McgTwil 07-08-95
The
Twilight of Atheism
The Rise
and fall of Disbelief in the Modern World
Alister McGrath
Doubleday, 2004,
306 pp., ISBN 0-385-50061-0
McGrath is a
professor of historical theology at Oxford University and a consulting editor
for Christianity Today. Twilight
of Atheism describes the rise and fall of a great empire of the mind and explains
why it has faltered. (Introduction)
Atheism was an
imaginative and liberative response to the power and abuses of the church and
the establishment. The movement is now
seen as an alternative struggle for power that seeks to eliminate all opposition. Atheism fit the mentality of modernism but
doesn't fit with the tolerant ethos of post-modernisn.
Atheism is
framed by two pivotal events, the fall of the Bastille in 1789 and the fall
of the Berlin Wall in 1989. (1) Over these two centuries atheism captivated
the imagination of an era. (3)
"Paradoxically,
the historical origins of modern atheism lie primarily in an extended
criticism of the power and status of the church, rather than in any asserted
attractions of a godless world." (11)
The golden age
of atheism was ushered in by the French Revolution of 1789. "Generations of accumulated popular
resentment and intellectual hostility against king and church could finally
be contained no longer." Humanity
was to be liberated from tyranny and superstition. A new future would dawn when God was
eliminated. (21)
Voltaire
suggested that the attractiveness of atheism was in proportion to the
corruption of Christian institutions. (27)
The American
Revolution was not accompanied by a serious move toward atheism. For many, Christianity motivated and guided
their struggle. It was their ally.
(27-8)
Nobody doubted
the existence of God until theologians tried to prove it. The 'proofs' were faulty and undermined the
prior certainty. (31)
Atheism, seen as
novel and exciting, was a major driving force of the French Revolution.
(45) But the movement that gave the
world the Declaration of the Rights of Man also gave it the Reign of Terror. "To those who suggest that religion is
responsible for the ills of the world, the Revolution offers an awkward
anomaly." "The new religion
of humanity mimicked both the virtues and vices of the Catholicism it hoped
to depose. It might well have a new
god, a new savior, and new saints. But
it also had its own inquisition and began its own particular war of
religion." (46)
But the real
impact of the French Revolution was the impact on the minds and imaginations
of alienated individuals throughout Europe.
Seeds were planted. (47)
"What was
necessary for the advancement of atheism was a revolution within the
collective Western mind, in which the presumption of God by Christians was
displaced by an intellectual skepticism…." (49)
"Ideas
originally limited to a small elite gradually percolated downward and outward
into society as a whole." Western
society began to look to intellectuals rather than to clergy for
guidance. (49)
"This
dismissal of God was as slick as it was sweeping. The longings of the human heart needed no
objective foundation in any external being." "Man is a god to himself." "Feuerbach thus laid the foundations
of the discipline of religious studies as a means of deepening our knowledge
of human nature." (58) "The
idea of God was a dream, and the church the perpetuator of this delusion."
(59)
Marx asserted
that ideas and values are determined by the material realities of life. Religion arises because of sorrow and
injustice, but these are social realities.
God is simply a projection of human concerns. Religion eases pain by creating a fantasy
world where sorrows cease. (63-5)
For Freud
religion was a illusion that draws its strength from our instinctual desires.
(68) As an atheist he felt religion
was dangerous. (70) Freud's impact was
immense, especially in the West. He
unlocked the repressed secrets of the human mind, enabling humanity to face
its future without religion. Freud's criticisms were accepted partly because
they were considered scientific.
Originally atheism was viewed as puzzling. Now, many considered the opposite true.
(76-77)
The early
twentieth century saw the development and domination of a mindset that
assumed religion is a superstitious relic that has always been in essential
conflict with science and will be until it is eliminated. (79)
Three cultural
suppositions about science contributed to this divide:
1.
The
natural sciences have been liberated from bondage to superstition and
oppression.
2.
Natural
sciences conclusively prove their theories whereas religion is irrational and
mysterious.
3.
Darwinian
theory made belief in God impossible. (83)
"The
interaction of science and religion is determined far more by their social
circumstances than their specific ideas." (87) "The golden age of atheism witnessed
the relentless advance of the sciences and the equally relentless retreat of
faith from the public to the private domain." (88)
But there is no
necessary discontinuity between religon and science. Some scientists are religious and some are
not. (89)
The outcome of the
philosophy of logical positivism in the 1950s was the moral demand that human
beings prove what they believe.
Religion was simply incapable of providing the evidential basis of
belief. Yet paradoxically, so was
atheism. Both atheism and Christian belief
are beyond the available evidence.
"Both could be proposed; both could be defended; niether could be
proved." (92-3)
Thus Thomas
Huxley coined the term, 'agnostic,' one who doesn't claim to know.
(93-4)
The natural
sciences offer what they believe to be the best possible explanation of
things, but they are perfectly prepared to abandon or modify this in the
light of additional information.
"A theory can be plausible enough to gain our trust, even though
some of its predictions and promises lie in the future. In short: it is about faith…"
(97) There is always some element of
faith or trust in the natural sciences because so much cannot be proven. (98)
According to
Dawkins, the appearance of design can arise naturally within the evolutionary
process. "Evolutionary theory
leads inexorably to a godless, purposeless world." (108)
On the other
hand, Stephen Jay Gould insisted that science can work only with naturalistic
explanations; it can neither affirm nor deny the existence of God. "The bottom line for Gould is that
Darwinism actually has no bearing on the existence or nature of God."
(109-10)
The Victorian
crisis of faith was a failure of the religious imagination. (112) The images of God as a machine or a
watchmaker were dull and uninspiring.
William Godwin (1758-1836) radically proposed that humanity could be
perfected through reason but this did not spark the imagination. There was no sense of transcendence. However, the beauty of the natural order,
as suggested by Wordsworth, Shelley, and Keats, seemed to provide a
satisfying alternative. (114-116)
"If God is to be removed, there must remain some corresponding
metaphysical category to which human emotions and imagination may be linked."
(118)
"By the
1870s the cheerleaders of Victorian culture were coming to the view that
Christ had nothing distinctive to say, other than to encourage people to
behave themselves properly." (139)
He came across as a glorified Sunday school teacher who lacked the
ability to captivate the imagination of the culture. (140) "Suddenly it became meaningful to
speak of the death of God in Western culture.
God had ceased to be a living presence…." (143)
On October 22,
1965, TIME Magazine's cover asked, "Is God dead?" "The public atheism that had taken its
first faltering steps in the eighteenth century had finally come of
age." (145)
However,
Dostoyevsky foresaw that to remove God is to eliminate the final restraint on
human brutality. Nietzsche's mature
writings represent a cultural observation that belief in God had become
unbelievable. The pragmatic fact was
that God was being eliminated from modern culture. God has been eliminated, squeezed out. In short: we have killed God. (149-150) "Morality is no longer
defined with reference to God, but solely with reference to human needs and
aspirations. 'Morality is the herd
instinct in the individual.'" (151)
According to
Camus, if there is no God to give meaning to events the only way to be happy
is by acknowledging the absurdity of the situation. The world is unreasonable and
meaningless. Yet, he longs for it to
have meaning. This brings despair, the
position of the absurd. (155-57) God's death is marked by his silence more
than his absence. (158)
In the 1960s
everything was swept aside to begin again.
Those with vision were unfettered by the outdated constraints of their
parents. God was an outmoded idea of
the past. It was a crisis time for
Christianity from which it has not recovered. (158-59)
In American
intellectual life, God is to be respected as long as people don’t get too
serious about him. "Talking about
God was seen as something that consenting adults do in private."
(160-61)
But atheism
never really caught on in America. Its
appeal was linked to a particular place and culture. In Europe it rested on its role as a
liberator from the past and challenge to the state. But the social situation
in North America was quite different.
There was, for example, no state-established church to oppose. (162)
For most of its
existence, atheism had to seek out an enemy to oppose. But it had an unwitting ally in the
intellectual leadership of the mainline denominations and revisionist
theologians. Its high point was the
removing of Bible reading and prayer from public schools in 1963. (162-63)
The mainline
denominations have suffered massive declines while churches that adapt to
their populations and communicate in ways that connect with needs have
grown. Many mainline ideas were so
adapted to the ideas of modernity that they were fatally compromised by the
death of modernity and the rise of postmodernity, which reacted against
almost every aspect of modernity.
(164)
"Marxism-Leninism
held that a true socialist state was necessarily atheistic." Since people didn't give up faith willingly,
the State tried to enforce it. The
persistence of practicing faith among two-thirds of the Russian people more
than twenty years after the revolution was an embarrassment to Marxist
theory. (165-66)
"By 1970
many had come to the view that religion was on its way out." (173) But the appeal of atheism is culturally
conditioned and the culture is changing.
"Everywhere
there are signs that atheism is losing its appeal." "Its day of influence is
passing." The term 'postatheist'
is now widely used as worldview in Eastern Europe. "Atheism, once seen as Western
culture's hot date with the future, is now seen as an embarrassing link with
a largely discredited past." (174)
"The
principal cause of my atheism was Marxism, a movement that I believed held
the key to the future (in the late 60s)." It offered a break from the
religious past and promised to lead to peace and prosperity in my troubled
homeland of Ireland." "Its
lure lay in its proposal to change the world." It seemed to make a certain degree of sense
of things and I believed it represented real integrity. Further it offered the hope of a better
future and the possibility of being involved in bringing it about. (177)
However,
"like my fellow countryman C. S. Lewis, I found myself experiencing 'the
steady unrelenting approach of Him whom I so earnestly desired not to
meet.'" (178) "The ideas
that once excited and enthralled me seem, on being revisited, rather humdrum
and mundane." (179)
"The
philosophical argument about the existence of God has ground to a halt. The matter lies beyond rational proof, and
is ultimately a matter of faith, in the sense of judgments made in the
absence of sufficient evidence." (179)
"The belief that there is no God is just as much a matter of
faith as the belief that there is a God." (180)
"There has
been a growing recognition of the ultimate circularity of the great atheist
philosophies of recent centuries."
"…explanations of religious belief start out from atheist
premises and duly arrive at atheist conclusions. They are, in their own way, coherent: they
are not, however, compelling." (180)
"For many,
the trauma of Auschwitz can only mean the supreme triumph of atheism: who
could believe in God in the face of such horrifying acts of violence and brutality? It is only fair to point out that those who
planned the Holocaust, and those who slammed shut the doors of the Auschwitz
gas chambers, were human beings--precisely those whom Ludwig Feuerbach
declared to be the new 'gods' of the modern era, free from any divine
prohibitions or sanctions…." (183)
"If any
worldview is rendered incredible by the suffering and pain of the twentieth
century, it is the petty dogma of the nineteenth century, which declared that
humanity was divine." (184)
In the twentieth
century a growing number of Christian writers such as Chesterton, Lewis,
Tolkien, Sayers, and others, gave rebirth to the Christian imagination. Atheism seems to have lost its appeal to
the imagination about the same time. (186)
It is no longer
necessary to imagine a world without God.
We have seen the real thing in the Soviet Union. The failure of imagination of secularism is
giving a rebirth to a fascination with the 'spiritual.' There is something about human nature that
impels it to seek the spiritual.
(187)
The prophecies
of the disappearance of religion from western culture were clearly failing by
the 1980s. The reverse is true. This new interest has swept through Western
culture in the last decade. (189, 191)
Christianity is
a living organism, still in the process of developing. "Without in any way ceasing to be
Christian, it has learned to exist in more accountable and responsible
forms." "Christianity is not
a historically fixed monochrome entity, but a diverse and dynamic
faith…" (192) The rapid rise of
Pentecostalism is a good example. A
massive transformation in global Christianity is taking place. (195-96)
"In part,
atheism gained its appeal in the past through the failures of the churches,
rather than on account of its own intrinsic merits." "Pentecostalism changed all that,
engaging directly with the cultural, social, and experiential world of the
masses." (197)
"If the
arguments presented in this chapter are correct…there are clear implications for
the futures of both Protestant Christianity and atheism, not least that
certain traditional forms of Protestantism will decline further, while those
which affirm and celebrate a direct engagement with the divine will grow at
the expense of the former." (213)
"Nevertheless,
some sects of Western Protestantism, often deeply influenced by the
rationalism of the Enlightenment, continue to …place an emphasis upon
'theological correctness,' stressing the overarching importance of having
right ideas about God." "The
mind is engaged; the emotions and imagination remain untouched." "The contrast with Pentecostalism on
this point could not be greater."
"Pentecostalism declares that it is possible to encounter God
directly and personally through the power of the Holy Spirit." "When you become a Pentecostal, you
talk about how you've been healed, or how your very life has been
changed." "Pentecostalism
today addresses the whole of life, including the thinking part." "How can God's existence be doubted,
when God is such a powerful reality in our lives?" (214-16)
Atheism was the
ideal religion of the modern period, reflecting its ideas, values, and
agendas. (216)
"What was
entirely plausible in one cultural context now becomes seen as eccentric,
possibly even irrational." (218)
"Reacting
against the simplistic overstatements of the Enlightenment, postmodernity has
stressed the limits to human knowledge, and encouraged a toleration of those
who diverge from the 'one size fits all' philosophy of modernity. The world in which we live is now seen as a
place in which nothing is certain, nothing is guaranteed, and nothing is
unquestionably given." (218) The
all-knowing mind has been replaced by the searcher, questing for truth. "Atheism, as a totalizing system, is
ill at ease in such a world…." (219)
"The
forcible suppression of religion is one of the most troubling aspects of
atheism--especially to those of a postmodern inclination, for whom tolerance
is the supreme social and personal virtue." (230) "A demand to eliminate deficient
beliefs leads to an obsession with power as the means by which that
elimination can proceed." (233)
"The appeal
of atheism to generations lay in its offer of liberation." "Yet wherever atheism became the
establishment, it demonstrated a ruthlessness and lack of toleration that
destroyed its credentials as a liberator." (234)
"No longer could anyone take the suggestion that atheism was the
liberator of humanity with any seriousness." (235)
"Postmodernity
is intolerant of any totalizing worldview, precisely because of its
propensity to oppress those who resist it." (236)
"Individual
atheist writers and thinkers are more than happy to appear on the nation's
chat shows to promote their latest books.
But they have failed to communicate a compelling vision of atheism
that is capable of drawing large numbers of people and holding them
securely." (269)
"The real
significance of atheism has to do with its critique of power and
privilege." "When religion
becomes the establishment, an abuse of power results that corrupts the
worldview. When religion starts
getting ideas about power, atheism soars in its appeal." And vice versa. (276)
"The future
looks nothing like the godless and religionless world so confidently
predicted forty years ago."
"Where religion manages to anchor itself in the hearts and minds
of ordinary people, is sensitive to their needs and concerns, and offers them
a better future, the less credible the atheist critique will appear."
(278)
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