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Does
Atheism Require More Faith?
April 20, 2004
I want to
tell you about an important new book I hope will be widely disseminated.
Though its subject is the truth of Christianity, it needs to be
read by far more than just "the choir."
I didn't come
to faith in Christ effortlessly. I began my adult spiritual journey
as a skeptic seeking answers for life's ultimate questions. In
the process I did a great deal of reading on Christian theology
and apologetics (defense of the faith).
I discovered,
to my initial surprise, that there is an extensive body of evidence
supporting Christianity's exclusive truth claims. Knowledge of
this evidence doesn't automatically lead one to faith, but it
certainly helps to remove obstacles we sometimes unwittingly use
as excuses for neglecting our spiritual "business" or
flat out rejecting the truth.
Some Christians
seem threatened by the very idea of marshaling evidence in support
of their faith. But the Bible itself tells us that we should "always
be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give
the reason for the hope that you have" (1 Peter 3:15).
It is healthy
to have doubts and work through resolving them, which only fortifies
your faith and better positions you to withstand challenges you
may encounter along the way.
Christianity
has nothing to fear from a thorough investigation of the evidence.
That's why I was fascinated when I happened onto a column by Washington
Post columnist E.J. Dionne Jr. a few weeks ago, wherein Dionne
discussed a recent article he'd enjoyed in the New Republic by
Leon Wieseltier.
In the article,
Wieseltier "praises atheists for taking the question of God's
existence so seriously that they force believers to do the same
… There is no greater insult to religion than to expel strictness
of thought from it."
I certainly
agree that a Christian's faith must hold up to intellectual scrutiny.
But do atheists actually take the question of God's existence
as seriously as Wieseltier and Dionne suggest? I have my doubts.
Indeed, widely
respected Christian apologists Norman Geisler and Frank Turek
dispute that notion in their new book, "I
Don't Have Enough Faith to Be an Atheist." Geisler and
Turek confront the conventional wisdom that Christians are an
unthinking lot whose faith is devoid of intellect and that atheists
need no faith to sustain their belief system.
The authors
show that Christian faith and reason are not mutually exclusive,
but complementary and that there is an abundance of evidence for
the truth of Christianity. Conversely, they show that it is impossible
to be an atheist without a substantial amount of faith.
They note,
for example, that naturalistic biologists claim "that life
generated spontaneously from nonliving chemicals by natural laws
without any intelligent intervention."
These scientists
believe that a "one-celled animal known as an amoeba (or
something like it) came together by spontaneous generation…"
But we now know there is incredible complexity in "the message
found in the DNA of a one-celled amoeba (a creature so small,
several hundred could be lined up in an inch)."
"The
message found in just the cell nucleus of a tiny amoeba is more
than all 30 volumes of the Encyclopedia Britannica combined, and
the entire amoeba has as much information in its DNA as 1,000
complete sets of the Encyclopedia Britannica." And "we
must emphasize that these 1,000 encyclopedias do not consist of
random letters but of letters in a very specific order -- just
like real encyclopedias."
You get the
point: Atheists have to have enormous faith to believe that such
complex messages exist in the absence of intelligent design.
But when you
closely examine the evidence supporting many Christian claims,
you'll find that they "are certain beyond reasonable doubt."
As such, "it's not faith in Christianity that's difficult
but faith in atheism or any other religion. That is, once one
looks at the evidence, we think it takes more faith to be a non-Christian
than it does to be a Christian."
The authors
admit there are obstacles to a belief in Christianity. In the
course of the book, they systematically address the perceived
intellectual objections, emotional obstacles and volitional reasons
to reject Christianity. The authors' treatment of these issues
is compelling.
I felt so
strongly about the value of "I
Don't Have Enough Faith …" that when the authors
honored me with a request to write the foreword
for it I readily agreed. This is the ideal all-in-one book for
you to share with your doubting friends and to bolster your faith
in Truth. You owe yourself a read.
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