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Time to Rekindle Our First Love
| ERIC METAXAS | | stan guthrie | | With apologies to Richard Dawkins, the New Atheists are old news. But we’ve got a bigger problem. You
remember them, don’t you? Christopher Hitchens, Richard Dawkins, Daniel
Dennett, and Sam Harris? These so-called “New Atheists” drew crowds
with their bombastic and occasionally clever attacks on God and theism.
For a while their books were best sellers, “The God Delusion,” “God Is
Not Great,” for example. But as atheist and evolutionary biologist David
Sloan Wilson recently wrote, “The world appears to be tiring of the New
Atheism movement.” However,
that’s not necessarily good news. Writing in The Public Discourse, Paul
Rowan Brian and Ben Sixsmith warn of something even more insidious than
atheism. Apatheism—that is, answering the “God question” with a shoulder shrug and a calm, “Whatever.” Brian
and Sixsmith write, “With roots in the practical atheism and deism of
the Enlightenment, ‘apatheism’ is embodied in French philosopher Denis
Diderot’s famous remark that ‘it is very important not to mistake
hemlock for parsley, but to believe or not believe in God is not
important at all.’” They
cite K. Robert Beshears of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, who
says the West suffers from an “unholy trinity of apatheism”: a lack of reason to believe, supposedly because of science; a lack of motivation to believe, because someone else will worry about it; and a lack of will to believe, because religion “is just too much drama.” | |
The
statistics suggest that they’re onto something. We’ve talked about the
troubling “rise of the unaffiliated,” with 33 percent of
twenty-somethings identifying as non-religious, or “nones.”
If we’re tempted to say, “So what?”—maybe we’re part of the problem! You see, under the New Atheism, people were at least wrestling
with the big issues of life and death. Now, too many of us can’t be
bothered. All this brings to mind Jesus’ warning to the lukewarm,
apatheistic church in Laodicea—that He was about to spit them out of His
mouth.
So what to do about the New Apatheism? Many people don’t care about God because they don’t find Him compellingly beautiful, the summum bonum
of human existence, as our Christian forebears did. They have no idea
that this God is actively at work in history, and that we are part of
His grand story. Why is that?
Perhaps
we’re not very good at telling them the Christian story because we
don’t know it that well ourselves. John Stonestreet often points this
out when he speaks at colleges and churches: We Christians too often
fail to see how we ourselves fit into God’s grand narrative of the
universe—from its beginning to its fulfillment when Christ returns and
establishes a new heaven and a new earth.
I
can recommend two easy-to-read, compelling books that can help you
understand and better articulate that Grand Story. They are “The Story of Reality,” by Greg Koukl, and “God’s Story in 66 Verses,” by my BreakPoint colleague Stan Guthrie. We have them at our online bookstore at BreakPoint.org.
Then there’s this: Perhaps because we
don’t quite believe God and His amazing plan for our lives, we fail to
live it consistently before a watching world. When the prophet Isaiah
entered the temple, he was overcome with a vision of the Lord, exalted
and seated high on His throne, with the angelic beings calling out,
“Holy! Holy! Holy!”
And you know what happened to Paul when he encountered Jesus on the road to Damascus. Who could be apatheistic after that?
How many visitors to our churches encounter the Risen Christ? Let’s face it—maybe they don’t because we’ve lost our first love and our holy fear of God, who promises to judge the living and the dead. May the Lord Jesus give us a fresh, world-changing vision of Himself—and may He give us the grace to lead others to His throne.