Subscribe to Christianity Today
Subscribe to Christianity Today
December 3, 2008
Free E-mail Newsletters:
RSS Feed | More Feeds | RSS Help

Home > 2007 > FebruaryChristianity Today, February, 2007  |   |  
The New Intolerance
Fear mongering among elite atheists is not a pretty sight.



ADVERTISEMENT

Atheism is in trouble. You can tell because its most eloquent spokesmen are receiving icily critical reviews in the very mainstream press that Christians often dismiss for liberal bias.

Take, for example, the reviews of Richard Dawkins's book The God Delusion that appeared in The New York Times, the London Review of Books, and Harper's. No one would mistake those journals for members of the Evangelical Press Association, but the Times reviewer, science and philosophy writer Jim Holt, upbraided Dawkins for not fully appreciating the intellectual force of classical arguments for God, especially in light of the more sophisticated versions presented by today's theistic philosophers: "Shirking the intellectual hard work," Holt wrote, "Dawkins prefers to move on to parodic 'proofs' that he has found on the internet."

"Those books really haven't dealt with compelling evidence for the existence of God," says Craig Hazen of Dawkins's God Delusion and its close cousin, Sam Harris's Letter to a Christian Nation. Hazen, who directs Biola University's M.A. program in Christian apologetics, told CT, "It's a stronger form of fundamentalism than you can find anywhere."

In the London Review of Books, Terry Eagleton complained that Dawkins reduces complex social problems to simplistic narratives in which religion is the villain. Take Northern Ireland. Dawkins thinks that "the ethno-political conflict" there "would evaporate if religion did."

And Islamist terrorism? Dawkins apparently "holds, against a good deal of the available evidence, that Islamic terrorism is inspired by religion rather than by politics."

But politically inspired Islamist terrorism provides the opening for this new antitheism, says Biola's Hazen. "They are taking advantage of Islamic radicalism to tap into subterranean American fears about religion. There's this notion that religious people will end up strapping dynamite to themselves, and this has got to be stopped."

Reducing the wide spectrum of faiths to a single unfashionable color. Refusing to give the arguments for faith the respect they deserve. These are just the first in a litany of weaknesses in the current antitheism rhetoric.

Crowbar or baseball bat?

You can also tell that atheism is in trouble because it is becoming increasingly intolerant. In the past, atheists (or secular humanists or freethinkers) were often condescendingly tolerant of their less-enlightened fellow citizens. While they disdained religion, they treated their religious neighbors as good-hearted, if misguided.

But now key activists are urging a less civil approach. At a recent forum sponsored by the Science Network at the Salk Institute in La Jolla, California, the tone of intolerance reached such a peak that anthropologist Melvin J. Konner commented: "The viewpoints have run the gamut from A to B. Should we bash religion with a crowbar or only with a baseball bat?"

This newly aggressive mood (Dawkins calls religious education "brainwashing" and "child abuse") is in danger of undermining civil society.

CT columnist David Aikman recently sounded a warning in a commentary for the Trinity Forum. Sam Harris, he noted, not only advocates a shift from viewing religion as harmless to treating it as dangerous, but he also wants to suppress religion. Aikman evoked images of Mao's China and Stalin's Russia as the future of America—if liberals ever abandon true liberalism.

Make no mistake; it is that potential abandonment of liberalism that Harris and Dawkins are calling for. Dawkins told the forum in La Jolla, "I am utterly fed up with the respect that we—all of us, including the secular among us—are brainwashed into bestowing on religion." In a blog post cited by Aikman, Harris wrote that he is as "wary" of his fellow liberals as he is of "demagogues on the Christian Right."





E-mail this pageWrite CTPrint this articlePost a comment





  


Subscribe to Christianity Today and get 3 free trial issues. No credit card required.

Please allow 4-6 weeks for delivery. Offer valid in U.S. only.

If you decide you want to keep Christianity Today coming, honor your invoice for just $19.95 and receive nine more issues, a full year in all. If not, simply write "cancel" across the invoice and return it. The three trial issues are yours to keep, regardless.


Click here for international orders2-for-1 Gifts!

[Reader Reviews]
Average User Rating: 

Displaying 1 - 3 of 43 comments.See all comments
Warren Stark   Posted: January 28, 2007 3:48 AM
One of the biggest problems in combatting the arguments of atheists is their (misguided) reliance on logic in their total denial of the possibility of eternity. In their eyes we are deluded for having any faith at all. This makes us dangerous to their cause as many people make their initial decision for Christ based on emotion and only develop a relationship with Him over time. This is why public prayer is so radically opposed. Their aim is simply to make it harder for the lost to be led to the Lord without actively seeking him out. If only these atheists realized that they are merely pawns in a much larger battle.

Jack   Posted: January 30, 2007 8:25 PM
I am Christian but I also have the propensity to allow other people to think what they wish to. It is how we will grow individually and as a global people. I have no fear that others will think differently. Just as many other religions lead to the same God , just via a slightly different path. Why would I discriminate against them? I also have no fear of science and theories of evolution. It is mankind's attempt to describe the world around us so that we can understand it and I think so that we can not only know what is best to do but also the reasons why. It is part of the learning process to question. Atheists likely have their fears as well, the most prominent among these being the extermination of entire peoples from the face of the earth in the name of religion because they are savages or because they think differently. See early North American history. What is there to fear? Let us learn and with learning understand. Let he who is without sin cast the first stone.

Mike Adams   Posted: January 25, 2007 11:53 PM
I think most atheists are not anti-religion. Instead they probably rarely bother to think about religions, but there are some atheists, including myself, who agree with Dawkins. I notice how much of my tax money and how many American lives are being wasted in our 2 religious wars in Iraq & Afghanistan thanks to Islam. I notice how some Christians fight against the teaching of evolution in American schools. I don't understand why so many people think there's compelling evidence for the existence of God. How could there be evidence for any gods? Nobody has ever seen a god and there really is no evidence at all for anything supernatural. To me religions have only given us violence, misery, and ignorance about science. This is why I could never respect anyone's religious beliefs. I wish more scientists would speak out against religions like Dawkins has been doing.

sponsors 








[Browse More Christianity Today]

Search





















Search by Name
Or use Advanced Search to search by program, region, cost, affiliation, enrollment, more!

Search by:





Books & Culture
Christianity Today
Church Law & Tax Report
Church Finance Today
Church Secretary Today
Ignite Your Faith
Leadership Journal
Men of Integrity
Outcomes
Today's Christian Woman
Your Church
ChristianityTodayLibrary.com
PreachingToday.com