an ordained minister who teaches Christian apologetics, and relief preaches in Southern Oklahoma. Contact at [email protected].
On Good Friday 1966, Time issued their magazine with the cover emblazoned with just three words: Is God Dead? What followed was a firestorm; Christians once again feeling threatened by an ever more hostile culture, atheist and free-thinkers eagerly awaiting what they just knew would this time be final victory. But both the question itself, and what played out was really nothing new. To be sure the cover garnered much attention and sparked much debate, but it was really nothing new under the sun. The same question had been raised for centuries, millennia even. The truth is, the question of the death of God was first raised by Lucifer, when Eve, in some sense, agreed with him. It seems to me there truly is nothing new under the sun, not even a question about the death of God. Sure enough, thousands of years later Fredrich Nietzsche’s Madman asks the same ageless question: “Do we not hear the noise of the gravediggers who are burying God? . . . What are these churches now, if they are not the tombs and monuments of God?” These are powerful and timeless questions that reside deep in the soul of most all men; questions that demand answers; questions that deserve answers. And that is precisely the intent of this weekly column, to look at the evidence available to help answer the timeless question: Is God dead? Whether you are a Christian, a Seeker, or a Nonbeliever, I welcome you to join along each week to consider the evidence for yourself.
To begin to answer the question, Christian philosopher Charles Taylor may be on to something when he asks a related question: “Why was it virtually impossible not to believe in God in say, the year 1500,” while today things are so very different? In the year 1500 there really was no question as to whether you would believe in God. In fact, it was a foregone conclusion that anyone you met on the street would believe in God. Today, obviously, that is not the case. So, what changed? A lot of things have changed. But these things that have changed, as they relate to religion and belief in God, can be grouped into three broad categories. The first category is the natural world where in the year 1500, the natural world was seen as grand and constant testimony to the design and purpose of God. Looking into the cosmos there was no question who made the moon and stars, and who constantly kept the planets in perfect orbital motion. But the scientific revolution beginning in the 17th century eventually gave people a scientific theory about how the moon and the stars came into being without the help of God. In that way science gave people an option of belief.
The second category is that society itself was understood in the year 1500 to exist as being grounded, or anchored, in something higher than the actions of man. God, it seemed, was tightly interwoven into every aspect of society. Man on his own, it was thought, could not have organized themselves into productive societies, and there were no questions about it, God’s hand actively held society together. Modern man, on the other hand, considers society anchored and grounded in his own brilliance and industry, and that man alone is the master of his destiny. That independent and autonomous mindset becomes especially entrenched as a result of the Age of Enlightenment in the 18th century.
The third category of things that have changed since 1500 that impacted belief in God is that people, then, recognized that they lived in an enchanted world. These three lived categories, working together, pointed people living in the year 1500 inescapably toward God. Taylor argues it was the upending of these three modes of “God’s felt presence” in the world that has ultimately led us to where we are today. Although the decline in belief in God is an extremely complex issue, I think Taylor is spot on with these three very broad categories of lived and felt changes that have occurred over the last 500 years.
Yet again, the question presents itself; Is God dead? How a person answers that question is a direct reflection of that person’s worldview. Everyone has a worldview. But the worldview of the Christian, and the worldview of the atheist are, in many ways, very different from one another. So different, according to some, that there can be no meaningful conversation about the existence of God between them. But there does exist between the believer and the nonbeliever some common ground. Christians believe this common ground exists as a result of all human’s being commonly created in the image of God (Gen 1: 26-27). And it is from this shared common ground that evidences from history, philosophy, and scientific discovery can be investigated to help answer our ultimate question; Is God dead? Although in truth, the question of whether God is dead hinges upon whether there is, or ever was a God to begin with. Quite simply, for God to be dead, He must have first existed. And this truly is the question: Does God exist? So, then, it would seem, before us lies a task to answer the question of whether God exists, only having answered that timeless question can we then answer the question whether we have killed Him.
Gloria in excelsis Deo!