
Everyday, we read and hear nut cracking news and nonsense over the internet. It is as if as the days pass by, more and more people becomes moronic. Just last week I read this article about debaptizing christians held by the Atheists themselves. The mockery is an overt expression in denouncing Christianity as their childhood faith. With the use of a hairdrier/hairblower, they dry the participant of water poured at them when they were baptized as Christian. The Anglican news has this complete story:

Until last summer, Jennifer Gray of Columbus, Ohio, considered herself “a weak Christian” whose baptism at age 11 in a Kentucky church came to mean less and less to her as she gradually lost faith in God.
Then the 32-year-old medical transcriptionist took a decisive step, one that previously hadn’t been available. She got “de-baptised”.
In a type of mock ceremony that’s now been performed in at least four states, a robed “priest” used a hairdryer marked “reason” in an apparent bid to blow away the waters of baptism once and for all.
Several dozen participants then fed on a “de-sacrament” (crackers with peanut butter) and received certificates assuring they had “freely renounced a previous mistake, and accepted Reason over Superstition”.
For Gray, the light-hearted spirit of the 2008 Atheist Coming Out Party and De-Baptism Bash in suburban Westerville, Ohio, served a higher purpose than merely spoofing a Christian rite.
“It was very therapeutic,” Gray said in an interview. “It was a chance to laugh at the silly things I used to believe as a child. It helped me admit that it was OK to think the way I think and to not have any religious beliefs.”
Within the past year, “de-baptism” ceremonies have attracted as many as 250 participants at atheist conventions in Ohio, Texas, Florida and Georgia. More have taken place on college campuses in recent years, according to Hemant Mehta, chair of the board of directors for the Secular Student Alliance, a group that promotes atheism among high school and college students.
“If we’re having a winter solstice or summer solstice get-together or some other event, we might say: ‘Who wants to get de-baptized?”‘ said Greg McDowell, the Florida state director for American Atheists, an advocacy and networking group. “It’s a bit of satire. People will play the fool by waving their arms in the air and saying, ‘I got de-baptised!’ But the paperwork is still legit.”
Some of the so-called “de-baptized” have used their certificates to petition churches to remove their names from baptismal rolls. One argument: they were baptised without their consent as children and should now be declared de-baptised.
Some churches, however, aren’t budging on what they regard as an irreversible sacrament.
Atheist Gary Mueller recently mailed his de-baptism certificate to St. Bonaventure Catholic Church in Concord, California, and asked to be dropped from its baptismal record. The church told him, in effect, that he was all wet.
“While we do not remove a name/person from a Baptism register, we can note alongside your name that ‘you have left the Roman Catholic Church’,” the Rev. Richard Mangini replied in an email. “I hope that God surprises you one day and lets you know that He is quite well.” In Christian theology, baptism can’t be undone.
If a Southern Baptist renounces his or her baptism, then that person is usually presumed to have never received an authentic baptism in the first place, according to Nathan Finn, assistant professor of Baptist studies at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary in Wake Forest, North Carolina.
For mainline Protestant, Catholic and Orthodox Christians, baptism is commonly understood as a sign or means of grace and a covenant that God maintains even when humans turn away, said Laurence Stookey, professor emeritus of preaching and worship at Wesley Theological Seminary in Washington. He said “de-baptisers” misunderstand baptism when they caricature it as an attempt at magic.
Baptism “is a kind of adoption where you become a child of God, of the church and of the family,” Stookey said. “You can renounce your physical parents, (the church and God), but they cannot renounce you because you are their child. Anybody who makes fun of baptism probably hasn’t gone into it in enough depth to know that.”
De-baptism efforts have been growing internationally in recent years. More than 100 000 Britons downloaded de-baptism certificates from the National Secular Society between 2005 and 2009, according to NSS campaigner Stephen Evans. Upwards of 1000 Italians requested de-baptism certificates prior to Italy’s “De-Baptism Day” in October 2008, according to Italy’s Union of Rationalist Atheists and Agnostics.
Public ceremonies to confer de-baptism, however, seem to be primarily an American phenomenon.
“I think a de-baptism ceremony (in Europe) would strike a lot of secularists and atheists as kind of pointless,” Evans said. “They would leave the ceremonies to the religious.”
Not all American non-believers have warmed to de-baptism rituals. Secularist Phil Zuckerman, a Pitzer College sociologist who studies apostates, said he would never take part in such an event because it “feels intrinsically negative” and “immature”.
Even so, he said, de-baptisms may serve a cathartic function for some participants, as well as a political one.
“For a long time, non-religious people in the Bible Belt just kept quiet, but they aren’t keeping quiet anymore,” Zuckerman said. “I think that’s largely a reaction to George W. Bush’s presidency. [Atheists] were saying, ‘The government is being taken over by very religious people. We need to stand up and say: We’re here. We’re secular. Deal with it’.”
Upon reading this news earlier this week, I can’t help but wonder if Atheism is a philosophy or a religion. Because Atheism have been so overly hostile and bothered by christians lately that their so called philosophy is now turning into a religion itself, the very same “opium” they considered and despised. The rites they held is not just a mockery but a “belief” that such nonsense would rid of the participants of its baptismal identity as the Son of God. This kind of “belief” is an obvious category of a “religion”. Hmmmm isn’t it contradictory?
Anyway, I don’t normally pay attention to what Atheists say like what I do with Traditionalists Pricks. But debaptizing a person with a hairdrier is probably the most amusing thing I heard.
Baptism is not a rite, but therefore a spiritual sacrament which confirms the person of his identity not only as a Christian but also as a son or daughter of God. There is a Catholic doctrine which states that once you are baptized as a catholic, you are forever catholic. And any trasngression against your childhood faith would likely make you liable than what you think otherwise. The Identity of being a Christian and Catholic is so indelible that even if you change religion and get baptized in it, it would prove invalid in the eyes of God since you were first and foremost offerd to him as a Christian.
And having said, no amount of hairdrier, Microwave oven or even the heat of the sun would ever dry up the eternal water that runs through your soul when you were baptized as Christians.
bluepanjeet is journeying in the secular world, blogging about his traversals in and out of the blogosphere which are often times accompanied by the moral lessons of life's humor and irony, the integration of the human and the Divine, his search for his proper place in the greater scheme of things and his never ending flight towards his aspirations, yearnings and goals on the wings of his dreams.
using hairdrier to do ‘de-baptism’ is the most ridiculous thing i’ve ever heard! i don’t know if i will get mad or laugh at these people.. i feel sorry to them..
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What for? Why dramatize their unbelief? Why make a fuss about their atheism? These atheists who perform a de-baptism ceremony are simply nuts. Something is wrong in them, psychologically or even mentally.
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it’s funny but I shouldn’t laugh. Natawa lang ako sa mga pinaggagawa ng mga ito
.-= Mahalia´s last blog ..Faith Without Apology =-.
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Walang magawa tong mga “lost” na to. Titino din ang iba sa kanila dyan and will be transformed (as in Transforming the hairdresser) and will become rabid apologists and ultraconservatives hehe…
.-= dFish´s last blog ..Dengue… =-.
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ridiculous!!!!!!!!
how st*pid of them.. .
hahay………………..
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