VERITAS
Does God
Exist?
By Craig Branch
July 2007
Atheism: from the Greek a (without) and theos (deity or God). It is a word commonly understood as meaning
a denial of the existence of gods. The most fundamental question
of religion, of spiritual experience, and of philosophy is:
Is there a God? And if there is a God, what difference does
it make? And can I know this God personally? Can I know the
answers to these kinds of questions?
The
Bible affirms the existence of God. It also affirms—and
historical observation tends to confirm it—that human
beings have an innate and universal knowledge of God. The
Old and New Testaments assume man’s natural, normal
state includes the knowledge of God and thus atheism is abnormal.
As Paul wrote,
For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all
ungodliness and unrighteousness of men who suppress the truth
in unrighteousness, because that which is known about God
is evident within them; for God made it evident to them.
For since the creation of the world His invisible attributes,
His eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly seen,
being understood through what has been made, so that they
are without excuse. (Rom. 1:18-20)
But
despite these clear biblical teachings, there are people
in the world who claim
differently.
They claim that they
do not believe in God and that God’s existence is not
as evident as Scripture says it is.
ATHEISM AND ITS VARIETIES
The
Bible reveals that because of his sinful nature, man tends
to suppress his
knowledge
of God in varying degrees.
Because of the abnormality of atheism, man tends to invent
or create artificial gods that are more to his liking than
the true God—gods he can manipulate for his own interests—and
this explains the origin of false religions and cults (cf.
Rom. 1:18-25; Deut. 13:1-4). God’s Word tells us
that this rebellion can go so far as to deny the existence
of
God altogether. God calls such rebels “fools” (Ps.
53:1; 14:1). But the word “fools” does not
mean “dumb.” In
Scripture, the fool is one who lacks wisdom, mocks guilt,
is quarrelsome, and is morally licentious (Ps. 10:4). (1)
Closely
related to atheism is agnosticism. Agnostics claim to be
unable or unwilling
to accept either dogmatic atheism
or dogmatic religious claims. They claim to suspend belief
on the question of God’s existence. However, even though
agnostics may say that they do not positively deny the existence
of God, they live as though God doesn’t exist. They
are, in effect, practical atheists.
It
is helpful to differentiate atheism into three classifications.
First, there is philosophical
atheism which rejects belief
in a personal God. But, one could be an atheist of this sort
and still hold to the existence of an impersonal “god” or
force or energy that is characterized as divine in some sense
as in pantheism or panentheism (e.g., Buddhism and New Age).
Second,
there is dogmatic atheism which is the absolute denial
of any god whatsoever
(which
is what most people understand
when they hear the term “atheism”). And third,
there is practical atheism in which, like the agnostic
mentioned above, one does not explicitly deny the existence
of God,
but lives his life as if there is no god.
THE GROWTH
OF ATHEISM IN OUR CULTURE
The
philosophical foundations of atheism in the West can be
found in the development
of 19th century Darwinian evolution
and the philosophical writings of David Hume, Immanuel Kant,
Ludwig Feuerbach, Karl Marx, Arthur Schopenhauer, and Fredrick
Nietzsche. In the 20th century, there have been influential
atheistic thinkers who were Marxists, existentialists, Freudians,
and logical positivists—all of which espouse an atheistic
outlook.
Studies
have shown that in some countries which have a long tradition
of religion
and morality,
respondents to even anonymous
surveys are reluctant to identify themselves as atheists
apparently because of a perceived negative stigma attached
to that form of belief. In Muslim countries like Iran,
Iraq, and Saudi Arabia, there is some actual fear of being
found
out if one so designates himself. For example, one study
asked if the respondent affirmed that they did not believe
in a god, and asked a second question if they are an atheist.
A representative sample of the results was 29% of Latvians,
41% of Norwegians, 48% of the French, and 54% of Czechs
said they didn’t believe in God, but only 9%, 10%,
19%, and 20% respectively self-identified themselves as
an atheist. (2)
In America,
depending on the wording, recent studies reveal that atheist-agnostics
make up one in eleven (9%) of the
population, or approximately 20 million people. Significantly
though, this number has doubled in the past twenty years.
Also important to note is that the proportion of atheists
and agnostics increases among the younger citizens. While
only 6% of elders (ages 61+), and 9% of Boomers (ages 42-62)
embraced atheism, 14% of Busters (23-41), and 19% of Mosaics
(18-22) did so. (3) Also, a recent Barna
study, revealed that while most Americans still embrace
a traditional view
of
God (66%), this number is down from 71%, just one year
ago. (4)
One
of the factors contributing to the growth of atheism
in America could be immigration.
Even though atheism rates
are declining in the former Soviet Union, Eastern Europe,
and China due to the loss of Communist influence, in other
formerly “Christian” countries, atheism-agnosticism
percentages have grown exponentially. The following are
statistics on atheism-agnosticism from several nations:
Sweden (46-85%)
Denmark (43-80%)
Japan (64-65%)
France (43-54%)
Germany (41-49%)
Britain (31-44%)
Canada (19-30%)
Spain (15-24%)
Italy (6-15%)
Bulgaria (34-40%)
Australia (24-25%)
All the
nonbelievers in God combined rank fourth in the worlds
population after professing believers in Christianity
(2 billion), Islam (1.2 billion), and Hinduism (900 million).
Atheists-agnostics number approximately 750 million worldwide.
(5)
MILITANT ATHEISM
Obviously,
atheists comprise a very important mission field. This
is one of
the reasons
for this issue of Areopagus Journal.
But there are additional reasons. There is currently a growing
movement of militant atheism in our culture (and beyond).
This movement is best exemplified by a growing volume of
books that have been making it to the NY Times bestseller
list in the past three years. There have always been occasional
books extolling atheism like Bertrand Russell’s Why
I Am Not a Christian. These books, however, had a limited
popularity. But the new wave of militant atheists’ books
differ in that they not only argue for the superiority of
atheism, they aggressively accuse Christians and other religious
people of being insane, evil, and dangerous, and propose
the need to actually outlaw religion. And these books are
finding a large, receptive audience.
This
recent string of assaults began with Sam Harris’,
The End of Faith: Religion, Terror and the End of Reason (2004). This work was followed by Daniel Dennett’s
Breaking the Spell (2006), then Harris’ follow-up,
Letter to a Christian Nation (2007), The God
Delusion by
Richard Dawkins (2006), Atheist Manifesto by Michael Onfray
(2007), God – the Failed Hypothesis by Victor Stenger,
and the current bestseller, God Is Not Great: How Religion
Poisons Everything by Christopher Hitchens.
The
popularity of these books is indicating a disturbing
growing trend, one made
even
more disturbing by the aggressive
militant rhetoric of these atheists. Sam Harris, for
example, fires polemical blasts at religion claiming it
to be the
source of most of human misery. He stated that the grievous
harm caused by religious conviction “is what makes
the honest criticism of religious faith a moral and intellectual
necessity.” (6) He encourages Christians to consider
the possibility that
The biblical
God is a fiction, like Zeus and the thousands of other
dead gods whom most sane human beings now ignore.
Can you prove that Zeus does not exist? Of course not.
And yet, just imagine if we lived in a society where
people spend
tens of billions of dollars of their personal income
each year propitiating the gods of Mount Olympus, where
the government
spent billions more in tax dollars to support institutions
devoted to these gods, . . .where elected official
did their best to impede medical research out of deference
to The Iliad
and The Odyssey. . . .This would be a horrific misappropriation
of our material, moral, and intellectual resources.
And yet that is exactly the society we are living in.
This is the
woefully irrational world that you and your fellow
Christians are working so tirelessly to create. (7)
Richard Dawkins is even more vitriolic:
The God
of the Old Testament is arguably the most unpleasant
character in all of fiction: jealous and proud of it;
a petty,
unjust, unforgiving control-freak; a vindictive, bloodthirsty
ethnic cleanser; a misogynistic, homophobic, racist,
infanticidal, , genocidal, filicidal, pestilential, megalomaniacal,
sadomasochistic,
capriciously malevolent bully. (8)
In addition
to the militancy, atheists are intentionally organizing
and strategizing on how to minimize the permissibility
of religion in society and enhance the growth of their
own group. Recently, atheists held a conference at the
Jonas Salk Institute
in California where Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, physicist
Steven Weinberg and others passionately called on scientists
and intellectuals to “actively combat religion,” stating
that “anything we scientists can do to weaken the
hold of religion should be done and may in the end be our
greatest
contribution to civilization.” (9) Dawkins compared
this new militant atheism movement to the homosexual movement
in the sense of being a time of “coming out of the
closet” and challenging public opinion of atheism.
They have even decided to use the term “Brights” to
identify themselves much like the homosexual community
has adopted the term “gay.” The participants
of the conference now have a new agenda: to raise awareness,
reframe
the issues, and change the language. (10)
Many
atheists believe the real battleground is in the classroom—from
elementary school through college—and public libraries.
They intend to increase their focus on distributing videos,
not just on evolution, but also emphasizing its accompanying
philosophy of naturalistic materialism. They also intend
to influence educators, school board members, and educational
policy makers. (11)
May
I recommend a book by Alister and Joanna McGrath, The
Dawkins Delusion? Alister
McGrath
was an atheist, earned
degrees in chemistry and molecular biology at Oxford (where
Dawkins is a professor), and later became a Christian and
is now an influential scholar with a special emphasis on
Christian thought and issues in science and religion. His
wife, Joanna, earned her degree in experimental psychology
and clinical neuropsychology at Oxford, as well as subsequent
studies in Christian theology. The McGraths point out that
even though the leading atheists like Dawkins accuse what
they call “dyed-in-the-wool faith-heads” of
being immune to arguments (since the are “deranged,
deluded, deceived, and infected by a malignant God virus”),
they and many other Christians are able to effectively
demonstrate the weaknesses of the atheists position and
the convincing
strengths of the Christian worldview. (12)
It
also damages the militant atheists’ case that some
very well-known and prominent scientists are religious. A
real embarrassment to Dawkins and company is Dr. Francis
Collins. The militant atheists claim that no legitimate scientist
could be a Christian. It’s an oxymoron. Yet Collins
is one of the most respected scientists in the world. He
is the head of the international Genome Project who has successfully
mapped out the human DNA. He has written a book, The Language
of God, in which he affirms that science and Christianity
can harmoniously co-exist.
Despite their rhetoric, the new militant atheists dismissal
of God and religion is baseless and misinformed. We have
put together this issue of Areopagus Journal to help you
see why.
IN THIS ISSUE
We
will not in this issue give a point-by-point response to
the militant atheists’ arguments. Rather, we will
simply lay out some of the impressive evidence for the existence
of God. We begin with an article by Greg Ganssle, lecturer
in the philosophy department at Yale University and a research
fellow with the Rivendell Institute, entitled, “The
Universe Points to God.” In this article, Greg shows,
first of all, that the amazing fine-tuning of the universe
for life points to the existence of an intelligent designer
of the universe. Secondly, he shows that the universe must
have had a beginning—it is not eternal—and therefore
very likely had an eternal, personal Creator.
Second, ARC’s Steve Cowan provides two other kinds
of arguments for God’s existence based on facts about
human knowledge in his piece, “God, Morality, and Knowledge:
Two Arguments for God’s Existence from What We Know.” First,
we have moral knowledge. We know that some things are objectively
right and other things are wrong. Secondly, we have knowledge
per se. We believe that we know things like 2+2=4 and that
the sky is blue. Steve shows that knowledge in general and
moral knowledge in particular would not be possible unless
God exists.
Lastly,
Ray VanArragon, Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Bethel
University,
contributes
the article, “Must
We Have Evidence for God?” Many atheists and skeptics
allege that belief in God is irrational unless we have compelling
arguments for God’s existence. Though there are good
arguments for God’s existence (as our other articles
show), Ray demonstrates that such arguments are not necessary
for rational belief.
An
important goal we are striving for in this Areopagus
Journal is to exhort
our readers
and the church to do some
serious self examination. David Kinnamen, president of the
Barna Group addresses our concerns well in a soon to be released
book UnChristian: What a New Generation Really Thinks
about Christianity –and Why it Matters. He writes,
It is important for
Christians to understand the environment and the perspectives
of people who are different from them,
especially among young generations whose culture is
moving rapidly away from Christianity. Believers have
the options
of ignoring, rejecting, or dealing with the aggressiveness
of atheists and those hostile to the Christian faith.
By their own admission, Christians have difficulty handling
change, admitting they are uncertain of something,
and responding
effectively to divergent perspectives. These characteristics
make the new challenges facing Christianity even more
daunting. (13)
It is our prayer that the truth in these articles will be
used by God the Holy Spirit both to equip Christians and
to open the minds and hearts of unbelievers. May you be encouraged
by the words of Sheldon Vanauken whom C.S. Lewis had befriended
and pursued while they were at Oxford:
There
is a gap between the probable and the proved. How
was I to cross it? If
I were to stake
my whole life on the
risen Christ, I wanted proof. I wanted certainty. I
wanted to see him eat a lot of fish out of my hand. I
wanted letters
of fire across the sky. I got none of these. And I
continued to hang around on the edge of the gap. . .
.It was a question
of whether I was to accept him—or reject. My
God! There was a gap behind me as well! Perhaps the
leap to acceptance
was a horrifying gamble—but what of the leap
of rejection? There might be no certainty that Christ
was God—but,
by God, there was no certainty that he was not. This
was not to be borne. I could not reject Jesus. There
was only
one thing to do once I had seen the gap behind me.
I turned away from it and flung myself over the gap
towards Jesus. (14)
Craig
Branch is director
of the Apologetics Resource Center, Birmingham, Alabama.
NOTES
1 Vines Complete Expository Dictionary
of Old and New Testament Words (Nashville, TN: Thomas
Nelson, 1985), 85.
2 “Atheism, Contemporary
Rates and Patterns,” internet article accessed
at http://www.pitzer.edu/academics/faculty/zuckerman/atheism.html.
3 George Barna, “Atheists
and Agnostics Take Aim at Christians,” (June
6, 2007), internet article accessed at www.barna.org.
4
George
Barna, “Barna’s Annual Tracking Study,” (May 21, 2004)
accessed at www.barna.org.
5 “Atheism: Contemporary Rates and Patterns.”
6
Quoted in Atheists Throw
Down the Gauntlet,” International Herald Tribune
(Feb. 2, 2007).
7
Sam Harris, Letter to a Christian Nation (New York: Knopf, 2006),
55-56.
8
Richard Dawkins, The God Delusion (New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2006), 31.
9
Richard
Bernstein, “Letter From America.”
10
Will Moredock, “The Bright
Revolution,” Charleston City Paper (Jan.
31, 2007).
11
See http://www.apologeticspress.org/articles/pring/3195.
12
Alister
and Joanna McGrath, The Dawkins Delusion (Downers Grove, IL: IVP, 2007),
8-10.
13
See “Atheistis and Agnostics Take Aim at Christians.”
14
Sheldon Vanauken,
A Severe Mercy (London: Holder and Stoughton, 1977), 98-99.
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