Is atheism cac shyt?

Spiritual Stratocaster

Jesus is KING
Supporter
Joined
Aug 14, 2014
Messages
38,606
Reputation
7,273
Daps
149,539
Praise white Jesus brehs
Practice the same religion as your oppressor brehs
Follow a tool used to keep you passive brehs
How?

GOD tells men to be men
That they have a purpose and great works to do on this earth
To have a backbone

White Jesus is some cac insecure garbage.

The barbarian north europeans wanted to twist things around because they were once considered dirty heathens...thus the effort to produce these bs Cesar Borgia like images Of Jesus.....then you add in muskets and superior weapons over Africans and you get modern white supremacy

And also slavery is apart of humanity. Meaning we as weak humans have to oppress our fellow humans. God gives us choices and we humans choose bullshyt.
 

Spiritual Stratocaster

Jesus is KING
Supporter
Joined
Aug 14, 2014
Messages
38,606
Reputation
7,273
Daps
149,539
That had nothing to do with religion and I'm tired of ignorant, non reading nikkas spewing that non sense. The church was not the foundation of the Civil Rights movement. It was simply a part of it. Black people would've followed/stood with anybody who could mobilize and organize at the level of MLK. All we needed was unity and a plan and MLK provided that.
You know the mindset of black people during that era to make a statement like that?
 

Diunx

Probably drunk
Joined
Nov 18, 2013
Messages
11,632
Reputation
1,316
Daps
35,096
Reppin
nightset
The oldest Christian churches is in Ethiopia

and the original manuscript of the Qu'ran was written by people who were darker than the average breh in the Americas today

do your homework instead of repeating cliches
So because the religion was made up in the African continent that means that the slaves didn't have different ones and were forbidden from practicing it?

Do you nikkas realize how big Africa is?
 

MrSpook

All Star
Joined
Mar 11, 2022
Messages
2,035
Reputation
331
Daps
3,700
No it’s not. Plenty of people around the way are atheist and it’s because of the life they live or the ones around them that become lost. Atheism for a lot of people is just a way to show resentment towards a god that you feel wronged you in a way or let you down.

That can apply to any race, ethnicity and skin of color.
 

Dafunkdoc_Unlimited

Theological Noncognitivist Since Birth
Joined
Jul 25, 2012
Messages
44,377
Reputation
8,094
Daps
120,945
Reppin
The Wrong Side of the Tracks
You can't just pull a random number out your ass especially 99% and say it doesn't happen
And you can't equate the Black Church to the Catholic Church since only 6% of Black Christians are Catholic....

Among Black Americans, Protestant Christianity is by far the most common religious affiliation. Fully two-thirds of all Black adults (66%) describe themselves as Protestant. Catholics, the next largest religious group, account for only about 6% of all Black adults.

Nice try, though.​
 
Last edited:
Joined
May 22, 2012
Messages
42,218
Reputation
-5,962
Daps
47,594
Reppin
RENO, Nevada
No it’s not. Plenty of people around the way are atheist and it’s because of the life they live or the ones around them that become lost. Atheism for a lot of people is just a way to show resentment towards a god that you feel wronged you in a way or let you down.

That can apply to any race, ethnicity and skin of color.
Mr.Spook huh

Coli caca cacs ain't even try to hide it
 

bnew

Veteran
Joined
Nov 1, 2015
Messages
54,644
Reputation
8,125
Daps
154,537
Utter and complete nonsense.

Here's proof....

Martin-Luther-King-Jr.jpg


Atheists in the Civil Rights Movement
Posted by Josh Rothman February 29, 2012 02:25 PM



In the story of the Civil Rights Movement, pride of place is often given to religious African Americans like Martin Luther King, Jr., who used the power of religious ideas to-motivate and inspire millions of Americans. Writing for the Religious News Service, Kimberly Winston points out that there were plenty of African American atheists involved in the movement. They're often overlooked, she argues, because their atheism doesn't fit in with the usual Civil Rights narrative.
448px-A._Philip_Randolph_1963_NYWTS.jpg

Take A. Philip Randolph. Today he's hardly remembered at all. In fact, he was a prominent labor leader who organized the March on Washington at which Martin Luther King gave his "I Have a Dream" speech. (King called him "the chief.") "In 1973," Winston explains, "Randolph signed the Humanist Manifesto II, a public declaration of Humanist principles. He is reported to have said of prayer: 'Our aim is to appeal to reason. ... Prayer is not one of our remedies; it depends on what one is praying for. We consider prayer nothing more than a fervent wish; consequently the merit and worth of a prayer depend upon what the fervent wish is.'" (Winston has put together portraits of a few other prominent African American atheists here.)

The Civil Rights Movement, in short, was spiritually quite diverse. Randolph and other African American atheists, Winston writes, have been "ignored in the narrative of American history, sacrificed to the myth that the achievements of the civil rights movement were the accomplishments of religious -- mainly Christian -- people." Their atheism, and its relationship to their activism, is rarely discussed, in part because African Americans are among the most religious groups in the U.S.

Just how atheistic were the Civil Rights atheists? Winston quotes Juan Floyd-Thomas, a professor at Vanderbilt who's just written a book on black humanism, who says that, if they were alive today, many atheistic civil rights leaders "would not be too far out of step with the New Atheists," like Richard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens. More at the Religious News Service.

 
Top