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
I grew up without religion and never found a reason to seek it
It was never really part of my life
I studied and reasoned my way here
Reading, arguing, following evidence
I left a religion I once genuinely believed in
The departure was deliberate and often painful
I've always sensed something is there — but no tradition has described it right
Searching across different paths
I had religion imposed on me and I rejected it
The departure was partly about harm and partly about truth
I was raised religious but drifted away gradually
Not a dramatic break — more like a slow fade
I'm here because someone I care about is questioning
Not my own doubt — I want to understand theirs
Question 2 of 10
When you think about God or ultimate reality, what's your first response?
Give the immediate answer, not the polished one.
Select up to 3 that fit best
The concept seems philosophically incoherent
Self-contradictory properties, necessary existence problems
Probably doesn't exist — but I hold it lightly
Uncertain, not committed either way
Something made the universe — but not the God of any religion
Creator yes, personal intervening God no
The question just doesn't feel urgent or relevant
Life is full enough without engaging it
Religion has caused too much harm to take God seriously
The harm is itself evidence against a good God
I feel something genuinely real — just not what any tradition describes
Sacred presence, not institutional doctrine
I believe — but I want better reasons than 'because I was raised this way'
Faith is there, but it needs stronger foundations
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 valid argument with demonstrably true premises
The philosophical case, made rigorously
Reproducible empirical evidence
Something testable, observable, not just argued
An honest answer to the problem of suffering
Why a good God would permit this specific scale of pain
I'm genuinely open — I just haven't encountered enough yet
Uncertain, following where evidence leads
A tradition that matched what I already sense about the sacred
Recognition rather than argument
Very little — I'm fairly settled in my position
The case has been made and I've examined it
Seeing that the tradition produces genuinely good people
Not arguments — character. Show me lives transformed.
Question 4 of 10
What drove you away from — or kept you from — religion?
The specific thing that made or confirmed the distance.
Select up to 3 that fit best
The harm it causes — violence, oppression, control
The track record of religious institutions
The intellectual dishonesty — the refusal to allow questioning
Closing down inquiry rather than welcoming it
Specific things my tradition required me to believe or do
Particular doctrines, history, or practices I couldn't reconcile
Nothing dramatic — it just never grabbed me
Gradual irrelevance rather than active rejection
I found my values and meaning without needing religion
Humanism, science, or ethics filled the space
I've been in and out of traditions — still searching
Each gave something; none gave everything
Nothing drove me away — I'm a believer exploring
Not doubting, just curious about the landscape
Question 5 of 10
What do you find most convincing about your current position?
The strongest thing you'd say if pressed to defend where you stand.
Select up to 3 that fit best
The physical universe is all there is — consciousness is what brains do
Materialism is the only coherent ontology
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence — and there is none
The evidential burden hasn't been met
Human beings create meaning and ethics without needing God
Flourishing is possible — and actual — without divine grounding
The specific contradictions and historical problems with religious texts
The particular claims don't hold up to scrutiny
The universe is too vast and indifferent for a personal caring God
The scale doesn't match the description
Inner experience points to something real — just not any one tradition's version
The sacred feels genuine; the labels don't fit
The moral case — religion has done more harm than good in the world
Not a philosophical position — a historical observation
Question 6 of 10
What is your current relationship with faith?
Where you actually are — not where others think you should be.
Select up to 3 that fit best
I believe in God and I practice Islam
My faith is intact — I'm here to understand the arguments better
I believe something is there — but I don't practice
A sense of the transcendent without commitment to a tradition
I used to believe but I no longer do
The faith ended — through a process or a specific moment
I've never had a religious belief
It was never part of my life in any meaningful way
I'm a committed Muslim — I took this quiz out of curiosity
Not doubting, just exploring
I'm between — I want to believe but I can't yet
The heart wants to, but the mind won't let it
I practice outwardly but I'm empty inside
Going through the motions without conviction
Question 7 of 10
When someone you care about expresses doubt about God, your instinct is to...
The honest reaction — not the ideal one.
Select up to 3 that fit best
Agree — I share many of the same doubts
Their questions are my questions too
Listen and try to understand what they're going through
Their experience matters more than winning an argument
Engage — I want to share what I've found convincing
Not to argue, but because I think the evidence is strong
Feel uncomfortable — doubt feels like something to be careful around
I worry about where it leads
Not feel much — it's their journey, not mine
People have to work these things out for themselves
Feel grateful someone is being honest for once
Most people never say what they really think
Want to point them to good resources rather than argue
I don't have all the answers, but I know where they are
Question 8 of 10
Which comes closest to why you're taking this quiz?
No wrong answers. Just the honest one.
Select up to 3 that fit best
I'm questioning my beliefs and looking for answers
Something is shaking and I want to examine it
I want to understand how the other side thinks
Not doubting — just curious about the arguments
I want better arguments for conversations I'm already having
People around me have questions and I want to help
Someone shared this with me and I'm just exploring
Curious, no strong agenda
I want to see if the case for God actually holds up
Genuinely open to being surprised
I left religion and want to see if the arguments have improved
Giving it one more honest look
I'm a believer but some specific objections really trouble me
Not leaving — but I need answers to specific things
Question 9 of 10
Complete this sentence: "The strongest version of the case for God is..."
Your honest assessment — not what you think you should say.
Select up to 3 that fit best
Something I haven't encountered yet
Most arguments I've heard have been weak
Probably out there, but I haven't looked seriously
Haven't invested the time
Something I already find convincing — I want to see it articulated well
I believe, and I want the best version of why
Impossible — the concept is fundamentally flawed
No argument can save an incoherent idea
Worth examining, even though I'm skeptical
Open to being surprised
The moral argument — without God, nothing is truly wrong
Ethics needs a foundation that materialism can't provide
The personal experience of millions — not proof, but not nothing
Too many people across too many cultures to dismiss
Question 10 of 10
What is your biggest unresolved question?
The one that keeps coming back — even when you think you've settled it.
Select up to 3 that fit best
Why does suffering exist if God is good and powerful?
The problem of evil — the oldest and hardest question
How can we know anything about God with certainty?
The epistemology problem — is faith rational or a leap?
Why would God care about human beings at all?
In an infinite universe, why would the Creator notice us?
Are the specific claims of Islam actually true — historically, textually?
Not God in general — Islam specifically
Can religion survive what science has shown us about the universe?
Evolution, neuroscience, cosmology — is there room left?
How do I reconcile faith with the harm done in its name?
The moral weight of religious history
I don't have an unresolved question — I'm here to understand others' questions
My own position feels settled