Posted on 12/17/2011 5:32:02 AM PST by Kaslin
When Christopher Hitchens died this week, I trust that after he did so, something miraculous happened.
Thats what my faith tells me.
Its not in good taste to speak ill of someone recently deceased. But in this case, I think Hitchens would approve, or at least shrug it off with indifference, many of the screeds written for or against him.
But, while reading the eulogies about Hitchens I get the feeling, more than anything else, of a life wasted on unbelief.
Everyone dies, and then thats it or is it?
Is all thats left behind for a writer like Hitchens a mass of manuscripts and his ability to endure- or not- over the generations?
Hitchens would argue so. But I would argue no.
Because I believe that the things you do in life to bolster faithfulness; the things you do in life to support belief in anything or even something are much more important, either way, than the things you stand against.
Faith is the most important part of life and probably the most neglected.
This is not merely a religious argument. Its an argument against skepticism as an end rather than as a means to something. Its an argument that understands that unbelief requires much more faith than faith does and provides us with little substance.
If Abraham Lincoln had merely been against the spread of slavery rather than also believing in the God-given equality of man, 45 million people could be in slavery today.
But lets get back to Hitchens.
His view of the miraculous is a good example of how faith is the most extraordinary part of human existence.
He dismisses our existence as a mere accident of well he doesnt know what.
But if we are just an accident that happened, sentient beings with the ability to know right from wrong, of knowing the natural law from right here in our heart, of comprehending our own existence and even rejecting our existence, well thats probably the greatest miracle of all.
Is more improbable that man with knowledge of natural law was created by a knowing and loving God or just on accident? It certainly would require a great deal of faith to believe that it was on accident.
Im not a mathematician, but Im guessing the odds of me being here, occupying this space and time, on accident, would be quite astronomical.
Reverse engineer the "Infinite Monkey" theory that says that if you have an infinite number of monkeys on an infinite number of typewriters that one monkey will accidentally bang out the Complete Works of William Shakespeare. This is a much-used thought experiment that deals in big number probabilities.
In Hitchens' universe, William Shakespeare was that improbable, infinite monkey, as are you. In fact, in Hitchens universe, Shakespeare is even more improbable than our infinite monkey, because our infinite monkey only accounts for the odds of creating Shakespeare's works, rather than creation of Shakespeare himself.
What atheists would have you believe is the improbable multiplied by infinity by accident.
That's why I think increasingly advances in biology and physics suggest that an accidental creation is the most improbable faith of all.
For example, the theory in quantum mechanics called the Uncertainty Principle- which so far is consistent with what has been observed in physics- increasingly suggests that everything remains only a probability until it is actually observed. Without observation, nothing actually exists.
If thats true- Einstein rejected the possibility of the Uncertainty Principle- none of us really exist nor does the universe exists without an all-seeing being. There is just no other explanation for the universe.
In Hitchens universe, a universe without an all-knowing being, freed from bonds of both time and space, would suggest that our existence is only a probability, not a reality.
The awareness of our own existence, our self-consciousness therefore makes belief in a sterile universe without a Creator, an unknowable act of faith.
But instead of faith all you are left with is the certainty of doubt.
The lesson you find has the moral authority of a South Park episode.
And none of the humor.
Thats not great.
Thats an episode of The View.
Ah. The title is simply a reference to Hitchens’ book, God Is Not Great: http://www.amazon.com/God-Not-Great-Religion-Everything/dp/0446579807
What’s more “damning” — saying The Author isn’t great, or saying the author isn’t great?
The headline writer is simply being ironic.
I conclude with a relevant passage of Scripture: “What do you benefit if you gain the whole world but lose your own soul? Is anything worth more than your soul?”
The man who loses his soul is not great, but a failure, having lost everything of value. Sad, tragic.
There are certainly vast numbers of imperfect human beings who despite appearances otherwise; may have no authentic/active. . .God connection.
Finte knowledge is humbling. Or should be. . .
Wuz!
And yes, agree with you on the ‘judgment’ or appropriately discriminatory, thing. For sure PC has diluted judgment to the point that is is discriminatory by every measure. Am speaking of course, here; per judging Christopher Hitchens spent lifetime as a waste. Again; we cannot kow. . .
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