This article was shared in our FSAOF's FB space. And, knowing that our blog visitors hail from widespread and varied religious backgrounds, I thought it appropriate for posting. Perhaps some will find Teresa's experience mirroring your own. Remember; tinclusivity is at the heart of God's plan and Christ's message. It's the same message that you preached or are preaching and the one that will lead you home again. Sven Ljungholm, for the FSAOF.
_______________________
_______________________
Teresa MacBain walks her dog, Gracie, at a park near her Tallahassee, Florida home. After a lifetime in the church,
MacBain came out as an atheist at an American Atheists' convention in Bethesda, Md.
Teresa MacBain has a secret, one she's terrified to reveal.
"I'm currently an active pastor and I'm also an atheist," she says. "I live a double life. I feel pretty good on Monday, but by Thursday — when Sunday's right around the corner — I start having stomachaches, headaches, just knowing that I got to stand up and say things that I no longer believe in and portray myself in a way that's totally false."
MacBain glances nervously around the room. It's a Sunday, and normally she would be preaching at her church in Tallahassee, Fla. But here she is, sneaking away to the American Atheists' convention in Bethesda, Md.
Her secret is taking a toll, eating at her conscience as she goes about her pastoral duties week after week — two sermons every Sunday, singing hymns, praying for the sick when she doesn't believe in the God she's praying to. She has had no one to talk to, at least not in her Christian community, so her iPhone has become her confessor, where she records her private fears and frustrations.
"On my way to church again. Another Sunday. Man, this is getting worse," she tells her phone in one recording. "How did I get myself in this mess? Sometimes, I think to myself, if I could just go back a few years and not ask the questions and just be one of those sheep and blindly follow and not know the truth, it would be so much easier. I'd just keep my job. But I can't do that. I know it's a lie. I know it's false."
EnlargeCourtesy of Teresa MacBain
Teresa MacBain's husband, Ray MacBain, says he still believes in God but defends his wife's right not to.
MacBain made that recording in her car on the way to Lake Jackson United Methodist Church several weeks before the American Atheists' conference.
Finding Atheism
MacBain, 44, was raised a conservative Southern Baptist. Her dad was a pastor and she felt the call of God when she was 6. She had questions, of course, about conflicts in the Bible, for example, or the role of women. She says she sometimes felt she was serving a taskmaster of a God, whose standards she never quite met.
For years, MacBain set her concerns aside. But when she became a United Methodist pastor nine years ago, she started asking sharper questions. She thought they'd make her faith stronger.
"In reality," she says, "as I worked through them, I found that religion had so many holes in it, that I just progressed through stages where I couldn't believe it."
The questions haunted her: Is Jesus the only way to God? Would a loving God torment people for eternity? Is there any evidence of God at all? And one day, she crossed a line.
"I just kind of realized — I mean just a eureka moment, not an epiphany, a eureka moment — I'm an atheist," she says. "I don't believe. And in the moment that I uttered that word, I stumbled and choked on that word — atheist."
But it felt right.
About a year ago, MacBain found The Clergy Project, an anonymous online community of clergy who have lost their faith. Now she had allies, but no easy escape. She began applying for jobs, but when prospective employers asked why she wanted to leave the ministry, she didn't know what to say. She recorded her worries on her iPhone."So what the hell am I supposed to do?" she asks in one recording, her voice sounding desperate. "Really, the options are work at something like Starbucks or McDonald's — and even there they're going to ask those questions. I could even clean houses and not make a great amount of money — but at least nobody would be asking me questions."
Driving to church on Sunday, March 18, MacBain realized she could no longer bear her double life.
"I got to come out. I got to get out of it," she told her phone. "It used to terrify me, what people's reaction would be. But it's been so long now and I've done this for so long, I don't even care."
The sermon she gave that day was her last.
The 'Freedom' Of Coming Out
On March 26, at the American Atheists' convention in Bethesda, MacBain seems almost giddy. The day before, she decided she would go before the conference's 1,500 or so nonbelievers and announce that she is officially an atheist.
"I am nervous," she says, "but at the same time I am so excited. I slept like a baby last night because I knew I wasn't going to have to live a lie anymore. Such freedom."
Moments later, in the darkened, cavernous conference room, MacBain steps onstage.
"My name is Teresa," she begins. "I'm a pastor currently serving a Methodist church — at least up to this point" — the audience laughs — "and I am an atheist."
Hundreds of people jump to their feet. They hoot and clap for more than a minute. MacBain then apologizes to them for being, as she put it, "a hater."
"I was the one on the right track, and you were the ones that were going to burn in hell," she says. "And I'm happy to say as I stand before you right now, I'm going to burn with you."
A few minutes later, MacBain strides off the stage into a waiting crowd. One man is crying as he tells her that her speech is "one of the most moving things I've seen in years." Another woman says she, too, had been a born-again Christian. "Join the club," she says as she hugs MacBain.
"I have never felt so appreciated and cared for, you know?" MacBain says later, noting that she has left one community — Christianity — for another. "New member, just been born — that's what it feels like."
Teresa MacBain pauses while talking about her ongoing job search. She has been out of work since leaving her position as a Methodist pastor earlier this year.
The Fallout
Two days later, MacBain returned to Tallahassee — and to reality.
"I didn't know how far or how explosive her coming out would be, but, then again, nobody did," says MacBain's husband, Ray MacBain. "The next morning, we got up, I went to work and my son Alex texted me and said it went viral."
The local TV station, WCTV, ran a series ofstories about MacBain, interviewing her boss but never MacBain herself. Hundreds of people wrote comments on the site, and MacBain says they were painful to read.
"The majority of them, to begin with, were pretty hateful," she says, although some nonbelievers soon came to her defense. "For somebody who's been a good guy their whole life and been a people pleaser, it's really hard to imagine that overnight you're the bad guy."
MacBain tried to see the church's district superintendent to explain, but he canceled the meeting. She was immediately locked out and replaced, so she flew out to Seattle to meet with her colleagues at The Clergy Project. There, sitting alone in her hotel room on Palm Sunday, MacBain again turned to her iPhone.
"I don't want to go home," she muses in the recording, deflation flattening her voice. "I don't want to have to be in Publix or Wal-Mart or somewhere and worry about who's going to see me and who's going to corner me and just tell me off."
But MacBain did go home. People shunned her. Job interviews were canceled. The Humanists of Florida Association offered to pay her salary for a year, but there's no guarantee. Only two of MacBain's friends called her and took her to lunch. Meanwhile, her family was a refuge, even if they didn't all agree with her new views.
"I believe in God," says her husband, Ray. "And to be honest, I pray for her every night, I got friends praying for her."
But he says he adores his wife and defends her right to disbelieve. "That's why I spent 23 years in the Army. That's why I'm still a police officer. We have freedom of speech and freedom of thought. And God never forced anybody to believe, so who am I to step up?"
EnlargeColin Hackley for NPR
Teresa MacBain makes breakfast for her son David, 22, while he is home on leave from serving in the Army. MacBain says she is still adjusting to life outside the church.
'Life Is Just Different'
A few minutes later, Teresa MacBain goes for a drive to the church at the center of her story. She says she has butterflies — this is the first time she's seen her church since she went public. Its 11:20 a.m., nearly time for the sermon. She's glad she's not inside.
"Not because of the people or anything," she says, "but because if I were in there, I know what I'd be doing. And that would be standing up and proclaiming something that I no longer believe in. So, yeah, I'm relieved that I don't have to do that."
Back at home, MacBain doesn't hesitate when she's asked what she misses most about her old life.
"I miss the music," she says. MacBain sang in church choirs and worship bands most of her life, and even though she no longer believes the words, she still catches herself singing praise songs.
She says she also misses the relationships — she'll often pick up the phone to call someone, then realize she can't. And she misses the ritual and regularity of church life.
"It's what I know. It's what I knew. And I still struggle with it. Life is just different," she says.
When it's pointed out that she hasn't said whether or not she misses God, MacBain pauses.
"No, no," she says. "I can't say that I do.
9 comments:
Ms. MacBain is where she is in life because at this point, for whatever the reason, she needs to be there. If she were my friend I certainly wouldn't desert or condemn her, though I suspect that eventually our relationship might change only because we would both be looking at life from different angles---and people do tend to gravitate toward other people who are like them.
Lastly, if I've learned one thing about faith it's that it's never true faith in God until all of our idols have been forsaken anyway. This may be what's happening with Ms. MacBain. Is it possible that her god wasn't God in the first place, in which case the dumping of the idol would actually be liberating and the first step on the road to true faith? Is it possible that she grew up with a certain religious construct about God that has failed her?
Since I don't know her I can't make the judgment but at the same time I wouldn't be a bit surprised if later she realised that that is what happened.
At least she was honest and didn't continue living a lie. That's got to count for something. May God Bless her even though she no longer believes.
Daryl Lach
USA Central
"You Must Go Home by the Way of the Cross, To Stand with Jesus in the Morning!"
P.S. Sven,
Can't you at least try and come up with more lame articles until September when I'm finished with my other projects? (lol!) How about the last one I sent you? That was pretty simple, lame and non-controversial. (lol!)
I asked an atheist(Former Pastor)if perhaps she was never born-again in the first place. Wow, did she get mad.She was upset for me suggesting that she had no relationship to begin with and/or moved along upon emotion or a false relationship with the Lord. Now,if she is an atheist why would she think that ? If an atheist does not believe in any diety at all, what was the difference anyway. Strange.
We should remember that John the Baptist had doubt and needed reassurance concerning Jesus.We all may have some doubts from time to time but the Lord wants to see our faith in action.
Bob Deidrick USA Western Territory
I wonder if she is more of an agnostic rather than an atheist? I can relate to her story in many ways - even though I never stopped believing God exists. I still read my bible almost every day, and pray etc. But there is no way I believe in the God that is preached or worshipped in almost every church around the world. I am very anti-religion and anti-church - but I still count myself a Christian. It is my faith that gets me through the day and gives me strength to go on and be there for my partner in rough times etc. For me, church diminishes that faith and makes it harder for me to get through the day and survive. That's why I believe that the God that is attached to religion doesn't exist. But I would still call myself a Christian - not an atheist. At most, I might concede to calling myself an agnostic who knows God exists - just not sure what to call Him/Her/It. It's just 'God' or 'LORD' and leave it at that.
faith and belief does evolve over time. What we believe wholeheartedly at one point in our lives likely will not be what we believe in another point in our lives. I think that might be what is happening with Ms MacBain - and me. As far as I'm concern, if faith did not evolve and change, then it is dead, and becomes proof that God really doesn't exist in any form.
Just my thoughts.
Yours in Christ,
Graeme
Former Australian East living in London.
Graeme,
Sounds like you are searching.It also sounds like you have not found the perfect church. You and I both know that you never will. I have attended many and never have found one 100% to my liking.People are not perfect and they bring with them their shortcomings, but surprisingly God still uses them. Look at the early Disciples-Apostles.You also see in their writings that they portrayed personality and even shared some of their weaknesses. God still loved them and used them. After all they were humans , not gods.
I thought that I would see a response from you on this subject. In fact this very same lady that is an atheist commented concerning you on another site some time ago. She is the Chaplain. I keep away from these folk because they gang up on individuals and make fun of faith in God.I do not need to comment on this site what she shared except that it dealt with atheism and agnostics.
I would agree that faith evolves. Our faith grows at times but then we may still have some doubt. We constantly seem to need assurance from the Lord. (Children often do need this)I saw that in John the Baptist. Before he was beheaded he wanted assurance that Jesus was the Christ.We are no different.Some people seem to have more faith than others for various reasons.
If I were you I would continue to study the Bible and seek God where He may be found. You are an intelligent person. Attempt to be more open to the the Holy Spirit for He is the One who will reveal to you what you need to know and understand.Don't give up Graeme.
I know that some people do not like organized religion. My thought is that I do not like disorganized religion. Sometimes people get in the way of the Lord and we get frustrated.
I enjoy working and ministering through the direction of the Salvation Army as an officer. Do I ever get frustrated or have doubt? Of course. I am human. But, God can work through that.This is nothing new to us all.
Continue to seek the joy in the Holy Spirit.
Bob Deidrick USA Western Territory
As a former SA officer I feel kind of encouraged by this article. Though I on the contrary begged for fellowship but the Church and the SA lost me.
What I have to do now is to get things in order by trying not to believe. And I can say that when you're left alone long enough it works.
Oh, love that will not let me go....
Christ will continue to beckon until the last breath. In Him is life.
Doubt comes from many sources but there is too much written, too much witness, and too many people that really care. Try again. Seek and you will find. Never give up. Never. If you think that Christ does not care, think again. His atonement upon the cross was for you. Thank God it was for me too !
Bob Deidrick , USA Western Territory
I certainly understand where she is coming from, but I serioulsy disagree. While I have been discouraged, fed up and burned out for the past few years, I can not give up believing in God and in the provision He has made for us sinners!
Whether or not I join the ranks of the formers is still something I haven't yet decided, but I will never give up on Him; I have seen his grace and goodness so many times. I am trusting him to help me decide what to do next.Whatever happens, I am in His hands, it in fact it would take more faith for me to deny it than it does for me admit it!
I absolutely agree with you Anonymous officer! Whatever else has happened to me in life and over the years that may have caused me to change this or that peripheral thing about my own belief system, it is still the undeniable experience of grace that keeps me believing in God and Christ---and NOTHING will ever be able to take that away from me.
O' to Grace how great a debtor!
Jesus Saves! Jesus Saves!
Daryl Lach
USA Central
P.S. I'll be praying for you in your burned out condition. I hope you get the help you need before you crack up or do something foolish that you might regret later on---like leave the work if deep down inside you know that you really should be there. God Bless You.
I tend more to identify with this author though I would label myself agnostic rather than atheist. I'm still holding out some kind of hope for a god but not necessarily the god that is presented by the bible or the church at large. Don't buy the miraculous conception thing. Don't buy the resurrection thing. I want to buy some type of higher being. I hope. I want. But still am not sure. The science points me in another direction. And my search continues.
Post a Comment