I ran across this interesting little gem in my Bible reading recently. I was in Ephesians Chapter Two, and read an interesting commentary on verse 12.
Here is Ephesians 2:12 -- "That at that time ye were without Christ, being aliens from the commonwealth of Israel, and strangers from the covenants of promise, having no hope, and without God in the world:"
My Defender's Bible, with commentary by Henry Morris, says that in the Greek "without God" is "atheos." He goes on to say that it is the only occurrence of that word in the New Testament. That perked my ears up, because along with the "law of first mention" we should pay special attention to anything that stands alone or apart in the Bible. God put it there for a reason.
Obviously, and I checked this out in a secular dictionary, atheos is the root for our word today for atheist. The dictionary, however, fails to give the full meaning in its definition. Dictionaries will say that an atheist is someone who denies there is a God.
God, however, tells us in Ephesians that an atheist is someone who not only denies God, but who has no hope. By denying God and lacking the status of being a child of God through Christ, atheists not only must live their lives without God, but they must suffer the consequences of God denying them.
So, according to Ephesians 2:12, instead of saying an atheist is one who denies there is a God, it would be more proper to say an atheist is one who is denied by God. An atheist doesn't believe in God, and God does not believe in the atheist. He is a non-person to God.
It's not to say that the atheist can never recover from the terrible tragedy of being a non-person in God's eyes. With the atheist's repentance, and a turning of the heart toward Jesus, God will very willingly and gladly adopt him as one of his children.
Personally, I find the prospect of being denied by God to be pretty scary. I wouldn't want to live with that. Or, die with that, for that matter.
Dave
