I think all churches are a social thing to varying degrees.
That's not saying much. Pretty much all human interactions can be considered "social" in one way or another.
Not to belabor the point, but maybe I'm not getting through and I need to spell it out:
A couple earlier posts seemed to be talking about how atheists were creating some kind of mock religious services, perhaps implying that atheists had some kind of innate human need to engage in some kind of "worship" at some kind of "church services." Or something along that line. (Frankly, I don't even know what point those earlier posts were trying to make.)
So just to clarify, I pointed out that the UUs provided a sort of "atheist church" outlet for decades, and to my knowledge the larger atheist community never had any interest. Meantime if SA is currently gaining some traction, I think that's happening more on a regional basis reflecting social isolation of atheists rather than some innate human need to "worship" at an "atheist church."
SA is very clear that there's no religious orientation to anything they do. The first three items of the SA Charter are:
The Sunday Assembly:
1. Is 100% celebration of life. We are born from nothing and go to nothing. Let’s enjoy it together.
2. Has no doctrine. We have no set texts so we can make use of wisdom from all sources.
3. Has no deity. We don’t do supernatural but we also won’t tell you you’re wrong if you do.
So I'm making a distinction. I think the "atheist church" label is a misnomer, and I've never seen where atheists have any kind of innate need for "worship" or "church services." Atheists just want to socialize, like all humans. As I understand it, SA's real function is about socializing.
Now if religious people want to compare *their* church services to SA meetings and say that *their* religious services are really just for socializing and aren't any more spiritual than what the SAs do, then that's fine with me. I don't really care how religious people spin their services. I don't give a shit what happens in religious church services. Religious people can do whatever they like in church. As long as they don't try to impose any deity-oriented beliefs, doctrines, and laws on me.
