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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 July 2009
It began with a lie. Perhaps not a big lie, at least I didn't think so at the time, but a lie nevertheless. My Vicar had taken me for an interview with our Bishop following my application, supported by him, to undergo ordination training. My Vicar had prepared me well except that he never warned me that I would be asked if I was sure that I had a vocation. I had to hazard a guess at what this question meant. I wanted to be a clergyman like the Vicar and I sensed that if I answered: “No”, to the bishop's question, I probably wouldn't be proceeding much further. So I said “Yes”, not really knowing what I was committing myself to. Later I worked out that the question was meant to reassure the bishop that I had had a word from God. At the end, many, many years later, when I admitted to myself that there really wasn't a god, it was the same question that rose up to meet me. By then I had to admit that I had never, ever had a word from God.
1 Fletcher, Joseph, ‘Humanist Ethics: The Groundwork’, ed. Storer, Morris B., Humanist Ethics: Dialogue on Basics, (Buffalo NY, Prometheus Books, 1980), p. 255.Google Scholar
2 Philosophy Now, Aug/Sept, 2004, p.16.