If you think about it there are NO ATHEIST'S only Agnostic's! Do atheists know all of reality? That would be a NO, therefore w/ honest reflection they can only be Agnostic!
The below is a favorite blog.
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Why I Left Atheism
Of all the lessons that I
present concerning the existence of God and of all the material that I try to
make available to people to learn about God's existence, the present lesson,
"Why I Left Atheism," is the lesson in the series that I frankly do
not like to present. I guess none of us like to look back in our lives to a
time when we made poor judgments and foolish mistakes--when we took rather
really idiotic positions--and admit this, especially to people we are not well
acquainted with. I present this lesson, however, because it is my fervent hope
and prayer that perhaps by exposing my mistakes and by pointing out the things
that were a part of my early life, some who might be following the same paths
(to a greater or lesser extent) might not make those same mistakes. Someone
once said that nobody is totally useless; if we cannot do anything else, we can
at least serve as a bad example. That is sort of my situation. I am hoping that
by presenting these materials and telling you something about my early life,
some of you may be able to recognize the lack of wisdom and perhaps the poor
judgment that is involved in rejecting God and living a life that demonstrates
such a rejection.
Most of the time when I speak
to religious groups or to people who believe in God, someone will ask me
somewhat incredulously, "Well, were you really an atheist? Did you really
not believe in God?" I want to start by asserting that the answer to that
question is a very affirmative "Yes." At one time in my life, I was
totally and firmly convicted that there was no such thing as God and that
anybody who believed in God was silly, superstitious, ignorant, and had simply
not looked at the evidence. I felt that believers in God were uneducated and
were just following traditions, superstitions, and things that really made no
sense to a person who was aware of what was going on around them. Of course,
that kind of life and conviction led me to do and say things and to be
something that was really very unpleasant. I lived a life that was immoral and
which reflected a lack of belief in God. I lived in a way that was very
self-centered and that satisfied my own pleasures and desires regardless of
whether or not other people were hurt in the process of what I was doing. In
the process of doing this, I did a lot of things that affected me through my
whole life. It is because of this that I present these materials hoping that
perhaps some of you will not make the mistakes and suffer the consequences that
I have suffered. I cannot clearly remember all of the events that took place or
the proper sequence of events because I was not taking notes. I never expected
that I would be trying to recall these things, much less tell someone else
about them. Still, I can recall in a general way much of what happened, and I
am very sure of the concepts. The concepts are what will be most useful to you.
I guess the reason that I was
an atheist is the same reason that many of you are believers in God if you are.
That was because I had been indoctrinated in that particular persuasion. My
background, the variables that were exposed to me as a child, led me very strongly
in that direction. Just as many of you believe in God because your parents
believe in God and because they instilled this belief in you, I also
questioned, challenged, and rejected God because that was the kind of
indoctrination that I received as a child. I can remember my mother saying to
me as a child something like, "Do you really believe there is an old man,
floating around in the sky, blasting things into existence here upon the earth?
Do you really believe that crummy looking structure on the corner could be
something beautiful called 'the church?' Do you really believe that there is a
hole in the ground that I am going to be thrown into and burned eternally if I
do not live just the way some preacher thinks I ought to?" Of course, I
could not conceive of these things as a child and did not know enough to
realize they are not what the Bible teaches. Consequently, I came to believe
that anybody who believed in God was just silly, superstitious, ignorant, and
unlearned. You may wonder how it would be possible for a person coming out of
this type of background and kind of learning situation to become a strong
believer in God today, devoting his life to trying to help people to understand
that there is a God in heaven and that the Bible is His literal and verbally
inspired Word. It is the purpose of this booklet to try and point out at least
some of the things that entered into my acceptance of God, Jesus Christ, and
the Bible as God's Word.
My high school career was one
in which I grew quite rapidly academically. I enjoyed science and decided that
I wanted to be a scientist of some kind. I entered Indiana University majoring
in the field of physical science. It was actually at this point that one of the
great changes that occurred in my life took place. I enrolled in a course in
astronomy at the feet of one of the great astronomers of our day. In that
particular course, we were studying the problem of origins--the creation of
matter from nothing. As we discussed this particular subject, we went into all
those theories that are in that particular material. We talked about the
big-bang theory, the quasistatal theory, the continuous generation theory, the
planetessimal theory, etc.
When we got to the conclusion
of that discussion, I asked the professor which of the particular theories was
the one that is most acceptable and that satisfactorily explains the creation
of matter from nothing. He leaned over the desk and looked me straight in the
eye and said, "Young man, you need to learn to ask intelligent questions."
That rather upset me. I did not appreciate that and I said, "Well, what do
you mean?" He said, "This is not a question that a scientist tries to
answer. This is a question for the philosopher or theologian, but this is not
something that falls into the realm of science." In today's discussions of
black holes and parallel universes, things have not changed. The basic question
of the creation of matter/energy from absolutely nothing is not an area that
can be scientifically explored. I was very disturbed by that answer. I had
always felt that science could ultimately answer all the questions that man
had--that there was nothing that science could not eventually take care of as
far as what man might challenge and want to know about. Yet this learned man,
an expert in his field, said that this was an area that the scientist should
not even try to answer--that it was totally beyond the capacity of science to
explain and explore.
Not too long after that, I
enrolled in a course in biology at the feet of one of the great primitive life
scientists in the country. As we discussed the initial beginning of life upon
the earth in that class, we talked about the synthesis of various primitive
chemical materials such as deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). As we discussed this, I
once again asked a question related to the one that I had asked previously. I
asked this professor what the process was by which the original life--the
original living cells upon the earth--came into existence. How did the
structure or generation of DNA occur? Once again, this man said, "Young
man, that is not a question that falls within the realm of science." In
today's world we understand more about biochemical processes, but we cannot
answer how in the environment of the primitive earth these processes came into
operation. I guess what was happening to me was the same thing that Lord
Kelvin, a very famous British scientist, described in his writings when he made
the statement, "If you study science deep enough and long enough it will
force you to believe in God." That is what happened to me. I began to
realize that science had its limitations--that science, in fact, strongly
pointed to other explanations than natural ones to certain questions.
It was about this time when
another thing happened in my life and that was that a woman entered it. A lot
of things begin with women (some things end with them, too). In this particular
case, this young lady was by all means the most bull-headed, stubborn,
cast-iron willed individual I had ever met in all my life. I can make those
statements because some six years later I married her. This was the first girl
I ever met that I felt I could respect. Sometimes you will hear preachers, who
know absolutely nothing about what they are talking about from the role of
experience, make statements such as, "If you hold on to your virtues and
maintain your moral standards, a man will respect you more." Let me tell
you, as one who has lived on the other side of the fence and has thought as one
who is alienated from how God thinks, that statement is true. I will guarantee
you that I never thought seriously about marrying anyone until I met this girl
whom I could respect--who really stood for something. Not only did she stand
for something morally, she believed in God and read her Bible. Though she could
not answer all my questions, she kept going back to the Bible. I also learned
quickly not to let her know what I was really like morally. I knew if she
really knew that, she would have nothing to do with me. I did not seem to be
able to break her faith as I had been able to do with other people and the
thing that happened was that as a result of her stubbornness and refusal to
reject the Bible, she forced me to read the Bible.
I read the Bible through from
cover to cover four times during my sophomore year in college for the explicit
purpose of finding scientific contradictions in it. By that, I mean statements
in the Bible that were false that I could throw back at her to show her how
ridiculous it was to believe in God. I had even decided to write a book called
All the Stupidity of the Bible. Something amazing happened as I did this. As I
considered and thought about these things, I found that I could not find a
contradiction--to find some kind of scientific inaccuracy in the Bible. I just
simply was not able to do it. I gave up writing the book because of lack of
material! It is amazing to me that as I talk to people, I find many who claim
to be Christians and who perhaps claim to have been Christians for many years
who have not read the Bible through cover to cover once. I find it hard to
believe that they believe in God very much if they do not even want to know
what He has to say.
As I read the Bible through
again and again, I began to realize that not all of the things I had been told
about God and religion were what the Bible said. They may have been what
organized religion said or what some men taught, but not what the Bible itself
said. For example, the Bible did not say that God was an old man floating
around in the sky, blasting things into existence here upon the earth. The
Bible said, "God is a spirit:..." (John 4:24) and that God is not flesh
and blood. Jesus made the statement, "...for flesh and blood hath not
revealed it unto thee, but my Father which is in heaven" (Matthew 16:17). There are many people
today who do not understand this. A Russian astronaut once made the statement,
"See, I told you there was no God; I didn't see him when I was in
orbit." The question might be, "What was he looking for?" I
began to recognize that God was not an old man in the sky. I had an
anthropology professor who made the statement in all dead seriousness, "We
all know what God is; He is an old man with a long white beard and big flowing
robes." I am sure that this was his concept of "God." I began to
recognize that this was not the biblical concept of God.
I began to recognize that the
Christian life was not an altruistic life. I had been told by several people as
a child that if you ever become a Christian, you cannot ever be happy, you
cannot ever own anything, and you have to walk around with a long sad face and
your chin dragging on the ground. Yet when I read the Bible, I read statements
like, "So ought men to love their wives as their own bodies. He that
loveth his wife loveth himself. For no man ever yet hated his own flesh; but
nourisheth and cherisheth it,..." (Ephesians 5:28-29). I read about the
Ethiopian eunuch who went on his way rejoicing because he had found Jesus
Christ and the happiness that went with that acceptance of Jesus in his life. I
have had many problems come into my life, but all I have to do is to look back
at how miserable life was without Christ and I can realize that life, as it is
now with Jesus, is beautiful in comparison.
I began to recognize that the
Church was not a building. I can remember that when we lived in Alabama, there
was a meeting place of some religious group just down the street from us. My
mother used to point to that as we drove or walked by and say, "Look at
that. How could anybody believe in God when the Church looks like that." I
realized that the Bible did not teach that the Church is such a structure. First Corinthians 3:16 makes the
statement, "Know ye not that ye are the temple of God...." As an
atheist, I recognized that you could meet on the moon, in a submarine, out in
the desert, or any place else and still be the Church. The Church was not a
building. What a tragedy it is that so many today have invested enormous
amounts of money in edifices and buildings, while other human beings have gone
hungry nearby.
I began to recognize that
hypocrisy was not confined to religion. I had the idea that every hypocrite in
the world sat in a pew on Sunday morning, and thus that everybody who was not
sitting in a pew was not a hypocrite. I remember the lesson I learned on this.
There was a young man who would sit elbow to elbow with me arguing against the
religionist from time-to-time. He was in the hospital once with a very serious
ailment. I went up to visit him and as I opened the hospital door, I saw him
down on his knees praying to God. I stood at the door of that hospital room
screaming at him, "You hypocrite--you dirty hypocrite!" until I was
escorted out of the hospital. It slowly began to dawn on me that hypocrisy is a
function of humanity, not religion. You deal with hypocrites at the grocery
store, at the filling station, on the job, at school, and at the golf course
(maybe more there than anywhere else). You do not quit buying groceries because
the grocer says one thing and does another. You do not quit your job because
your employer tells you to do something that he himself would not touch with a
ten-foot pole. You do not deprive yourself or your child of a good education
because a teacher teaches one thing and lives something else. You do not quit
playing golf because your buddy takes a stroke in the rough and does not count
it when he thinks you did not see it. Sure there is hypo-crisy in the Church,
because there are human beings in the Church, and as long as you deal with
human beings, you are going to deal with hypocrisy. Do you want to get away
from hypocrisy? Dig a 20-foot hole in your back yard, jump in, let someone
cover you with dirt, and even then you are going to be sitting down there in
the bottom of that hole with one hypocrite. There is not a one of us breathing
air that is as consistent as we ought to be, but the person who says, "I'm
not going to be a Christian! I'm not going to serve God! I'm not going to get
involved in the work of the Church because there are hypocrites in the
Church," is just logically inconsistent! We do not use that kind of
thinking anywhere else in our lives. How can we do it in our relationship to
God? There were many, many misconceptions that I had to get rid of to
understand truly what the Bible really teaches.
Another thing that I think
needs to be mentioned here as we discuss some of the things that led me to
believe in God were things that had to do with my happiness. I remember that as
a young person, I had what would be an ideal home by worldly standards. My
parents were marvelous people; there was no divorce, unfaithfulness, or neglect
in my family. We did things as a family. We enjoyed each other, yet I ran away
from home. I was rebellious and antagonistic. As I look back at God's Word
today, I can see why these things happened. In Colossians 3:20, for example, the
Bible says, "Children, obey your parents in all things: for this is
well-pleasing unto the Lord." Obedience was not a characteristic of John
Clayton as a young man. Living in Bloomington, Indiana, Indianapolis was known
as the party town, and if I wanted to go to Indianapolis, I went. When my
mother said she did not want me to go, I disconnected the speedometer and went.
I did anything and everything I wanted to do. After all, there was no God. All
my parents were doing was restricting my fun and enjoyment in life; why should
I obey them? I lived a life that was totally antagonistic to everything that my
parents stood for. It is amazing to me today that some parents, who do not
believe in God and demonstrate this lack of belief to their children by what
they say or the way they live, wonder why their children will not obey them.
Why should they? They have removed the only source of authority that they have,
and no child is going to obey a parent who has destroyed that source of
authority. I am convinced that much of our law and order problems center around
this very question.
Years ago I was talking to a
young man in Michigan who had been a participant in some of the riots at the
University of Michigan. He made the statement to me that he had done these
things and I asked him why he had not obeyed the law. He said, "What
law?" and I said, "The law of the land--the law that God has
instituted." He looked at me and laughed and said, "Man, I don't
believe in God." I do not believe we can have law and order when we remove
the source of the authority to that law and order. Certainly, my rebelliousness
and failure to obey my parents brought a great deal of unpleasantness and
misery not only into my life, but into theirs as well. The very next verse, Colossians 3:21, contains another
statement that I think had a great deal to do with my unhappiness and
rebelliousness as a child. The statement is made, "Fathers, provoke not
your children to anger, lest they be discouraged." My parents had a
tradition when I was a young man--a tradition they called the cocktail hour. I
have never seen my parents drunk, but they would drink a few martinis and my
mother would ask me questions that ordinarily she would not have asked. I
remember, for instance, she would sometimes ask, "What did you do with the
girl you took out last night?" That was the last thing I was going to tell
my mother, so I learned to look her right straight in the eye and lie. I could
lie to her or anybody else without batting an eyelash. I conditioned myself to
do things that were wrong. I conditioned myself to steal. I remember the first
time that I stole something. It was a box of raisins from the IGA store. I felt
so badly that I took it back and apologized. Sometime later, I stole a comic
book from a drug store; I took it back, but I did not apologize. Six months
later, I was stealing almost anything I could get my hands on, not because I
needed it, but because it was fun--it was a challenge. I even went so far as to
be caught stealing money from my parents. That brings me to the next point,
which is certainly another thing that had to do with my happiness.
When I read passages in the
Bible like Psalm 53, for instance, I sometimes feel like God is describing John
Clayton some years ago. Psalm 53:1-3 says:
The fool hath said in his
heart, "There is no God." Corrupt are they, and have done abominable
iniquity: there is none that doeth good. God looked down from heaven upon the
children of men, to see if there were any that did understand, that did seek
God. Every one of them is gone back: they are altogether become filthy; there
is none that doeth good, no, not one.
Another statement, made by
Solomon in Ecclesiastes 1:2-3, 14, says:
Vanity of vanities, saith the
Preacher, vanity of vanities; all is vanity. What profit hath a man of all his
labour which he taketh under the sun?...I have seen all the works that are done
under the sun; and, behold, all is vanity and vexation of spirit.
I have tried almost
everything you can imagine to find pleasure and happiness. I will not try to
tell you that I did not find pleasure using my own system of following my own
desires, but I can guarantee you that I did not find happiness. I tried every
conceivable thing you can think of. I tried all kinds of things--things that
were immoral, that were wrong, that hurt other people, and things that I would
not even want to describe. I did those things because I was trying to find
pleasure and happiness and, as I say, I found pleasure sometimes. However, I
never went to bed at night satisfied or happy with my life and enjoying my
living. I never got up in the morning looking forward to a new day. Life was
just one long chain of misery.
Judge Roy Moore of Lawton,
Oklahoma, who deals with the legal problems precipitated by the presence of
Fort Sill in that area, once made the statement to me, "I've never seen a
young man on drugs live more than seven years without taking his life."
You may not be able to understand that, but I have sat on the edge of my bed
with a .22-caliber rifle between my legs, trying to have enough guts to pull
the trigger. I bottomed out that low; I got that emotionally disturbed and
upset with my desire and attempt to find happiness. Please listen to me and
profit by what I am saying. You can try every conceivable thing that this world
has to offer. You can try sex, drugs, alcohol, stealing, and all kinds of
things in a desperate attempt to find happiness. I can testify from experience
that you may find pleasure, but you will not find happiness. I can go back to
Bloomington today and meet people who refuse to believe that I have changed my
life--people that I hurt and who knew the kind of life I lived. The reason that
I think many things happen with young people today is because they try to find
happiness living their own way. It simply does not work. Have you ever wondered
why it is that when a person gets clean from drugs, gets rid of the problem of
alcohol, or conquers some of the problems like the ones I had, that the person
always seems to get involved in some religious cause, halfway house, or something
like that? Why is that? I can tell you from my own experience that we have
learned that the only place you find happiness is in using God's system--in
following God's way. Perhaps people that have lived without God appreciate so
much more than people that have grown up in religious structures--what you have
in the Church. You do not find happiness living your own system, but only in
living God's way and in being a part of God's system.
As perhaps you are beginning
to realize as we get into this discussion more thoroughly, there were a variety
of things that led me to believe in God. One other thing that I think ought to
be mentioned is the fact that I entered a period of military service about this
time. For the first time in my life, I came in contact with death. I began to
think about the reasonableness of death as I Iooked at it as an atheist.
Perhaps a more accurate way to describe this was the way that I had to look at
life because of death. As an atheist, I realized that I had to look at life
with all of its problems, difficulties, and terrible things that I experienced
as the best thing that I could ever look forward to. Yet I realized that as a
Christian, I would be able to look at life with all of its joys, beauties, and
wonderful things that we all enjoy as the absolute worst that I was ever going
to have to experience. Yet from a philosophical point, I began to realize that
Christianity offered a great deal in this particular area. I did not get scared
into believing in God, but I think this area together with all these other
things helped me to realize that there really was quite a change in my
understanding of what Christianity and God are all about. I began to recognize
that perhaps there were some things about the Church and what it had to offer
that were important to me.
About this time in my life, I
decided that other religious systems might be as good as the Bible. To check
them out, I began reading the Vedas, Koran, Sayings of Buddha, writings of
Bahaullah and Zoroaster and found that other religions taught many things I
could not accept. There were teachings in their writings concerning what life
was like after this life that were unrewarding and unrealistic and there were
descriptions of God that were illogical and inconsistent. There were also many
scientific inaccuracies in their works. There were many teachings about life
and how to live it that were not workable. This included the role and position
of women in the Koran, the Holy War concept of Mohammed, the pantheism of nearly
all other systems, reincarnation, idol worship, polygamy, and a myriad of ideas
which I had expected to find in the Bible, but did not. I began to realize that
nothing matched the Bible's system of life. Only in the Bible could I see
statements which would stand in the face of the scientific facts that I knew to
be true and only the Bible offered a system of life that I felt was reasonable
and consistent. I decided that if I ever came to believe in God, it would be a
belief based upon the Bible.
The next question was that if
I ever became a believer in God, which of all the religious organizations
claiming to be Christianity would be the correct one. I recognized that I did
not want to be a part of all these traditional religious bodies that taught the
error that I had been taught and had believed in my early years, so I started
visiting the various religious organizations in southern Indiana at that time.
I visited almost every religious organization that I could get into, to try and
see what they taught, to see if they followed the Bible and if they understood
what the Bible had to say or if they followed men's theologies. My experience
was that as I went from one to another, each of them taught something that was
not in the Bible. They honored some men above other men, they taught that
unreligious writings were equivalent to the Bible and they did not follow the
Bible literally and verbally. I had had enough of religious confusion and
error. I did not want any more of that sort of thing, so I continued looking.
In a real sense, I guess you could say I am still looking--I am still trying to
find that true Church. I did find the religious group that seemed to me to
follow the Bible very closely. In Bloomington, there was a group of people who
met on the corner of 4th and Lincoln streets. They were called the Church of
Christ. These people still did not totally follow what I understood to be the
biblical system. My challenge today to young people who are Christians would be
to do a job of totally restoring New Testament Christianity. This group did
have the doctrine of Christianity pretty well restored as I understood it. I
recognized that passages like 1 Peter 3:21 ("The like figure
whereunto even baptism doth also now save us....") had to be interpreted
as meaning what it said, and this group did interpret that in a way that I felt
was consistent with that passage. This group did interpret Acts 2:38 ("...be baptized every
one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins,...") in
a way that I felt was consistent and they did reject men as their source of
authority.
As a matter of fact, I
remember hearing one of the first lessons that I ever heard in that building
preached by a man named Raymond Muncy. Mr. Muncy said, "Now, don't you
ever listen to anything any preacher says," and I said amen to that. He
went on and talked about how we should not rely upon man and I want to tell you
here an now that you should never believe anything any preacher says. Do not
ever listen to any preacher, under any circumstance, unless you can find for
yourself in the Bible that what that man says is consistent with God's Word. This
is, in essence, what Mr. Muncy was saying and I was very impressed by it, but
that group of people did not give as they were prospered. Yes, they worshipped
according to God's format, but they did not give as they were prospered. They
were not involved in teaching their neighbors about Jesus Christ. There was a
very small percentage who were active in the work and they certainly did not
manifest the kind of love and appreciation for each other that I understood the
Bible to teach. The generation before you has restored the doctrine of
Christianity--I believe that. However, they have yet to restore the spirit of
New Testament Christianity and that is your challenge. Restore the spirit of
New Testament Christianity--the love and the concern for the souls of others
that the early Church had. I recognized that the Church of Christ was the
closest thing that I had seen to what the Bible taught. I determined that if I
ever became a Christian, I would become a member of this group--a group that
was trying to follow the Bible literally and verbally, that would not accept
the teachings of men and would not try to be influenced by the traditions of
the past.
I guess the real straw that
broke the camel's back occurred some six months later. I was enrolled in my
first geology course at Indiana University. The professor was a brilliant,
well-known atheist. On the first day of class, in response to a discussion, he
made a statement something like, "I'm going to show you that the Bible is
a bunch of garbage," and I thought, "Now this is going to be
great," because I was getting concerned. I was still saying that I was an
atheist to those who knew me well. I was still rejecting God and holding on
tenaciously to my lack of belief. It is hard to change a life that has gone a
certain direction for years and all of a sudden make it go another direction, I
was not ready for that. I thought this man was going to be able to provide me
with some arguments that would finally defeat this girl that I had been dating
all these years. She was a Christian--although perhaps not as strong as she
might have been. I was going to show her that this religion stuff was really a
lot of bunk and I was even convinced that I might even be able to show Ray
Muncy that belief in God was not realistic. Mr. Muncy was a man who had great
patience and knowledge, but he had not been given much of an opportunity to
convince or teach me much of anything.
The professor started the
class out by showing us the various methods of dating rocks and other parts of the
creation. He then asserted that everyone knew that the Bible said the earth was
6,000 years old. I asked where it said that. He replied that he believed it was
in Genesis the 52nd chapter. I started looking, not knowing much about the
Bible, to Genesis 40, Genesis 49, Genesis 50, Exodus 1--I said, "Wait a
minute; Genesis only has 50 chapters." He sputtered around a few minutes,
but he never did find that passage. Of course, the Bible does not say the earth
is 6,000 years old. The Bible is totally silent on the age of the earth and I
realized that. This man made the statement that the Bible says that God created
two cocker spaniels, two English terriers, and two German shepherds. We all had
a good laugh when we figured out how big the Ark would have to be to hold the
20 million groupings of this kind. Once again, I asked where the word kind was
defined in that way. It did not seem to me that the word kind meant that. We
looked at it and he finally said he guessed that maybe it did not. First Corinthians 15:39 is the only
definition of the word kind and that is a very broad definition ("All
flesh is not the same flesh: but there is one kind of flesh of men, another
flesh of beasts, another fishes, and another of birds."). Genesis 1 uses the same terminology
and the same break-down as 1 Corinthians 15. To make a very, very long story
fairly short, when I turned in my final exam the last day of class, I said to
this learned professor, "Sir, you have not really shown me any
contradiction between what we have studied in this course and in what the Bible
has to teach." He jerked my paper away from me and said, "Well, I guess
if you really study it, there is no contradiction." I was shocked! I was
appalled! Here was a man who had a Ph.D. and was a leading atheist, yet he
could not answer the silly questions from an ignorant college junior who was on
his side. I remember that February day very clearly. I walked back to my room
in the dormitory in a state of shock. I could not believe what had happened. I
got to my room about 11:00 and sat on my bed thinking what a stupid, ignorant
fool I had been. I had rejected God; I had been dishonest. I had actually been
stupid in my response to the evidence available to me. I did not like people
who refuse to look at the evidence and draw intelligent conclusions. I did not
like people who could not break free of their parents' thinking and do their
own thinking. I had always accused the religionists of doing this, yet I
recognized that I had been guilty of the same thing. I had refused to be
honest--to look at the evidence. I had refused to make comparative choices
based upon what was available to me. I was miserable.
Supper time came and I was
sitting there. My roommate came in and said, "Are you ready to eat?"
I said, "No, I'm not hungry." He said, "Are you sick?" I
said, "Yes, I'm sick of me!!! I'm sick of being selfish, I'm sick of using
people, I'm sick of being dishonest, I'm sick...." I was still telling him
what I was sick about as he left for supper. At the time, I did not understand
what was happening, but I do now! That is what repentance is all about--to get
sick of a selfish, egotistical, destructive life and turn to God's way--to turn
to a life that has value, meaning, and direction. My roommate went on to eat
and I just sat there determined that I had to do something. I could no longer
sit back and be dishonest and continue to refuse to accept the obvious evidence
that was available to me. About 6:30, I got up and started walking toward the
building where the Church of Christ met on Wednesday nights. The invitation was
extended at the Church of Christ that evening for anyone who wished to accept
Christ and come forward. I went forward, understanding that I now believed
totally and completely in God. I recognized that I needed to start a new life
and be willing to tell people that I accepted the existence of God and believed
that Jesus is His Son. I also realized that I was totally and completely lost
in my sins and that I needed to be baptized to have forgiveness (as the Bible
commanded). I started down the aisle that night and Raymond Muncy went into a
mild state of shock. I remember the expression on his face. I do not think he
believed that the power of God could ever reach a man as divorced as I was from
anything good, decent, and godly. I was baptized into Christ that evening for
the remission of my sins, as I understood the Bible to teach. To show you how
far I was from God, I called this girl, I had been dating for some six years at
that time. I said, "Phyllis, I've become a Christian!" She said,
"I don't believe you. You quit lying to me." I had to have the
preacher's wife talk to her to convince her that I had, in fact, become a
Christian. There are people today who still do not believe it--that the power
of God could change a man that was as divorced and alienated from God as I
was--but I want to tell you that in many respects, this is just the beginning
of this story. God promised His help to those who are His followers. Having a
close personal relationship to God and to other followers enable us to conquer
enormous problems and do things we could not possibly do on our own (see Philippians 4:13).
I had a lot to overcome. I
could not talk without swearing. You could not go to the preacher's house and
say pass the @$#%& potatoes. I had to learn a new way of talking, a new way
of living, a new set of values, and a new morality, because I had lived in
opposition to God. I asked God's help in these things and I found I was able to
overcome things I had never been able to overcome before. I have a whole new
set of problems--a whole new set of things that I have to work on--but the
problems I have today are nothing like the problems I had in the past. If
anyone had told me twenty years ago that I would be openly using my limited
abilities to publicly convict disbelievers of God's reality, I would have
thought they were insane. Nonetheless, God has blessed my feeble efforts in
spectacular ways--totally beyond anything I could have ever done.
I want to close this lesson
by asking you a very simple question--a question that you need to answer for
yourself and that each person needs to answer I suppose nearly every day. Are
you an atheist (not perhaps as man would define it, but as God defines it)? Are
you an atheist? Oh, I realize you may not be the kind of atheist that I was.
Perhaps you are not immoral or hurting people or dishonest or doing the kinds
of things that I did. I am thankful that you are not, but do you realize the
way Jesus views an atheist? Matthew 12:30 says, "He that is
not with me is against me; and he that gathereth not with me scattereth
abroad." What is He saying? He is saying that you are either for God or
you are against God. You are either an atheist or a Christian; you cannot be
both. I can understand how a man can be an atheist. I have been an atheist a
good part of my life. As an atheist, I believed (and still believe) that my
life was consistent, reasonable, and defendable.
For a few years now, I have
been trying to live what I understand to be the Christian way of life. Once
again, I believe my life is consistent, reasonable, and defendable with what I
believe, but I will never understand (and if you understand, I wish you would
explain it to me) how a man or a woman or a boy or a girl can say, "Yes, I
believe in God. Yes, I understand that the Bible is God's Word," and then
not do everything and anything within their power to make sure their lives
conform to what that God teaches. That is not consistent, not reasonable, and
not defendable, yet I am sure there are many people who know that their life is
not consistent with God's way of living. Jesus said, "He that is not with
me is against me; and he that gathereth not with me scattereth abroad."
Are you for Christ? Are you working for Christ? Is your life radiating the kind
of living that Jesus taught? Are you really a Christian or are you an atheist?
There is no middle ground. It is my hope that by revealing to you the kind of
person I have been and the mistakes I have made, you have realized that God is
the only way. It is my prayer that you have realized that there is nothing that
can be a part of your life that God cannot help you overcome and that you also
realize that there is no better time than right now to begin the Christian way
of living. Will you not give yourself to God and live Christ's Way? If you do
not know a person or group of people in your community following the Lord, write me and I will try to help you.
John N. Clayton
1555 Echo Valley Dr.
Niles, MI 49120-8738
1555 Echo Valley Dr.
Niles, MI 49120-8738
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