When Atheists Believe
From Christianity Today.
When Atheists Believe
The confounding attraction of the Christian worldview.
Chuck Colson with Catherine Larson | posted 10/22/2009 10:11AM
In recent years Great Britain’s chief export to the U.S. has been a payload of books by atheist authors such as evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins and literary critic Christopher Hitchens. They contend that faith is irrational in the face of modern science. Other prominent British atheists seem to be having second thoughts. Is there some revival sweeping England? No; they are examining the rationality of Christianity, the very beliefs Dawkins and others are so profitably engaging, but are coming to opposite conclusions.
Well-known scholar Antony Flew was the first, saying he had to go “where the evidence [led].” Evolutionary theory, he concluded, has no reasonable explanation for the origin of life. When I met with Flew in Oxford, he told me that while he had not come to believe in the biblical God, he had concluded that atheism is not logically sustainable.
More recently, A. N. Wilson, once thought to be the next C. S. Lewis who then renounced his faith and spent years mocking Christianity, returned to faith. The reason, he said in an interview with New Statesman, was that atheists “are missing out on some very basic experiences of life.” Listening to Bach and reading the works of religious authors, he realized that their worldview or “perception of life was deeper, wiser, and more rounded than my own.”
He noticed that the people who insist we are “simply anthropoid apes” cannot account for things as basic as language, love, and music. That, along with the “even stronger argument” of how the “Christian faith transforms individual lives,” convinced Wilson that “the religion of the incarnation … is simply true.”
Likewise, Matthew Parris, another well-known British atheist, made the mistake of visiting Christian aid workers in Malawi, where he saw the power of the gospel transforming them and others. Concerned with what he saw, he wrote that it “confounds my ideological beliefs, stubbornly refuses to fit my worldview, and has embarrassed my growing belief that there is no God.”
While Parris is unwilling to follow where his observations lead, he is obviously wrestling with how Christianity makes better sense of the world than other worldviews.
While we can’t reason our way to God, I’ve long believed that Christianity is the most rational explanation of reality.
Could this signal a trend? Well, not yet. But it does illustrate something I have been teaching for years: Faith and reason are not enemies. We are given reason as a gift. And while we can’t reason our way to God (only the power of God can transform fallen men—I’ve seen that in prisons for over 32 years), I have long believed that Christianity is the most rational explanation of reality. And that fact, winsomely explained, can powerfully influence thinking people to consider Christ’s claims.
A strong empirical case can be made to show that Christianity is the only rational explanation of life. For the past six years, I’ve been teaching students in the Centurions Program to draw a grid listing the four basic questions that most people ask about life: Where did I come from? What’s my purpose? Why is there sin and suffering? Is redemption possible? Then, on the other side of the matrix, we list the various philosophies and prominent world religions. By examining how each view answers the four questions, we can determine which worldviews conform to the way things really are. This is the correspondence theory of truth—a thoroughly rational test.
Students quickly see that only Christianity teaches that humans are created in the image of God, thus protecting their dignity. It’s no coincidence that Christians have waged most of the great human rights campaigns.
Or take the question of sin. If people are good, as French political philosopher Rousseau argued, problems can be solved by creating a utopian state. Yet all of history’s utopian schemes have ended in tyranny. Meanwhile, Eastern religions see life as an endless cycle of suffering. There’s no way for sin to be forgiven. And grace is an unknown concept in Islam.
This is nothing particularly novel. A long history of prominent atheists, interestingly concentrated in Britain, have traveled back to faith. These doubters began to examine the rationality of Christianity’s claims. Whether in the Victorian era, with Thomas Cooper, George Sexton, and Joseph Barker, or in the 20th century, with T. S. Eliot, Graham Greene, and C. S. Lewis, all of them concluded that the Bible speaks most accurately to the human condition—the very definition of a rational choice. It is rational to choose the worldview that provides the best choice for living, consistent with the way life works.
People today have a caricatured view of Christians, seeing us as followers, often hypocritical and judgmental, of an outdated book of mere illusions.
What does this tell us? People today have a caricatured view of Christians, seeing us as followers, often hypocritical and judgmental, of an outdated book of mere illusions. But if we can explain why Christianity is so reasonable, our faith becomes a very winsome proposition, which will at least open the mind, if not the heart, of many a doubter.
John
on October 26th, 2009
Hi, Im from Melbourne.
A handful of famous people suddenly rediscover the “truth” of their child-hood “religion” and this then becomes the sign of a significant turning point!!
Have you ever considered that the “real” caricaturists are the simple-minded “true believers” such as your self?
Caricaturists because your beliefs are so childishly naive. As this set of closely and impeccably reasoned essays points out.
http://www.adidam.org/teaching/aletheon/truth-religion.aspx
The Radiant Being who wrote these essays was fearlessly driven or HEART-IMPULSED and motivated to investigate ALL of the “truth” propositions of the entire Great Tradition of Humankind.
And what is more He was always prepared to go wherever His investigations lead Him–without any reservation whatsoever.
Beginning with his thoroughly and closely reasoned comprehensive discovery in His philosophy 101 course at Columbia University that there was no substance whatsoever to any of the “truth” claims of Christianity.
A discovery that threw Him into a state of temporary profound despair–despair that His inherited child-hood “religion” was not in any sense true.
But that crisis/despair thus became a source of positive dis-illusionment which provided Him with the HEART-URGED motive or impulse that he needed to find a truly adult understanding of Truth and Reality. The findings and report of His investigations are fully described in this book.
http://www.kneeoflistening.com
Also:
http://www.dabase.org/tfrbklih.htm
http://www.dabase.org/noface.htm
http://www.dabase.org/dualsens.htm
rogermorris
on October 26th, 2009
Thanks John for posting.
Unfortunately, to your discredit you have fallen into the very trap which you criticise Christians for when you caricature all Christians as “simple-minded” and holding to “childish and naive” beliefs. These are straw man stereotypes.
You seem to consider yourself spiritual, yet the tone of your response is very much that of someone stuck in outdated and superceded Enlightenment rationalism of the 1700s.
Jeannie Dunaway
on October 27th, 2009
Christian (Christ) what a word, what a belief, what a blessing to have been brought up in a God Fearing (Awe) home. Christians aren’t perfect, but we have been forgiven. We are bought with a price, God loves us so much that he allowed his only SON to be the sacriice that gives us this forgiveness.
We are judgemental and we should not be, but we are human. As humans we fail, and we have to seek God’s forgiveness. By seeking and abiding in Christ, we grow and learn, and then we become less judgemental. We as a Christian should always judge ourselves first, for if we judge ourselves we shall not be judged.
Bring up a child in the way he should go, for when he is old he will not depart from it.
God is the utopia that the Atheists want and are looking for, for only God Through His Son will bring peace.
Why Atheism Is Morally Bankrupt … among other things
on November 8th, 2009
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