The 
“God” 
who 
started 
Atheism. 
An alternative view, by T W Palm 
1
2 
Atheism Defined 
• Athe-ism - noun 
– a disbelief in the 
existence of a deity 
– the doctrine that 
there is no deity 
(god) 
– Archaic definition – 
“ungodly 
wickedness” 
• Merriam-Webster 
Dictionary
3 
Synonyms for Atheism 
• non-belief 
• disbelief 
• scepticism 
• incredulity 
• ungodliness 
• mistrust
4 
Ancient Gods 
• Baal (god of thunder & rain) 
• Ashtoreth (mercy & 
destruction) 
• Dagon (goddess of being) 
• Isis (fertility goddess) 
• Zeus (king of gods and men) 
• Asherah (fertility goddess) 
• Amon-Ra (king of all gods) 
• Apophis (god opposed to 
light) 
• Osiris (god of the afterlife) 
• Nintu (goddess of childbirth) 
• Adad (god of storms) 
• Ereshkigal (ruler of 
netherworld) 
• Damkina (earth mother 
goddess) 
• Anu (great god of the sky) 
• Ishtar/Inanna (great goddess of 
love) 
• Kingu/Qingu (dragon 
commander) 
• Marduk (creator god/ruler god) 
• Sin (moon god)
Ancient View of god/s 
• Dwells in a place where worshippers cannot 
reach him. 
• Needs to be appeased 
• Hard to please 
• Is easily offended 
• Forgives only after retribution (punishment) 
• Desires the sacrifice (of innocent: virgins and 
children) 
• Withholds blessings 
• Arbitrary /Vengeful 
• Adherents are ignorant of his ways and 5 
are 
afraid of him.
Fundamental Christian View of 
God 
• Can only be approached through an 
intermediary 
• Needs to be appeased 
• Impossible to please (looking for perfection) 
• Is easily offended 
• Forgives only after retribution (punishment) 
• Desires sacrifice (of innocent – e.g. Jesus) 
• Withholds blessings as punishment 
• Arbitrary /Vengeful (needs to vent his anger by 
sometimes making you lose your job or a loved 
one) 
• Adherents are ignorant of his ways and are 
afraid of him. 
6
The “Killer God” wipes out sinners 
with… 
• Natural disasters e.g. floods, droughts, 
tsunamis, hurricanes, landslides, 
avalanches, volcanic eruptions, plagues 
(boils) and pestilences (Aids). 
• Using a political superpower to defeat 
sinners and then hold them captive for 
100’s of years. 
• Punishing sinners through generations by 
making the children and the children’s 
children pay for the sins of the great-grandparents, 
7 
grandparents and the
8 
The True 
Character of God 
Is Revealed On A 
Hill Outside 
Jerusalem called 
“Golgotha”…The 
Place of a Skull.
9 
The Fundamental 
Christian View of 
The Crucifixion 
versus 
God’s View of The 
Crucifixion
Fundamental Christian View of the 
Crucifixion of Christ 
• God was/is angry at sinners. 
• God wanted/wants to destroy sinners. 
• Jesus wanted/wants to save sinners from 
the Killer God The Father. 
• Picture this: Jesus has his back to the 
Father and says “beat me up instead of 
the sinners so that you can deal with your 
pent up anger.” 
• God “killed” Jesus to get rid of his rage… 
so that He does not have to kill sinners 
any longer. 
10
God’s View of the Crucifixion 
To wit, that God was in Christ, reconciling 
the world unto himself, not imputing their 
trespasses unto them; and hath committed 
unto us the word of reconciliation. 
(2Co 5:19 KJV) 
11
Christian Fundamentalism 
12 
Paradox 
God is Love (1 John 4:8 and 16) 
1. God is Love but Kills Sinners who refuse to 
listen. 
2. God is Love but wipes out those who are 
imperfect. 
3. God is Love but gets angry and needs to vent 
from time to time. 
4. God is Love but is coming to destroy the earth 
because he is sorry that he made people.
Christian Fundamentalism 
13 
Paradox 
• The fundamental Christian view of God as 
presented through the centuries can trace 
its origins to the original views that people 
clung to about ancient gods like Ra and 
Baal. 
• Christ stepped into this religious mindset 
(theological paradigm) and desired to set 
the record straight on the TRUTH about 
the character of God that Satan had 
maligned.
Fundamental Christian Paradox 
• Did Christ condemn anybody? 
• Did Christ reject anybody? 
• Did Christ hate anybody? 
• Did Christ curse anybody? 
• Did Christ hurt anybody? 
• Did Christ turn his back on anybody? 
• Did Christ kill anybody? 
14
Fundamental Christian Paradox 
• It this “killer God” worldview that is 
responsible for the creation of Atheism. 
• If this is who God really is then I don’t 
want Him and declare myself an “atheist” 
with immediate effect. 
• But if God is the God as expressed 
through the son “Jesus” then I embrace 
Him with immediate effect and call upon 
all atheists to do the same. 
15
Who is The God of the Bible? 
• For I am the LORD, I change not; therefore 
ye sons of Jacob are not consumed. (Mal 
3:6 KJV) 
• Every good gift and every perfect gift is 
from above, and cometh down from the 
Father of lights, with whom is no 
variableness, neither shadow of turning. 
(Jas 1:17 KJV) 
• Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and to 
day, and for ever. (Heb 13:8 KJV) 
16
Who is the God of the Bible? 
• Moreover the law entered, that the offence 
might abound. But where sin abounded, 
grace did much more abound: (Rom 5:20 
KJV) 
17
Who is the God of the Bible? 
• “It is the darkness of misapprehension of 
God that is enshrouding the world. Men 
are losing their knowledge of His 
character. It has been misunderstood and 
misinterpreted. At this time a message 
from God is to be proclaimed, a message 
illuminating in its influence and saving in 
its power. His character is to be made 
known. Into the darkness of the world is to 
be shed the light of His glory, the light of 
His goodness, mercy, and truth.” 
18
Who is the God of the Bible? 
• “Those who wait for the Bridegroom's coming 
are to say to the people, "Behold your God." The 
last rays of merciful light, the last message of 
mercy to be given to the world, is a revelation of 
His character of love. The children of God are to 
manifest His glory. In their own life and character 
they are to reveal what the grace of God has 
done for them. The light of the Sun of 
Righteousness is to shine forth in good works--in 
words of truth and deeds of holiness.” Christ’s 
Object Lessons pp.415-416. Ellen White. 
19
So who/what is doing the 
killing? 
• For the wages of sin is death; but the gift 
of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ 
our Lord. (Romans 6:23 KJV) 
• God created the universe to function as a 
circle, Himself at the centre of the circle as 
the original Source of life, and love and 
every good thing. 
• Sin, on the other hand , is a departure 
from God’s circle of beneficent love. 
20
So who/what is doing the 
killing? 
• Blessed is the man that heareth me, 
watching daily at my gates, waiting at the 
posts of my doors. For whoso findeth me 
findeth life, and shall obtain favour of the 
LORD. (Pro 8:34-35 KJV) 
• But your iniquities have separated 
between you and your God, and your sins 
have hid his face from you, that he will not 
hear. (Isa 59:2 KJV) 
• Once separated from God, sin operates in 
the sinner as a lonely line rather 21 
than a 
circle.
So who/what is doing the 
killing? 
• At first ,selfishness imparts an illusionary 
sense of fulfillment, deceiving the mind 
with the idea that looking out for Number 
One is the only way to survive. 
• Because God’s love is the law of the 
universe, by which He created and 
sustains all things, the principles of that 
law are embedded into our very natures. 
Within our psycho-social-emotional 
makeup, love is encoded as the law of life. 
22
So who/what is doing the 
killing? 
• When we break God’s law, a malfunction 
signal issues a warning in the form of guilt. 
• Our conscience senses discomfort with sin 
and identifies it as a destructive force/ 
virus in the computer system. 
• Guilt is not arbitrarily imposed by God. 
God made the human faculty of 
conscience but He is not the source of 
guilt. He made us with the capacity to feel 
guilt as a merciful and wise deterrent to 
sin. 
23
So who/what is doing the 
killing? 
• Take, for example, physical pain. 
– If you put your hand on a red-hot stove, you 
will feel the pain of the destruction that is 
beginning to occur. 
– Without pain, the destruction of your hand is 
sure. But the pain serves as a helpful warning 
that something is wrong, which causes you to 
pull your hand away from the source of heat. 
– Pain is a very wise divine invention. 
24
So who/what is doing the 
killing? 
• The same is true for disease. 
– Sickness is attended by pain. We hate the 
pain, but we need it to tell us something is 
wrong so we can get help. 
– If there were no pain involved in disease, we 
would simply drop dead one day without 
notice ,with no opportunity to solve the 
problem. God is not the source of the pain, 
although He created the physical laws that 
make pain possible. 
25
The Solution to the Sin 
Problem? 
• Create in me a clean heart, O God; and 
renew a right spirit within me. (Psalm 
51:10 KJV) 
• Come unto me, all ye that labour and are 
heavy laden, and I will give you rest. 
(Matthew 11:28 KJV) 
• And Jesus said unto them, I am the bread 
of life: he that cometh to me shall never 
hunger; and he that believeth on me shall 
never thirst. (John 6:35 KJV) 
26
Conclusion: God does not… 
• dwell in a place where He cannot be 
reached; 
• need to be appeased; 
• take offence easily; 
• forgive only after retribution/ punishment; 
• desire the sacrifice of innocent – e.g. 
Jesus; 
• withhold blessings because of our 
unfaithfulness; 
• act in an arbitrary /vengeful manner; 27 
and 
• rejoice in the death of the wicked.
Conclusion 
• The Fundamental Christian View of God 
as this “Killer God” is Biblically flawed and 
is responsible for “protest atheism”. 
• The “Killer God” concept is causing people 
to leave the church in numbers and resist 
the Gospel. 
• Fearing God in order to avoid Hell is no 
way to enter Heaven. 
• God is not a man (Number 23:19) and 
cannot be expected to think, act or behave 
as a man would. 
28
Fundamental View of God 
Leads To: 
• non-belief 
• disbelief 
• scepticism 
• incredulity 
• ungodliness 
• Mistrust 
• In a nutshell… 
Atheism 
29
30 
“God Is 
Love.” 
1 John 4: 7 
-8
Sources 
• “Christ’s Object 
Lessons” by E G 
31 
White 
• “The Nature of Sin” by 
Pastor Paul Leacock 
• “Death of a Monster 
God” by Pastor Brian 
Zahnd; Word of Life 
Church. 
• International Standard 
Bible Encyclopaedia 
• Nelson’s New 
Illustrated Bible 
Commentary 
• Holman Bible 
Dictionary

Thegodwhostartedatheism 140529011246-phpapp02

  • 1.
    The “God” who started Atheism. An alternative view, by T W Palm 1
  • 2.
    2 Atheism Defined • Athe-ism - noun – a disbelief in the existence of a deity – the doctrine that there is no deity (god) – Archaic definition – “ungodly wickedness” • Merriam-Webster Dictionary
  • 3.
    3 Synonyms forAtheism • non-belief • disbelief • scepticism • incredulity • ungodliness • mistrust
  • 4.
    4 Ancient Gods • Baal (god of thunder & rain) • Ashtoreth (mercy & destruction) • Dagon (goddess of being) • Isis (fertility goddess) • Zeus (king of gods and men) • Asherah (fertility goddess) • Amon-Ra (king of all gods) • Apophis (god opposed to light) • Osiris (god of the afterlife) • Nintu (goddess of childbirth) • Adad (god of storms) • Ereshkigal (ruler of netherworld) • Damkina (earth mother goddess) • Anu (great god of the sky) • Ishtar/Inanna (great goddess of love) • Kingu/Qingu (dragon commander) • Marduk (creator god/ruler god) • Sin (moon god)
  • 5.
    Ancient View ofgod/s • Dwells in a place where worshippers cannot reach him. • Needs to be appeased • Hard to please • Is easily offended • Forgives only after retribution (punishment) • Desires the sacrifice (of innocent: virgins and children) • Withholds blessings • Arbitrary /Vengeful • Adherents are ignorant of his ways and 5 are afraid of him.
  • 6.
    Fundamental Christian Viewof God • Can only be approached through an intermediary • Needs to be appeased • Impossible to please (looking for perfection) • Is easily offended • Forgives only after retribution (punishment) • Desires sacrifice (of innocent – e.g. Jesus) • Withholds blessings as punishment • Arbitrary /Vengeful (needs to vent his anger by sometimes making you lose your job or a loved one) • Adherents are ignorant of his ways and are afraid of him. 6
  • 7.
    The “Killer God”wipes out sinners with… • Natural disasters e.g. floods, droughts, tsunamis, hurricanes, landslides, avalanches, volcanic eruptions, plagues (boils) and pestilences (Aids). • Using a political superpower to defeat sinners and then hold them captive for 100’s of years. • Punishing sinners through generations by making the children and the children’s children pay for the sins of the great-grandparents, 7 grandparents and the
  • 8.
    8 The True Character of God Is Revealed On A Hill Outside Jerusalem called “Golgotha”…The Place of a Skull.
  • 9.
    9 The Fundamental Christian View of The Crucifixion versus God’s View of The Crucifixion
  • 10.
    Fundamental Christian Viewof the Crucifixion of Christ • God was/is angry at sinners. • God wanted/wants to destroy sinners. • Jesus wanted/wants to save sinners from the Killer God The Father. • Picture this: Jesus has his back to the Father and says “beat me up instead of the sinners so that you can deal with your pent up anger.” • God “killed” Jesus to get rid of his rage… so that He does not have to kill sinners any longer. 10
  • 11.
    God’s View ofthe Crucifixion To wit, that God was in Christ, reconciling the world unto himself, not imputing their trespasses unto them; and hath committed unto us the word of reconciliation. (2Co 5:19 KJV) 11
  • 12.
    Christian Fundamentalism 12 Paradox God is Love (1 John 4:8 and 16) 1. God is Love but Kills Sinners who refuse to listen. 2. God is Love but wipes out those who are imperfect. 3. God is Love but gets angry and needs to vent from time to time. 4. God is Love but is coming to destroy the earth because he is sorry that he made people.
  • 13.
    Christian Fundamentalism 13 Paradox • The fundamental Christian view of God as presented through the centuries can trace its origins to the original views that people clung to about ancient gods like Ra and Baal. • Christ stepped into this religious mindset (theological paradigm) and desired to set the record straight on the TRUTH about the character of God that Satan had maligned.
  • 14.
    Fundamental Christian Paradox • Did Christ condemn anybody? • Did Christ reject anybody? • Did Christ hate anybody? • Did Christ curse anybody? • Did Christ hurt anybody? • Did Christ turn his back on anybody? • Did Christ kill anybody? 14
  • 15.
    Fundamental Christian Paradox • It this “killer God” worldview that is responsible for the creation of Atheism. • If this is who God really is then I don’t want Him and declare myself an “atheist” with immediate effect. • But if God is the God as expressed through the son “Jesus” then I embrace Him with immediate effect and call upon all atheists to do the same. 15
  • 16.
    Who is TheGod of the Bible? • For I am the LORD, I change not; therefore ye sons of Jacob are not consumed. (Mal 3:6 KJV) • Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning. (Jas 1:17 KJV) • Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and to day, and for ever. (Heb 13:8 KJV) 16
  • 17.
    Who is theGod of the Bible? • Moreover the law entered, that the offence might abound. But where sin abounded, grace did much more abound: (Rom 5:20 KJV) 17
  • 18.
    Who is theGod of the Bible? • “It is the darkness of misapprehension of God that is enshrouding the world. Men are losing their knowledge of His character. It has been misunderstood and misinterpreted. At this time a message from God is to be proclaimed, a message illuminating in its influence and saving in its power. His character is to be made known. Into the darkness of the world is to be shed the light of His glory, the light of His goodness, mercy, and truth.” 18
  • 19.
    Who is theGod of the Bible? • “Those who wait for the Bridegroom's coming are to say to the people, "Behold your God." The last rays of merciful light, the last message of mercy to be given to the world, is a revelation of His character of love. The children of God are to manifest His glory. In their own life and character they are to reveal what the grace of God has done for them. The light of the Sun of Righteousness is to shine forth in good works--in words of truth and deeds of holiness.” Christ’s Object Lessons pp.415-416. Ellen White. 19
  • 20.
    So who/what isdoing the killing? • For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord. (Romans 6:23 KJV) • God created the universe to function as a circle, Himself at the centre of the circle as the original Source of life, and love and every good thing. • Sin, on the other hand , is a departure from God’s circle of beneficent love. 20
  • 21.
    So who/what isdoing the killing? • Blessed is the man that heareth me, watching daily at my gates, waiting at the posts of my doors. For whoso findeth me findeth life, and shall obtain favour of the LORD. (Pro 8:34-35 KJV) • But your iniquities have separated between you and your God, and your sins have hid his face from you, that he will not hear. (Isa 59:2 KJV) • Once separated from God, sin operates in the sinner as a lonely line rather 21 than a circle.
  • 22.
    So who/what isdoing the killing? • At first ,selfishness imparts an illusionary sense of fulfillment, deceiving the mind with the idea that looking out for Number One is the only way to survive. • Because God’s love is the law of the universe, by which He created and sustains all things, the principles of that law are embedded into our very natures. Within our psycho-social-emotional makeup, love is encoded as the law of life. 22
  • 23.
    So who/what isdoing the killing? • When we break God’s law, a malfunction signal issues a warning in the form of guilt. • Our conscience senses discomfort with sin and identifies it as a destructive force/ virus in the computer system. • Guilt is not arbitrarily imposed by God. God made the human faculty of conscience but He is not the source of guilt. He made us with the capacity to feel guilt as a merciful and wise deterrent to sin. 23
  • 24.
    So who/what isdoing the killing? • Take, for example, physical pain. – If you put your hand on a red-hot stove, you will feel the pain of the destruction that is beginning to occur. – Without pain, the destruction of your hand is sure. But the pain serves as a helpful warning that something is wrong, which causes you to pull your hand away from the source of heat. – Pain is a very wise divine invention. 24
  • 25.
    So who/what isdoing the killing? • The same is true for disease. – Sickness is attended by pain. We hate the pain, but we need it to tell us something is wrong so we can get help. – If there were no pain involved in disease, we would simply drop dead one day without notice ,with no opportunity to solve the problem. God is not the source of the pain, although He created the physical laws that make pain possible. 25
  • 26.
    The Solution tothe Sin Problem? • Create in me a clean heart, O God; and renew a right spirit within me. (Psalm 51:10 KJV) • Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. (Matthew 11:28 KJV) • And Jesus said unto them, I am the bread of life: he that cometh to me shall never hunger; and he that believeth on me shall never thirst. (John 6:35 KJV) 26
  • 27.
    Conclusion: God doesnot… • dwell in a place where He cannot be reached; • need to be appeased; • take offence easily; • forgive only after retribution/ punishment; • desire the sacrifice of innocent – e.g. Jesus; • withhold blessings because of our unfaithfulness; • act in an arbitrary /vengeful manner; 27 and • rejoice in the death of the wicked.
  • 28.
    Conclusion • TheFundamental Christian View of God as this “Killer God” is Biblically flawed and is responsible for “protest atheism”. • The “Killer God” concept is causing people to leave the church in numbers and resist the Gospel. • Fearing God in order to avoid Hell is no way to enter Heaven. • God is not a man (Number 23:19) and cannot be expected to think, act or behave as a man would. 28
  • 29.
    Fundamental View ofGod Leads To: • non-belief • disbelief • scepticism • incredulity • ungodliness • Mistrust • In a nutshell… Atheism 29
  • 30.
    30 “God Is Love.” 1 John 4: 7 -8
  • 31.
    Sources • “Christ’sObject Lessons” by E G 31 White • “The Nature of Sin” by Pastor Paul Leacock • “Death of a Monster God” by Pastor Brian Zahnd; Word of Life Church. • International Standard Bible Encyclopaedia • Nelson’s New Illustrated Bible Commentary • Holman Bible Dictionary

Editor's Notes

  • #5 The cultures surrounding Judah and Israel had deities who ruled the netherworld. In Mesopotamia the divine couple Nergal and Ereshkigal hanged the corpses of the dead on butchers’ hooks like slabs of meat. Egypt’s afterlife under the rule of Osiris was more appealing, if you survived the journey to the land of the blessed dead. Syria-Palestine had the god Mot (meaning “death”) who was hungry to devour the living. The voraciousness of the netherworld and the mercilessness of its ruler, Mot, is reflected in the “devouring” and “king of terrors” of Job 18:11–14.Radmacher, E. D., Allen, R. B., & House, H. W. 1999. Nelson's new illustrated Bible commentary . T. Nelson Publishers: Nashville DAGON (Day' gahn) Name of god meaning, “little fish,” or “dear.” Dagon is a god associated with the Philistines. However, his origins were in Mesopotamia during the third millennium B.C. By 2000 B.C. a major temple was erected for him in the maritime city of Ugarit. Ugaritic commerce carried his cult into Canaan when Canaan was still a part of the Egyptian empire. When the Philistines conquered the coastal region of Canaan, they adopted Dagon as their chief deity.
  • #28 The LORD is gracious, and full of compassion; slow to anger, and of great mercy. (Psa 145:8 KJV)
  • #29 God is not a man, that he should lie; neither the son of man, that he should repent: hath he said, and shall he not do it? or hath he spoken, and shall he not make it good? (Num 23:19 KJV)