This is A Call to the Children of the Global South. And An Invitation to the Children of the Global North: Stop the infighting. Study and interrogate the systems. Reject the design.
To those in media, publishing, and the arts: postcolonial narratives are not cultural sidebars. They are central to national healing. They preserve memory, restore dignity, and confront whitewashed histories.
If you want work that matters — support art that pushes past trauma into structural critique.
Greenlight truth. Platform memory. Choose courage over comfort.
Postcolonial stories should be the norm — not niche art.
Jordan Peele’s Get Out was a cinematic breakthrough — razor-sharp and genre-defying — in its exposure of white supremacy’s quiet machinery: liberal smiles, performative allyship, and the pacification of dissent through assimilation. The Sunken Place is not just a metaphor for silenced Black consciousness — it’s the empire’s preferred position for the marginalized: visible, exploited, but unheard.
A system that offers the illusion of inclusion, weaponizing identity as control.
Ken Levine’s BioShock Infinite exposed white supremacy through a dystopian, fictional but historically grounded lens - depicting the religious justification of Black enslavement, Indigenous erasure, and genocidal nationalism in a floating, evangelical empire.
David Simon’s The Wire exposed the institutional decay of law enforcement, education, and the legal system - revealing how systemic failure, not individual morality, drives urban collapse.
Jesse Armstrong’s Succession traced the architecture of empire through family - showing how media empires weaponize racism, propaganda, and manufactured outrage to generate profit and secure generational wealth.
Ava DuVernay's Origin unearths caste and race as twin blueprints of white supremacy - linking Dalit oppression in India to the subjugation of Black Americans. Adapted from Isabel Wilkerson's Caste, it dismantles the myth of isolated injustice, revealing a global system meticulously engineered to rank human worth - and the radical act of naming the system.
Ryan Coogler’s Sinners — a revelatory, critically and commercially successful film about Afro-Asian resistance in 1930s Mississippi — exposes the hunger for speculative narratives grounded in historical truth.
Across the Spider-Verse gave us Pavitr Prabhakar - a Brown superhero who wasn't nerdy or celibate, as Western media typically portrayed the South-Asian man, but cool, smart, athletic, with great hair, in love, and proudly anti-colonial. He called out the British for stealing and keeping Indian artifacts… in a Spider-Man movie. That moment was history reclaimed.
A glitch in the wealthy white patriarchal matrix.
Dev Patel’s Monkey Man is a visceral fable of vengeance and resistance, where the brutality of caste, corruption, and religious nationalism collide. Amid this chaos, the film uplifts the Hijra community who stand not only as victims, but as warriors against systemic violence. Their alliance reframes queerness not as deviance, but as defiance — ultimately confronting the machinery of empire with what it fears most: a system-breaking empathy it cannot contain.
The vitriolic backlash from white male gamers and fandoms isn’t about quality — it’s about losing default status in stories. Everyone else has had to empathize with majority white male protagonists for decades. Diverse representation in media isn’t a threat to art — it’s a threat to white supremacy. It’s not just a mirror held up to the globe — it’s a refusal to let one worldview define it.
Hollywood, gaming studios, and the gatekeepers of entertainment — if you want to reclaim artistic integrity and still make money doing it, we need art that remembers, resists, and reclaims — stories that name the machine and short-circuit its lies. The world is ready. So am I.
Today, efforts like Project 2025, the Heritage Foundation, and the Federalist Society are not merely policy shops — they are ideological engines: built to roll back civil rights, impose authoritarian values, and erase uncomfortable truths. They represent a hyper-concentrated form of white supremacy, rooted in unresolved Civil War grievances and the failures of Reconstruction.
Miraculously, or perhaps, blessed with intellectual curiosity and natural empathy, through all of this, my wife — a compassionate, steadfast partner and a Christian woman — has remained by my side. She has witnessed my transformation with both love and complexity. While our bond is rooted in deep respect and shared values, our spiritual landscapes have diverged. Her faith brings her solace; mine has evolved into something more secular, grounded in justice and humanism. We’ve navigated that tension with care — proof that love can stretch across differing beliefs, even as the echoes of religious conditioning still ripple through our lives.
I am proud of her increasing intellectual curiosity and her willingness to accept me for who I am now, even if I wasn’t ready to accept myself when we met.
But our marriage has defied the splintering that white supremacy specifically creates: hyper-capitalist, hyper-individualistic, fractured families and societies.
As Children of the Global South — descendants of peoples who survived enslavement, colonization, and erasure — we carry within us the urgent need for stories that do not turn away from history, but confront it with unflinching truth.
In the pain of losing my family, I found a deeper purpose: to tell this story — and my own — any way I can. A sudden rush of empathy, pity, and love struck me: My parents’ and sister’s rejection was not theirs alone — it was a lingering Fracture left by colonization and global exploitation, tearing apart families across generations. As Children of the Global South, we still carry those wounds.
Make no mistake: white supremacy leaves wounds — because it is the system. And unless it is dismantled, both the Global South and North — and their collective Children — will remain trapped in a dance choreographed by empire — built to divide, exploit, and erase. Any vision of democracy, in America, will remain a fragile illusion — if not an outright mythology — built on a conceptually false foundation: white supremacy itself.
A cruel, heartbreaking legacy of erasure — passed down through empire — indoctrinating God-fearing Brown fathers to erase their godless, queer Brown sons. Preaching shame as scripture. Teaching silence as survival.
I reject that inheritance.
Empathy as praxis is how we reject that inheritance. In a world engineered to divide, it rebuilds connection, disarms supremacy, and charts a path forward. If humanity is to survive — let alone heal — empathy must become our collective discipline.
And perhaps what cut even deeper for my father — beyond my queerness — was that I no longer validated his role as a pastor. In stepping away from the faith he had built his life upon, I wasn’t just rejecting a belief system. I was, in his eyes, nullifying his life’s work. For a man shaped by empire, ordained by colonial Christianity, and burdened with the role of moral gatekeeper, my departure from his manufactured worldview may have landed as personal failure. But it wasn’t. It was never about wanting to hurt him. I love my father. I love my mother. I love my sister. It was never about them — it was about the system that taught them love was conditional, acceptance required obedience, and dissent unforgivable. That kind of pain is real — but its source is systemic. I still want to be Mootha Makkan — not by obedience, but by truth. By love without condition. Not through erasure, but by living fully in the open. Not in their image, but in mine.
Yet, and yes, I also carry the wound — but I also carry the will to heal it.
THE CALL I believe in empathy. I believe in memory. I believe the Children of the Global South are not broken. We are not rejected. We are awakening.
Children of the Global North: join us. We are not your enemies. We are your present and future collaborators, business & creative partners, lovers, and kin. We are building something new — something ancient yet reawakened, a pursuit of empathy, and a reckoning with history that refuses to forget.
If this story resonated with you, kindly share it, spread the word and please comment. I’d love to hear from you. Your voice, your memory, your Fracture — it matters here.
You are not alone. All are welcome.
Thank you so, so much for your time in reading my story.
You can also email me directly: vinesvenus at protonmail.com I'll be writing more on Medium as well: https://medium.com/@vinesvenus/a-call-to-the-children-of-the-global-south-the-system-that-made-my-father-disown-me-fecad6c0b862
#queer#exvangelical#global south#colonialism#religious trauma#deconstruction#lgbtqia#longform essay#history#queer history#queer community#queer pride#mental health#agnostic#ex christian#atheist#empathy in praxis#empathy
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saint sebastian tended by saint irene but they're both drag artists
felt like this might be something this site would enjoy
on stage: oleandro & delfi oraakel, photographer: peroksiid (on ig as oleandro_drag, delfi_oraakel and peroksiid)
#saint sebastian#st sebastian#drag#drag king#drag queen#saint irene#saint sebastian tended by saint irene#art#drag artist#religious art#queer#art history#homoerotic art#drag performer#queer art#trans#transgender#transmasc#saints#gay#gay art#trans art#lgbt art#christianity#catholic art#progressive christianity#queer christian#<- i'm currently too complicated abt god to have a label other than agnostic But i love yall and feel like you might appreciate this so. ta
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Another fine case of “practice what you preach.” It’s not the woman’s fault that you lack self control.
#atheist#agnostic#ex christian#atheism#apostate#ex muslim#ex religious#excatholic#deconvert#feminism#feminist
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In the AO3 Demographics Survey 2024 - an unofficial demographics survey of 16,131 AO3 users - 17% of respondents identified as Christian, while 69% identified as having no religion.
To see more analysis, including a list of the common write-in answers for this question, please view the full results on AO3.
#ao3 demographics survey 2024#religion#christianity#atheism#christian#atheist#fandom#fanfic#judaism#jewish#paganism#pagan#agnosticism#agnostic#ao3#archive of our own#survey results
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i’m so tired of religion over saturating literally every single thing ever. i don’t care i don’t care I DON’T CARE.
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Actually the Great Commission is about generating a culture of love and care between diverse interconnected global communities not about colonizing and trying to convert groups because you think their way of life is somehow lesser unless they approach the Divine from a Christian lens
#the law is love and care#the gospel is love and care#the atheist and the agnostic and the Muslim and the Jew and the Buddhist and the mystic and the transcendentalist and the witch#all of them are my siblings#we all commune with something#whether we call that something god or ethics or care or love or spirits or the universe#it’s about being part of something greater than you in service of love#and then extending that love to others#catholicism#catholic#catholic saints#folk catholicism#queer catholic#queer christian#folk practitioner#progressive christianity#catholic anarchism
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It's funny how certain religious people act like accepting LGBTQ rights will lead to paedophilia being normalized when they've already let that shit slide for centuries.
Then again, what else do you expect from people who value religion over the rights of children?
Don't let them trick you into thinking they care.
#ex religious#ex christian#ex religion#religious trauma#religious deconstruction#deconstructing christianity#ex pentecostal#deconversion#apostate#ex fundie#ex muslim#exvangelical#ex evangelical#christian fundamentalism#ex fundamentalist#ex mormon#ex catholic#ex jehovah's witness#ex jw#agnostic#ex upci#lgbt#lgbtq
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Healing from being raised catholic by eating meat on Fridays and doing the opposite of fasting (baking cookies and doing things that make me HAPPY) during the time period of lent is soooo nice
#ex catholic#atheist#atheism#agnostic#excatholic#ex christian#healing from the past#WOOOOO I HAD BACON TODAY LETS GO
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The irony of Christians who are convinced that aborting a mass of cells that is not even a human being is "murder" but see nothing wrong in the fact that, according to the Bible, Abraham tried to kill his son because "God asked him to". So let me get this straight, if I get raped and decide not to carry a pregnancy resulting from violence, I am a monster but it's totally fine if I kill my child and justify it by saying that "God asked me to do it"? Got it. 🤡
#Christians ☕️#Not all Christians but somehow always a Christian#religion critical#ex christian#fuck christianity#pro choice#abortion is healthcare#abortion is a human right#women's rights#my body my choice#agnosticism#agnostic#agnosticism is the way
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Abusive religions will tell you that positive feelings in your body are signs from god or a movement of the holy ghost and then do whatever they can to monopolize those positive feelings by demonizing any other source they could come from. Sex, masturbation, “worldly” media, “worldly” music, connecting with friends outside the church, etc. That way you don’t figure out that those feelings aren’t god, they’re a biological response you can get from anything else. It’s just dopamine. And then you’ll become dependent on the church for dopamine because it’s your only source. It’s literally hacking your biology to keep you dependent on the church.
#deconstruction#ex christian#ex evangelical#agnosticatheist#deconstructing christianity#agnostic#ex religious#exevangelical#religious trauma#exmo#JMS cult
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every time i see someone exclude, mock or ignore queer religious people's existence (whether from bigoted religious people or bigoted queer people) i think it should be perfectly acceptable for us to punch them in the face for that
#bonus points if the person is NOT christian (queer jew in progress here!)#yes i saw smth bigoted earlier btw#queer jews#queer muslim#queer christian#queer religion#queer sikh#queer hindu#queer buddhist#queer people of faith#also yes i love queer atheists and agnostics. that's for a different post though#lgbtq and religious#aggie talks#jumblr#jewblr#<- target audience
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