Could I ring loud church bells in my church of atheism?

church_of_atheism

New member
Joined
Feb 21, 2009
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
Points
1
I've recently been told that the Eau Claire Police department will not investigate noise violations of Church's and their bells and I don't have the money to sue the city for aiding and abetting noise ordinance violations.

So.........Can i get a set of giant bells and ring them on Tuesdays? That's when we have our gatherings. Should be legal for me too, right?

I'm an incorporated non-stock tax exempt church in the state of wisconsin
But I feel like church bells are too last-few-hundred-years-ago. I want to just honk my car horn for a while.
 
No you can't..... The Atheist holiday is not until April 1st

The Bible says "The fool hath said in his heart there is no God".
 
honey ring them loud and long if that is your path. It will only mean something to those that are inclined to go that way.
 
just curious...what does the church of atheism teach or preach? im just curious, its not intended to be ironic or sarcastic...im not a religious fanatic...
 
I've always loved the sound of Church bells when they are rung well. I live in the city where change ringing was invented in the 16th century, and of a summer evening the sound of church bells ringing out from every belltower all across the town is quite magical.

If you can ring that well, then I see no reason why you shouldn't be allowed to do so. But ringing is not easy, and installing a tuned change of bells in your tower is not cheap.
 
I've always loved the sound of Church bells when they are rung well. I live in the city where change ringing was invented in the 16th century, and of a summer evening the sound of church bells ringing out from every belltower all across the town is quite magical.

If you can ring that well, then I see no reason why you shouldn't be allowed to do so. But ringing is not easy, and installing a tuned change of bells in your tower is not cheap.
 
I've always loved the sound of Church bells when they are rung well. I live in the city where change ringing was invented in the 16th century, and of a summer evening the sound of church bells ringing out from every belltower all across the town is quite magical.

If you can ring that well, then I see no reason why you shouldn't be allowed to do so. But ringing is not easy, and installing a tuned change of bells in your tower is not cheap.
 
Back
Top