Come Reason's Apologetics Notes blog will highlight various news stories or current events and seek to explore them from a thoughtful Christian perspective. Less formal and shorter than the www.comereason.org Web site articles, we hope to give readers points to reflect on concerning topics of the day.
Although this quote from Malcolm Muggeridge is is some forty years old, it is more apt now than ever before:
"So the final conclusion would surely be that whereas other civilizations have been brought down by attacks of barbarians from without, ours had the unique distinction of training its own destroyers at its own educational institutions, and then providing them with facilities for propagating their destructive ideology far and wide, all at the public expense. Thus did Western Man decide to abolish himself, creating his own boredom out of his own affluence, his own vulnerability out of his own strength, his own impotence out of his own erotomania, himself blowing the trumpet that brought the walls of his own city tumbling down, and having convinced himself that he was too numerous, labored with pill and scalpel and syringe to make himself fewer. Until at last, having educated himself into imbecility, and polluted and drugged himself into stupefaction, he keeled over—a weary, battered old brontosaurus—and became extinct."
Pater, Alan F. What They Said in 1975: The Yearbook of World Opinion (Beverley Hills, CA: Monitor Book Co, 1976). 480.
Have you ever struggled in a conversation to make your Christian views known? Have you ever been tongue-tied when someone objects to belief in God because of the problem of evil or the exclusive claims of Christianity? Don’t be too hard on yourself. It can be difficult getting across all the aspects of a worldview as rich as Christianity, especially when you may not have had much training or practice.
However, there is a great book that can help you be an effective communicator when those providential opportunities to discuss your faith arise. The God Conversation, written by J.P. Moreland and Tim Muehlhoff, is a compact, easy to read collection of illustrations and stories that you can use to communicate the reasons for your faith in an effective way.
The authors note that illustrations are one of the prime ways important concepts have been passed on throughout history. It is the main method Jesus used in His teaching. And these stories remain memorable to both the sharer and the hearer.
The book has eleven chapters covering five major themes: the problem of evil, competing religious claims, the fact of the resurrection, morality and ethics, and the creation/evolution question. Each area looks at many of the common objections offered today and provides an illustration of why the Christian view makes sense. By using clear examples where most people would agree, the effectiveness of the stories is easily seen. But Moreland and Muhlhoff go beyond just the illustration as they provide the reader with extended discussion ideas and further develop the arguments.
I highly recommend The God Conversation, but not just for the evangelist or apologist. Facebook and social media today have made these kinds of interactions almost inevitable for every Christian who takes his or her faith seriously. By using stories such as these, you will find such engagements to be less contentious and more productive. And you may even learn a little bit more about your own faith in the process.
Johann Sebastian Bach once said “The aim and final end of all music should be none other than the glory of God and the refreshment of the soul.” Bach also said that he worked hard on his craft and those that worked as hard as he did should see results. Bach recognized that believers should excel in whatever they do as that would honor the Savior. For much of Christendom, this maxim was followed. The finest thinkers were Christians; names such as Augustine, Ockham, Anselm, Aquinas, and Pascal still play a central role in secular programs of philosophy. Science, too, saw Christians take the lead with such notables as Newton, Kepler, Boyle, Mendel, and Kelvin. And of course the world's great artists continually produced paintings and statues around biblical themes.
But that seems to have changed today. Peter Kreeft put is best when he said:
"Christian thought is the most intelligent of all thought and Christian morality is the most holy of moralities. But Christianity no longer produces the world's most beautiful and arresting art. I think modern culture is rejecting Christianity not because they think it is stupid or wicked, but because it looks boring... It's pictures aren't moving pictures anymore. They don't move hearts. It's the secular media that makes them abject now."
Good art both reflects and drives the culture in which it is presented. It is at root a medium that engages the heart first, and then the mind. We know that the story tellers of today are the record producers and the movie directors; and we can see their influence at the fashion shows and at the ballot box. However, Christianity seems to be markedly absent from making a significant impact in this day and age. We've settled for following the lead of those who hold views antithetical to Christianity. I'm not satisfied with the ghettoed Christian music station or television channel. I'm not satisfied with the substandard and derivative work of Christian artists who are supposed to substitute for the secular flavor of the day.
Now, to be sure, I don't want to paint with too broad a brush. LeCrae is topping the hip hop charts all over the place. C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien's books are still masterpieces. But we should see more. We should be leading in the arts, not following.
So, I'd like to challenge you, Christian. If you have a passion for storytelling, if you're an artist, filmmaker, writer or musician, work hard and take a risk. Think about how to work hard and honor God while being meaningful. We need to move the culture of today. In so doing we can move people more towards Christ.
I've had an off-and-on again discussion with an atheist friend of mine on the
concept of the soul. Being an atheist, he routinely defaults to a
naturalistic/materialistic understanding of the world and how things work. For
example, he recently made the claim on my Facebook page that "The new thing that
is emerging is 'machine life' (artificial intelligence). It will surpass us in
intelligence." There are two claims being made in this statement, both of which
I think are faulty and the first rests on the understanding of the second.
The primary claim that machines will someday be considered alive due to advances
in artificial intelligence that are happening even now. The second is that this
intelligence will allow machines to be smarter than us.
The problem here is one of language. We've heard people discuss sentience
or intelligence as synonyms. Then, we see a new device, such as a smart phone or
intelligence-assist devices and think that people are using the words in the
same fashion. But that is simply not true. In the first sense,
intelligence means to be able to comprehend the facts that are presented to you, to understand a concept. The biggest point of understanding is not the medium
through which the concept is presented nor is it the reaction or outcome. Understanding is an act of consciousness and consciousness has a specific
kind of experience associated with it that machines can never have.
You see, machines simply are cause and effect loops. Given a specific
input, a computer acts like any other mechanical device—it spits out a result
based on preset programming. This is true even if the programming has a
randomizer built into it. As computer programs become more complex we can
be tempted to think the machines are "understanding" what is going on, but they
aren't. They are merely acting like an extremely complicated
Rube Goldberg machine and producing an
outcome based on their prior programming.
Philosopher John Searle's Chinese Room thought experiment is a great
example of the difference. Searle asks you to imagine a man inside a locked room
with two slots in the wall. A Chines messenger will slip a question written in
Chinese on a piece of paper through the door and in a little while the paper
will be returned through a second slot with an answer inscribed at the bottom,
also in Chinese. The messenger and probably all observers would believe
the man in the room spoke Chinese. However, inside the room the facts are
different. The man actually speaks no Chinese at all. He just has a very
large code book that will tell him "If this combination of characters appears on
a piece of paper, then you should write this second combination of characters at
the bottom and return the paper." The man inside the room has no idea what the
question is or what the answer says. It is a qualitatively different experience
than conscious understanding. (For a more detailed explanation of the Chinese
Room and some great animation, see
this page.)
This is exactly how artificial intelligence works. Even
the head of the Google Car project can teach you how to program your own
self-driving car in just seven weeks. See the page at
https://www.udacity.com/course/cs373 and look at the list of topics covered
in the class. All the programming features are simply rules in a code book
that must be followed by the machine. No understanding is required. The
CPU in a computer is basically a Chinese Room, except the language is binary, 1s
and 0s.
I don't think the label artificial intelligence will ever change; it's
become too ingrained in our culture. However, it still can be understood
that the term intelligence can mean different things. If I say my cell phone is
dead, I don't mean that at one point it was capable of biological life. In the
same way if I say my phone is smart, I don't mean that it is capable of
conscious understanding. We would do well to note the difference.
Last week we marked the 40th anniversary of the infamous Roe vs. Wade
decision, a particularly
bad bit of legalese that opened the door to more than
55 million babies being
slaughtered in the U.S. to date. There were many articles commenting on the
decision, from both pro-life and pro-choice camps. One that specifically
caught my attention was from the MSNBC commentator Touré (nee Touré Neblett) who
said in a video commentary that abortion had "saved my life."
Touré's monologue began:
"This week brought us the 40th anniversary of Roe v. Wade and made me
reflect on a moment from about fifteen years ago when I was in a committed
relationship with a woman who I knew was just not the one. She probably
also knew it wasn't gonna work out… and then she got pregnant. And I was
terrified. I've always known the importance of family and building kids into
strong adults. And I know I would not be who I am if not growing up under the
watchful eye of two people who loved me and loved each other. I knew that
pregnant woman and I were not gonna be able to form a lasting family. She
decided it was best to have an abortion and days later she did; we did. And in
some ways that choice saved my life. I was not yet smart enough or man enough to
build a family or raise a child and I only would have contributed to making a
mess of three lives."
Touré goes on to say how years later, after he married his current wife and
they were expecting their first son, his belief in abortion was shaken by
viewing 3-D ultrasounds. "But in the end I remain committed to being
pro-choice because I cannot image arguing against a woman's right to control her
body and thus her life." He then dismisses babies in the womb by saying that
"there is a reasonable and unsolvable medical debate about when exactly life
begins."
Now, there is so much terrible thinking here that I could write a book about
it, but if I were to be given the chance to talk with Touré, I think I would ask
him two questions. First, notice his opening sentence. He said, "I was in
a committed relationship with a woman who I knew was just not the one." Hmm.
What do you mean by "the one" Touré? The context seems to imply that you didn't
truly love her (remember families are built by two people who love each other),
or you at least didn't love her to commit to forsake all others for her. So, if
that's the case, then tell me what exactly was it that you were committed to?
How can one be in a "committed relationship" without committing to the person
for life? The only answer I can come up with is that he was committed to
the sex. He states that "She probably also knew it wasn't gonna work
out... and then she got pregnant." So, she got pregnant after they both knew it
wasn't going to work out? Touré's understanding of commitment is about as fast and loose as one could have.
Secondly, Touré said that the experience of prenatal care and the technology
of ultrasounds made him question his position on abortion. His only escape from
the fact that medical science through ultrasound showed that there is a live
human being in the womb was to assert that "there is a reasonable and unsolvable
medical debate about when exactly life begins." Perhaps the debate is unsolvable
medically (the question of the soul would be a metaphysical question and thus
lie outside the purview of science), but my question would be so what? There is
an equally unsolvable medical debate about when exactly life ends.
However, we don't throw up our hands and claim that we can never recognize a patient
from a corpse.
No, Touré is doing a brilliant job of Orwellian double-speak here. He
wants to be committed when it's not a commitment and he claims that any small area of
doubt is justification to deny the facts of science that are presented to him
directly so he may hold onto his politically correct ideology. It is just this type of
propaganda and self-denial that allows the slaughter of the innocents to
continue. If Touré was truly held to "a woman's right to control her body and
thus her life", he wouldn't stand for destroying both those bodies and those
lives in utero, before they ever had a chance to grow and thrive.
"Lenny Esposito's work at Come Reason Ministries is an invaluable addition to the realm of Christian apologetics. He is as knowledgeable as he is gracious. I highly recommend booking Lenny as a speaker for your next conference or workshop!"