Which is, of course, about a person's position at a specific moment.
Then it's funny that over the past few years i've never caught you in one of your christian or hindu moments...I always seem to catch you on an atheist day
There are other surveys that also ask about a person's upbringing. That is my point - you were brought up as a christian in a largely christians societal setting, hence the notion of the truthfulness of christian claims will have been imbued in you from a very early age.
And yet I went through a period as a grown ass man as treating them as myth and before that several years as well meaning morality tales.
It is then disingenuous of you to claim some kind of massive 'conversion' to christianity, when that was the religion you were brought you were brought up to believe.
I think you are suggesting here that since the majority of christian bought up to believers as you call them go the secular way that there is something odd about me. Sure, i'm not an apatheist. Also weare back to your definition of convert. What is blindingly clear here is you are sticking to your definition of convert, which incidently I shared, right up to the moment of converting and committing my life to Christ
And if you want to claim a 'conversion' why do you never talk about the necessary other conversion, for your later conversion to make any kind of sense, that from your christian upbringing to being agnostic and non religious, as you claim.
so you believe that christian converts never truly are atheist, agnostics or non religious. I thought as much...although you have contradicted yourself on this by saying ''Which is, of course, about a person's position at a specific moment''
Children tend to 'believe' in a different way to an adult - I think there is even a bible quote about this! So, of course, your childhood christian beliefs are unlikely to be the same as your adult christian beliefs. But they were there nonetheless, supported by your attendance in church, at Sunday School, within a faith school. So you cannot deny the link.
I think many converts would talk about their transition prior to conversion, of christians they had come into contact with, and of literature they would have read and suffice it to say that non contact or deliberate avoidance of which results in non conversion.
A good analogy would be a child whose parents take them to gymnastics every week - as a child they aren't particularly good, but they are being taught the basics and taught to enjoy and love it. Even if they perhaps stepped back from it for a while, if that person became a professional gymnast as an adult are you really claiming that their adult abilities and love of gymnastics have absolutely nothing to do with their childhood experience. And also it is pretty unlikely that they would have come to full professional gymnast status as an adult without that childhood experience. Firstly because they'd have been way behind in learning the basics, but perhaps more importantly their parents might have inculcated a different 'love', perhaps playing the piano so gymnastics would be something they probably would never have encountered or considered.
I would call this poor analogy since you are likening getting on the equipment and doing it to sitting in a church reluctantly listening to a crusty droning on where being with your parents in church is like being with your parents in Marks and Spencer.
Again you are contradicting yourself by claiming that churchgoing as a child, where there might be no faith or familial faith rather than personal conversion and commitment to and encounter with christ, is the crowning experience of faith.