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Free Thinking/Non-theist/Atheist Church — Brooklynian

Free Thinking/Non-theist/Atheist Church

blinktoe
edited November -1 in Park Slope
So now that I'm officially a non-religious person, I miss going to church and having a community. Is there a free thought church in Brooklyn?

Comments

  • i feel like atheist church is an oxymoron. I guess I've only ever heard of them called universal churches...
  • Mrs Whynot attended services with a rabbi for a while who was atheist.
  • Atheist church for social interaction= ...bar?
  • A lot of folks talk philosophical and give people advice after a few drinks, its true.
  • Brooklyn Society For Ethical Culture springs to mind.
  • Isn't United Methodist (?) church more like a fellowship than very religious-y? I've heard good things about it

    (8th ave and 7th???? eh...somewhere around there)
  • There was some church giving out coffee and donuts this morning at the farmer's market. I can't remember the church, but the coffee was good
  • I also thought to suggest the Brooklyn Society for Ethical Culture (on PPW), though I've not yet visited. I was at a benefit for the New York Society for Ethical Culture last night, and the clergyman (or "leader") was very friendly and passionate about ethical action as a semi-religious orientation... The place and the people reminded me a great deal of Quakers I've had contact with, a group with which I have more than a passing familiarity, and whom I generally admire. Different groups of Friends are more or less secular -- I attended a Quaker-founded camp that was entirely secular and, incidentally, life-changing -- but in my experience all are very tolerant of wherever you're coming from. There is a Friends Meeting House a few blocks from Brooklyn Borough Hall, and I know there are other active groups in Manhattan as well. Good luck. I'd be interested to hear if you find a place you like.
  • vidro3 wrote: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theosophy ?
    No. Basically I want to go to church; put on sensible, nice shoes, listen to a talk, interact with like-minded people over bad coffee, hold friend's babies, sing songs, make casseroles for people with cancer, and do community outreach. Church, but without the "there is a deity in the sky" bit, a thought I find entirely unpalatable.
  • Pastafarians unite!
  • No. Basically I want to go to church; put on sensible, nice shoes, listen to a talk, interact with like-minded people over bad coffee, hold friend's babies, sing songs, make casseroles for people with cancer, and do community outreach. Church, but without the "there is a deity in the sky" bit, a thought I find entirely unpalatable.
    Without the "deity in the sky" thing, what's the talk going to be about?

    Perhaps a Unitarian church? They kind of do almost literary criticism instead of theology.
  • Ha! I am a proud member of the Pastafarian movement! They don't have services however. The Brooklyn Society for Ethical Culture sounds intriguing.
  • Flexichick wrote: Isn't United Methodist (?) church more like a fellowship than very religious-y? I've heard good things about it

    (8th ave and 7th???? eh...somewhere around there)

    The United Methodist on 8th ave and 6th street is one that is religious BUT i would wager there were maybe 10% of people who weren't believers of a higher being and more a connected-ness between all people in the world. It is one of the most liberal (in both policy and beliefs) churches i've attended and i've attended a good deal of churches which most people would think were more fellowship than worship. i think, in this church's case, you can take out of it what you want. they do a lot of service, community activity, and fellowship. I would go every sunday in a heartbeat if it didn't take me so long to get there in the morning.
  • Subject: Non-churchy church

    I would venture you would feel welcome at any Episcopalian church. There are all kinds of Episcopalians who only go for the bad coffee and casseroles. I also have it on good faith (from a Jewish chorister) that we have the best music, too. Trinity Church on Wall Street is very active.
  • i'm very interested in ethical culture, and i've been to some functions at their gorgeous building on PPW.

    may sound dumb but i felt really, really young there. out of place young, and i was in my late 30s at the time. i love the whole ethos, but i'd been hoping to find a place with people in my age range
  • brooklynpotter wrote: i'm very interested in ethical culture, and i've been to some functions at their gorgeous building on PPW.

    may sound dumb but i felt really, really young there. out of place young, and i was in my late 30s at the time. i love the whole ethos, but i'd been hoping to find a place with people in my age range
    I was worried about that; I'm 27. I'm still going to go and check it out, though.
  • The Unitarian Universalist church is a free-thinking church; non-creedal religion. There is a church in Brooklyn Heights, http://www.fuub.org. The Unitarian Universalist Association also has a website where you can read more about UU, http://www.uua.org/.
  • Oh also, I meant to say that though UU was founded in Judeo-Christian beliefs, it is not a Christian church.
  • i've never been to UU but been curious. are many people atheists?
  • definitely. and there are theists too. really anything goes.
  • but do their services include references about god?
  • sometimes, yes. i personally am not sure about the existence of god and have never felt persuaded to believe in one. i think it also depends on the minister. but is UU a purely atheist church? no.
  • eseveral friends are very involved in the Unitarian Church in the Heights, and from what i have seen of it the community is very much "anything goes" in terms of your level of religiousity. they really more believe in social justice as the passion in life.
  • There is a synagogue in Manhattan called I think the Humanist Synagogue that caters to atheists....I know what you mean though. I want the "church/synagogue" experience with no God...but it seems like a tall order.
  • jschneier wrote: There is a synagogue in Manhattan called I think the Humanist Synagogue that caters to atheists....I know what you mean though. I want the "church/synagogue" experience with no God...but it seems like a tall order.
    If all else fails we can found one :)
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