UK's 'Atheist Church' Now Expanding to US,  Australia

 
 
By _Anugrah  Kumar_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/anugrah-kumar/) , 
Christian Post Contributor
September 15, 2013|8:36 am
A godless congregation in London, which meets monthly on a Sunday "to hear  
great talks, sing songs and generally celebrate the wonder of life" with no 
hope  of the hereafter, is launching satellite assemblies in over 20 cities 
across the  U.K., the United States and Australia. 
The Sunday Assembly, which came into existence about eight months ago, will 
 announce on Sunday the formation of satellite congregations in more than 
20  cities across Britain and beyond, including in New York, San Diego, 
Melbourne  and Sydney, The Guardian reports. 
The "godless congregation," as they describe themselves, plans to plant 40  
atheist churches in one year, and as many as 1,000 worldwide within a  
decade. 
The NYC chapter of the "godless church" plans to have its first meeting at  
Connolly's Pub in mid-town on Sept. 29, the group's website says. 
Nick Spencer, research director of Theos, a think-tank, says the idea is 
not  necessarily new. "This contemporary idea of people who are not religious 
but  wanting to maintain some kind of church-like existence has got form. 
We've been  here before," Spencer was quoted as saying. 
The Sunday Assembly was founded by stand-up comedians Sanderson Jones and  
Pippa Evans. "It's a service for anyone who wants to live better, help often 
and  wonder more," says the website. 
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"We are born from nothing and go to nothing. Let's enjoy it together," says 
 the Public Charter of the Assembly, which has "no doctrine... no set texts 
so we  can make use of wisdom from all sources... no deity." 
"We don't do supernatural but we also won't tell you you're wrong if you 
do,"  it adds. "Sometimes bad things happen to good people, we have moments of 
 weakness or life just isn't fair. We want The Sunday Assembly to be a 
house of  love and compassion, where, no matter what your situation, you are 
welcomed,  accepted and loved." 
"If we do it in London and there are 400 people who come, that's brilliant, 
 but if we find a way to help hundreds of people to set one up then we can 
have a  bigger impact than we could ever dream of," Jones tells the British 
daily,  adding that their vision is "a godless gathering in every town, city 
or village  that wants one." 
A member of the assembly describes the nature of services, saying, "It's  
unashamedly copying a familiar Church of England format, so it's part of the  
collective consciousness." 
"When I had the idea for this, I always thought if it was something I would 
 like to go to in London then it was something other people would like to 
go to  in other places," Jones says. "The one thing that we didn't take into 
account  was the power of the internet, and I think even more than that, the 
fact that  there is obviously a latent need for this kind of thing. People 
have always  congregated around things that they believe in. I think people 
are going to look  back at the fact that it didn't happen as the oddity, not 
this part." 
Some members of the assembly want to set up a free school guided by the  
group's principles, raising the prospect "of Christians one day lying about  
being atheists to get their children into school," Jones  adds.

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