List of converts to Christianity from nontheism
This is a list of notable converts to Christianity who were not theists before their conversion. See Nontheism for specifics of what encompasses nontheism. All names should be sourced and the source should indicate they had not been a theist, not merely non-churchgoing, before conversion.
See also List of former atheists and agnostics
Converted to Anglicanism or Episcopalianism
- Joy Davidman – Poet and wife of C. S. Lewis.[1]
- Tamsin Greig - British actress raised as an atheist then converted at 30.[2]
- Nicky Gumbel – Anglican priest known for the Alpha course, from atheism.[3]
- Peter Hitchens – Journalist who went from Trotskyism to Traditionalist conservatism, and estranged brother of late outspoken anti-theist and Vanity Fair writer Christopher Hitchens.[4][5]
- C. E. M. Joad – English philosopher whose arguing against Christianity, from an agnostic perspective, earned him criticism from T. S. Eliot.[6] He turned toward religion later, writing The Recovery of Belief a year before he died and returning to Christianity.[7]
- C. S. Lewis - Oxford professor and writer; well known for The Chronicles of Narnia series, and for his apologetic Mere Christianity.[8]
- Alister McGrath - Biochemist and Christian theologian. Founder of 'Scientific theology' and critic of Richard Dawkins in his book Dawkins' God: Genes, Memes, and the Meaning of Life[9]
- Enoch Powell – Conservative Party (UK) member who converted to Anglicanism.[10]
- Michael Reiss - a British bioethicist, educator, journalist, and Anglican priest. Agnostic/Secular upbringing.[11]
- Dame Cicely Saunders - Templeton Prize and Conrad N. Hilton Humanitarian Prize winning nurse known for palliative care. She converted to Christianity as a young woman.[12]
- Fay Weldon - British novelist and feminist.[13]
Converted to Catholicism
- Mortimer J. Adler – American philosopher, educator, and popular author. He converted to Catholicism, from agnosticism, after decades of interest in Thomism.[14][15]
- G. E. M. Anscombe – analytic philosopher, Thomist, literary executor for Ludwig Wittgenstein, and author of Modern Moral Philosophy. She converted to Catholicism as a result of her extensive reading.[16]
- Benedict Ashley – Raised humanist, and a former Communist, he became a noted theologian associated to "River Forest Thomism."[17][18]
- Maurice Baring – English author who converted in his thirties.[19]
- Mark Bauerlein – An English professor at Emory University and the author of 2008 book, The Dumbest Generation, which won at the Nautilus Book Awards.[20][21]
- Léon Bloy – French author who lead to several notable conversion and was himself a convert from agnosticism.[22][23]
- Paul Bourget – French author who became agnostic and positivist at 15, but returned to Catholicism at 35.[24]
- Avery Dulles – A Jesuit priest, theologian, and cardinal in the Catholic Church. He was raised Presbyterian, but was an agnostic before his conversion to Catholic Christianity.[25][26]
- Dawn Eden – Rock journalist of Jewish ethnicity who went from an agnostic to a Catholic writer, who was particularly concerned with the moral values of chastity.[27][28]
- Edward Feser – A Christian philosopher and author, wrote The Last Superstition: A Refutation of the New Atheism.[29][30]
- André Frossard - French journalist and essayist.[31][32]
- Maggie Gallagher – Conservative activist and a founder of the National Organization for Marriage.[33]
- Eugene D. Genovese – Historian who went from Stalinist to Catholicism.[34]
- Anna Haycraft - Raised in Auguste Comte's atheistic "church of humanity", but became a conservative Catholic in adulthood known as Alice Thomas Ellis.[35]
- Mary Karr - Author of The Liars' Club and a Guggenheim Fellow. She once described herself as an "undiluted agnostic", but converted to a self-acknowledged "Cafeteria Catholicism" that embraces Pro-Choice views amongst others.[36][37]
- Ignace Lepp - French psychiatrist whose parents were freethinkers and who joined the Communist party at age fifteen. He broke with the party in 1937 and eventually became a Catholic priest.[38]
- Arnold Lunn – A skier, mountaineer, and writer. As an agnostic he wrote Roman Converts, which took a critical view of Catholicism and the converts to it. He later converted to Catholicism due to debating with converts, and became an apologist for the faith, although he retained a few criticisms of the faith.[39]
- Gabriel Marcel – A leading Christian existentialist. His upbringing was agnostic.[40]
- Claude McKay – Bisexual Jamaican poet who went from Communist-leaning atheist to an active Catholic Christian after a stroke.[41][42]
- Vittorio Messori – An Italian journalist and writer called the "most translated Catholic writer in the world" by Sandro Magister. Before his conversion in 1964 he had a "perspective as a secularist and agnostic."[43][44][45]
- Malcolm Muggeridge – British journalist and author who went from agnosticism to the Catholic Church.[46][47]
- Bernard Nathanson - Medical doctor who was a founding member of NARAL, later becoming a Pro-Life proponent.[48]
- Fulton Oursler - A writer who was raised Baptist, but spent decades as an agnostic before converting. The Greatest Story Ever Told is based on one of his works.[49][50]
- Giovanni Papini – He went from pragmatic atheism to Catholicism, also a Fascist.[51]
- Joseph Pearce – An anti-Catholic and agnostic British National Front member who became a devoted Catholic writer with a series on EWTN.[52][53]
- Charles Péguy - French poet, essayist, and editor. He went from agnostic humanist to a pro-Republic Catholic.[54]
- Sally Read - Eric Gregory Award winning poet who converted to Catholicism.[55]
- E. F. Schumacher – Economic thinker known for Small Is Beautiful, his A Guide for the Perplexed criticizes what he termed "materialistic scientism." He went from atheism to Buddhism to Catholicism.[56][57]
- Peter Steele - Lead singer of Type O Negative.[58]
- Edith Stein - Phenomenologist philosopher who converted to Catholicism and became a Discalced Carmelite nun; declared a saint by John Paul II.[59]
- John Lawson Stoddard – Divinity student who became an agnostic and "Scientific humanist." Later he converted to Catholicism. His son Lothrop Stoddard remained agnostic and would be significant to Scientific racism.[60]
- R. J. Stove: Raised atheist, converted to Catholicism.[61]
- Allen Tate - American poet, essayist and social commentator, and Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress.[62]
- Sigrid Undset - Norwegian Nobel laureate who converted to Catholicism from agnosticism.[63]
- Evelyn Waugh – British novelist who converted to Catholicism from agnosticism.[64]
- John C. Wright - Science fiction author who went from atheist to Christian, specifically Catholic.[65] Chapter 1 of the book "Atheist to Catholic: 11 Stories of Conversion", edited by Rebecca Vitz Cherico, is by him.[66]
- Alexis Carrel - French surgeon and biologist who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1912.[67]
- Czesław Miłosz - poet, prose writer, translator and diplomat. He was awarded the Neustadt International Prize for Literature, and in 1980 the Nobel Prize in Literature.[68]
Converted to Eastern Orthodox Christianity
- Emir Kusturica - Film-maker, actor, and musician. Although of Muslim ancestry, his father was atheist.[69] He took the name "Nemanja" on conversion in 2005.[70]
- Seraphim Rose - Hieromonk and religious writer. In early adulthood he considered non-theist ideas of God and the Philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche that God is dead. He became Russian Orthodox in 1962.[71][72]
- Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn – Nobel Prize-winning dissident author who converted to Russian Orthodoxy.[73]
Converted to Protestantism
- Steve Beren - former member of the Socialist Workers Party (United States) who became a Christian conservative politician.[74]
- Kirk Cameron - Actor noted for his Role in Growing Pains.[75][76][77]
- Francis Collins - physician-geneticist, noted for his landmark discoveries of disease genes, and the director of the National Human Genome Research Institute (former atheist)[78]
- Bo Giertz - Swedish Confessional Lutheran Bishop, theologian, and writer.[79]
- Keir Hardie – Raised atheist and became a Christian Socialist.[80][81]
- Paul Jones – Musician, of Manfred Mann. Previously atheist and in 1967 he argued with Cliff Richard about religion on a TV show.[82][83]
- Kang Kek Iew (also known as Comrade Duch) - Cambodian director of Phnom Penh's infamous Tuol Sleng detention center[84]
- Akiane Kramarik (and family) - American poet and child prodigy raised as an atheist and converted to Christianity[85][86]
- Chai Ling, Chinese student leader of the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989. Converted to evangelical Christianity in 2009.[87][88]
- John Warwick Montgomery, Renowned Christian Apologist, Lutheran theologian, and barrister. As a philosophy major in college, he investigated the claims of Christianity "to preserve intellectual integrity" and converted.[89]
- William J. Murray - author and son of atheist activist Madalyn Murray O'Hair[90]
- Marvin Olasky - former Marxist turned Christian conservative, he edits the Christian World magazine.[91][92]
- George R. Price - Geneticist who became an Evangelical Christian and wrote about the New Testament. Later he moderated his evangelistic tendencies and switched from religious writing to working with the homeless.[93][94]
- Mira Sorvino - Academy Award winning actress who had been on Humanist lists.[95][96]
- Lee Strobel - former avowed atheist & Journalist for Chicago Tribune was converted by his own journalistic research intended to test the veracity of scriptural claims concerning Jesus. He is the author of such apologetic books as "The Case for Faith" "The Case for Christ" & numerous more.[97][98]
- Lacey Sturm - musician, former vocalist and lyricist for alternative metal band Flyleaf.[99]
- Jonny Lang - Blues and Rock singer who professed to once "hating" Christianity, before later claiming to have a supernatural encounter with Jesus Christ which led to his conversion.[100]
- Simon Greenleaf - one of the main founders of Harvard Law School, he first set out to disprove the biblical testimony concerning the resurrection of Jesus Christ. After he had written "The Principles of Legal Evidence", some of his students challenged him to take his book and apply it to the resurrection of Christ and investigate the reliability of the evidence of Jesus rising from the dead. He accepted the challenge and after his investigation he said, “There’ s no better documented historical evidence than that for the resurrection of Christ...I am convinced that you can convince any jury in England or America that Christ rose from the dead.” [101][102]
Converts to the Quaker faith
- Whittaker Chambers – Former Communist turned conservative writer.[103][104]
- Gerald Priestland – News correspondent who discusses having once been the "school atheist" in Something Understood: An Autobiography. He became a Quaker after an emotional breakdown.[105]
Unspecified or other
- Peter Baltes, former heavy metal musician, member of Accept.[106][107]
- Anders Borg - Sweden's Minister for Finance.[108]
- Julie Burchill – British journalist and feminist.[109]
- Jeffery Dahmer - Serial Killer and convict who was baptized by Churches of Christ minister Roy Ratcliff.[110]
- Bruce Cockburn - Canadian folk/rock guitarist and singer/songwriter. (former agnostic)[111]
- Karl Dallas - British music journalist, author and political activist.[112]
- Larry Darby – Former Holocaust denier and former member of the American Atheists.[113][114]
- Nina Karin Monsen - a Norwegian moral philosopher and author who grew up in a humanist family, but later convert to Christianity through philosophic thinking.[115]
- Rosalind Picard – Director of the Affective computing Research Group at the MIT Media Lab. She was raised atheist, but converted to Christianity in her teens.[116]
- Allan Sandage - a prolific Astronomer converted to Christianity later in his life stating that "I could not live a life full of cynicism. I chose to believe, and a peace of mind came over me."[117]
- A. N. Wilson – Biographer and novelist who entered the theological St Stephen's House, Oxford before proclaiming himself an atheist and writing against religion. He announced his return to Christianity in 2009.[118]
References
- ↑ San Francisco Chronicle: At 8, she read H. G. Wells' "The Outline of History" and pronounced herself an atheist.
- ↑ Interview with Tamsin Greig in The Guardian
- ↑ Interview at the Guardian
- ↑ Near Christianity: "Hitchens describes his tumultuous journey from atheist to Christian and the moral reasoning that caused his conversion," book description
- ↑ I couldn't paint golden angels by Albert Meltzer, pg 319
- ↑ The Return of Christian Humanism by Lee Oser, pg 46
- ↑ Humanist Heritage
- ↑ "Lewis lapsed into atheism in his teens but experienced a reconversion to Christianity in 1931." Lewis, C.S.. (2007). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 28 June 2007, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online
- ↑ biography on official website
- ↑ The Guardian's obituary of Powell
- ↑ The Guardian
- ↑ Article from the University of Wollongong
- ↑ The Guardian Quote: Even though she was raised an atheist, in the past three or four years she has been going to church. In her eighth decade, she has even submitted to being baptised.
- ↑ Grand Forks Herald
- ↑ Free Inquiry
- ↑ Voices Online Edition "Elizabeth voraciously read books concerning religious faith. ... She finally announced, at 15, that she wanted to become a Catholic."
- ↑ Obituary in the Chicago Tribune
- ↑ Profile in "The Core: The College Magazine of the University of Chicago": "I was gradually convinced by my own reflections that Aquinas had provided a better case for theism than Marx or Darwin had provided against it,"
- ↑ Crisis Magazine
- ↑ "My Failed Atheism" in "First Things"
- ↑ “Atheism to Catholicism: a faith journey” – Dr. Mark Bauerlein at Eastern Mennonite University
- ↑ Medieval Roles for Modern Times by Helen Solterer, pg 85
- ↑ Tim Stanley's blog at The Telegraph
- ↑ Career stories: Belle Epoque novels of professional development by Juliette M. Rogers, pg 55
- ↑ Obituary at the Guardian
- ↑ Newsweek obituary
- ↑ St. Petersburg Times
- ↑ MSNBC
- ↑ American Enterprise Institute
- ↑ Page for "The Last Superstition"
- ↑ Obituary at the Independent
- ↑ I have met Him: God exists by André Frossard "We were what could be called perfect atheists, the kind that no longer ever question their atheism." (not in link itself)
- ↑ "The making of gay marriage’s top foe" by Mark Oppenheimer; Salon: "I was an atheist from the youngest age. When I was 16, I became a Randian. Becoming a Catholic began as an intellectual thing."
- ↑ Interview in the National Review: FMG:You've mentioned that you now believe in God. How recent is that? Eugene Genovese: It's in the last two years. You know, in The Southern Front I still spoke as an atheist; one reviewer said that I protest too much. When the book came off the press and I had to reread it, I started wrestling with the problem philosophically, and I lost.
- ↑ Telegraph "She reacted strongly against her parents' beliefs and became a Catholic at 19, because she 'no longer found it possible to disbelieve in God.'" (pg 2)
- ↑ UC Berkeley article
- ↑ PBS
- ↑ Time Magazine from 19 July 1963 "Lepp has the credentials to explain the mind of the atheist: he was one himself for 27 years."
- ↑ Catholic Converts: British and American Intellectuals Turn to Rome by Patrick Allitt, pg 199-201
- ↑ Phenomenological approaches to moral philosophy By John J. Drummond, Lester E. Embree; pg 269
- ↑ A Fierce Hatred of Injustice By Winston James, Claude McKay: "Prior to his conversion to Catholicism in 1944, his atheism was one of the most powerful and enduring threads of continuity in his outlook on life."
- ↑ Claude McKay: rebel sojourner in the Harlem Renaissance : a biography, pgs 357-359
- ↑ "From Rome to the World: The Global Offensive of the Catholic Media" 20 August 2004
- ↑ Who's who in hell by Warren Allen Smith, pg 57
- ↑ First Things
- ↑ Malcolm Muggeridge: A Life by Ian Hunter
- ↑ Chicago Sun-Times obituary
- ↑ Nathanson, Bernand Aborting America (1981 Pinnacle Books)
- ↑ The Miami News - April 9, 1965: "His conversion to Catholicism ended 50 years of questioning doubt as an agnostic."
- ↑ Rome News-Tribune - May 29, 1952
- ↑ Cassell dictionary of Italian literature, pg 423: "Although a confirmed atheist in his youth, Papini experienced a religious conversion in later life..."
- ↑ Notre Dame Center for Ethics and Culture
- ↑ The American Spectator
- ↑ Political ecumenism: Catholics, Jews and Protestants in de Gaulle's Free ... by Geoffrey Adams, pg 85
- ↑ Australian Broadcasting Corporation
- ↑ Sustaining the earth by John Young, pgs 96-112
- ↑ New Scientist 26 July 1984. pg 38
- ↑ Decibel Magazine
- ↑ University of Chicago "made a spiritual journey from atheism to agnosticism before eventually converting to Catholicism"
- ↑ Race: the history of an idea in America by Thomas F. Gossett, pg 390
- ↑ The American Conservative
- ↑ "...he was an atheist arguing for religious values, a man writing an essay on religion 'in a spirit of irreligion.'... He would not convert to Catholicism for two decades, but his need for religious authority was acute even in 1930." Allen Tate: Orphan of the South, p. 167, biographer Thomas A. Underwood, Princeton University Press, 2000, ISBN 0-691-06950-6
- ↑ Norwegian Women's Writing 1850-1990 by Janet Garton, Page 125
- ↑ Six Modern British Novelists by George Stade, pgs 53-55
- ↑ Interview with John C. Wright at "Mostly Fiction": "For many years I had been an atheist, and a vehement, argumentative, proselytizing atheist at that. I saw no other possible option for belief for a logical thinker. My recent conversion to Christianity was a miracle, prompted by a supernatural revelation, which has satisfied my skepticism in this area, and saved my life."
- ↑ Amazon page for "Atheist to Catholic"
- ↑ Alexis Carrel, The Voyage to Lourdes (New York, Harper & Row, 1939).
- ↑ Haven, Cynthia L., "'A Sacred Vision': An Interview with Czesław Miłosz", in Haven, Cynthia L. (ed.), Czesław Miłosz: Conversations. University Press of Mississippi, 2006, p. 145.
- ↑ The Guardian
- ↑ Atlantic Times
- ↑ Nihilism by Eugene Rose from Columbia University
- ↑ Pomona College
- ↑ The Australian
- ↑ Seattle Times "In 1975, he threw off his atheism and became a Christian."
- ↑ Bashir, Martin (7 May 2007), "Does God Exist? The Nightline Faceoff", ABC News, retrieved 4 April 2009
- ↑ "Back of Book Segment". The O'Reilly Factor Flash. April 12, 2006. Retrieved December 8, 2008.
- ↑ Cameron, Kirk; Ray Comfort (2004). The Way of the Master. Tyndale House Publishers, Inc. p. Foreword. ISBN 1-4143-0061-1.
- ↑ "He converted from atheism to Christianity in his twenties after seeing how radically his patients' faith transformed their experience of suffering, and after reading several works by C. S. Lewis." The Question of God: Interview with Francis Collins, WGBH Educational Foundation, 2004 (Accessed 14 June 2007)
- ↑ [Bo Giertz, The Hammer of God,revised edition, XIII, Augsburg Fortress, Minneapolis, 2005.
- ↑ Men who made Labour: the PLP of 1906, pg 75
- ↑ Spartacus Schoolnet "Although raised as an atheist, Hardie was converted to Christianity in 1897."
- ↑ Stockport Express 17 May 2006
- ↑ Cotswold Journal 14 October 2010
- ↑ "The Killer and the Pastor" article from Time.com
- ↑ Beryhill, Mary. "Akiane Kramarik: Dream Child". Christianity Today. Retrieved 23 February 2013.
- ↑ Centi, Lori Rose. "Interview: Akiane speaks of heaven and paintings". Washington Post. Retrieved 23 February 2013.
- ↑ The Post and Courier
- ↑ USA Today
- ↑
- ↑ statement of William J. Murray
- ↑ Marxism and Me by Marvin Olasky: My communism was based on atheism, and when I could no longer be an atheist, I resigned from the party.
- ↑ Creators Syndicate Profile
- ↑ University of Bielefeld
- ↑ Chronicle of Higher Education article obituary (Copied by Gametheory.net) has the following "Because George was a fire-spitting atheist and Julia a devout Christian, their relationship was contentious from the beginning. After eight years, the marriage ended in acrimony." "On June 7 [1970] I gave in and admitted that God existed", he explained to friends.
- ↑ American Humanist's "Top Ten Sexiest Female Celebrity Atheists"
- ↑ Article by Mira Sorvino in "Guideposts", via Huffington Post, where she mentions her Christian faith
- ↑ Barry, JD (2009). "Investigative Bible Study: Lee Strobel on Engaging a Pluralistic World". Bible Study Magazine: 10–14.
- ↑ Lee Strobel Books and Ministry. Christnotes.org. Retrieved on 2011-11-14.
- ↑ Interview for Christianity Today: I was so outspoken about not believing in God. I had real problems with Christians.]
- ↑ "I knew it was Jesus immediately from the moment I started shaking. It was like he just came up and introduced himself to me. I remember him saying, “You don’t have to have this if you don’t want it.” And I said, “No, I want it.”"
- ↑ "Testimony of the Evangelists by Simon Greenleaf". law2.umkc.edu. Retrieved 2015-11-29.
- ↑ M. Maisel, John. "Jesus God". Meekness and Truth. Retrieved November 28, 2015.
- ↑ Heritage Foundation
- ↑ TruTV: "He had been an atheist and had been kicked out of Columbia University for writing a play considered blasphemous."
- ↑ Antiqbook
- ↑ TheTrueSeven. Peter Baltes of Accept Heavy metal band from Germany. Sep 23, 2011. Retrieved on October 13th, 2014.
- ↑ http://www.cbn.com/700club/features/amazing/Peter_Baltes082609.aspx
- ↑ Wall Street Journal
- ↑ The Guardian "I grew up, and stopped being an atheist, in my 20s, in the 1980s."
- ↑ "Dahmer found religion, played pranks in prison". The Beaver County Times. Associated Press. November 28, 1994. Retrieved 2013-12-05.
- ↑ "I was brought up as an agnostic... and when I first became a Christian in the Seventies I didn't really know what it was I'd adopted." Faith in Practice: Holding on to the Mystery of Love, by Bruce Cockburn as told to Cole Morton, Third Way, September 1994, page 15. (Accessed 13 June 2007)
- ↑ Becky Barnicoat, Weekender: Karl Dallas, writer, 82, The Guardian, 27 April 2013. Retrieved 2 July 2013
- ↑ Ohio Atheists
- ↑ Statement disavowing Atheism
- ↑ Norge IDAG - Monsen med bok om sin tro
- ↑ Interview at Inspire Magazine
- ↑ http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/science-obituaries/8150004/Allan-Sandage.html
- ↑ New Statesman
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