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The Blind Watchmaker (New York: W.W. Norton, 1986), p. 316.
Nearly all peoples have developed their own creation myth, and the
Genesis story is just the one that happened to have been adopted by one
particular tribe of Middle Eastern herders. It has no more special
status than the belief of a particular West African tribe that the
world was created from the excrement of ants. All these myths have in
common that they depend upon the deliberate intentions of some kind of supernatural being.
"In Intellectual Neutral", in Passionate Conviction: Contemporary Discourses on Christian Apologetics, eds. Paul Copan and William Lane Craig (Nashville TN, B&H Publishing: 2007), p. 8.
The gospel is never heard in isolation. It is always heard against the background of the cultureal milieu in which one lives. A person raised in a cultural milieu in which Christianity is still seen as an intellectually viable option will display an openness to the gospel which a person who is secularized will not. You may as well tell the secular person to believe in fairies or leprechauns as in Jesus Christ! Or, to give a more realistic illustration, it is like a devotee of the Hare Krishna movement approaching you on the street and inviting you to believe in Krishna. Such an invitation strikes us as bizarre, freakish, even amusing. But to a person on the streets of Delhi, such an invitation would, I assume, appear reasonable and cause for reflection. I fear that evangelicals appear almost as weird to persons on the streets of Bonn, Stockholm, or Toronto as do the devotees of Krishna. ¶ Part of the broader task of Christian scholarship is to help create and sustain a cultural milieu in which the gospel can be heard as an intellectually viable option for thinking men and women. Therefore, the church has a vital stake in raising up Christian scholars who will help to create a place at the university for Christian ideas. The average Christian does not realize that there is an intellectual war going on in the universities and in the professional journals and scholarly societies. Christianity is being attacked as irrational or obsolete; and millions of students, our future generation of leaders, have absorbed that viewpoint.
Stephen King on God said...
"Stephen King's God Trip" by John Marks, at Salon.com (October 23, 2008), p3.
It's a mystery. That's the first thing that interests me about the idea of God. If there is one, it's mysterious and powerful and awesome to even consider the concept, and you have to take it seriously. I understand where Bill Maher is coming from when he says, basically, the world is destroying itself over a bunch of fairy tales about talking snakes and men who are alive inside fishes. I'm very sympathetic to it, but at the same time, given the cosmos that we're living in, it's very persuasive, the idea that there is some kind of first cause that's running things. It might not be the god of Jerry Jenkins and Tim LaHaye, it might not be the god of al-Qaida, and it might not be the god of Abraham, but something very well could be running things. The order of the universe as we see it, the interlocking nature, and the way things work together, are persuasive of the idea that there may be some overarching first cause.
Rudolf Bultmann on Miracles said...
Kerygma and Myth, (New York: Harper and Row, 1961), p. 5.
It is impossible to use electrical light and the wireless and to avail
ourselves of modern medical and surgical discoveries, and at the same
time to believe in the New Testament world of spirits and miracles.
Arthur Schopenhauer on Sex said...
"Metaphysics of the Love of the Sexes" in The World as Will and Idea (K. Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co.: 1906), p. 339.
The sexual impulse in all its degrees and nuances plays not only on the stage and in novels, but also in the real world, where, next to the love of life, it shows itself the
strongest and most powerful of motives, constantly lays claim to half
the powers and thoughts of the younger portion of mankind, to the
ultimate goal of almost all human efforts, interrupts the most serious
occupations every hour, sometimes embarrasses for a while even the
greatest minds, does not hesitate to intrude with its trash,
interfering with the negotiations of statesmen and the investigations
of men of learning, knows how to slip its love letters and locks of
hair even into ministerial portfolios and philosophical manuscripts,
and no less devises daily the most entangled and the worst actions,
destroys the most valuable relationships, breaks the firmest bond,
demands the sacrifice sometimes of life or health, sometimes of wealth,
rank, and happiness, nay, robs those who are otherwise honest of all
conscience, makes those who have hitherto been faithful, traitors;
accordingly on the whole, appears as a malevolent demon that strives to
pervert, confuse and overthrow everything.
Roy Batty on Death and Meaning said...
Blade Runner directed by Ridley Scott, writers Philip K. Dick and Hampton Francher (1982).
I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion. I watched c-beams ... glitter in the dark near Tanhauser Gate. All those ... moments will be lost ... in time, like tears ... in rain. Time ... to die.
The Plague, (New York: Vintage International, 1948, 1975) 95-7.
Thus from the dawn of recorded history the scourge of God has humbled
the proud of heart and laid low those who hardened themselves against
Him. Ponder this well, my friends, and fall on your knees. If today the
plague is in your midst, that is because the hour has struck for taking
thought. The just man need have no fear, but the evildoer has good
cause to tremble. For plague is the flail of God and the world His
threshing-floor, and implacably He will thresh out His harvest until
the wheat is separated from the chaff. There will be more chaff than
wheat, few chosen of the many called. Yet this calamity was not willed
by God. Too long this world of ours has connived at evil, too long has
it counted on the divine mercy, on God's forgiveness. Repentance was
enough, men thought; nothing was forbidden. You fondly imagine it was
enough to visit God on Sundays, and thus you make free of your
weekdays, You believed some brief formalities, some bendings of the
knee, would recompense Him well enough for your criminal indifference.
But God is not mocked. These brief encounters could not sate the fierce
hunger of His love... To some the sermon simply brough home the fact
that they had been sentenced, for an unkown crime, to an indeterminate
period of punishment.
Cited in A Devil's Chaplain by Richard Dawkins (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt: 2004), p.169.
Imagine a puddle waking up one morning and thinking, 'This is an interesting world I find myself in — an interesting hole I find myself in — fits me rather neatly, doesn't it? In fact it fits me staggeringly well, must have been made to have me in it!' This is such a powerful idea that as the sun rises in the sky and the air heats up and as, gradually, the puddle gets smaller and smaller, it's still frantically hanging on to the notion that everything's going to be alright, because this world was meant to have him in it, was built to have him in it; so the moment he disappears catches him rather by surprise.
Christopher Hitchens on Religion said...
god is not Great, Christopher Hitchens (Twelve Books, 2007), p4.
Thus the mildest criticism of religion is also the most radical and the most devastating one. Religion is man-made. Even the men who made it cannot agree on what their prophets or redeemers or gurus actually said or did. Still less can they hope to tell us the "meaning" of later discoveries and developments which were, when they began, either obstructed by their religion or denounced by them. And yet — the believers still claim to know! Not just to know, but to know everything. Not just to know that god exists, and that he created and supervised the whole enterprise, but also to know what "he" demands of us — from our diet to our observances to our sexual morality. In other words, in a vast and complicated discussion where we know more and more about less and less, yet can still hope for some enlightenment as we proceed, one faction — itself composed of warring factions — has the sheer arrogance to tell us that we already have all the essential information we need. Such stupidity, combined with such pride, should be enough on its own to exclude "belief" from the debate. The person who is certain, and who claims divine warrant for his certainty, belongs now to the infancy of our species. It may be a long farewell, but it has begun and, like all farewells, should not be protracted.
J.P. Moreland on Scientism said...
Love God With All Your Mind (Colorado Springs: NavPress, 1997), p. 33-34.
I have no bone to pick with legitimate science. Indeed, it has been argued repeatedly that science was born in Christian Europe precisely because Christian theology helped provide worldview justification for its assumptions. What I do reject is the idea that science and science alone can claim to give us knowledge. This assertion — known as scientism — is patently false and, in fact, not even a claim of science, but rather, a philosophical view about science. Nevertheless, once this view of knowledge was widely embraced in the culture, the immediate effect was to marginalize and privatize religion by relegating it to the back of the intellectual bus. To verify this, one need only compare the number of times scientists, as opposed to pastors or theologians, are called upon as experts on the evening news.
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