Foster Zygote
Dental Floss Tycoon
- Joined
- Jun 24, 2006
- Messages
- 22,102
I know what you mean, but unfortunately feeling sorry for people who cut themselves off from a profound sense of joy is what Christians often say when they pity atheists.
I've analogized it in the past this way:
I love my wife and she makes me happy. I'd be profoundly unhappy if I lost her. Therefor everyone who isn't married to my wife is profoundly unhappy.
It's a failure to understand, or at least to admit, that other people could find fulfillment in other things than you do. This is reinforced by the indoctrination that Jesus is the only way to fulfillment. So if they see people who aren't devoted to their beliefs they have to tell themselves that they pity those poor, miserable wretches. And if those poor, miserable wretches indicate that they are actually quite happy without Jesus, they have to inform those people that they are, in fact, poor, miserable wretches who cannot possibly be happy.
I suspect there's a sort of natural selection in religious beliefs, too. A religion doctrine that responded to alternative bases of fulfillment with, "that's cool - whatever works for you", is going to be less internally reinforced than one that refuses to acknowledge any other valid way of finding satisfaction.