Does a word exist for a person who has lost faith?
I am looking for a single word that represents a person who lost faith, e.g. in religion, humanity, himself. The more general, the better.
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Sign up to join this communityDoes a word exist for a person who has lost faith?
I am looking for a single word that represents a person who lost faith, e.g. in religion, humanity, himself. The more general, the better.
if by losing faith you mean the person does not believe anymore, then the word that comes to mind is 'apostate' - someone who renounces/abandons his a religious or political belief or principle.
It depends to a fair degree on the context.
One who has lost faith might be disillusioned: freed from or deprived of illusion, belief, idealism, thus realizing that a belief or an ideal is false; or disenchanted (freed from illusion or false belief). Certainly one would expect an initial disappointment or discouragement by the loss of one's hope in someone or something that one discovers to be less good than one had believed.
I'm not religious. I was as a child, and like lots of people... [I] became very disillusioned with the whole thing. - Natascha McElhone
If not saddened, one can be disabused of a falsehood or misconception, or even enlightened (factually well-informed, tolerant of alternative opinions, and guided by rational thought.)
In less enlightened times, the best way to impress women was to own a hot car. But women wised up and realized it was better to buy their own hot cars so they wouldn't have to ride around with jerks.
- Scott Adams
There isn't a common word for it, so it rather depends on what spin you want to put on it. Recovered X is used by some former believers in the sceptic movement to describe themselves while former X is rather more neutral but doesn't necessarily have the connotation of lost faith you're looking for. Disillusioned X or disenchanted X carry a connotation of a particular manner of leaving the faith and perhaps lingering doubt. Lapsed tends to refer to people who continue to partake in the wider culture of a religion but don't regularly attend or have strong beliefs. Apostate could be used but it's a relatively uncommon term and carries quite a bit of baggage.
Christians might refer to themselves as having a "crisis of faith" during periods of doubt.
"Ex-believer" might be the most neutral word for it, without too much emotional baggage. And it does not apply exclusively to religion too, or spirituality.
It can largely depend on what you are losing faith in. Some religious movements (not mentioning names) have very prescriptive belief systems and to leave, in disbelief, is a sudden, sharp and radical turn. Words like 'apostate' etc, come to mind.
In the Anglican communion you can be anything from a fervent evangelical to someone who professes disbelief in an actual God (there are clergy who will say this). You can accept gay marriage, or (like many of the African clergy) regard homosexuality as a sin. The Church of England is perhaps as much about a state of outlook, and of mind, as it is about belief in deity. It is founded on compromise (the Elizabethan settlement), which idea lies somewhere near the centre of where it stands today.
In such circumstances 'apostate' is inappropriate. But a word often used is lapsed; which has less of a ring of permanence about it. After all today is only Monday, and you may have changed your mind by Saturday!
faithless = you had faith, you lost faith
disillusioned = you followed the illusion of a god, you no longer believe in the illusion of a god unfaithful = you were a faithful follower of a god, now you are no longer
It isn't fancy but the answer is in your question. The common usage is "lost".
Example: Person A: "Tom looks really down." Person B: "Well I think he is really questioning his faith in Catholicism. He is lost."
Also a lot of churches use this word, hence lost souls.
...For the Son of Man came to seek and to save the lost.
, implying that there live people amongst us who are lost. +1 to the OP.
Mar 11, 2014 at 11:55
Despondent, disillusioned, and bitter all come to mind
It depends on your definition of “faith” and what spin you want to put on it. If your definition of faith, like mine, is simply “belief without empirical evidence”, then a person who has “lost their faith” has merely become a metaphysical naturalist, which lacks the pejorative connotations of some of the other answers.
Heathen can be used for someone who doesn't belong to any faith, so if the said person hasn't converted to another faith, they could be considered a heathen.
The dictionary definition of a heathen is
An unconverted individual of a people that do not acknowledge the God of the Bible;
If a person has lost their faith, then they have, in effect, become a heathen.
Due to a certain game, I've come across this beautiful word: crestfallen which I believe fits quite nicely.
crest·fall·en adj.
A 'cynic'. Such a person is no longer accepting what is told (by the religion, about humanity, about themselves).
Enlightened? Embiggened? It could be argued that losing one's faith is liberating. Atheist and agnostic describe more what you are not, rather than what you are.
A person who has lost faith is an unbeliever.
The term also covers people who never had faith in the first place.
Renouncer or renunciate can be used to describe just those who had faith in the first place, but have set it aside.
The word 'despair' comes to mind as when a person loses faith in anything in which he/she once possessed, especially in a loved one, in oneself or more importantly in a Heavenly Father to believe in, that emotion most often takes hold. There are many people in the world who believe they are above such things as faith, but they sure sing a different tune when pain and fear enter the picture. Such is the analogy that there are no atheists in foxholes. Sooner or later we all find ourselves in a foxhole of sorts. Food for thought.
I’d like to add “backslider” to the mix.
Backsliding, also known as falling away, is a term used within Christianity to describe a process by which an individual who has converted to Christianity reverts to pre-conversion habits and/or lapses or falls into sin, when a person turns from God to pursue their own desire.
Source: Rice, John (1943). Backslider via Wikipedia
Obviously this would only apply to people who had first converted and then fallen out of religious faith, but it seems close enough to warrant a mention.