Bart’s Problems
God is great;
God is good;
Now we thank him
for our food.
And therein is the problem. If God is great (all-powerful) and if he is good, then why does this world so often feel God-forsaken? Why is there such great suffering? Why do bad things happen to good people? Why must infants suffer?
“If there is an all-powerful and loving God in this world, why is there so much excruciating pain and unspeakable suffering?”
This is the question that has haunted Bart Ehrman, a prolific writer and professor of religious studies at UNC, for most of his lifetime.
The result of his quest to answer that question is his newest book, God’s Problem: How the Bible Fails to Answer Our Most Important Question–Why We Suffer, which I read this weekend.
He’s asking the questions I’ve been asking for many years. Those questions have led us in different directions, though.
Ehrman, once a student at Moody Bible institute and at Wheaton College and later a pastor of a Baptist Church while working on his Ph. D. at Princeton in New Testament studies, has decided that the answers for him do not lie in Christianity. “I now have lost [my faith] altogether. I no longer go to church, no longer believe, no longer consider myself a Christian.”
Then he explains, “The subject of this book is the reason why.” He had to finally admit to himself that what he was observing in life didn’t mesh with the claims of faith.
Ok, get ready for this: I like the book. I like it a lot. Maybe it’s not the kind of reading you want to give for May graduation gifts, but it strikes me as an honest journey — though a journey that ends in a very different place from where I am.
First, I appreciate how he honestly observes the pain and suffering in the world — from his personal experiences with suffering to the global agonies. Holocaust. Cancer. Starvation. Infant mortality. Tsunamis. Hurricanes. Diseases. Wars.
He remembers going to a Christmas Eve service during which they prayed for God to break into the darkness again.
Yes, I wanted to affirm this prayer, believe this prayer, commit myself to this prayer. But I couldn’t. The darkness is too deep, the suffering too intense, the divine absence too palpable. During the time that it took for this Christmas Eve service to conclude, more than 700 children in the world would have died of hunger; 250 others from drinking unsafe water; and nearly 300 other people from malaria. Not to mention the ones who had been raped, mutilated, tortured, dismembered, and murdered. Nor the innocent victims caught up in the human trade industry, nor those suffering throughout the world from grinding poverty, the destitute migrant farmworkers in our own country, those who were homeless and inflicted with mental disease. Nor to mention the silent suffering that so many millions of the well-fed and well-tended have to experience daily: the pain of children with birth defects, children killed in car accidents, children senselessly taken by leukemia, the pain of divorce and broken families; the pain of lost jobs, lost income, failed prospects. And where is God?
Sometimes when I’ve talked about suffering with my university students, I get the feeling that many of them — coming, perhaps, from comfortable, relatively pain-free lives — don’t yet get it. Darfur is too far away.
So, yes. I like his honestly. For me, it’s the great losses in my life; but it’s also the overwhelming flood of suffering in the world.
Second, I like his humility. Having read several of his other books, I think it maybe doesn’t come easily for him. (Couldn’t many of us say this about ourselves?) He points out that others who are equally aware and intelligent — including his wife, who is a distinguished prof of medieval English literature at Duke and a devoted Christian in the Episcopal church — come to different conclusions.
Third, I like his survey of how scripture attempts to answer the problems of theodicy, including these:
- The main voice of the Old Testament, which suggests that suffering comes because God is punishing us for being bad. At times, God is a fierce beast who rips his people to shreds for failing him (see Hosea 13 — the “prophet of love”). But does this really explain the suffering that we often see? Does that explain cancer that strikes godly people? How about babies who are perishing because they don’t have access to inexpensive malaria drugs?
- The implications of free will (emphasized in the novel The Shack, which I wrote about recently) — suffering as a collateral damage of the way we treat each other. But does this explain a tsunami? retardation? tornados? And if God SOMETIMES enters in to stop the suffering that might result (e.g., to protect a godly families from a drunk driver), then how do you explain that he doesn’t USUALLY seem to do that? If he EVER intervenes, isn’t that in some ways even more of a problem?
- The view that suffering is ultimately redemptive. “But I just don’t see anything redemptive when Ethiopian babies die of malnutrition, or when thousands of people die today (and yesterday, and the day before) of malaria, or when your entire family is brutalized by a drug-crazed gang that breaks into your home in the middle of the night.”
- The focus of some biblical authors that suffering is a kind of test. Think here of Job or Genesis 22 (God’s demand that Abraham sacrifice Isaac). Side note: his material on Job, and the important questions he asks, was worth the price of the book to me.
- The belief of some of the apocalyptic passages that suffering is caused by forces opposed to God. Ehrman says: “It is also rooted in a blind faith that eventually everything wrong will be made right — a nice thoguht, and one that I wish were true. But it is, at the end of the day, blind faith; and it can lead all too easily to social apathy: since problems won’t be solved until the end, there is no point in our working to solve them now.”
There is one biblical writer that he thinks gets it right: Ecclesiastes. In his reading of that book this means that suffering is mystery, this life is all there is, and that we should seek personal joy and joy for our fellow human beings as we live it.
Maybe you don’t want to read this book. I understand. It’s not for the faint of heart.
It’s called God’s Problem. But, as a believer in the Triune God, I have to ask this: does God really have a problem. Or do I?
So here, I think, are Bart’s Problems. (I say this with great respect for his scholarship. I’ve been blessed by reading several of his books.)
First, he believes that the earliest Christians didn’t understand Jesus of Nazareth to be God himself. Rather, he thinks that was a later development. For good reasons, I disagree. And if you disagree, that makes a lot of different. It does not solve the problem of suffering. I’m still confounded. Still searching. Still upset and flummoxed. But it matters deeply to me that I believe God came among us and suffered with us.
Second, despite his disclaimer in the beginning, it feels at times that he forgets that people with equal intelligence and courage have looked right into the monster of pain and have continued to believe. Even with questions and mystery swirling about them. Remember the story of Dr. Diane Komp? A pediatric oncologist, she actually came to faith in the midst of horrible stories of suffering. It wasn’t charismatic healing that convinced her; it was courageous, faith-filled suffering.
Third, and I know this is just kind of pragmatic, I think he’s advocating a view that won’t work for you when you die. Not after you die — but as you face your mortality. The end stories of unbelievers tend not to be pretty. Something in us insists that there is more. Our souls are, indeed, restless until they rest in him.
My journey to understand continues. I’m so thankful for Bart Ehrman as a conversation partner. If my son winds up doing his residency in North Carolina, perhaps we’ll have a chance to sit down some day and chat about it.
Mike, It seems I’m always a couple of steps behind you. I’m looking forward to read this book. I heard the author on NPR the other day and listened to his story of unbecoming a Christian. Hearing him talk about the day he recited the Apostles’ Creed in church and finding the only part of it he still believed was “[Jesus] suffered under Potius Pilate, was crucified, died, and was buried…” made me so sad for him. The power of this creed, and of any hope for answers is in the next part, in the resurrection. Suffering is such a sticky question, but one that we cannot ignore.
Is there really any answer to the question of suffering other than “faithfulness”? Not to satisfying to me either!!
Mike,
I am currently reading the Shack & I cannot put it down. I’m not finished yet, but I can’t help to long for my own “shack” time. Not that I want to re-visit pain, but well, you probably understand what i’m saying. Also, if you get a minute check out this youtube link (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nNuSBGa1mLM). It is a clip from ER and I think it touches on your 3rd point of Bart’s problem.
Mike, this is what I love about your posts. They are real life, maybe even messy and difficult. I recently watched a dear young deeply faithful friend suffer and die (cancer). Anything I said had a hollow ring to it. I don’t have any answers and frankly I don’t understand. The grace and faith that characterized his (and his wife’s)last few weeks was an incredible testimony to everyone around us, so for that I give thanks. He lived an inspirational life and died a hero’s death. But it just doesn’t make any sense to me. I think that rather than try to mask our struggle with some theological platitude we need to be honest. That’s one of the reasons that what you have written here resonates so much with me. Having grown up in a setting that was willing to accept only black and white answers (and thought it knew them all), I’m realizing that it’s okay to admit that sometimes I simply don’t know.
The comments on this thread are going to be pretty revealing, methinks.
I will be interested to see how many people fall on either side of this particular fault line…
1. One observation is that Bart Ehrman draws his conclusions from the available evidence, while there are others who hold their conclusions in spite of the available evidence…
2. I have not read this book yet, though I will probably be doing so soon… Having said that, his questions and observations as related in Mike’s article are profound, and go to the heart of the matter.
3. I myself have concluded that, ultimately, the “problem of evil” can only be met by a “faith-filled” response. As one who is not a Christian, but a “theist” (one who believes in a personal God), I can only survive by trusting that, no matter how horrible life on Earth is, it is all for a good purpose. Yes, it’s sortof a theist’s verion of Romans 8:28 ; – ) But wrapped up in this faithful response is the realization that there are times when life can be more horrible than any of the New Testament writers ever envisioned.
This post really hits home. I don’t want to read the book, but I will. At this point I refuse to stop believing, but at times it is difficult. I look forward to hearing what other people have to say.
Without hope, faith, and love the only thing left is suffering and death.
I think people can have faith in God without crediting him, or blaming him, for all the good and evil in the world. Sure, it may be creeping close to theism, or deism, but I don’t think you have to believe God has his finger in every pie to have “faith.”
If your son doesn’t end up in North Carolina, don’t discount South Carolina. Self Memorial is a great place for residents who want to have opportunities in medical missions. And it is not far from the North Carolina border.
Mike,
Thanks, old friend, for your incredible insights (let’s strike the word old and make it long time friend, I turned 54 a week ago).
In my simple thinking I must make two remarks about Bart’s study.
First, it is maddening for a human to try to understand the world’s suffering and pain. It is just too big for us. The pain and suffering of the world is overwhelming because we cannot see nor understand all the layers of the spiritual war going on and all of what God is doing in spite of the carnage. We cannot know people’s hearts either. It is like one believer all by himself trying to take on a demonic stronghold over a region. He is tackling something too big and too powerful and cannot win that battle by himself.
Secondly, I know without a doubt that God exists and loves me because I have experienced Him as I have stepped out in faithful obedience on many an occasion, even when it made no earthly sense. God was sufficient even though I was not. As a result my faith has grown exponentially over the years as I continually experience God’s faithfulness and His power. Even as Deb and I stared death in the face in ’05, and watched her suffer excrucitating pain, God was faithful to us and empowered us and spoke to us, and encouraged us, etc. Here is the bottom line: Faith must be personal and real and experiential. If it is just based on heritage and book knowledge, the devil will confound our minds destroying a faith built on knowledge rather than experience. God wants a personal relationship with each of us. The question is, do we want one with him? Will we trust him.
To Duane: How is your profession of faith as something that ‘must be personal and real and experential’ any different than that which a Muslim might give ???
To throw in the towel because there is so much we don’t understand is to resign ourselves to a few seconds of meaninglessness in eternity. Something in us rebels against that. Perhaps it’s that we realize that we’re too fearfully and wonderfully made to surrender hope.
Thanks for your summary and the short rebuttal at the end.
1. To make a decision of whether there is a God based on suffering in the world, seems to imply going in that we’ve been promised something different. Isn’t the suggestion God vs. no-God = no suffering vs. suffering?
2. Amen, Clint!
3. Yes, Jeff, we are all brothers. Some of us are at home working the fields and dining at the table. Others of us are prodigals roaming around while our Father anxiously awaits our return.
To C: The question, as I see it, is not that there is suffering in the world; the question is that there is UNIMAGINEABLE SUFFERING in the world, the kind of suffering, for instance, done by a child born with Cerebral Palsy, through no fault of its own, the kind of suffering done by children born with AIDS contracted thru their mothers’ umbilical cord, the kind of suffering done by children born as cocaine addicts, contaminated by their birth-mothers’ blood-supply…
Sorry, C., but the ol’ “suffering is good for you” or “you deserve it” arguments just don’t get it done…
I just had to say “AMEN” to your comment Duane Jenks. Yours too, Clint!
The reason God is it not that he allows it or that it is the cause of our own sin. The earth is cursed. It is the nature of sin.
Sounds like an intersting book. The problem of suffering has never been “solved” for me either. I do believe that we don’t suffer alone. Christ suffers with us. This belief has kept me going through some tough times in my walk. Thanks for the honesty and the recommendation!
I believe that the tough times in life builds faith and character. It deepens our relationship with God. As Christians suffering is part of taking up our cross and following Him. Jesus doesn’t promise the easy, good life. He wants us to take up our cross’s and follow Him even to the point of death. Are we ready to do that? Are we committed enough? I hope so. One thing I have learned is that God is always close even when he seems far away. His timing is always perfect and that he expects us to be faithful during those times of suffering. I know that if we are faithful for this momentary time of trouble we will be blessed with a crown of eternal life. The eternal life in Christ is no more pain, suffering. What a wonderful blessing and promise for us who are suffering now.
I don’t think the suffering will ever make sense to us. God has the power to intercede and yet he allows terrible things to happen. I also don’t think I’ll understand the scriptures that talk about counting it joy when we face trials of many kinds.
I do know that the only way I have survived difficult times is God carrying me through.
Jeff, I’m with you that the argument of “suffering being deserved” not getting it done. My thought is more that Erhman’s God would not have even allowed the Cross. Isn’t that the apex of God’s love? At a time of beating, flogging, humiliating, and hanging on a cross until death overtook His only son, God’s love was at it’s greatest for you and me, by allowing that unimagineable event to happen. If I’m reading Erhman correctly, he wants to say “Thanks, but God, if you really exist and want us to love you back, please remove all suffering, especially the unimagineable”.
I do like the fact that I am not alone in asking the question “why have you forsaken me”. No matter what the answer.
Oh, and I liked your use of Bilbo Baggins’ word flummoxed.
As a nurse,I spend much of my time in an ER with people in crisis. In pain. Suffering. Today I sat with a family who unexpectedly lost their husband/father. When I offered them a chaplain or a prayer, the answer was, “it wouldn’t do us any good”. They were inconsoleable….hysterical..frightened….lost. What could I say?… To compare, when I sit with a family with a deep, abiding faith and assurance of a place in Heaven with God, while there may still be pain and suffering, and grief – it is surrounded with a peace that often passes all understanding. There is much I can say!!..for the comforting words of our Father are there to easily reach out across the pain and join us together to hold each other up and share our burdens – strangers yet brothers/sisters…understanding that our time here on earth is but a moment…and the one we’ve lost has gone on to a MUCH better place! That’s the difference….Praise God!
Ehrman’s dilemma is rooted in his own historical and higher critical approach to the text of scripture. Anyone who has been through the academic drill understands his dilemma–may not agree with his outcomes, but at least understands.
His other problem is God. . .but that might not be such a problem for him if the self-proclaimed “people of God” really acted out what they know of God’s passion and compassion for the suffering of the world. Strangely, God is helped when those who believe begin to order their lives as if they gave a damn.
I’ll admit, I have no answers for most of what I see in terms of human suffering, violence, abuse of children, hunger, etc. My hope resides in the human impulse to attack the pain, no matter what the cost, no matter how foolish. . .in that inexplicable reality my doubts are put off enough for me to hope and to move forward into what at times does seem like only darkness.
I like Carl Jung’s approach to God. It balances an equation. It relieves the anxiety found in the ambiguous and senseless acts in an irrational world.
“God” allows us to relieve anxiety about our own morbidity and selfishness and to actualize the social interest in our real self. It allows us to do as Larry James would probably say “live to our values” not just recite them.
The atheist’s view is too one sided and tries to find rational answers for irrational things. Whether real or imagined God does serve a purpose to the self aware mind.
I do believe in a “God” but not the one defined by the Christian, Jewish or Muslim “Bible.” I do believe in Jesus’ life well lived and his death.
This is how I finally reconciled Adam’s and my mamaw’s death. Amongst their own faults they gave a damn and “lived to their values.”
Jeff, you asked Duane, “How is your profession of faith as something that ‘must be personal and real and experential’ any different than that which a Muslim might give ???”
Clearly, I’m not Duane, but I’d like to share with you what my answer is. (Please, hear my tone as soft…it’s difficult sometimes in “blogspeak” to tell if someone is being dogmatic or just simply talking.)The difference is Jesus. It’s that simple, really. I believe that Jesus is who he says he is…the Son of the Living God, the Way, the Truth, the Life. The person of Jesus that came and lived on this earth, died on the cross and rose the 3rd day is who I have a “personal,real and experential” faith in. Not because I’m 100% certain about all these big questions of suffering. In fact, I think my faith requires me to be at peace with not having an answer to some of the biggest questions. I don’t mean that I’m at peace with suffering itself or that I don’t feel something visceral when I hear about the horrific suffering of others in the world. I just mean that there are many things in this world that we can question, but should have no expectation of an answer. Maybe a person can “smart” themselves right out of faith…that seems to be Ehrman’s case. The Bible says that man’s wisdom is God’s foolishness. So no matter what grand arguements or lofty philosophies we come up with, it’s still nothing compared to God’s wisdom and ways. I honestly do not know much about the Muslim faith. I do know that they don’t believe Jesus is who He says He is and that’s where my walk in this world diverges. Can I live with and love a Muslim? Oh I truly hope so. Do I think I need to “enlighten” them to the truth? No. I’m just called to live like Jesus. Do I do that perfectly? Nowhere near! My faith in Jesus requires me to leave judgment up to Him. Maybe this helps you, maybe not. But I thank you for challenging me (and others) to think about the question. It helped me to contemplate it.
The problem of suffering is incredibly difficult. However, another question has forced its way into my mind. Why does anyone care about suffering? Where does compassion come from? God is behind a lot of suffering as with Job. However, why does He not get credit for people caring about what happens. So when people ask me about suffering, my response is, “Why do you care?” Could that be God also?
Mike,
I don’t know if you saw it, but we are starting, this week, a study of God’s Problem at Highland on Wednesday nights in the Theologia class.
Lot’s of interesting Winter Christian discussions ahead…
i know i haven’t commented here in quite some time, but i just wanted to thank you, mike, for highlighting this book. i haven’t had the opportunity to read it yet, but will try to do so as soon as possible. my initial thought (disclaimer: having not read the book) is to breath a huge sigh of relief. i imagine that his ideas are hard to understand for some, but i for one appreciate his willingness to say many of the things i have been thinking for years. my one plea is that those who have trouble fathoming his position take a moment to breath and then talk to someone who shares his views. we’re really not bad people; we’re just trying to deal with our own inner demons.
I don’t have any answers for this troubling, faith-challenging dilemma either. It has tortured me and caused me doubts for years.
I always go back to one of the promises of Jesus…not a promise we often think of, but one that ultimately results in comfort for me:
John 16:33.
Jesus says (most likely with tears in his eyes), “you can bet the farm that in this world you will suffer greatly,” and then with a smile that shines through the tears he adds, “but don’t let it get you down…your faith in me…in my death, burial, and resurrection holds promise of better times to come. I am the answer.”
Does this answer the question of suffering? Ultimately, no. But it sometimes gives me the courage and the faith to hang on to Him in spite of the storms that are raging. Sometimes I let go and fall into despair, but then he comes and gently gathers me in his arms and whispers the promise again and I am renewed in my faith…at least for that moment.
I think this is possibly one reason for suffering and pain in this world. If life was rosy here and everything always went great for believers, then where would faith come in? We would be believers because we could relieve the suffering of our lives by doing so. But to believe and follow in spite of the apparent inconsistencies in this dark world DOES take faith…it is a leap off of a cliff into a dark void that trusts in the promises made even though it makes very little sense in the world around me.
Hebrews 11 reminds us, “without (a leap of) faith, it is impossible to please Him…because every one who comes to God must believe two things: 1. God exists…period. and 2. Even though there is suffering and pain everywhere around us, His promise is that he rewards those who seek him in faith.”
I think we also must look at the times, places, and people that aren’t suffering. Yes, there is unimaginable amounts of suffering in this world but there is also unimaginable amounts of joy. When we think of all those that are suffering we must also think of all those that are not. When you think about the numbers that die in a natrual disaster you must also think of the numbers that survived.
I think that in a world without God the suffering numbers would be higher the survivor number would be lower. We ask “why did this person have to die in that wreck?” We should also ask “why have the millions of drivers still out there driving not died in a wreck?” How many close calls have you had in your life?
For as many people there are suffering there are more that are not. People that experience pain and suffering in their lives also experience joy and peace.
Thank you Penney for pointing out the compassion that allows us to see suffering. We must also seek to see the times when suffering was prevented, diverted, removed from us.
After the death of my son, the thought that this was simply it (that is, death was the final word) was horrifying — and still is. Though there have certainly been times when the non-existence of God would relieved me of the dichotomy that exists between a ‘good’ God and a ‘suffering’ world. To settle on such a conclusion would have renedered all of life as meaningless and hopeless which, five years now removed from my son’s death, would seem to make life just as miserable as it began to be on that particular evening in the emergency room.
Rex
Pain and suffering are problems as long as you believe in a merciful God, but when you realize there is no God, pain and suffering make perfect sense.
Use reason. USE REASON.
And the singular use of reason by the falible minds of humanity has helped us how?
Rex
Ah, Rex. The next time you are sick, you may pray for God to make you better, but it is the doctor’s medical knowledge received by reason that will make you better. If you want to move mountains, your faith won’t do it, but man-made earth-mover’s built using human reason will. If you want to follow Jesus into the clouds, man-made airplanes built by human reason will take you there, not God. In fact, if you think about it, those biblical miracles aren’t so great next to our man-made “miracles” that you rely on, Rex, every day: Cell phones, computers, the gasoline engine, etc. These “miracles” didn’t drop from heaven; instead, they came from humanity employing our incredible use of reason.
These “miracles” didn’t drop from heaven; instead, they came from humanity employing our incredible use of reason.
And just how did that great human reason come about? Oh, yeah! It was an accident of a big, noisy bang. Talk about having faith, that is quintessential faith,imho.
These “miracles” didn’t drop from heaven; instead, they came from humanity employing our incredible use of reason.
And just how did that great human reason come about? Oh, yeah! It was an accident of a big, noisy bang. Talk about having faith, that is quintessential faith,imho.
Ooops! Don’t know how it happened, but forgive the stuttering – double post.
I struggle with the value of these type of books. I know the writing of the book doesn’t change the reality of what has happened in this man’s life, but in this true story, the ending is utterly sad and there is no redemption. I see the value many of you find, but I think it is hard to balance the idea that this is the story of a real man who is lost. That just makes it hard for me to get very excited about reading it. I may anyway but I’m not pumped.
Martin said, “The next time you are sick, you may pray for God to make you better, but it is the doctor’s medical knowledge received by reason that will make you better.”
Yet that same doctor is unable to cure the person next to me. The same basic problem exists today. The human mind (reason – i.e., René Descartes) has not generated a solution to death. I’ll keep my faith in God.
Rex
Rex,
Give doctors a break…and a little time. The gaps are closing very quickly these days, again, thanks to our use of reason.
Kathy,
You deny evolution which is supported by facts, yet imply that you believe–have faith–that miracles come from God. This is the problem: putting faith (which doesn’t rely on sight) above reason (which does rely on sight). Open your eyes and think for yourself.
I love reason. I use it all day long here in Aggieland of the north.
I just have never been able to squeeze it hard enough to make it yield correct premises on which to build a coherent ethical theory.
qb
Paul Tillich says true faith embraces doubt, makes room for it, emerges from it. I know that’s a very simplistic statement on his views. But it has helped me. Faith grows in doubt.
This post struck me hard. I’ve had similar questions along the lines of prayer. Thanks for introducing some doubt to keep my faith alive, Mike.
The essence of faith IS “opening your eyes and thinking for yourself”! Come on Martin, faith is tough and requires much. Reason/evolution is the easy way out when you can’t find the answers when relying on human wisdom.
“A too benign picture of the human condition leaves something crucial out, something that matters to us. There is a dark side to creation, to use this (Barthian) expression; along with joy, there is massive innocent suffering; and then on top of this, the suffering is denied, the story of victims is distorted, eventually forgotten, never rectified or compensated.”
–Charles Taylor, A Secular Age, p. 319
Interestingly, Taylor points that “a very common objection of unbelief to Christianity has been that it offers a childishly benign view of human life, where everything will come out right in the end, something which the really mature person cannot believe, and is willing to do without, having the courage to face reality as it is.” I agree with Taylor that this view is “somewhat justified.”
However, Taylor also notes that horrific suffering also stumps humanism. In an age of spiritual flatness, where a spiritual dimension has been dismantled and only the horizontal plane of human verbiage remains, we are robbed of words that capture the “depth” of pain and horror. We lack, in this scientific age, the word “evil” to describe Hilter or genocide. Further, we lack a “heroic” perspective to describe the courage of victims in the face of evil. As Taylor notes, this flat age of science “is held in some way to cheapen life, to render it shallow. Recognizing the tragedy in life is not just having the nerve to face it; it is also acknowledging some of its depth and grandeur. There is depth because suffering can make plain to us some of the meaning of life which we couldn’t appreciate before, when it has seemed swimmingly benign; this is after all what tragedy as an art form explores. There is grandeur because of the way suffering is sometimes borne, or fought against.”
In sum, I agree with Taylor: Suffering stumps both faith and unfaith. The only move forward is for both theist and atheist to more forward together to take pain, suffering, and victims seriously. Too often, speaking as a Christian, the church fails to do this.
But C, since when did faith require one to think for themselves? Accepting something on faith actually discourages thinking–you just accept it b/c it was told to you by someone you respect. After all, doesn’t the writer of Hebrews encourage Christians to “walk by faith and not by sight”?
Martin, your problem is you are trying to define faith from solely a Christian perspective. By your reasoning, you possess faith, too. What you are accepting is from someone you respect, assumedly someone from the secular world of scientific thought. We both live by faith, just from different perspectives.
But C, those who I accept info. from, those in the “secular world of scientific thought,” can prove their assertions using the Scientific Method for what they assert. I could, with a lot of effort, even use the Scientific Method and produce those results myself. Faith just simply isn’t involved in that process. That’s why our undestanding of our environment changes, b/c sometimes scientists prove other scientists findings misled or just wrong because they can prove it. Faith doesn’t work like that, does it?
I noticed this book yesterday at the book store. I thought it was just another bash God book. I might read it now though. I think we have all struggled with this problem with pain. I have read a lot of weak explanations that seem to work for some people, but ultimately we have no good answer to the problem. I guess a lot of it goes back to the Fall.
http://www.matthewsblog.waynesborochurchofchrist.org