A Zen monastery, a Reconstructionist Jewish wedding, a Quaker* meeting.
*Not all Quakers, of course, some are overtly Christian, but it’s worth noting that the whole thing works just as well for just about any level of belief-in-god.
I mean “atheist” is just “without god” and all the things Ben mentioned are in fact without god as far as I know, and I can specifically confirm the case that western Zen practice is atheistic. But I’m guessing you’re trying to say something more like “aspiritual” or “without spirituality”.
“Spiritual but not religious” is a separate category from “Atheist”, to the government and to the people who identify as it. Glossing atheist as “without god” is a literal translation, not a true one.
A Zen monastery, a Reconstructionist Jewish wedding, a Quaker* meeting.
*Not all Quakers, of course, some are overtly Christian, but it’s worth noting that the whole thing works just as well for just about any level of belief-in-god.
I wouldn’t term those atheist.
I mean “atheist” is just “without god” and all the things Ben mentioned are in fact without god as far as I know, and I can specifically confirm the case that western Zen practice is atheistic. But I’m guessing you’re trying to say something more like “aspiritual” or “without spirituality”.
“Spiritual but not religious” is a separate category from “Atheist”, to the government and to the people who identify as it. Glossing atheist as “without god” is a literal translation, not a true one.