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Monday, August 16, 2004

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>>  The End of Faith--Secularism with the Gloves Off

Attacks on Christianity are nothing new, but a book now hitting the
nation's bookstores argues that faith in God is not only out of date,
but dangerous. As a matter of fact, Sam Harris argues that belief in God
is the root cause of world terrorism and virtually every other problem
faced by humanity.

In The End of Faith: Religion, Terror, and the Future of Reason, Harris
presents a frontal assault on the edifice of faith, charging the
God-believers with murderous intentions, intolerance, and intellectual
repression--and that's just for starters.

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"Religious faith represents so uncompromising a misuse of the power of
our minds that it forms a kind of perverse, cultural singularity--a
vanishing point beyond which rational discourse proves impossible,"
Harris asserts. "When foisted upon each generation anew, it renders us
incapable of realizing just how much of our world has been unnecessarily
ceded to a dark and barbarous past."

Harris levels his attack at theism in any form, including Judaism,
Christianity, and Islam. While he appears to find some potential benefit
to society in the meditative traditions of Eastern religions, theistic
faiths bear the blame for monstrous evil and human suffering.

Harris represents the hard left of militant secularism. He minces no
words and writes with a "take no prisoners" aggressiveness. Take this
passage for example: "Our world is fast succumbing to the activities of
men and women who would stake the future of our species on beliefs that
should not survive an elementary school education. That so many of us
are still dying on account of ancient myths is as bewildering as it is
horrible, and our own attachment to these myths, whether moderate or
extreme, has kept us silent in the face of developments that could
ultimately destroy us."

While most Americans--even those on the cultural left--would suggest
some positive contributions attributable to faith in God, Harris
discards all claims of theistic value. This author is not out to resist
religious extremism. As Harris sees it, all faith is extremism. Faith in
God--whatever its form--is the problem, he insists, and religious
liberty is a threat to the Republic itself.

Pursuing his argument to its logical conclusion, Harris admits that he
hopes "to show that the very ideal of religious tolerance--born of the
notion that every human being should be free to believe whatever he
wants about God--is one of the principle forces driving us toward the
abyss." So much for the myth of liberal tolerance.

Harris, a philosophy graduate of Stanford University now completing a
doctorate in neuroscience, clearly hopes to change the terms of our
current debate. He does not want militant Muslims to moderate, he wants
them to become atheists. He does not call upon Christians to forfeit
belief that Jesus is the only way of salvation; he calls upon Christians
to abandon the faith altogether. The poisonous influence of theism and
the dangerous intoxication of belief in God must be eliminated. But how?
In an op-ed column published in the August 15, 2004 edition of The Los
Angeles Times, Harris calls for an all-out attack upon faith, seeking to
mobilize militant secularists to action. He blames
Christians--particularly Christians in elected office--with
obstructionism, hatred, and intellectual backwardness. Such believers
are responsible for the nation's focus on "pseudo-problems like gay
marriage" and the like.

Harris would have Americans ban all belief in God from the public square
and the culture. Insofar as Christians look to the Bible as the revealed
authority, they must be marginalized. After summarizing the Bible's
teachings against homosexuality, Harris presents his argument with full
force: "What should we conclude from all this? That whatever their
import to people of faith, ancient religious texts shouldn't form the
basis of social policy in the 21st century. The Bible was written at a
time when people thought the Earth was flat, when the wheelbarrow was
high tech. Are its teachings applicable to the challenges we now face as
a global civilization?" Believers are "the genuine enemies of
civilization," Harris argues, and religious tolerance--much less
religious liberty--is simply too high a price to pay.

As a matter of fact, Harris aims his sharpest criticism at those who
would pose as "moderates" in matters of faith. Those who seek to
accommodate theistic faith with the claims of modern culture "are
themselves the bearers of a terrible dogma." Furthermore, they blind
themselves to the fact that they are lying to themselves and
misrepresenting their faith.

In other words, Harris argues that one may be liberal or religious, but
not both. Take Christianity for example. Liberal theologians and
self-styled moderates have sought to accommodate Christianity's central
truth claims with the worldview of secularism. Nevertheless, Harris
correctly describes their predicament. "The first thing to observe about
the moderates' retreat from scriptural literalism is that it draws its
inspiration not from Scripture but from cultural developments that have
rendered many of God's utterances difficult to accept as written."

Thus, moderates seek to argue that the authoritative text, the Bible,
should be "reinterpreted" in light of modern knowledge and
sensitivities. These efforts fail to remove the underlying problem,
Harris insists. At the same time, the accomodationists destroy the very
faith they claim to be attempting to save. "This is a problem for
'moderation' in religion," Harris argues, "It has nothing underwriting
it other than the unacknowledged neglect of the letter of the divine
law."

While believers place their trust in God and believe in life after
death, "religious moderation consists in not being too sure about what
happens after death." Nevertheless, even religious liberals pay lip
service to vague promises concerning the afterlife and ambiguous
assertions concerning God and his purposes in the world.

In Harris's view, this amounts to an exercise in mass self-delusion on
the part of religious moderates. Furthermore, the very existence of
supposed moderates in matters of faith provides cover for what Harris
alleges is the heart of the problem--the very idea of belief in God. As
he explains, "Religious moderation still represents a failure to
criticize the unreasonable (and dangerous) certainty of others."

Those on the secularist side who fail to take their argument to its
ultimate conclusion also come under Harris's condemnation. Moderate
believers and moderate secularists are, in his view, combined as a
massive obstacle to human progress. Religious beliefs are not to be
fixed, Harris asserts, nor are beliefs to be merely tolerated. Sam
Harris believes that civilization must eradicate belief in God--nothing
less will do.

What about the American tradition of respect for believers? "As a
consequence of our silence on these matters, we live in a country in
which a person cannot get elected president if he openly doubts the
existence of heaven and hell." Harris looks at this reality with sheer
incredulity: "In our next presidential election, an actor who reads his
Bible would almost certainly defeat a rocket scientist who does not.
Could there be any clearer indication that we are allowing unreason and
otherworldliness to govern our affairs?"

In a fascinating section, Harris attacks the fragile house of religious
liberalism, directing his scrutiny to Paul Tillich, one of the most
perversely influential theologians in the history of the Christian
church. Tillich, a native of Germany who taught at the University of
Chicago and Harvard Divinity School, exerted an inordinate influence on
Christian liberals at the middle of the twentieth century. Tillich lied
both to himself and to believers, Harris alleges. As another famous
atheist once observed, it takes one to know one--and Tillich was clearly
an atheist.

As Harris insists, Tillich redefined the word "faith" so that belief in
God was removed, and some version of a vague existentialistic experience
remained--all based in Tillich's concept of an "ultimate concern." Thus,
Paul Tillich plays his part in Harris's conspiracy theory. While Tillich
may have been an intellectual, he lacked intellectual honesty. "Despite
the considerable exertions of men like Tillich who have attempted to
hide the serpent lurking at the foot of every altar, the truth is that
religious faith is simply unjustified belief in matters of ultimate
concern--specifically in propositions that promise some mechanism by
which human life can be spared the ravages of time and death."

One of the most interesting features of Harris's book is its back cover.
Endorsements--known in the publishing world as "blurbs"--include
statements by Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz, notorious Princeton
bioethicist Peter Singer, and Joseph C. Hough, Jr., president of Union
Theological Seminary in New York City. One can only wonder if Dershowitz
and Hough actually read the book.

Dershowitz, a Jewish agnostic, has built his reputation as a defender of
civil liberties. Has he now decided that religious liberty is simply too
dangerous for American society? If so, it would be most interesting to
read Dershowitz's own version of this argument.

The statement by Joseph Hough represents the insanity of religious
liberalism in its purest form. Union Theological Seminary represents the
castle of protestant liberalism in America, proudly harboring various
heresies throughout the last century. No informed observer of American
religious life should be surprised by any inane idea emerging from that
seminary's campus in Morningside Heights. Hough's endorsement reads:
"Here is a ringing challenge to all Americans who recognize the danger
to American democracy posed by the political alliance of right-wing
religion and politics and the failure of the tepid and tentative
responses by liberal persons of faith. While one might dispute some of
the claims and arguments presented by Harris, the need for a wake-up
call to religious liberals is right on the mark."

Assuming that President Hough had even the most minimal understanding of
Harris's book--an assumption that would seem warranted given the fact
that he endorsed it--one can only be reminded of Vladimir Lenin's
prediction that, when it came time to hang the capitalists, the
capitalists would compete for the contract to sell the rope.

The End of Faith presents us with a portait of secularism with its
gloves off. Harris's argument is almost certain to be repeated again and
again as America continues its slide into secularism and hostility
toward all believers.

In today's climate of secular advance, the prophets of unbelief think
time is on their side. Sam Harris's book is a wake-up call indeed, and
it should awaken believers to the true character of aggressive
secularism and the true agenda of its proponents.

Furthermore, believers should pay particular heed to Harris's argument
about the nature of religious liberalism. As Joseph Hough's endorsement
makes clear, when it comes time to hang belief in God on the gallows of
modern secularism, the theological liberals will be more than willing to
sell the rope--and endorse the book.

____________________________________

R. Albert Mohler, Jr. is president of The Southern Baptist Theological
Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky.  For more articles and resources by
Dr. Mohler, and for information on The Albert Mohler Program, a daily
national radio program broadcast on the Salem Radio Network, go to
www.albertmohler.com.  For information on The Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary, go to www.sbts.edu.  Send feedback to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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than at any other time of year. Research shows that 90% of 
children between 8-16 have viewed pornography on the internet. 
Not because they are looking for it but because porn is looking 
for them. Don�t be a victim. Porn-proof your home with Bsafe.com 
http://l.salemweb.net/bsafe0604/

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