Posted on 05/19/2020 6:56:41 AM PDT by Heartlander
Historian Tom Holland is known primarily as a storyteller of the ancient world. Thus, his new book Dominion: How the Christian Revolution Remade the World, came as something of a surprise for several reasons. First, Tom Holland is not a Christian. Second, Hollands book is one of the most ambitious historical defenses of Christianity in a very long time.
While studying the ancient world, Holland writes, he realized something. Simply, the ancients were cruel, and their values utterly foreign to him. The Spartans routinely murdered imperfect children. The bodies of slaves were treated like outlets for the physical pleasure of those with power. Infanticide was common. The poor and the weak had no rights.
How did we get from there to here? It was Christianity, Holland writes. Christianity revolutionized sex and marriage, demanding that men control themselves and prohibiting all forms of rape. Christianity confined sexuality within monogamy. (It is ironic, Holland notes, that these are now the very standards for which Christianity is derided.) Christianity elevated women. In short, Christianity utterly transformed the world.
In fact, Holland points out that without Christianity, the Western world would not exist. Even the claims of the social justice warriors who despise the faith of their ancestors rest on a foundation of Judeo-Christian values. Those who make arguments based on love, tolerance, and compassion are borrowing fundamentally Christian arguments. If the West had not become Christian, Holland writes, no one would have gotten woke.
Hollands book-length defense of the belief system the elites love to despise has unsurprisingly attracted some criticism. He faced off with militant atheist and prominent philosopher A.C. Grayling on the question Did Christianity give us our human values? Grayling struggled to rebut Holland, sounding more petty than philosophical. Holland, on the other hand, became positively passionate in his defense of Christianity. If Western civilization is the fishbowl, he stated, then the water is Christianity.
While many including Holland cannot quite bring themselves to believe Christianity is true, they are starting to believe that Christianity might be necessary.
In fact, the very critiques of those who condemn Christianity for various perceived injustices are rooted in Christian precepts.
Hollands passionate defense of Christianity is fascinating because it appears to be part of a trend. As the West becomes definitively post-Christian, many secularists are suddenly realizing that Christianity may have been more valuable than they thought. While many including Holland cannot quite bring themselves to believe Christianity is true, they are starting to believe that Christianity might be necessary.
Douglas Murray, the conservative author and columnist, is also an atheist. In recent years, however, he has started to warn that the decline of Christianity is a dangerous thing. Society now faces three options. First, Murray says, is to reject the idea that all human life is precious. Another is to work furiously to nail down an atheist version of the sanctity of the individual. And if that doesnt work? Then there is only one other place to go. Which is back to faith, whether we like it or not.
Murray now occasionally refers to himself as a Christian atheist. Speaking with Esther OReilly on the Unbelievable podcast, Murray lauded the revolutionary moral insights of Christianity. He told her that while visiting the Sea of Galilee, he couldnt shake the feeling that something happened here. And he admitted that as atheists consider morality, the more we may have to accept that the sanctity of human life is a Judeo-Christian notion which might very easily not survive [the disappearance of] Judeo-Christian civilization.
Speaking on The Darren Grimes Show last month, he was even blunter. There seems to be little point to me in a life spent talking about Labour Party politics rather than God.
The phenomenon of atheists praising Christianity appears to be growing. Gone are the days when Christopher Hitchens (a good friend of Murrays) and his fellow secularists raged against the poison of religion. Even Richard Dawkins has now admitted that Christianity might be preferable to the alternatives. He once called for Christianity to be destroyed. Now he begrudgingly says it has good effects on society.
There is also Jordan Peterson. The famous psychologist refuses to say whether he believes in God. Or at least, he refuses to say what he means by God, or Christ or faith. Peterson is attempting to synthesize Scripture with Jung and Darwin, and the result is predictably tortured. But Peterson knows that without Christianity, unspeakable cruelty is inevitable. He speaks like a secular Calvinist. He believes in human depravity, but has not yet worked out redemption.
Charles Murray, the American social scientist and sociologist, is an agnostic. Yet, he told me in an interview that he believes the American republic will not survive without a resurgence of Christianity. You cannot have a free society with a constitution like the American one unless you are trying to govern a religious people, he observed.
The late Sir Roger Scruton, too, headed back to church. He struggled with many of Christianitys truth claims. But still, he came to believe that Christianity was necessary. While nursing doubts, he played the organ in his local Anglican church during Sunday services. Perhaps practice, he once said, would help him along. He wasnt sure he could believe it all. But he wanted to.
These men are King Agrippa Christians. As King Agrippa told the Apostle Paul: Almost thou persuadest me to be a Christian. They almost believe it. They believe Christianity is good. Some believe it is necessary. As Murray put it, he believes in belief. But they cannot (yet) bring themselves to believe that it is literally true that Jesus Christ actually rose from the dead.
These strange struggles also deliver a warning to the West. Without Christianity, we are heading into a thick and impenetrable darkness. Christianity gave us human rights. It gave us protection for the weak. Compassion rooted in commands to love. Forgiveness for enemies. It revolutionized the world. We are now in the process of undoing that revolution. In fact, we are replacing it with the Sexual Revolution.
We should look at what we are destroying before we carry on. We should ask why fences were built before tearing them down. We should listen to the atheists nervously telling us that Christianity is necessary. And we should fight to ensure that our post-Christian culture is again a pre-Christian one.
Jonathon Van Maren is a public speaker, writer, and pro-life activist. He is the author of The Culture War and Seeing Is Believing: Why Our Culture Must Face the Victims of Abortion, and co-author of A Guide to Discussing Assisted Suicide.
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This verse is the most progressive statement of its age.
Galatians 3:28 There is no Jew or Greek, slave or free, male and female; since you are all one in Christ Jesus.
The statement was so against the beliefs of most people that it took hundreds of years for people to finally institute it into law. Even now most of the world does not believe in equality for all.
Atheism is irrational. At least this guy gets the importance of belief in God, if not the reality of God.
To know Him is to love Him.
Anyone who is reading this who is not already His: get to know Him.
"Ask and you shall receive." "Lord, let me know You." Keep asking.
Abandon whatever evil you have in hand, and turn to Him. He says "Follow Me." You say "Yes." That's it.
The quote about being “woke” doesn’t work. Wokeness and Christianity are antithetical in my understanding. Woke is based on identity politics and class conflict and does not see humanity without those two lens, does not see the universality of man as man.
There is the distinction between believing and knowing, but those two words can be used in an indistinguishable way. Christianity asks you to believe. With belief you can be riddled with doubt at times. True knowing only comes when you are with God. This makes sense for agnostics but, perhaps, not atheists. The atheist claims he knows. But his “knowledge” is really a faith, because true knowledge of this sort cannot be had. Unless the atheist has checked out everywhere in the universe, he wouldn’t know for sure if God is out there or not.
In the debate between religion and science—religion wins because it has an ethical framework (10 Commandments etc..) It has been misused but always in the face of opposition. Science has no over-riding ethical structure. Should scientist have built the Atomic Bomb? German scientist didn’t build one for Hitler. Allied scientists built one for the US and used it to fry to Japanese cities—Not military bases, not a naval base, not a battlefield—civilians. Science is being misused in China to control their population. No, religion, like it or not, is needed.
Good answer
Thanks for posting.
Without saying it, some of them seem to be understanding that atheism brings no moral code, in fact the opposite - ‘anything goes’ devolves a population.
Then there’s Islam. They may also be realizing that the only thing standing between them and an Islamic beheading is a Christian.
For so long we’ve heard about all the bad things in Christian history ‘because’ of Christianity. The truth is that man was vile, Christianity brought us OUT of the darkness, it wasn’t the cause - which took time.
So if Islam scares them and atheism has no answers then where is the truth? They realize the answer is staring them in the face but they still won’t accept it.
But he isnt shy about saying that as a Jew he views any weakening of the American Christian consensus with alarm.
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