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I Don’t Believe in God

Posted by Sam Aureli | Feb 23, 2026 | Poetry | 2 |

I Don’t Believe in God

There—I finally said it.
The words left my mouth like startled birds,
a thousand wings battering the rafters.
Since I was nine, I’ve been polishing pews,
scrubbing the scent of old prayers from wood and wax.
Knees on the floor, I mouthed other people’s miracles,
waiting for one to fall in my lap.
Once, lightning split the oak behind the church.
I thought that was an answer.
Once, a car missed me by inches.
I thought that was an answer.
Now I wonder if answers just have good timing.
There’s a strange quiet in unbelief,
a silence that hums like an unplugged organ.
I want to call it peace, but maybe it’s only the air
filling the place where certainty used to live.
Sometimes at night my hands find each other
without meaning to. Sometimes I still listen
for the Voice I said isn’t there.
Maybe faith is just a bruise you keep pressing
to see if it still hurts, to see if you’re still tender.
And here I am, still pressing.

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About The Author

Sam Aureli

Sam Aureli

Sam Aureli is a design and construction professional, originally from Italy, now calling the Boston area home. A first-generation college graduate, he’s spent decades immersed in concrete and steel. Poetry is what truly feeds his soul these days. With retirement still some time away, Sam balances the grind of his day job with the refuge he finds in writing. His work has appeared in Ragaire Literary Magazine, The Berlin Review, Chestnut Review, and other literary journals. Sam was also the Grand Prize Winner in The October Project’s 2025 Poetry Contest, a Merit Award winner in The Atlanta Review 2025 International Poetry Competition, and a finalist in the Good Life Poetry HoneyBee Prize.

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2 Comments

  1. Lorraine coscia Ackerman
    Lorraine coscia Ackerman on February 25, 2026 at 8:37 pm

    I was born into an Italian catholic family and grew up in Brooklyn.ny long ago now. The church saved me and damaged me too. Your poem deeply touches my own hesitation about the one we name God as if anyone truly knows what we are talking about. Much of what we have been taught about god has more to do with our teachers than about the nameless mystery called life. Thank you much!

    Reply
    • Sam Aureli
      Sam Aureli on February 28, 2026 at 3:07 am

      Thank you so much for sharing your story with me. I’m moved that the poem resonated with your own journey. I grew up in the church as well, my father was both a missionary and a pastor, so faith shaped the landscape of my childhood. For a long time, I never questioned it. I didn’t know how to walk alongside doubt; I was told to believe, and so I did. Over time, though, my understanding shifted. These days, I see God less as something clearly defined and more as the same nameless mystery you describe, something far beyond our language, our doctrines, or our certainty. Thank you for reading, and for responding with such honesty. I truly appreciate your presence and your reflection.

      Reply

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The Braided Way is a framework to see every faith tradition as a strand, braided into a larger whole of spiritual awareness. In the Braided Way, combining spiritual practice from various faiths allow us to explore sacred experience and wonder in forms that resonate with our personal spiritual needs and sacred intuitions. In today’s culture, many people shun religious dogma, but yearn for spiritual connection. The Braided Way allows the ceremonies and practices of multiple faiths to be available without the confinements of cultural dogma.

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