AP
 
 
 
Atheist  'mega-churches' take root across US, world
 
 
 
By _GILLIAN  FLACCUS_ (http://bigstory.ap.org/content/gillian-flaccus) 


— Nov. 10, 2013 

 
 
LOS ANGELES (AP) — It looked like a typical Sunday morning at  any 
mega-church. Several hundred people, including families with small children,  
packed 
in for more than an hour of rousing music, an inspirational talk and some  
quiet reflection. The only thing missing was God. 
Nearly three dozen gatherings dubbed "atheist mega-churches" by  supporters 
and detractors have sprung up around the U.S. and Australia — with  more to 
come — after finding success in Great Britain earlier this year. The  
movement fueled by social media and spearheaded by two prominent British  
comedians is no joke. 
On Sunday, the inaugural Sunday Assembly in Los Angeles  attracted several 
hundred people bound by their belief in non-belief. Similar  gatherings in 
San Diego, Nashville, New York and other U.S. cities have drawn  hundreds of 
atheists seeking the camaraderie of a congregation without religion  or 
ritual. 
The founders, British duo Sanderson Jones and Pippa Evans, are  currently 
on a tongue-in-cheek "40 Dates, 40 Nights" tour around the U.S. and  
Australia to drum up donations and help launch new Sunday Assemblies. They hope 
 to 
raise more than $800,000 that will help atheists launch their pop-up  
congregations around the world. So far, they have raised about $50,000. 
They don't bash believers but want to find a new way to meet  likeminded 
people, engage in the community and make their presence more visible  in a 
landscape dominated by faith. 
Jones got the first inkling for the idea while leaving a  Christmas carol 
concert six years ago. 
"There was so much about it that I loved, but it's a shame  because at the 
heart of it, it's something I don't believe in," Jones said. "If  you think 
about church, there's very little that's bad. It's singing awesome  songs, 
hearing interesting talks, thinking about improving yourself and helping  
other people — and doing that in a community with wonderful relationships. What 
 part of that is not to like?" 
The movement dovetails with new studies that show an increasing  number of 
Americans are drifting from any religious affiliation. 
The Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life released a study  last year that 
found 20 percent of Americans say they have no religious  affiliation, an 
increase from 15 percent in the last five years. Pew researchers  stressed, 
however, that the category also encompassed majorities of people who  said they 
believed in God but had no ties with organized religion and people who  
consider themselves "spiritual" but not "religious." 
Sunday Assembly — whose motto is Live Better, Help Often,  Wonder More — 
taps into that universe of people who left their faith but now  miss the 
community church provided, said Phil Zuckerman, a professor of secular  studies 
at Pitzer College in Claremont. 
It also plays into a feeling among some atheists that they  should make 
themselves more visible. For example, last December, an atheist in  Santa 
Monica created an uproar — and triggered a lawsuit — when he set up a  godless 
display amid Christian nativity scenes that were part of a beloved,  
decades-old tradition. 
"In the U.S., there's a little bit of a feeling that if you're  not 
religious, you're not patriotic. I think a lot of secular people say, 'Hey,  
wait a 
minute. We are charitable, we are good people, we're good parents and we  
are just as good citizens as you and we're going to start a church to prove 
it,"  said Zuckerman. "It's still a minority, but there's enough of them 
now." 
That impulse, however, has raised the ire of those who have  spent years 
pushing back against the idea that atheism itself is a religion. 
"The idea that you're building an entire organization based on  what you 
don't believe, to me, sounds like an offense against sensibility," said  
Michael Luciano, a self-described atheist who was raised Roman Catholic but 
left  
when he became disillusioned. 
"There's something not OK with appropriating all of this  religious 
language, imagery and ritual for atheism," said Luciano, who blogged  about the 
movement at the site policymic.com. 
That sentiment didn't seem to detract from the excitement  Sunday at the 
inaugural meeting in Los Angeles. 
Hundreds of atheists and atheist-curious packed into a  Hollywood 
auditorium for a boisterous service filled with live music, moments of  
reflection, 
an "inspirational talk" about forgotten — but important — inventors  and 
scientists and some stand-up comedy. 
During the service, attendees stomped their feet, clapped  their hands and 
cheered as Jones and Evans led the group through rousing  renditions of 
"Lean on Me," ''Here Comes the Sun" and other hits that took the  place of 
gospel songs. Congregants dissolved into laughter at a get-to-know-you  game 
that 
involved clapping and slapping the hands of the person next to them  and 
applauded as members of the audience spoke about community service projects  
they had started in LA. 
At the end, volunteers passed cardboard boxes for donations as  attendees 
mingled over coffee and pastries and children played on the floor. 
For atheist Elijah Senn, the morning was perfect. 
"I think the image that we have put forward in a lot of ways  has been a 
scary, mean, we want to tear down the walls, we want to do  destructive things 
kind of image is what a lot of people have of us," he said.  "I'm really 
excited to be able to come together and show that it's not about  destruction. 
It's about making things and making things  better."

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