When I said that Jesus is good for the world because he
is the life of the world, you just tossed this away. You said, "You
cannot possibly 'know' this. Nor can you present any evidence for it." Actually,
I believe I can present evidence for what I know. But evidence comes to
us like food, and that is why we say grace over it. And we are supposed
to
eat it, not push it around on the plate—and if we don't give
thanks, it never tastes right. But here is some evidence for you, in no
particular order. The engineering that went into ankles. The taste of
beer. That Jesus rose from the dead on the third day, just like he
said. A woman's neck. Bees fooling around in the flower bed. The
ability of acorns to manufacture enormous oaks out of stuff they find
in the air and dirt. Forgiveness of sin. Storms out of the North, the
kind with lightning. Joyous laughter (diaphragm spasms to the atheistic
materialist). The ocean at night with a full moon. Delta blues. The
peacock that lives in my yard. Sunrise, in color. Baptizing babies. The
pleasure of sneezing. Eye contact. Having your feet removed from the
miry clay, and established forever on the rock. You may say none of
this tastes right to you. But suppose you were to bow your head and say
grace over all of it. Try it that way.
Source > "Is Christianity Good for the World?",
Christianity Today debate between Douglas Wilson and Christopher Hitchens. (May, 2007)