I tried to argue that God is necessary in order to have
objective moral values as opposed to moral-relativism, the predominant Western belief
that morals are relative to our culture, upbringing, traditions, and feelings
and therefore, they are always evolving along with the culture. This means that
if incest is wrong today, it might be totally acceptable tomorrow.
The group leader retorted:
·
I am an atheist, but I too believe that morals
can be objective and don’t need to base my moral absolutes on a mythical God
for which there is no evidence.
I responded that I am glad that he does believe in moral
absolutes, but that, as an atheist, he has no foundation for these beliefs. I
tried to illustrate this problem. I pointed out that he too believes in the
equality of all humans. However, without a firm basis, this belief cannot be
sustained. This is because, without God, there is no reason to believe that we
are all equal. Some are males, others females; some are healthy, some are not;
some are kind, others are abusers. No equality!
The atheist reaffirmed his belief that he didn’t require God
to believe in objective moral absolutes. He explained that the facts of science
and nature provided an adequate basis for moral absolutes. His reasoning goes
like this:
1.
Facts produce morality.
2.
The fact that water is necessary for human
survival means that water is good. (Anything on which human survival depends is
good.)
3.
Human survival is an adequate foundation for an
objective moral system.
However, there are many problems with this formulation, for
instance:
1.
The concept of the “good” has no independent
existence in a godless world. Instead, billions of people have to create it,
each contending for their own version of the “good.” Therefore, the atheist
first has to prove that human existence is good. However, some people believe
that there are too many people, and that we are destroying the environment.
Therefore, some need to be eliminated. Then there is abortion. What makes it
wrong? We kill animals. Why not humans? Others claim that the “good” requires
suffering and even death. In conclusion, the atheist can offer no objective
standard for morality. In contrast, only God can provide a sound foundation for
the goodness of human survival.
2.
Facts do not produce values. Instead, they serve
values. Only once we have a sound basis for the sanctity of human life can we
call upon the facts of science to help us better serve humanity. Since human
life is sacred (morality), science (facts) has a responsibility to find
remedies for human suffering.
3.
What makes us more valuable than a cow or a
mosquito? And valuable to whom? One cow is more valuable to another than is a
human. Science cannot answer these questions of value/worth. Instead, it is the
Bible that informs us of human sanctity and God’s surpassing love for humanity.
The atheist responded that the fact of our intelligence
makes us more valuable than the cow or mosquito. We can formulate our values,
but they can’t. However, this opens the door to other philosophical problems:
1.
Do we really know that cows do not have moral
and values. It seems that many animals have been programmed to act in moral
ways and to even experience grief.
2.
What scientific fact would base our value on our intelligence? Instead, this
conclusion requires a prior value judgment. Again, it seems that facts and
values (morals) are two different things, and this prevents us from deriving
values from facts.
3.
If intelligence is the basis for human value,
then this would make some humans more valuable than others. Goodbye to our
belief in human equality and unalienable human rights!
To illustrate the problem of basing human worth upon
intelligence (or upon the amount of any other quality), we would have no answer
to give to the idealist Hitler who had been trying to construct the master race
by eliminating inferior humans. What
fact of science could we offer in defense of humanity? None!
Two common objections are raised against what I have
written:
“The existence of God must first be proved!” For now, it is
enough to simply demonstrate the necessity of God in order to have a coherent objective
moral system.
“Theists disagree about the nature of both God and morality. Therefore,
God cannot serve as the basis for an objective system of morality.” While
this is a reasonable objection, it is a secondary to the question at hand – Is the
concept of God necessary for an objective morality? To put it another way, the
mere presence of disagreement doesn’t invalidate the concept itself. Scientists
disagree about many things. However, their disagreement doesn’t mean that there
isn’t a correct answer among them.
The reality of God is not only necessary for objective moral
absolutes, He is also necessary for a material world – its fine-tuning,
elegant, immutable, and universal laws of science, life, the cell, DNA, freewill,
and consciousness. Physicist, philosopher, and professor, Paul Davies,
concluded that chance events could not account for what he had been observing:
·
“Scientists are slowly waking up to an
inconvenient truth – the universe looks suspiciously like a fix. The issue
concerns the very laws of nature themselves. For 40 years, physicists and
cosmologists have been quietly collecting examples of all too convenient
“coincidences” and special features in the underlying laws of the universe that
seem to be necessary in order for life, and hence conscious beings, to exist.
Change any one of them and the consequences would be lethal. The crucial point
is that some of those metaphorical knobs (of which there are 40) must be tuned
very precisely, or the universe would be sterile. Example: neutrons are just a
tad heavier than protons. If it were the other way around, atoms couldn’t
exist, because all the protons in the universe would have decayed into neutrons
shortly after the big bang. No protons, then no atomic nucleus and no atoms. No
atoms, no chemistry, no life.”
He is also the One who gives our lives meaning. In short,
everything depends upon Him, even our ability to formulate arguments to reject
and denigrate Him.
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