A Christian Analysis Of Atheism, Part 2


Try as the atheist might to manipulate objective data to fit their hypothesis with some evolutionists going so far as to invoke the law in order to suppress perspectives conflicting with their origins account, the assumptions of atheism fail to square with the facts of nature and with the revelation of nature’s God.  At one time earlier in the modern era, it was quite common for the atheist to portray himself as the true friend and ally of science.  However, as impartial observational science has probed deeper onto the macroscopic realm of cosmic space as well as the microscopic world of the subatomic particle, this relationship once prided by the atheist turned out not to be as solid as originally thought.

The scientific establishment and the philosophical elites once derided the so-called “theistic proofs” for the existence of God as the outdated wisdom of a less-enlightened era.  It turns out, however, that these time-honored arguments may be as relevant as the latest academic journals.

The cosmological argument, perhaps the best known, states that all finite realities and structures have a cause.  Therefore, ultimately there must be an uncaused cause complete in itself in order to get the proverbial billiard ball rolling; this the theist declared to be God.

Naturalistic cosmologists steeped in atheism such as Carl Sagan once tried to dance around the issue by saying that the cosmos is all there was, is, or ever will be.  But it seems that the laws of physics don’t exactly have a record of contributing to their local PBS station.

The Laws of Thermodynamics declare that, left to themselves, systems degrade to the maximum level of entropy; or in laymen’s terms, things wear out.    Employing this principle, one is forced to conclude that, if the universe is an infinitely-old closed system those like Sagan claim it to be, then the universe would have already wound down in eons past.  Therefore, the universe must have had a beginning.  And since something finite cannot come from nothing, the hypothesis of a divine creator provides the most plausible alternative.

It has been noted that the theistic proofs do not necessarily reveal the God of Judeo-Christian adoration but at best point the seeker in His direction.  Likewise, the findings of science point the individual in the direction of a yet more definitive source of knowledge standing in opposition to the claims of atheism.

Scripture strikes the decisive blow against those daring to spit cognitively in the face of God.  Psalms 19:1 says, “The heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament sheweth his handywork.”

Until the scientist can replicate life on his own from nothing whatsoever, that verse settles the issue of whether the universe sings the praises of an omnipotent Creator or testifies to the cruel fact of an arbitrary universe devoid of plan or purpose.  Some will no doubt continue to insist upon their own path of stubbornness despite what the very molecules they are breathing might be telling them.

Of those failing to be persuaded by the evidence, Psalms 14:1 says, “The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God.”  Webster’s defines fool as “a person devoid of reason or intelligence.”  Either the educated person assents to the reality of God or his so-called “education” is not worth the value of the parchment the big-shot degree is printed upon.

If the skeptic still refuses to abandon atheism in light of the objective evidence,  one is left with no alternative but to drag out the rotten fruits produced by this faulty system in terms of ruined lived and fallen nations.  For instead of establishing a set of moral values resting upon a foundation apart from divine revelation as originally postulated by the adherents of early atheistic modernism, one ends up with an ethical system based upon the absolutist relativism of postmodernism where almost anything goes except daring to set forth some kind of behavioral standard binding upon all.

According to Chuck Colson in Against The Night: Living In The New Dark Ages, in the arena where relativism reigns supreme in opposition to the law of God, there is no legitimate ground in which one can exclude the arguments and proposals of Nazis, serial killers, and pedophiles (47).  From today’s headlines, the nation is coming to realize in the most brutal of ways that these ideas do not confine themselves to academic journals or newspaper opinion pages.  And in the case of school shootings such as Columbine High, this radical antipathy towards God can in fact turn deadly.

If the lawlessness of atheism can wreak havoc upon individual lives, just imagine its affects magnified across entire societies.  The major dictatorships of the twentieth century testify to this blood-soaked historical truth.  Founded upon assorted atheistic ideologies, these totalitarian regimes promised secular heavens on earth but instead dragged their nations down to the very borders of hell.

Unfettered by eternal external standards, those holding the reins of power in such societies had nothing to hamper the implementation of their most extreme policy whims, not even the value of innocent human lives.  For example, Mao Zedong of the People’s Republic of China slaughtered five million of his own countrymen in pursuit of his Cultural Revolution and related kinds of Communist nonsense.

While the United States has not yet eliminated that many (at least among those fortunate enough to escape the womb alive), the Orwellian day is here when good will be called evil and evil called good.  Former Secretary of Education Bill Bennett aptly noted on an appearance on “Meet The Press” that, had the Columbine killers greeted one another with “Hail the King of Kings” rather than their trademark “Heil Hitler”, school officials would have intervened since an affirmation of theism — especially of a Christian variety — is the one thing an atheistic educational system cannot tolerate.  School officials did not intervene and the rest is history, with organized unbelief claiming yet a few more in its unrelenting war upon God and humanity.

As public rhetoricians are fond of pointing out, mankind stands at a crossroads.  The choice, however, goes to a level deeper than the choice between Democrats and Republicans that Americans must make on election day.

The decision to be made transcends the limited purposes of institutionalized politics to embrace fundamental issues of worldview and belief.  The nature of this conflict can be discovered in a comparison and contrast between atheism and Christianity.

From the fundamental postulate regarding the nonexistence of God, atheism attempts to formulate a comprehensive framework upon which to hang its understanding of mankind and the universe.  Without God to account for the cosmos in which they find themselves, atheists argue that the complexity of nature arose through a process of gradual evolution governed by the rules of chance.

This process of evolution, to the atheist, serves as the dynamic against which man strives to find and determine his role upon the earth.  As such, everything is thus in a state of flux and nothing is fixed as man struggles to figure things out against the backdrop of a cold and purposeless void.

Not even fundamental issues such as individual rights, personal ethics, or social institutions can afford to remain fixed and stagnant.  And if innocent human lives are ruined or destroyed, that may seem regrettable at this moment along the long evolutionary chain, but mankind will ultimately get things worked out and the piles of corpses littering history’s ditches will not seem so nauseous upon further enlightenment.

Of these ideas, Proverbs 14:12 says, “There is a way which seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of death.”  Any history book objective enough to attest to the horrors of the twentieth century testifies to this startling truth.

Standing in contrast to the lonely pointlessness of atheism is Judeo-Christian theism recognizing God as the fundamental proposition of the universe.  Like atheism, the Judeo-Christian tradition builds its system around its conceptual foundation as well.  But since its basis is drastically different from that of atheism, the conclusions drawn by Christianity are considerably different.

Christianity holds that, since the universe was created from nothing through the Word of God, all creation is dependent upon Him at all times.  Colossians 1:17 says, “…by him all things consist.”

Since man is God’s creation, it is therefore God’s right to determine the standards by which man shall conduct his own affairs.  And since God loves His creation, it follows that His standards are for the benefit of His children.  These standards are communicated to mankind in a number of ways.

One such way is through individual conscience.  Romans 2:14 says, “For when Gentiles, which have not the law, do by nature things contained in the law, these having not the law, are a law unto themselves.”  While God has written the Law across the heart of man, man has suppressed this truth through sin.

God has overcome this development by making Himself known in the person of His Son Jesus Christ and through the direct propositional revelation of His Word and the Holy Bible of which II Timothy 3:16 says, “All Scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness.”  It is within this framework of Law and Grace that the balance between the individual and society is found as this system and the objective standards established by it protect the individual since it recognizes the worth and fallen character of each.  That is why Psalms 33:12 says, “Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord.”

Atheism remains one of the most serious intellectual challenges faced by the contemporary Christian.  Despite its obvious scientific and sociological shortcomings, the powerful adherents of this system positioned in influential sectors of society such as government and academia have enshrined this worldview as the official dogma of civilization nearly as stifling as anything allegedly imposed by the medieval Catholic Church.

Yet despite considerable efforts to enforce this system as an orthodoxy that goes so far as to jail students daring to pray around a flagpole, like its sister system in the former Soviet Union, Western atheism is a decaying ideology.  It is amid this decay often resulting in social and individual ruin that the Christian is able to proclaim the superiority of the theistic alternative and the God of its adoration.

by Frederick Meekins



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7 Comments Leave a comment

An atheist analysis of your christian analysis

nearweirdest Friday, August 21st at 1:08AM EST (link)

So the “objective evidence” you’ve given here is that universe had a beginning, which is true! It is well known in science nowadays that the universe began 13.7 billion years ago. (This was a hypothesis back in Carl Sagan’s day, but it was not nearly so well established a theory back then…it was brand new!) And if the universe had a beginning, it must have had a cause. Also true!

Here is where we diverge. You cite this fact alone as “objective evidence” for God. I disagree. The only thing that can be said is, “The universe had a beginning, and thus a cause, but we do not YET know what it is.” See, you take what is unknown and stick a God in and declare the question answered, for all time. Scientists take was is unknown and leave it as unknown, while they look for the answer. That is science, and that is what makes science work. Sticking a God in to explain things is the easy way out, we would never learn or grow if everyone did this…and it does not qualify as “objective evidence.”

You then go on to point out that atheism is the cause of all the world’s ills. In addition to being rude, this is not proof for existence or non-existence of any God. If anything, I would jokingly cite it (if it were true) as proof that there is no God…what loving God would let a bunch of unsaved, hell-bound rabble ruin everything for his chosen. But alas, it was just a joke.

You mention the moral relativism of atheism as the cause of things ranging from mass genocide, to school shootings, to various social problems. You make it sound like atheists morals aren’t based on anything, while your vastly superior morals are based on the word of God. Are you really saying that the only reason you don’t kill people is because the Bible says so?

I think there are some things that we all know are wrong. No, I cannot logically or scientifically say why I think this. Maybe someday I or someone else will be able to.

I do know there are certain things you would never do even if there was no Holy Book telling you not to. You wouldn’t kill, you wouldn’t hurt people, you wouldn’t rape people (encouraged in the Old Testament!), you wouldn’t engage in pedophilia. I do know there are certain things you probably do even though the Bible says it’s wrong: you probably eat shellfish, you probably wear clothes made of 2 kinds of material woven together, etc. You must have some innate sense of what is right and wrong, because you pick out the bits of your Holy Book that make sense, make a moral code out of them, and disregard the silly parts. Then you say how superior your morals are because they came from the Bible.

I disagree with your suggestion that genocidal dictators and depressed school shooters have been driven to kill based on their lack of belief in God. I do think there have been both Christian and atheist (other religions are also well represented, I’m sure) mass murderers in the history of the world. While we can never know what drives these people to kill, I think that if someone is unhinged and/or depraved enough to commit murder(s), they will do it no matter what. Whatever they might say about their (lack of) religion…they did it because they are crazy. No other reason needed.

You also make some confusing comments about evolution, and how it creates an ever changing backdrop against which to consider social issues. I do not understand…physical evolution happens so slowly, any change would be almost completely imperceptible over the course of my lifetime (a single generation).

Unless you are referring to social evolution? The idea that “natural selection” should happen in society as well as nature? That cluster**** (excuse the self-censored profanity…it really was the best word I could think of to describe this) of a “scientific theory” was nothing of the sort, people just made it up as an excuse to persecute black people…and was also completely dismissed by everybody about 50 years ago.

Darwin himself said, in Origin Of Species, something about how this is exactly what sets humans apart from animals…that we do not succumb to the forces of natural selection. We do not (or try not to..sometimes I’m not sure how successful we actually are) let our sick, elderly, poor, otherwise “unfit” people slip through the cracks of society and die. We help them.

For whatever reason we give ourselves…whether we are following bits and pieces of some Holy Book, or whether we are doing it simply because it is the right thing to do…it seems that anyone who is not deranged enough to go shoot innocent people in a school has some urge to help his fellow man.

I am willing to defend my moral principles to the last drop of Charles Augusto’s blood.
http://www.redstate.com/snarkandboobs/2009/08/16/old-man-defends-property-and-lives-how-awful-sneers-the-associated-press/#comment-291

 

pigheadedness and willful ignorance

clowngirl (Diary) Friday, August 21st at 1:15AM EST (link)

It seems like every major scientific discovery meets with derision/resistance and intelligence is more threatening than most!

Science is interesting it’s always changing and correcting itself (like, when I was a kid, Pluto was a planet) but atheist will assert the theory of evolution (which even Darwin thought was flawed & not really ready for publication) as if it’s unassailable fact.

The human capacity to deny inconvenient facts and/or to believe utter nonsense when the desire to believe it is strong enough will never cease to amaze me.

evolution as unassailable fact

nearweirdest Friday, August 21st at 4:58PM EST (link)

I don’t think that scientists really think that ANYTHING is unassailable fact, because of exactly what you always said, science is always changing and correcting itself. There are a lot of things that we scientists think is “almost unassailable facts”…as in, while they are not completely correct, they are very close to it. Just some details to work out. Evolution is one of these (out of very many).

I think the reason the general public thinks that scientists “worship” evolution as something that is unassailable…or, a religion…is because evolution comes up so much more often in the public square than any other science, because of the recent push to teach intelligent design in schools.

It is true that a lot more scientists are a lot more vocal about evolution than any other branch of science, because of the recent popularity of intelligent design. And that is just because the teaching of something like intelligent design in a science classroom undermines all of science. Intelligent design is NOT science…it takes the unknowns in science and sticks an intelligent creator in. There is no evidence whatsoever for a creator, there is only evidence of things that we have not figured out yet. Real scientists are working on it, while “creation scientists” are busy identifying the “gaps” and sticking a God in.

So to put something like this, which is so clearly unscientific, on par with real science in our children’s classrooms, is something that gets scientists all riled up. And they talk a lot about evolution, and they try to educate people about evolution. And they do make it sound like it is fact…because in general, it is. No scientist questions the main, basic principles of evolution…It is the details that are in question.

Evolution is the most talked about science, and so it may seem that it is being shoved down our throat. It is simply the most talked about because it is the most under attack. Believe me, if someone came up with a theory of “intelligent falling” and decided to get it taught in science classrooms, scientists would be just as in your face about the latest theory of gravity, relativity.

I am willing to defend my moral principles to the last drop of Charles Augusto’s blood.
http://www.redstate.com/snarkandboobs/2009/08/16/old-man-defends-property-and-lives-how-awful-sneers-the-associated-press/#comment-291

 
 

right and wrong. where does it come from?

clowngirl (Diary) Friday, August 21st at 1:22AM EST (link)

Intelligent DESIGN is more threatening than most.

Nearweirdest,
I won’t take the time your comment really deserves, but I – to some extent- agree with you that we know right from wrong without needing the Bible. My question is where does that innate knowledge come from?

I wish I knew where it came from...

nearweirdest Friday, August 21st at 5:02PM EST (link)

I just haven’t studied philosophy, or psychology, or any of the things that might have answered it already, lol.

Sadly, I just don’t know.

I am willing to defend my moral principles to the last drop of Charles Augusto’s blood.
http://www.redstate.com/snarkandboobs/2009/08/16/old-man-defends-property-and-lives-how-awful-sneers-the-associated-press/#comment-291

Actually, you know very well. Inexcusably well, one could say.

CincoSolas_del_Bronx (Diary) Friday, August 21st at 5:21PM EST (link)

But while I would be happy to have you over for an evening to go over the unanswerable inconsistencies in your presuppositions about life and even more important issues, I do hope you know that in the civil sphere, that is in our role as citizens in this present world, I welcome your knowledge about and support of the conservative cause, and welcome your input about the same, and hope to treat you as a neighbor and ally. This venue is simply not designed to address conflicts of fundamental belief systems–between people on the same political side–in more than cursory fashion.

Those dreading urbanization should remember that though the Kingdom of God first appeared in a temporal Garden, at the end of the book it is established in an eternal City. (paraphrase, James M. Boice)

soli Deo gloria

 
 
 

But how does this help advance the conservative and Republican cause?

NightTwister (Diary) Friday, August 21st at 6:35AM EST (link)

I’d really hoped you would drop this or at least address my question when you posted the 2nd part.

The best argument against democracy is a five-minute conversation with the average voter. – Winston Churchill