You could have had fun pointing out that Giuseppe Verdi was an atheist.
:evilgrin:
To students of Verdi, the Requiem is something of a paradox in his career, given that he was, if not an outright atheist, "certainly not much of a believer," according to a letter by his second wife, soprano Giuseppina Strepponi, as quoted in "Verdi: A Biography" by Mary Jane Phillips-Matz. Still, the composer insisted that his Mass be premiered in a church, and it was first heard in the Church of San Marco in Milan in 1874.
"I think it's pretty clear that he was an atheist," DeRenzi said. "But one has to remember that Verdi lived in a very religious time, and what he was doing was looking to move an audience. A lot of his operas have themes based on religion. For Verdi, what was important was how you behaved toward other people, how you functioned in society."Atheist Amen!
http://www.sptimes.com/News/012101/Floridian/In_memory_of_Giuseppe.shtml And...
No, you're not hypersensitive. I just came back from 2 weeks in South Carolina, where I felt like I was getting a Jesus Suppository at every turn.
I do have to admit that one "saying of grace" impressed me. It was at a neighbor's house. This is out in the boondocks, so I've known this guy my whole life.
He's a die-hard right-wing Republican and has always been racist. But in his "grace," he asked Divine Guidance (tm) for "our new president, who has such a hard job to do."
That's just about a miracle on the same level as that loaves-and-fishes thing.