PART I
The Secular Condition
1
Modern Western Rationality’s
Eliding of Spiritual Realities
“Secularity”—that social and cultural situation in which spiritual reality is deemed nonexistent and nonsensical—didn’t just happen overnight. It is the result of long-term shifts in how we understand what is and is not reasonable. These tectonic shifts are barely perceptible to ordinary reason. Unlike planet earth’s tectonic shifts, these shifts are never earthquake sudden, but over the centuries their impact can be just as earthshaking. For instance, in the West we can go from the sixteenth century, when the whole of society was passionately debating how one is saved, to the early twenty-first century, when even believers worry over the reasonableness of faith.
At the heart of the shift to a secular age is a shift in what is considered to be reasonable that not only undercuts the reasonableness of faith in God but also undercuts the reasonableness of affirming free will, creative originality, altruism, moral reality, and moral responsibility. Henceforth I will call these “spiritual realities.”1 Notably, no new and challenging argument suddenly made spiritual realities seem like nonsense. The secular worldview arose slowly and indirectly. Certain background ideas about what was reasonable came together in such a way that they gradually rendered all spiritual realities intellectually suspect.
By the secular condition, however, I mean something more than simply the secular rejection of spiritual realities. The secular condition describes a society in which vast numbers of people subscribe to a modern, naturalistic understanding of what is reasonable (which involves rejecting all spiritual realities) and simultaneously continue to affirm some or all spiritual realities. In short, the secular condition describes the quandary of a host of people who affirm spiritual realities whose meaningfulness and reasonableness they cannot, if pressed, defend.
This is all a bit abstract, so before detailing the history of the conceptual shifts that have resulted in the secular condition, let me try to make all this more concrete with two illustrations. My first illustration should make clear how a shift in conceptual frameworks elided the meaningfulness of faith in God. My second illustration should make clear how a shift in conceptual frameworks elided the meaningfulness and reasonableness of affirming spiritual realities such as free will, creative originality, altruism, moral reality, and moral responsibility.
Eliding Faith
First, consider the fate of “faith” in the modern West. What does “faith” mean? Even for many believers, “faith” means believing something beyond what is warranted by the evidence. Even many believers say they are taking something “on faith” or that they are making a “leap of faith,” meaning that they are affirming a proposition despite a lack of evidence, that they are leaping beyond what is warranted by reason. This means that making an affirmation beyond the bounds of evidence and proper warrant—in short, being irrational—is what “faith” now means by definition. Meanwhile, that which is specifically affirmed by faith, the content that distinguishes various faiths, is typically described in terms of “beliefs.”
So, for instance, what makes one’s religion Christian or Hindu depends upon the differing beliefs of Christians and Hindus. To speak of “faith” with regard to Christianity, Hinduism, and other religions is to affirm that they all affirm truths without proper warrant, which is to say, what all religions share, what makes them “faiths” is, by definition, their irrationality. In accord with this mainstream modern Western understanding of faith, the phrase “a reasonable faith” is an oxymoron, for faith by definition is irrational, an affirmation that goes beyond what is warranted by evidence.
Even conservative Christians who are self-proclaimed enemies of secularism accept this devastating definition of faith. Consider the work of Phillip Johnson, Jefferson E. Peyser Professor of Law, emeritus, at the University of California, Berkeley. Johnson, a major proponent of intelligent design theory, is the author of books such as Defeating Darwinism and Reason in the Balance: The Case Against Naturalism in Science, Law and Education. This, however, is Johnson at the beginning of Defeating Darwinism:
I therefore put the following simple proposition on the table for discussion: God is our true Creator. I am not speaking of a God who is known only by faith and is invisible to reason, or who acted undetectably behind some naturalistic evolutionary process that was to all appearances mindless and purposeless. That kind of talk is about the human imagination, not the reality of God. I speak of a God who acted openly and who left his fingerprints all over the evidence. Does such a God really exist, or is he a fantasy like Santa Claus? That is the subject of this book.2
Johnson is an evangelical Christian whose books are published by conservative Christian presses. But Johnson rejects faith alone because it is irrational: “I am not speaking of a God who is known only by faith and is invisible to reason ... That kind of talk is about the human imagination, not the reality of God. I speak of ... evidence.” For Johnson, if you only have faith in God you are as rational as an adult who still believes in Santa Claus: “Does such a God really exist, or is he a fantasy like Santa Claus?”
Johnson understands himself to be defending Christianity—“defending the faith,” as Christians often say—against naturalism.3 But Johnson accepts a modern definition where “faith” means “affirmation without evidence,” he accepts a modern ethics of belief whereby to believe in God only by faith is irrational, and he calls for an argument for the existence of God. In short, Johnson’s argument against naturalism and defense of belief in God remains within the boundaries of the rationality he means to reject. That is why Johnson ends up defending a version of Christian faith that considers faith alone insufficient.
Let me hasten to stress that I am not questioning Johnson’s lived faith or personal spirituality. From my perspective, Johnson is a victim of modernity’s eliding of faith. His attempt to protect Christianity from accusations of irrationality by developing an argument for the existence of God (an argument in which belief in God doesn’t have to be based on “mere faith” but rather is grounded in evidence and reason) is continuous with prominent efforts by Christians ever since the scientific revolution of the seventeenth century to develop arguments that prove God exists. For this reason, standard philosophy of religion textbooks treat a variety of so-called ontological, cosmological, and teleological arguments for the existence of God and also review a variety of theodicies, which are arguments that provide justification for belief in God in the face of the so-called problem of evil (i.e., where the existence of evil creates a logical problem for those who argue for the existence of God).
No proof of God’s existence has succeeded, no theodicy has triumphed, but that is not the real problem for Christian (or any other) faith. The clarity of Johnson’s statement of purpose helps to unveil the depth of the real problem, which only becomes visible when one realizes that if any proof of God’s existence were to be successful it would immediately ruin faith. For then the belief that “God exists” would be a matter not of faith, but a matter of reason, a properly warranted conclusion of reason. I would then believe in God in the same way that I believe that it takes approximately eight minutes for light from the sun to reach earth. That is, if any proof for the existence of God were successful we would be dealing with a God who is the conclusion of a human argument, a God who is a valid inference of human reason, a God who is known reasonably only insofar as that God is within the grasp of human reason.
According to Judaism, Christianity and all the rest of the world’s classic theistic faith traditions, any such god, any god drawn by human reason, would be a graven image, an idol. Notably when I say, “ruin faith,” I am not concerned with ruining the anemic, modern version of faith, where “faith” means “affirmation beyond the evidence.” This modern understanding already ruins faith, as does its demand for a God who is a valid inference of human reason (i.e., an idol). The conceptual power of the condition of secularity is so strong that it is no longer clear even to many people of faith what else faith could possibly mean, so they define faith in terms of affirmation of some set of beliefs they cannot justify. In sum, within the background conceptual framework of modern Western reason, any defense of the reasonableness of faith is quixotic, for we are left with a disastrous either/or: either faith in God by virtue of an affirmation that reaches beyond the evidence (and therefore irrationality) or reasonable belief in a God whose existence we have demonstrated (and thereby idolatry).
Let me reiterate that I am not questioning the lived faith or personal spirituality of the multitude of people who, like Phillip Johnson, have been ensnared by the modern Western rationality that drives us to this disastrous either/or. I am claiming that the ability to articulate the reality of faith accurately, and to defend how faith is reasonable, has been elided by tectonic shifts that have eventuated in the condition of secularity. Over the past four centuries, modern Western thought has surreptitiously evolved background concepts—in particular, concepts of “knowledge,” “good,” “nature,” “reality,” “cause,” and “I”—that empty “faith” of spiritual content and make the phrase “reasonable faith” nonsensical by definition.
Skeptics may argue that I should not use the term “elided” because there are arguments against faith in God. No such arguments exist. True, university classes in religion regularly review convincing arguments against arguments for the existence of God. But those arguments for the existence of God themselves presume a modern Western framework of understanding and are almost wholly the inventions of modern Western reason. They were developed when people of faith were, for the first time, duped into thinking that the reasonableness of faith depended upon finding proof for the conclusion “God exists,” and thereby into thinking that it was a good idea to try to prove the existence of God. To the contrary, since any successful argument for the existence of God would ruin faith and set up an idol, from the perspective I am defending all arguments that defeat arguments for the existence of God are beneficial, for they eliminate a threat to true faith.4
The demand for proof keeps most modern thinkers from noticing and taking seriously the fact that none of the world’s major faith traditions—none of their scriptures, major theologians, or classic interpreters—ever attempted to prove the existence of God. It leads some people of faith to speak of a “leap of faith,” “belief without proper warrant,” a “leap beyond reason,” and sometimes even to describe faith as “a decision [my decision] to believe [beyond the evidence].” It leads others to declare faith insufficient and therefore to try to prove the existence of God, to speak of “evidence that demands a verdict,”5 to argue enthusiastically for creation science, and/or to attempt to infer the existence of an intelligent designer. All of this displays the influence of quintessentially modern Western understanding and is disastrous for faith.
In sum, a centuries-long, surreptitious shift in conceptual frameworks has created a predominant form of reason in the modern West that sets up a disastrous either/or: either faith in God by virtue of an affirmation that reaches beyond the evidence (and therefore irrationality) or reasonable belief in a God whose existence we have demonstrated (and thereby idolatry). This disastrous either/or is not the result of any particular argument. It is the result of a long-term, largely hidden shift in Western conceptual frameworks that elides the possibility of speaking meaningfully about faith.
How, then, should we think about “faith in God”? The meaningful answer to that pivotal question is beyond the ken of modern Western reason, which frames the “either irrational or idolatrous” dichotomy. Answering that question is the task of the second part of this meditation. The first task is to make visible the deep, modern Western conceptual shifts that have elided the possibility of reasonable affirmation of faith in God, and by this point I hope I have lent some beginning clarity and plausibility to my claim that a major stream of modern reason has walled off precisely that possibility. Now I will use a second example to illustrate how tectonic shifts in conceptual frameworks in the modern West have elided conceptual space for affirmation of free will, creative originality, altruism, moral reality, and moral responsibility.
Eliding Spiritual Realities
Most Westerners will remember the familiar nature/nurture debate from high school biology class—or in more recent terminology, the genes/memes debate (where “memes” are the sociocultural equivalent of “genes”). The signal question is, “to what degree is our behavior determined by nature and to what degree is our behavior determined by nurture?” The debate is typically resolved amicably enough with the conclusion that it is almost always some combination of the two, and one is left to quibble over how precisely to apportion the influence of nature and nurture with regard to particular cases.
The standard framing of the nature/nurture debate, however, is not innocent. There is no problem with the two key questions, “to what degree nurture?” and “to what degree nature?” Certainly our actions are to a significant degree determined by nature and nurture. That legitimate conclusion is betrayed, however, when one frames the nature/nurture debate without qualification and so by default poses as a question that exhausts the explanatory options: “to what degree is our behavior determined by nature and to what degree is our behavior determined by nurture?” When the nature/nurture question is posed without qualification, then the question frames thought in such a way that answers can appeal only to the influence of nature and nurture, perhaps leaving some space for indeterminacy/randomness. That is, “to...