Question 1 of 10
How did you arrive at your current position on God and religion?
Not what you currently believe — how you got here.
Select up to 3 that fit best
Never really cared — it wasn't part of my world
The question of God just never felt pressing or relevant to your life
Reasoned my way here through evidence and logic
You studied, questioned, and followed the arguments to where they led
Direct experience with religion — and it broke something
Something you witnessed or endured changed how you see faith
Searched across traditions and ideas, still looking
You've explored widely but haven't found a framework that holds together
Saw what religion does to people and turned against it
The harm was too real, too widespread, and too systemic to ignore
Grew up in a faith tradition — still processing what that means
Whether you stayed, left, or drifted, the background shapes everything
Question 2 of 10
When you think about God or ultimate reality, what's your first honest response?
Not what you argue in debate. What you actually think when it's quiet.
Select up to 3 that fit best
The idea doesn't hold up under serious examination
You've looked at the arguments and found them wanting
I genuinely don't know — and I'm honest about that
You're holding the question open, not pretending it's settled
Something transcendent probably exists — but organised religion misses it
You sense there's more, but no tradition has captured it properly
I don't think about it much — the question just doesn't grip me
Not hostile, not searching — just not interested
The concept makes me angry or hostile — I've seen the damage
It's not just intellectual disagreement — there's real emotion behind it
I believe — even if questions remain
Your faith is real, even if it isn't always comfortable
Question 3 of 10
What would it take to change your mind?
What kind of evidence or argument would actually move you?
Select up to 3 that fit best
A logically airtight philosophical argument I can't refute
You need the reasoning to be watertight before you'll shift
Concrete scientific evidence — repeatable, peer-reviewed, testable
If it can't be measured and verified, you're not persuaded
Good answers to specific problems I've encountered
Not a general case — answers to the particular issues that trouble you
I follow evidence wherever it leads — I'm already open
You're not locked in — show you the best case and you'll evaluate it
A direct personal experience that felt undeniably real
Something beyond argument — an encounter that couldn't be explained away
Nothing would — my position is settled, for better or worse
Whether from conviction or exhaustion, you're done deliberating
Question 4 of 10
What's your biggest problem with religion?
The thing that makes you hesitate — or the thing that pushed you away.
Select up to 3 that fit best
The harm — violence, control, oppression, hypocrisy
You've seen religion do real damage, and that's hard to get past
Intellectual dishonesty — demanding belief without evidence
The reasoning doesn't hold up, and the refusal to admit it is the problem
Specific claims or practices in my own tradition
Not religion in general — particular things in the tradition you know best
Not much, honestly — it's just not relevant to my life
No big grudge, no dramatic break — religion simply isn't your concern
It contradicts what science has established about reality
The claims don't survive contact with what we actually know about the world
Not God — the institutions and traditions built around God
You don't object to the divine — you object to what humans did with it
Question 5 of 10
What do you find most convincing about your current position?
The thing that holds your view together — the reason you haven't moved.
Select up to 3 that fit best
Science explains reality without needing God
Physics, biology, cosmology — the picture is complete without a deity
Religion's specific claims don't withstand scrutiny
The arguments for God fail when examined carefully and honestly
Ethics and meaning work perfectly well without God
You don't need religion to be good, to find purpose, or to live well
Certain problems haven't been answered honestly
Specific issues — historical, ethical, textual — remain unresolved
The question is genuinely open — strong arguments exist on both sides
Neither side has closed the case, and intellectual honesty requires admitting that
Something deeper than argument — a sense that God is real
Not blind faith — but something reason alone doesn't fully capture
Question 6 of 10
What is your current relationship with faith?
Where you actually stand — not where anyone expects you to stand.
Select up to 3 that fit best
Practising and committed — my faith is the foundation of my life
You believe, you practise, and you want to go deeper
I believe in something beyond the material — but not any organised religion
Spiritual but not religious, or religious in your own way
I used to believe — sincerely — but no longer
Something broke, and you haven't been able to put it back together
Never religious — I've always been secular
Faith was never part of your identity or worldview
Muslim, but struggling with serious doubts I can't resolve
You haven't left — but specific questions are getting harder to ignore
Religion just isn't part of my identity — it's a non-issue
Not hostile, not searching — it's simply not on your radar
Question 7 of 10
When someone you care about expresses doubt about God, your instinct is to...
The first thing you feel — not the thing you think you should feel.
Select up to 3 that fit best
I relate — I've been there, or I'm there now
Their doubt mirrors something you recognise in yourself
I want to help them find what I've found
You have something real, and you wish they could see it too
I encourage them to think it through for themselves
Doubt is healthy — the important thing is independent inquiry
Not my business — everyone works this out on their own
You respect their autonomy and don't feel compelled to intervene
I suggest they examine the evidence carefully
The answer is in the data — they should look at it seriously
It concerns me deeply — doubt can lead somewhere dangerous
You take it seriously because you know what's at stake
Question 8 of 10
Which comes closest to why you're taking this quiz?
The honest version — not the version that sounds best.
Select up to 3 that fit best
I'm wrestling with real questions about faith
Something is unresolved and you're looking for clarity
I want to equip myself — strengthen or deepen what I believe
Your faith is real, but you want it to be more articulate
Intellectual challenge — I want to stress-test ideas
You enjoy rigorous thinking and want to see the strongest case
Curiosity — not urgent, just interested
Low stakes — you're browsing, not searching
Processing my own departure from religion
You left, or you're leaving, and you're still working through it
Searching — I haven't found the right framework yet
You know something is out there, but nothing has clicked
Question 9 of 10
Complete this sentence: "The strongest version of the case for God is..."
Even if you disagree — what's the best the other side has?
Select up to 3 that fit best
...hasn't been made yet — I'm still waiting to hear it
Nothing you've encountered has been strong enough to take seriously
...irrelevant — even if God exists, it changes nothing practical
The question is academic — your life doesn't depend on the answer
...already convincing — I believe for reasons I can defend
You've examined the evidence and it points where you stand
...impossible — the concept of God is incoherent
It's not that the arguments fail — the idea itself doesn't make sense
...worth serious engagement — the evidence deserves honest examination
You may disagree, but the case isn't trivial
...felt rather than argued — something reason alone can't fully reach
The strongest evidence is experiential, not philosophical
Question 10 of 10
What is your biggest unresolved question?
The one that keeps coming back — the one you haven't settled.
Select up to 3 that fit best
Can I trust what I was taught — or what I walked away from?
Your past shapes the question, and you're not sure which direction to revise
Is there evidence strong enough to justify believing in God?
The epistemological question — what counts as sufficient grounds for belief
Why is there something rather than nothing?
The deepest metaphysical question — existence itself needs explaining
How do I reconcile specific problems in my tradition?
Not God in general — particular issues in the faith you know
Can consciousness and fine-tuning be explained without God?
The scientific frontier — where the natural explanation seems to run out
How do I live most faithfully with what I actually believe?
Not what's true — how to live with integrity given what you hold