2016-12-13

(This is Part 3 of my response to the article, “God Is Unconvincing To Smart Folks,” by J. H. McKenna. For Part 1, click here. For Part 2, click here.)

Points 6–11 of Dr. McKenna’s article deal with human experience of and testimony about God, and with the phenomenon of divine revelation.

6. Personal testimonies of God are unconvincing

Under this heading, Dr. McKenna writes:

People who testify that they experience God in some way are found in every religion under the sun during the entire span of human history. Does the personal testimony of an ancient polytheist convince you all those ancient Gods existed? Does the personal testimony of a Voodooist convince you of the truth of Voodoo? Does the personal testimony of a Caodaist convince you of the truth of Caodai? All these people have had ‘an experience’ (a sensation or a special feeling) but it wasn’t God they experienced: it was a ‘feeling’ triggered by the very idea of God.

It’s true enough that the experiences of others really can’t convince us that there is a God. Nor does God want the experiences of others to be the only basis for our own faith in God. That’s something we must each come to for ourselves, in our own way. And atheists, of course, are perfectly free to convince themselves that there is no God.

However, the sheer mass of millions of people over the long sweep of recorded human history who have reported experiences of God, though it doesn’t prove anything, should at least give us pause. Such a widespread phenomenon must have some cause.

And although atheists do assign various causes to the human belief in and experience of God, there is no particular evidence that their rather speculative “causes” have any more validity than the possibility that all of those people had experiences of God because there actually is a God to experience. Atheists simply assume that there is no God (“a ridiculous, unscientific idea!”), and go looking for other possible explanations. That’s not even good scientific practice, let alone good philosophy. And history tells us that many “ridiculous” and “unscientific” ideas turned out to be true after all.



The Blind Men and the Elephant (Thailand)

Yes, people have experienced God in all different ways, whether polytheistically, monotheistically, voodooistically, or caodaistically. This issue is beautifully illustrated and resolved in the classic story of “The Blind Men and the Elephant.” Each blind man in the story felt a different part of the elephant’s body—its ear, its trunk, its tusk, its leg, its side, its tail. Therefore each man gave a very different description of the elephant. And yet, it was still a single elephant, which encompassed within its being all of the differing qualities that the various blind men sensed in it.

The very same thing is true of our varying experiences of God. For more on this, please see, “If there’s One God, Why All the Different Religions?”

7. An ‘intuition’ that God exists is unconvincing

‘I just know in my heart of hearts that God exists’ can be used to prove anything, such as: ‘I just know in my heart of hearts that God does not exist.’ Or: ‘I just know in my heart of hearts that many Gods exist.’ Or: ‘I just know in my heart of hearts that an invisible pink teacup orbits the moon.’ All these are valid if any one of them is valid.

At this point in the article I just had to chuckle.

Invisible pink teacup?!?

C’mon, McKenna! Everyone knows that the proper way for atheists to scoff at believers is to talk about the Invisible Pink Unicorn! (Or for Smart Folks, Russel’s Teapot.)

Beyond that, the response to this is the same as the response to the previous point, so we’ll just move along.

Nothing to see here.

Not even a Flying Spaghetti Monster. <mumble mumble Pastafarians mumble mumble>



Touched by His Noodly Appendage

8. Answered prayers are unconvincing

Do the answered prayers of all the various religions prove to you that those religions are true? Ancient people had their prayers answered by Zeus. More likely, things just go a petitioner’s way every now and then. Also, there are billions and billions more unanswered prayers than answered prayers: should unanswered prayers count against God?

It’s a common misconception among ordinary theists and atheists alike that “answered prayers” is all about getting stuff. “I prayed for a great deal on a car and Lo and Behold! I fell right into a great deal on a car! God answered my prayer!”

And perhaps God does sometimes answer our prayers for material things. We really can’t know for sure. So especially for skeptics, answered prayers are unconvincing.

But getting stuff is not what prayer is really all about. Real prayer focuses more on inner, spiritual things. Things such as asking God to help us be a better, more loving, more patient, and more thoughtful person. These are the sorts of prayers God especially wants to hear. And the very act of praying for them helps to open up our mind and heart so that God can flow into us more fully and help us to achieve these spiritual improvements in our life.

Of course, God always wants to do these things for us. But God will not force God’s presence and power upon us. When we ask sincerely for such things, what happens is not a change in God but a change in us—particularly, in our receptivity to God’s presence and power working in us.

That’s what prayer is really all about.

And yes, we can also pray for God’s presence and power to work in other people’s lives. We humans are not islands unto ourselves. We are community beings. And our prayers for one another help to open new and stronger channels for God to flow through.

Will any of this convince a skeptic?

Of course not.

But that’s not what prayer is for.

In fact, the purpose of religion in general is not to prove anything or to convince anyone of anything.

Religion is not science. It’s religion. It makes no more sense to expect religion to be just like science than it does to expect a historical novel to be just like a history textbook, or virtual reality to be just like physical reality.

9. Religious virtuosos (saints, prophets, mystics) are unconvincing

They disagree with each other about what they experienced. And they disagree about God. They are in all religions.

See the story of “The Blind Man and the Elephant” linked under Point 6 above.

Our human perceptions and conceptions of God don’t determine what God actually is. We perceive God based on our own life experiences and the things we’ve learned. This can be quite different for different people. Even “religious virtuosos” are still human beings. Just because they don’t all agree with one another, and in some cases flatly contradict one another, that doesn’t mean God doesn’t exist. Just that different people perceive and conceive of God differently.

The history of science is the history of conflicting theories, each attempting to explain the same phenomena of nature and the physical universe. Does the fact that different “scientific virtuosos” disagree with each other and have conflicting theories about the nature of nature mean that nature doesn’t exist?

10. Miracles are unconvincing

ALL ancient religions are bulging with miracle stories. Are ALL ancient religions therefore true that have miracle stories? Do you believe in many Gods because polytheistic religions have many miracle stories? Miracles are fictions in all religions. As to present-day claims that God heals bodily diseases, why doesn’t God heal amputations by growing limbs back? Is that too hard for God to do? Why don’t we see discarded prosthetic limbs alongside discarded crutches at ‘faith healing’ events?

Agreed. Miracles are unconvincing to skeptics.

In fact, whether or not you believe the miracles in the Bible actually took place as described, the Bible itself makes it crystal clear that miracles are terrible at convincing skeptics and the faithless!

Consider one of the most dramatic series of miraculous events described in the Bible: the Exodus from Egypt.

First came the Burning Bush (Exodus 3). Then the Ten Plagues (Exodus 6–12). Then the Crossing of the Red Sea (Exodus 13:17–14:31). And what was the first thing the people who experienced all these miracles did after singing songs of victory over their enemies?

They complained!

In the desert the whole community grumbled against Moses and Aaron. The Israelites said to them, “If only we had died by the Lord’s hand in Egypt! There we sat around pots of meat and ate all the food we wanted, but you have brought us out into this desert to starve this entire assembly to death.” (Exodus 16:2–3)

Yep! Their God—who had just decimated their Egyptian slave-masters, parted the waters of the Red See so that the Israelites could cross on dry ground, and destroyed the entire pursuing Egyptian army—had a brilliant plan: miraculously deliver the Israelites to the desert and then kill them all with hunger and starvation!

So . . . God did several more miracles for them, giving them food, water, and victory over the first enemies they encountered.

And the people complained the whole time.



The People at Mount Sinai

Then they arrived at Mt. Sinai, where the entire assembled throng of Israelites quaked in their sandals as they felt the mountain shake violently, saw it belch smoke and fire like a volcano, and heard God’s own voice booming the Ten Commandments out of the smoke, darkness, thunder, and lightning (Exodus 19–20, Deuteronomy 5).

Surely that would convince those grumbling, complaining, faithless Israelites of God’s reality and power!

Umm . . . . No.

While Moses was still up on the mountain getting God’s commandments and laws (okay, it did take a while—forty days, to be exact), the Israelites forgot all about what God had just told them. They made a golden calf, worshiped it, and “indulged in revelry” around it—breaking at least half of the Ten Commandments in the process (see Exodus 32).

God dealt severely with them for that, too.

And yet, when it came time for the Israelites to enter and conquer the Holy Land, despite all the miracles of power and victory that God had accomplished for them, they still didn’t believe God had the power to defeat their enemies. They rebelled, and refused to go in. As a result that whole generation of faithless people had to die off over forty years of wandering in the desert so that their children could go in and conquer the Holy Land. You can read the story in Numbers 13–14.

In narrating this extended story of miracles and faithlessness, the Bible couldn’t convey much more clearly that miracles simply do not convince people who are skeptical and don’t want to be convinced.

That’s why in the New Testament we read things such as this:

And he [Jesus] did not do many miracles there because of their lack of faith. (Matthew 13:58, and compare Mark 6:5–6)

And when he did do miracles in the presence of people who had no faith in him, they found ways to explain them away:

Then they brought him a demon-possessed man who was blind and mute, and Jesus healed him, so that he could both talk and see. All the people were astonished and said, “Could this be the Son of David?”

But when the Pharisees heard this, they said, “It is only by Beelzebul, the prince of demons, that this fellow drives out demons.” (Matthew 12:22–24)

Of course, modern-day skeptics and atheists don’t appeal to the prince of the demons to explain away miracles. But they do explain away every miracle that comes their way, usually by simply denying that it happened it all.

In short, both the Bible and common experience make it very clear that miracles do not convince skeptics—nor are they intended to.

If miracles are indeed real, their purpose is not to convince the skeptics, but to strengthen the faith of the faithful. This is beautifully expressed in an exchange between Jesus and the father of a boy whom Jesus was about to heal of possession by an evil spirit. The boy’s father said:

“But if you can do anything, take pity on us and help us.”

“‘If you can’?” said Jesus. “Everything is possible for one who believes.”

Immediately the boy’s father exclaimed, “I do believe; help me overcome my unbelief!” (Mark 9:22–24)

Further, from a spiritual perspective there are far greater miracles than these physical ones anyway. The true miracles are the miracles of people whose lives are changed from the inside out by the presence of God in their lives. Once people have experienced that transformative miracle within themselves and in their lives, miracles of physical healing and other physical transformations are no longer necessary to strengthen their faith.

That is one reason physical miracles mostly faded out after New Testament times. As the teachings of Jesus took hold, people’s faith moved to a deeper level, from being based on external, physical experiences to being based on inner knowledge, understanding, and experience of God’s presence within themselves and among the community of faithful believers.

But that is something that skeptics and atheists will never understand as long as their eyes remain firmly and exclusively fixed on physical reality.

11. Revealed holy books are unconvincing

None of the books are conspicuously divine. Human talent can explain them all. People from one religion do not acknowledge the revealed claims of another religion’s holy book, and skeptics simply doubt them all. Plus, some of the material in any ancient holy book is untrue and often sub-ethical by present-day standards.

Like miracles, holy books are not likely to convince the skeptics, nor are they designed to. Their role, rather, is to inspire and instruct the faithful, and to strengthen those who want to develop more faith.

Beyond that, it is striking that atheists commonly read and interpret the Bible the same way fundamentalist Christians do.

What?!?

Atheists reject the Bible! Fundamentalists think the Bible is divinely inspired Word of God!

Sure.

But both atheists and fundamentalists read the Bible as if it were meant to be interpreted literally. They both think it is speaking mostly about physical, material-world events.

Another way of saying this is that both atheists and fundamentalist Christians are materialistic in their view of the Bible. In particular, atheists think of the Bible as saying things that are “untrue” because their conception of “truth” is purely physical, scientific, and historical.

But if the Bible is God’s Holy Word, its purpose must be far greater than teaching us about material-world events such as how this world was created and how a particular bronze-age culture escaped slavery and invaded and conquered a land that they claimed as their own. If the Bible is God’s Word, its purpose must be to tell us, not about material-world things, but about spiritual and divine things.

Yet these are precisely the sorts of things that skeptics and atheists reject out of hand.

So of course they can’t see what the Bible is really about.

For what it is really about, and why it was written the way it was—including the “often sub-ethical” standards in it—please see these articles:

Can We Really Believe the Bible?

The Bible: Literal Inerrancy vs. Divine Depths of Meaning

How God Speaks in the Bible to Us Boneheads

Points 12–18 deal with big issues of God’s causative position and beneficial effects on the universe and humanity. We’ll take them up in Part 4.

(The remaining parts of this article will be posted every two days.)

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