Is Atheism a 'Personal Rebellion' Against God?

by leavingwt 34 Replies latest jw friends

  • leavingwt
    leavingwt

    I try to understand WHY other people believe what they believe. The author discussed in the article below evidently wants to hide his head in the sand and paint all atheists with the same broad, incorrect brush. It's as if he's never actually sat down with an atheist and had friendly conversation.

    Atheism is 'Personal Rebellion' Against God, Says Philosopher

    James S Spiegel has an uncomfortable thesis to propose. He contends: Religious skepticism is, at bottom, a moral problem.

    A professor of philosophy and religion at Taylor University in Upland, Indiana, Spiegel has written a 130-page book, The Making of an Atheist, in response to the New Atheists. But unlike the numerous responses that have emerged from Christian apologists, Spiegel's book focuses on the moral-psychological roots of atheism.

    While atheists insist that their foundational reason for rejecting God is the problem of evil or the scientific irrelevance of the supernatural, the Christian philosopher says the argument is "only a ruse" or "a conceptual smoke screen to mask the real issue – personal rebellion".

    He admits that it could appear unseemly or offensive to suggest that a person's lack of belief in God is a form of rebellion. But he said in a recent interview with the Evangelical Philosophical Society that he was compelled to write the book because he is convinced that "it is a clear biblical truth".

    His goal in writing the book is neither to provoke people nor show that theism is more rational than atheism. Rather, his aim is to direct people to "the real explanation of atheism".

    "The rejection of God is a matter of will, not of intellect," he asserts.

    "Atheism is not the result of objective assessment of evidence, but of stubborn disobedience; it does not arise from the careful application of reason but from willful rebellion. Atheism is the suppression of truth by wickedness, the cognitive consequence of immorality.

    "In short, it is sin that is the mother or unbelief."


    God has made His existence plain from creation – from the unimaginable vastness of the universe to the complex micro-universe of individual cells, Spiegel notes. Human consciousness, moral truths, miraculous occurrences and fulfilled biblical prophecies are also evidence of the reality of God.

    But atheists reject that, or as Spiegel put it, "miss the divine import of any one of these aspects of God's creation" and to do so is "to flout reason itself".

    This suggests that other factors give rise to the denial of God, he notes. In other words, something other than the quest for truth drives the atheist.

    Drawing from Scripture, Spiegel says the atheist's problem is rebellion against the plain truth of God, as clearly revealed in nature. The rebellion is prompted by immorality, and immoral behaviour or sin corrupts cognition.

    The author explained to EPS, "There is a phenomenon that I call 'paradigm-induced blindness,' where a person's false worldview prevents them from seeing truths which would otherwise be obvious. Additionally, a person's sinful indulgences have a way of deadening their natural awareness of God or, as John Calvin calls it, the sensus divinitatis. And the more this innate sense of the divine is squelched, the more resistant a person will be to evidence for God."

    Spiegel, who converted to Christianity in 1980, has witnessed the pattern among several of his friends. Their path from Christianity to atheism involved: moral slippage (such as infidelity, resentment or unforgiveness); followed by withdrawal from contact with fellow believers; followed by growing doubts about their faith, accompanied by continued indulgence in the respective sin; and culminating in a conscious rejection of God.

    Examining the psychology of atheism, Spiegel cites Paul C Vitz who revealed a link between atheism and fatherlessness.

    "Human beings were made in God's image, and the father-child relationship mirrors that of humans as God's 'offspring'," Spiegel states. "We unconsciously (and often consciously, depending on one's worldview) conceive of God after the pattern of our earthly father.

    "However, when one's earthly father is defective, whether because of death, abandonment, or abuse, this necessarily impacts one's thinking about God."

    Some of the atheists whose fathers died include David Hume and Friedrich Nietzsche. Those with abusive or weak fathers include Thomas Hobbes, Voltaire and Sigmund Freud. Among the New Atheists, Daniel Dennett's father died when Dennett was five years old and Christopher Hitchens' father appears to have been very distant. Hitchens had confessed that he does not remember "a thing about him".

    As for Richard Dawkins and Sam Harris, there is very little information available regarding their relationships with their fathers.

    "It appears that the psychological fallout from a defective father must be combined with rebellion – a persistent immoral response of some sort, such as resentment, hatred, vanity, unforgiveness, or abject pride. And when that rebellion is deep or protracted enough, atheism results," Spiegel explains.

    In essence, "atheists ultimately choose not to believe in God," the author maintains, and "this choice does not occur in a psychological vacuum".

    "It is made in response to deep challenges to faith, such as defective fathers and perhaps other emotional or psychological trials," he states. "Nor is the choice made in a moral vacuum. Sin and its consequences also impact the will in significant ways.

    "These moral-psychological dynamics make it possible to deny the reality of the divine without any (or much) sense of incoherence in one's worldview."

    The Making of an Atheist: How Immorality Leads to Unbelief is out now.

    http://www.christiantoday.com/article/atheism.is.personal.rebellion.against.god.says.philosopher/25529.htm

  • PSacramento
    PSacramento

    I know more than a few athiest that are that way because it is certainly "more fun", but the majority are athiests because they have questioned and not found the answers they were looking for/required.

    I don't know how much morals plays into it, other than when it DOES play into it and then it palys into it a lot.

    I know 2 athiests that turnded their back on religion because they found it to be immoral.

    I think that we tend to be a sum of our experiences and as such we make a commitment to something based on those experiences.

    I can see why many former JW's become atheists.

    Of course many former atheists become believers too, so.

  • BurnTheShips
    BurnTheShips
    Spiegel's book focuses on the moral-psychological roots of atheism.

    Bookmarked. I've started threads on this topic before. Belief has been subjected to psychological scrutiny since the science was invented by Sigmund Freud--an atheist. If psychology is a study of the mind, then atheism is part of its province, a woefully understudied one. An examination of the of psychological roots is needed, just as has been done with belief.

    Atheism has a psychological etiology, just like every other thing humans do.

    We aren't unfeeling computers, not even the atheists, as much as some of them seem they'd like to be.

    Examining the psychology of atheism, Spiegel cites Paul C Vitz who revealed a link between atheism and fatherlessness.

    http://www.jehovahs-witness.net/watchtower/beliefs/169353/1/Atheism-as-a-psychological-phenomenon

    BTS

  • drwtsn32
    drwtsn32
    It's as if he's never actually sat down with an atheist and had friendly conversation.

    It's much easier to just pass judgment on another group you don't agree with without actually trying to understand them. My JW mom tells me I'm an atheist because I don't want to be accountable to anyone. Also that I have no morals because atheists can't possibly have any morals without God in their lives.

  • leavingwt
    leavingwt

    I'm happy to see both PSacaramento and drwtsn32 here, again.

  • THE GLADIATOR
    THE GLADIATOR
    "Atheism is not the result of objective assessment of evidence, but of stubborn disobedience; it does not arise from the careful application of reason but from willful rebellion. Atheism is the suppression of truth by wickedness, the cognitive consequence of immorality.
    "In short, it is sin that is the mother or unbelief."

    The Watchtower Society had a similar idea. Anyone who was unable to make sense of their beliefs was labeled an apostate.

    They were sinners who had rebelled against 'the truth' and were in league with the Devil. The only reason they had left was to practise immorality. The penalty was death.

    And quite right too!

  • leavingwt
    leavingwt
    The only reason they had left was to practise immorality.

    Yep, sounds familiar.

  • Farkel
    Farkel

    : Is Atheism a 'Personal Rebellion' Against God?

    It would be if it was proven that there is a God. Otherwise, the statement is a non-sequitur.

    An atheist can no more rebel against something he doesn't believe in than a cat can rebel against the literary value of a Shakespearean sonnet.

    Farkel

  • keyser soze
    keyser soze

    Atheism is not the result of objective assessment of evidence,

    First the evidence has to exist before it can be assessed objectively.

  • PSacramento
    PSacramento

    To view all atheists as "willful sinners" is just as silly as to view all believers as "ignorant bible thumpers".

    Both sides get caught up in the extermisim of things.

    The moderates on both sides have actually more in common with each other than with the fringe elements that get all the press.

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