Know Why You Believe
By K. Scott Oliphant
“Why Believe in God?” – Chapter 2
The New Atheism
- Recent Resurgence
- Richard Dawkins
- Christopher Hitchens
- Sam Harris
- Daniel Dennett
- Hostile and “Evangelistic”
- Religion is “Destructive.”
Reasons
- Reasons to Not Believe
- Religious Abuses and Evils
- Worst possible caricatures
- Argument is not about religion per se but about the adherents of that religion.
- Must distinguish between what Christianity is and what Christians do.
- A skewed view of God based on a distorted reading of Scripture.
- Reflects more the bias of the reader than a legitimate, fair reading of the Bible.
- All the things that are wrong and all the suffering in the world.
- If all the wrong in the world proves that everything is random and meaningless, then why is it so evil to believe in God?
- Religious Abuses and Evils
- Reasons to Believe
- “Agreement of the People” argument
- 75% of people believe in a god.
- Has been the dominant belief of people through the centuries
- Not a sufficient proof, but does point to something deeper.
- “Internal” Reasons
- There is a reason why most people throughout time have believed in deity.
- There is in every person a “sense of deity.”
- “since what may be known about God is plain to them, because God has made it plain to them.” Rom 1:19
- We know God through general revelation.
- Our sin is direct rebellion against our Creator, because we know him.
- Because of this knowledge, we are without excuse.
- This knowledge is continually suppressed by sinful humanity.
- These truths help to explain why there is a general agreement of the people
- regarding the existence of deity.
- The false deities that people have worshiped are evidence of the suppression and distortion of the basic knowledge of God available to us in conscience and nature.
- “External” Reasons
- God’s revelation in and through creation is always and everywhere both “internal” and “external.”
- “Internal” revelation is that which God “implants” in us that speaks to our consciences.
- “External” revelation is that which God is showing us through the world that we experience every day.
- God’s revelation is in all creation, inside of us and outside of us.
- This general revelation gives strength to so-called “proofs” for God’s existence.
- Cosmological argument – argument from cause and effect.
- The world is the “effect,” and God is the eternal “first cause.”
- An atheist will not make the connection between this argument and the general revelation of God, because they have suppressed that knowledge.
- It is easier and “more free” to believe in an uncaused universe than to believe in an uncaused God to whom we are accountable.
- Ontological Argument – argument of necessary being
- Our existence is limited and dependent, so there must be a being who is infinite and independent.
- Teleological Argument – argument of design and purpose
- The intricate design of the universe points to a master designer.
- All of these “external” reasons for God testify of his existence. They ought to be obvious to everyone.
- But sin clouds, distorts, and hides the obvious. Sinners distort and suppress the knowledge of God and reasonable arguments for his being.
- How can the blind see?
- Cosmological argument – argument from cause and effect.
- God’s revelation in and through creation is always and everywhere both “internal” and “external.”
- “Agreement of the People” argument
Digging Deeper
- What is the root cause of the denial of God and a rejection of reasonable arguments for his existence?
- The atheist opts for a blind faith in an uncaused universe rather than a reasonable faith in a personal Creator God because the atheist does not want there to be a God.
- The “internal” and “external” reasons for God will not alone change the mind of an atheist because deep down they don’t want there to be a God.
- They have libertarian reasons for rejecting the existence of God that are stronger than any compelling arguments.
Responses
- So what do we do if the problem is in what people want rather than what they think?
- Atheistic arguments are inherently contradictory.
- They argue that religion poisons everything because it tries to influence everyone. But aren’t atheists trying to influence others?
- If everything that exists is by chance and meaningless, how do we determine good and bad?
- Why is it a bad thing for Christians to seek to evangelize others? By what standard?
- Why is opposition to evolution bad? Their strong defense of evolution proves that things do have meaning, which undercuts their belief in a meaningless universe.
- What makes evolution “better” than religion and creationism if everything is morally indifferent and neutral?
Conclusion
- No matter how articulate and educated the denial of God is, the diagnosis is always the same.
- The unbeliever lives as if there is no God, and deep down they don’t want there to be a God.
- Unbelief is not due to a lack of evidence but to an inward rebellion.
- The only thing powerful enough to change the rebellion of the human heart, which itself is enslaved to sin, is the truth of God in the gospel.
- The sinful chains that bind the heart must be broken. Only the gospel can do that.
- We make our appeal to unbelievers based on the shared truth that all humanity has access to in conscience and in nature.
- We show how Christianity helps us to see everything else more clearly. It illumines the world and provides it meaning and purpose.
Version: 20241125
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