For those who donât know, Alyssa Grenfell is a popular Youtuber whoâs famous for her story of leaving the Mormon church. Much of her content is focused on critiquing LDS beliefs and practices, but occasionally she talks about how her worldview has changed and why sheâs an atheist. I recommend you check out her channel. I think youâll find her videos interesting, especially if youâre also an ex Mormon.
Today though I wanted to address her reasons for being an atheist, since these are arguments I often see levied against Christians in atheist vs theist discussions. I’ll outline them below:
- âMost people are the religion of their parents.â
This is one of the most popular arguments against Christianity, and religion in general. Basically the idea is that all or most religious people only believe what they do because their parents taught it to them, and not for intellectually pure reasons. But there are two problems with this position.
First of all, even if it was true that the majority of religious people are only believers because of their parents’ upbringing, that wouldnât prove their religion false. In Alyssaâs case sheâs raising her children in a secular household, but if they grew up to be atheist because of their upbringing that wouldnât prove atheism false. For another example, there are plenty of people out there who canât defend their belief in the theory of evolution. They only believe it because it’s what they were taught in schools, but it would be absurd to say thatâs proof that evolution is false. Itâs actually a subtle form of ad hominem: Ad hominem circumstantial, where you attack the personal circumstances of someone making an argument rather than directly addressing the argument itself.
For a Christian, you need to prove that Jesus didnât rise from the dead to show why their religion is false. Simply saying, âYou believe it because your parents taught youâ isnât an argument.
Second, the idea that if one religion were true everyone would convert to it ignores factors like cultural conditioning, personal biases, and free will. In Christianityâs case, the fact that everyone has not converted to it doesnât prove that it isnât true or even isnât obviously true. Many people simply havenât had the opportunity to hear the Gospel, in which case God will judge them fairly based on the limited knowledge they have. Or they donât believe simply because they donât want to. Of course Iâm not saying people CANâT have good reasons for not believing, but I would argue that Christianityâs truth is evident enough to those with an open mind. Particularly since every secular explanation for the resurrection of Jesus Christ falls apart on closer inspection. (Although thatâs a post for another time.)
But more than that, I can flip this argument around: If there obviously was no God and religion was obviously nonsense, why does 80 percent of the human population believe?
- âIf God is good, why is there evil in the world?â
Alyssa doesnât use this exact phrasing, but her argument stems from this line of thinking. She uses the example of God supposedly saving a baby from dying while other babies die in poverty as proof that if there was a God, heâd be a horrible person.
To be fair, this is something a lot of believers wrestle with as well. The problem of evil has been a struggle for many people across many religions, and the unfairness of life is even addressed in Scripture (Psalm 73.) I donât think youâll find any serious Christian who denies this reality and hasnât struggled with it. So I want to approach this topic with extra sensitivity.
That being said, this too can be countered by another question, one that C.S. Lewis articulates perfectly:

If there is no God, no transcendent value to anything, and what we call âgoodâ or âevilâ is just a chemical reaction in our brains shaped by millions of years of randomized, chaotic evolutionâŠwhat real difference is there between a baby being saved and it dying? Someone asserting that the suffering we see in this world is consistent with a perfectly good God existing is no less objectively correct than Alyssaâs claim that it isn’t.
But even then, if Christianity is true, then death isnât the end. We donât âdieâ, per se, we just change locations. So even the baby who dies in poverty will experience the same eternal rest and consolation of the baby whose life was saved. Again I know this is a very sensitive topic and I donât want to minimize the suffering of anyone whoâs lost a child, but Iâd ask that whoever poses this question at least seriously look at it through a theistic lens before dismissing religion as nonsense because of it.
- âThere is no evidence for God.â
This is probably the most common argument youâll hear from atheists. If you are a theist debating an atheist, nine times out of ten youâll hear them say God doesnât exist because thereâs no evidence for it.
I donât want to sound rude, but this is just a lazy assertion. The reason I say this is because whenever the point is made that thereâs no evidence for Godâs existence, thereâs never a clear criteria given for what would qualify as evidence that God exists. Some people like CS Lewis converted because of the argument from morality. Others like Lee Strobel converted when they examined the historical evidence for Christsâ resurrection. Still others convert when they see the vast order and complexity of the universe, convinced that thereâs a creative mind behind it. These people have a clear idea of what constitutes evidence that God exists, but if the atheist presenting this question canât provide that, then thereâs no discussion to be had.
Alyssa then argues that when her believer friends talk about miracles happening in their lives, thereâs always a more logical explanation than God or the supernatural. Iâm not sure what miraculous stories sheâs heard, but from what Iâve seen, stage 4 cancer being healed after prayer, convincing even the secular doctor taking care of the patient that something supernatural is going on isnât something that can be explained in a lot of other ways.Â
Conclusion
I donât mean any offense to Alyssa in writing this post. Like I said I recommend you check out her channel, including her Youtube short that I linked above. The reason Iâm responding to her arguments for atheism is because these are some of the most common arguments I hear atheists make, and I thought it was an easy opportunity for me to give my rebuttal to them.
I hope you enjoyed reading, and if youâre an atheist, that this post at least gave you something to think about.