I was thinking about what Gonners was asking earlier, about whether atheists (here in the UK) see themselves as ‘cultural Christians’ and the extent to which atheism my influences my thinking in general, and I’d say that I can’t see that being an atheist has a similar type of effect on my overall outlook as it seems that being a Christian does.
I don’t see myself as a ‘cultural Christian’ at all. I wasn’t christened, so I’m not even a default member of Christianity and nor was greatly exposed to active Christianity during my education because my ‘unchristened’ status at the point of moving on to secondary school. This coincided with a move from Scotland to England (St Albans to be precise), and my not being christened seemed to freak the school out back then (1963) since they clearly applied a religious designation to all pupils and, presumably, I didn’t fit any of their then categories: the result was that I wasn’t expected to participate in anything religious, be it RE lessons or hymns/prayers during school assemblies: in effect religion in general, and not just Christianity, was something that happened to other people.
I’m obviously aware of the social and historical role of Christianity religion on the society/culture I live in but these days this really is negligible: at most I’m exposed to being told what various religious leaders think about matters, since it seems their pontifications are regarded as newsworthy by default, and I can either ignore them or listen to them as I please - but I’m not required to treat their musings as being in any sense profound or relevant by dint of their religious office: I can agree or disagree with them of course but I don't regard them as being authoritative, and they don’t in any sense speak for me.
Aside from the supernatural stuff like prophecies and miracles, which are just plain daft notions in this day and age, I also reject the idea that Christianity has any special merit in relation to morality, especially given its history and the stance of organised Christianity currently, such as on SSM legislation recently. Nor do I think that the Bible has any great merit when I hear Christians talk about what it ‘teaches’ – I can’t see that it 'teaches' a great deal since it is mix of anecdote, allegory, poetry and deepities, and especially given the subsequent dependence on translation and theological interpretation by those religious authorities who’ve seemingly decided what it all means. There are better alternatives, and in relation to morality my feeling is that the older approach of Aristotle (virtue ethics) is an example that is by far more useful and better thought-through: put simply I think the ‘Golden Mean’ is a better approach than the ‘Golden Rule’.
From what I can see Christians tend see their faith as some form of filter through which they see the world around them or pass through their own thoughts and reactions: so they see God in all that they think good or altruistic or life-enhancing, and also in everything that is bad (the ‘mysterious ways’ bit). I recall having an exchange with someone here (probably Hope or Alien) a while back during which they said along the lines of that their Christianity was something that was intrinsically part of ‘them’, in the sense that it pervaded everything they thought and did regarding all aspects of life, the universe and everything. For me atheism doesn’t have this type of function at all: it just means that I have no beliefs in gods and that I have rejected the current claims made by theists regarding the existence of the ‘divine’ as being arguments that seem fallacious in one way or another, so I can see no basis to even start to consider their idea of ‘God’ as being a serious proposition in reality. Other atheists may have different thoughts on how their absence of beliefs in Gods influences their views on other aspects of their life experience.
So in most aspects of my life to date the issue of 'God' hasn't been an issue at all, and in fact the only place it is relevant at all as a subject to be discussed is, ironically, here (and also in a certain Glasgow pub now and then with some of the most interesting and joyous people I've ever met, one of whom is a Christian).