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ColHown 09-04-67 |
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How Now Shall We Live? Charles
Colson and Nancy Pearcey Tyndale, 1999,
576 pp., ISBN 0-8423-1808-9 |
Colson and Pearcey expose false worldviews and
equip believers to understand, live out, and present a Christian worldview in
ways that transform their own lives and help redeem our culture. Christianity is a comprehensive life system
that answers all of humanity's age-old questions. The book is divided into five parts:
worldview, creation, fall, redemption, and application to society. Although the book is quite long and a bit
dated, it is very readable because of the fascinating stories that illustrate
their points. Part
I. Worldview and Why It Matters "Christianity is a way of seeing and
comprehending all reality. It is a worldview." (15) "To live in defiance of known physical
laws is the height of folly. But it is
no different with the moral laws prescribing human behavior." (16) The conflict of our day is theism versus
naturalism. Is ultimate reality God or
the cosmos? These two major systems
are utterly opposed. (20) "We must translate God's revelation into the
language of the world. We must be able to speak to the scientist in the
language of science, to the artist in the language of art, to the politician
in the language of politics." (34)
"It is especially crucial to cultivate the mind in order to avoid
the snares and expose the false values of modern culture." (35) "We must be men and women who will dare to
wrest Christianity free from its fortress mentality, its sanctuary
stronghold, and establish it once again as the great life system and cultural
force that acknowledges the Creator as sovereign over all." (36) "The contours of a Christian life system… creation--God spoke the universe into
existence and created humanity in his image; fall--the human condition is marred by sin; redemption--God in his grace provided a way to be reconciled to
himself; and restoration--we are
called to bring these principle into every are of life and create a new
culture." (36) Part II. Creation: Where Did We Come From, and Who
Are We? The dominant idea today is that science is the
source of truth while religion is merely subjective opinion. This life is all there is and nature
explains everything. This is the
philosophy of naturalism. Every worldview begins with a theory of
origins. Naturalism assumes that the
forces of nature explain everything.
"Naturalism may parade as science, marshaling facts and figures,
but it is a religion." And it is
being taught everywhere in the public square.
(54) "We must challenge
the assumption that science by definition means naturalistic
philosophy." (55) "The Christian worldview begins with the
Creation, with a deliberate act by a personal Being who existed from all
eternity." (55) The big bang theory assets that the universe
began at a particular time in the remote past. There is an absolute barrier to science
beyond this point. "And God said,
'Let there be light.'" "And
the case for creation is even stronger if we look at the nature of our
universe. It is a universe that speaks
at every turn of design and purpose." (61) Scientific experiments have failed to support any
naturalistic theory of life's origin.
The complexity of information in the DNA begs the question of where
the information came from. "Science
reveals consistent patterns that allow us to make negative statements about
what natural forces cannot do."
(79) "The biblical teaching of creation is not
just a theological doctrine; it is the very foundation of everything
Christians believe." "Our
origin determines our destiny." A
whole network of consequences follows.
(92) "At the heart of
every worldview are the intensely personal questions: Who made me, and why am
I here?" (97) "If God
created all of finite reality, then every aspect of that reality must be
subject to him and his truth. Everything finds its meaning and interpretation
in relation to God." (98) The
basic term sin makes no sense to
people if they have no concept of a holy God who created us. "The continued dominance of Darwinism has
less to do with its scientific validity than with a commitment to
naturalism." (99) "One effective test of any truth claim…is to
ask whether we can live by it." (99)
"Christianity is not merely a religion…. It is an objective perspective on all
reality. Only Christianity gives us an
accurate road map." (100) "What is the meaning of human
existence? Why are we here?" "Christians believe that God created
human beings in his own image. And
because human life bears this divine stamp, life is sacred, a gift from the
Creator." (117) "The
Christian is driven by a conviction, based on biblical revelation, about the
nature of human origins and the value of human life." (118) The naturalistic ethic is a culture of death that
denies the human species is superior to other biological species and it ends
by threatening life at every stage. (118)
"Abortion has always been about more than abortion. It is the wedge used to split open the
historic Western commitment to the dignity of human life." (120) Abortion, infanticide and euthanasia are
all parts of the same package. Simply
reduce a person to a non-person and then he or she has no rights. The test of any worldview is whether it conforms
to reality. "And the reality is
that humans are fundamentally different from animals." "Only the Judeo-Christian view of life
conforms to reality." "This
becomes abundantly clear when we examine Christianity and naturalism from
several perspectives: compatibility with the scientific evidence, human
dignity, the ultimate meaning in life, our destiny, and service to
others." (130) "Many modern Americans have lost any sense
of a higher destiny. Their lives have
no aim or goal." "We are
cast free, only to drift helplessly, like someone embarking on a journey with
no destination…." (133) "For the secularist, death is like
stepping off a cliff into a black abyss of nothingness." (136) Part III. The Fall: What Has Gone Wrong with the
World The second element of any worldview is how it
explains the human dilemma. Why is
there war and suffering, disease and death?
The biblical worldview says God gave us the unique dignity of being
free moral agents free to choose good or evil, to love Him or not. (148)
The responsibility of sin lies with the human race. In the choice to disobey God human nature
became morally distorted and bent so that there is a natural inclination to
do wrong. This is called original sin and it haunts humanity do
this day. This isn't satisfactory to many. The utopian view asserts that humans are
intrinsically good. People don't have
to live under the shadow of guilt and moral judgment or moral rules. But the doctrine of original sin is
validated by 35 centuries of recorded human history. Denial of our sinful nature leads not to
beneficial social experiments but to tyranny. (149) The utopian worldview promises to liberate
individuals. It tells us we are good
but it unleashes the worst evil. It is
the worldview that gave rise to the modern totalitarianism of Marx, Hitler,
Mao and Pol Pot. "If we turn human beings into objects for
scientific study we implicitly assume that they are objects [just complex
animals] to be manipulated and controlled, like scientific
variables." We inevitably dehumanize
and demoralize people, placing them at the mercy of social scientists. The end result is another form of
despotism. (176) The utopianism of the Great Society offered no
real answer to the dilemma of moral breakdown. When we deny sin and moral responsibility,
we actually end up treating people as less than human. (179)
"We have bred an entitlement mentality wherein people believe
that government owes them support even if they do not fulfill the basic
duties of citizenship--or even engage in harmful or illegal behavior."
(180) "Scientific
utopianism…expands government control while gradually sapping citizens of
moral responsibility, economic initiative, and personal prudence." (180) Approaches to criminal justice fail when we
do not recognize the ability to make morally significant choices. Denial of sin may appear comforting but it
is demeaning and destructive for it denies the significance of our choices
and actions. (183) Sin unleashes the capacity for raw evil and
blinds us to anything beyond our own selfish desires. Sin is choosing what we know is wrong. Have we lost touch with this fundamental
truth? The myth of human goodness fails
to match the reality of our own ordinary experience. "When we cannot name or identify evil,
we lose the capacity to deal with it--and ultimately we compound its deadly
effects." (190) "In any society, only two forces hold the
sinful nature in check: the restraint of conscience or the restraint of the
sword. The less that citizens have of
the former, the more the state must employ the latter." (191) "The only alternative to increased
state control is a return to biblical realism about the human potential for
evil...." (192) "The consequences of sin affect the very
order of the universe itself." (197)
It disrupts our relationships with God and with each other and injects
disorder into all of creation. "No one looking at the history of our own
century should be able to swallow the notion that if only we liberate people
from oppressive moral traditions and rules, they will be spontaneously good
and generous." (200) Part IV. Redemption: What Can We Do To Fix It? "All human beings yearn, deep in their
hearts for deliverance from sin and guilt." This is the great human predicament.
(227) Every worldview offers a
solution. Advertisers are attuned to
this yearning and exploit it.
"The powerful allure of religion and advertising is the same…we
will be rescued." (229 quoting James Twitchell) All liberation ideologies promise redemption by
rising up against the oppressor. The
idea of inevitable progress -- that we are moving in an endless progress
toward perfection -- has fueled the great utopian movements. Marxism has been reborn as multiculturalism
and political correctness. "Apply
Marxism in any country you want, and you will always find a Gulag in the
end." (236 quoting French philosopher Bernard-Henri Levi, a former
Marxist) "The tragic results of sexual licentiousness
have spread across our entire society, producing epidemics of abortion,
sexually transmitted disease, and children born out of wedlock…." "We base our lives on some vision of
ultimate reality that gives meaning to our individual existence. If we reject God, we will put something in
his place; we will absolutize some part of creation." (243) Is science our savior? Science can be a worldview, a substitute
for the kingdom of God. Technological
advances will save us. We can create a
new and improved race. But science
gives no moral guidelines or standard of values. Scientific optimism includes no change of
heart. Technology simply gives people
bigger and better means to carry out good or evil choices. For many, the alternative to Christianity is a
free fall into pessimism and despair.
There is no higher purpose or goal or meaning to life. All life-forms are driven to compete for
the next rung on the evolutionary ladder, leaving the weak behind. Tooth and claw. Consciousness, will, and choice are reduced
to genes and humans are machines that carryout their orders. The genes become the deity, the ultimate
creators and controllers of life.
"Atheism is presented as the conclusion
when it is, in fact, the hidden premise." "A universe without God is indeed
impersonal, meaningless, and purposeless." (259) Christianity offers the only real answers to how
we can be saved. It begins with an
accurate diagnosis of the human dilemma.
It provides the answer to the problem of sin. And it is based on historical truth. "Only Christianity provides true
redemption--a restoration to our created state and the hope of eternal peace
with God." (279) Part V. Restoration: How Now Shall We Live? "When God makes us new creations, we are
meant to help create a new world around us…." (294) It is the work of humans to obey God's
command to fill and subdue the earth (Gen. 1:28). This "cultural mandate" is the
task of building a civilization.
"Redemption is not just for individuals; it is for all God's creation."
(296) Christianity is meant to
function as a creative force in the culture.
We redeem culture from the inside out, from the individual to the
family to the community and ever outward.
If a man sees the Bible as a human document, he
will not consider it normative for his life.
The Scripture will be "filtered through a mental grid set by a
non-Christian worldview, resulting in a distorted understanding of doctrine
and personal ethics." (308) [I
believe this is often true even of Christians. The clear meaning of Scripture is distorted
and hidden because of secular worldview.
Consequently we rationalize our attitudes and actions rather than shape
them by Scripture. dlm] Moral choices determine the health of the entire
society. "The dominant cultural
voices have argued that individuals have a right to live in any way they
choose and that society has a responsibility to pick up the tab for any
negative consequences that result." (308) "Sexual behavior is a prime example. Sexual relationships outside marriage are
responsible for the spread of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), for most
abortions, for fatherless homes, and for chronic welfare
dependency." (308) "Society simply can't keep up with the
costs of personal and moral irresponsibility." "…morality is not merely an arbitrary
constraint on individual choice but a protection against social
disintegration." (310) "We cannot escape the consequences of
our own choices." (316) Nowhere is the clash of worldviews more
pronounced than in family relationships.
Liberty has been defined as absolutely free choice. It doesn't matter what we choose as long as
we don't claim that our choice is based on an objective, normative standard
of truth that applies to everyone. If
marriage is simply a matter of individual choice then we can alter it by
choice. In fact all choices are morally
equal. No lifestyle may be criticized
and no one must ever be made to feel guilty.
"…every Christian parent is called to make
the home a ministry. That means
educating our children in a biblical worldview and equipping them to have an
impact on the world. In the long run,
this is the best way that Christians can restore and redeem the surrounding
culture." (326) "Instead of being an arena where students
can learn to weigh conflicting ideas dispassionately, the classroom is
becoming a place where students are indoctrinated in political radicalism and
enlisted in the culture wars."
Education has been greatly influenced by a therapeutic model of
redemption where teachers are particularly concerned with the children's
psyches. (335) Students have developed an almost paranoid
certainty of their own absolute virtues and correctness and have become
unteachable. Asked to "clarify
their values," i.e. to list the things they love doing, some list
"sex, drugs, drinking, and skipping school." Horrified teachers are powerless since the
values are presented as matters of preference, not matters of transcendent
truth and morality! (336) Christian education "means teaching students
to relate every academic discipline to God's truth and his self-revelation in
Scripture, while detecting and critiquing non-biblical worldview
assumptions." (338) "The
future of any society depends on the way it teaches its children."
(340) "What the schools do today
determines what society will be tomorrow." (343) "It is only Christians who have a worldview
capable of providing workable solutions to the problems of community
life." (369) "Our Constitution was made for a moral and
religious people. It is wholly
inadequate to the government of any other." (373, quoting John Adams) "How can we achieve the virtue
necessary to maintain a good society…?"
Relativism provides no sure foundation. If all people are free to choose for
themselves what is right, how can a society agree on and enforce even minimal
standards? (374) To have objective, universal ethical
principles requires an absolute source, a transcendent authority. (376) Question of the book: "How now shall we live--by the
Judeo-Christian tradition or by the moral nihilism of today's relativistic,
individualistic culture?" (377) "Creation tells us that we owe our existence
to a holy God, whose character is the standard of all righteousness, the
measure of all morality."
"The Fall tells us we are prone to evil and thus need moral
restraints for society to function."
"People without personal morality inevitably fail in their
efforts to create public morality." (377) "The secular view of ethics offers no
salvation, no power to change the human heart." "For we humans have an infinite
capacity for self-rationalization; we can justify anything." (380) "God expects us to use our talents--both our
abilities and our money--toward productive ends in order to serve
others. [Christians'] beliefs about
the value of work and entrepreneurial talent shaped what became known as the
Protestant work ethic. It, in turn,
became the driving force behind the industrial revolution, which has raised
the standard of living immeasurably for vast numbers of societies around the
globe. The impact of the work ethic is
one of the great examples of the way a Christian worldview can revolutionize
a culture." (388) [But] "the Protestant work ethic has been
separated from its Christian context of stewardship and service, and degraded
into a creed of personal success."
Work has become solely a means of fulfilling one's self-interest. "Capitalism is astonishingly efficient
at generating new wealth, but it operates beneficently only when the market
is shaped by moral forces coming from both the law and the culture--derived
ultimately from religion."
(390) "Humane capitalism
also depends on a sound moral culture, for a free market readily caters to
the moral choices we make, supplying whatever consumers want--from Bibles to
pornography." (390) "A healthy democracy comprises political
liberty, economic freedom, and moral responsibility. Weaken any leg, and the stood topples
over." (391) Americans have lost a higher purpose for work as
a means of serving and loving God.
(392) "Only a Christian
worldview provides the moral foundation essential to preserving free economic
systems…" (395) "Unless there is a God who is himself
Goodness and Justice…, there can be no ultimate moral basis for the law. For if there is no God, nothing can take
his place. No human standard--no
person, no group of people, no document--is immune to challenge."
(408) |
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