Step Away From The Kool-Aid

Scott Mange's picture

I was recently reading one of those "Dear Abby" posts by Billy Graham called My Answer. It reads:

DEAR REV. GRAHAM: Recently, you told someone in your column to pray for a friend of theirs who claimed to be an atheist. Well, I don't believe in God either and I don't want anyone praying for me. I'm happy just the way I am, and I don't need some holier-than-thou Christian acting like he's better than me. --H.M.

Dear H.M.: Let me ask you a question: What would you do if you discovered a cure for cancer -- especially if you had been healed yourself? Would you forget about it, or decide you'd only tell a few friends about it? Or would you decide to make as much money as you could from it, and only let a very few wealthy people have access to it?

I hope not. I hope instead that you would do everything you could to tell others about it, and to make the cure available to as many people as possible. Not everyone would believe you, and not everyone would even admit they had cancer (if they did). But you would keep trying -- not because you thought you were better than people who still had cancer, but because you cared.

And that's why Christians pray for people who don't believe in Christ -- not because they feel superior, but because they care. They know the peace and joy Christ gives to those who know Him, and they know too that eternal issues are at stake. They know also from personal experience that Jesus' words are true: "Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you" (John 14:27).

I invite you to look honestly and with an open mind at Jesus Christ. The greatest discovery you can ever make is not only that God exists, but that He loves you and you can know Him personally by giving your life to Christ.

The good reverend doesn't feel superior, just insulting by comparing atheism to cancer. Please... Actually, I'm glad to see this article printed. It shows how sick the whole imaginary god belief is. I'm going to keep this with me so I can always be reminded how insulting and empty the promises of religion are.

A better analogy is the man who accuses you of being ill, even though you don't feel sick, and says the only way for you to get well is to pretend to drink from this empty bottle. If you do get sick or doubt the potency of the empty bottle, tip the bottle up twice a day until you feel better. Tip it up all the time because you can never drink too much from the empty bottle. How does our huckster know the empty bottle works? Because he doesn't feel sick and drinks from the empty bottle every day so that proves it right? Besides, the bottle will only cost you 10% of your income, was good enough for your parents, and is good enough for most of your friends.

Surprisingly, the only time I felt sick was when I pretended to drink from the bottle. I used to drink from the empty bottle a lot but never felt better and finally admitted to myself, the bottle is empty and the reason I don't feel better is because there is no medicine.

And then I felt better.

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Jim Downey's picture

Best God money can buy.

Good post. I just love this line from Graham's text:

Or would you decide to make as much money as you could from it, and only let a very few wealthy people have access to it?

See, Billy and his ilk didn't do that. They long ago realized that they could make *more* money by going mass market with their imaginary product, targeting the gullible majority, getting them to tithe/donate. And this bit:

And that's why Christians pray for people who don't believe in Christ -- not because they feel superior, but because they care. They know the peace and joy Christ gives to those who know Him, and they know too that eternal issues are at stake.

See, that explains the genius of the scam: get people vested in believing, and they'll want to make sure that others join in as validation. Sure, they'll pray for you and try to get you to join up - it affirms that they didn't get swindled.

Jim Downey

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Like Science Fiction? Read my novel, Communion of Dreams, for free.

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