Ingrained that christians are oddballs (not some christians are oddballs) at Sunday School and a Faith School. Come on VG?
I haven't been to either so don't know what cultures might have made an impression on Vlad when he attended.
Not the same thing of course, so not correct to lump them together. While 'bible bashers' as you call them may have been very overt and 'in your face' in their beliefs, I suspect there would have been plenty of church attenders whose attendance was completely unknown to you.
We called people Bible-bashers if they spoke about their faith. Sure there were people in our year who went to church for the community aspect, the parties and to snog boys, but were dismissive about Christianity. The people who spoke about their faith were in the minority. People attend churches or events for all kinds of reasons but it's what they say about it that I would take as the culture of the time.
Kids are often horrible at school to anyone perceived as 'different' - whether that be of a different ethnicity, religion, with a disability etc. That isn't really what we are talking about. And how about the 'atheists' - presumably these would have been in a minority to, although I suspect you wouldn't have know who most of them were which is kind of my point.
Our school did not really give the impression that kids were horrible - true, no one would have admitted to being gay in the 1980s in our school. But culturally, it was considered cool to be an atheist. The decline of religion amongst the pupils seemed pretty well-established. People used to scribble the names of their favourite bands etc on their white school lab coats. I had used a thick black marker pen to write in big Gothic script across the back of my school lab coat in the mid-80s: "God did not create Man, Man created God". I didn't get any grief about it and lots of pupils mentioned it. It upset someone - possibly a teacher, as a new rule came down soon after to say we all had to wash all the writing off our lab coats and no one was allowed to write on their lab coats
Blimey - scraping the barrel now - quoting Monty Python - sure 'he's not the messiah, he's a very naughty boy' - yup we did it too along with the dead parrot sketch, and a little 'waffer thin mint' and plenty of others - none of this was aimed at christians.
Nope - not scraping the barrel at all - Life of Brian did really well at the box office. It was aimed at Christians and pretty much all theists and also political factions e.g. The People's Front of Judea vs the the Judean People's Front. Apart from films, Monty Python also did a lot of sketches satirising religion e.g. the Spanish Inquisition. Other popular shows on TV that satirised religion that I remember watching off the top of my head were Black Adder, Dave Allen's stand up, Spitting Image. It didn't seem like atheists were invisible when I was at school.
But that isn't what he said, is it.
Depends how you interpret it - he said first time attending church after converting - so I didn't interpret it as him saying he had never attended church before.
And the point is that Vlad likes us not to recognise that he was brought up christian as it undermines his claimed massive conversion from atheism to christianity, which was in reality merely a reversion to the religion of his upbringing.
What "claimed massive conversion"?
Is that like you claiming to be an atheist on here but lying because you're still a massive Christian just in a little bit of denial?
What is a "massive conversion" anyway....as opposed to any other type of conversion? What is the criteria for adding the word "massive"? And why does it matter whether it's massive or just a normal-sized conversion? What's your point?