Now I think we are getting somewhere with this. First offSonicKoala said:-snip-
What I meant was, is that there is no such thing as choice. An Anglican friend of mine actually supported this with a quote from the bible (Don't remember which book though), which basically said, everything that will happen, will happen (as in everything that is going to happen will happen and there isn't anything anyone can do about it). And the 'circumstances had been different' thing, if somewhere in your life, an event had occured which influenced you away from Christianity or religion in general, then you would not be catholic today. So the whole 'I chose to be Christian' is just sort of an inside joke to me, cause I actually see it as 'you think you chose it, when it was really the events of your past which forced you into it' (It sounds blunter than it is)
You believe in the existence of 'a' God (emphasis on 'a' rather than 'the'), which just happens to co-incide with the idea of the Christian God. (Seriously, if I got that horribly wrong, tell me, just the use of the word spiritual made it sound as though you made your own beliefs, and they happened to be closest to Christianity). On a slightly different topic, if what I just said is the case, then I have no problem with your beliefs as they seem to be well-founded on personal opinion rather than on narrow-minded intolerance (which is my biggest nit-pick with religions, and Atheism on occasion).
You are quite right that many of the teachings from the Bible are good, and it would be great if more people had those ideals, (My favourite ideal being the anti-ignorance pro-wisdom thing that Proverbs preaches), my main thing(s) with this is,
a) No-one tends to know about it cause the Bible tends to get boring, fast.
b) Because most are written in parable or some other riddle-ish form, most people mis-interpret them
c) Because they are in a religious book, only religious people tend to see them, and people tend to go all high and mighty saying 'God's wisdom' and all this stuff, when wisdom belongs to everyone and if religious people wanted to help people, then they would offer a non-religious perspective on the bible for those who instantly shirk at the sound of religion (seeing as this would be the 'greatest good for the greatest number' approach. (basically, I don't like the fact that the wisdom is intimately (and unnecessarily so) tied to the bible when it could do greater good as separate from the bible)
a) No-one tends to know about it cause the Bible tends to get boring, fast.
b) Because most are written in parable or some other riddle-ish form, most people mis-interpret them
c) Because they are in a religious book, only religious people tend to see them, and people tend to go all high and mighty saying 'God's wisdom' and all this stuff, when wisdom belongs to everyone and if religious people wanted to help people, then they would offer a non-religious perspective on the bible for those who instantly shirk at the sound of religion (seeing as this would be the 'greatest good for the greatest number' approach. (basically, I don't like the fact that the wisdom is intimately (and unnecessarily so) tied to the bible when it could do greater good as separate from the bible)
I believe we may have gotten off topic slightly, my main point at the beginning (the whole Christianity-converting, Atheism-not thing was that having a belief in a lack of God should be considered just as important as havng a belief in a God, and therefore should be able to convert people to the same belief for as long as religion tries to do so, as I see neither as any better than the other (I lie, I am obviously biased towards Atheism, but from an outsiders view both would be equal.)