The Fools Says There Is No
God
“AUGUST 11
1 Samuel 1; Romans 1;
Jeremiah 39; Psalms 13-14
‘A friend of mine once gave a
university evangelistic address under the title, “Atheists Are Fools and
Agnostics Are Cowards.” Needless to say, he drew a considerable crowd, even if
the crowd was pretty hostile. Whether or not this was the tactically wise thing
to do in that setting may, I suppose, be debated. What should not be debated is
that my friend was being faithful to Scripture: “The fool says in his heart,
‘There is no God’” (Ps. 14:1). Indeed, if anything, the text of Scripture is
stronger than the English suggests. The word rendered “fool” is in Hebrew a term
of moral opprobrium suggesting perversity, churlish and aggressive perversity.
Paul certainly understood the point: “Although they claimed to be wise, they
became fools” (Rom. 1:22). After all, “what may be known about God is plain to
them, because God has made it plain to them” (Rom. 1:19); and “since they did
not think it worthwhile to retain the knowledge of God, he gave them over to a
depraved mind” (Rom. 1:28). The Bible’s view is that in the last analysis
atheism is less the product of misguided searching, a kind of intellectual
mistake, than a defiant and stubborn rebellion.
‘The fact that atheism is not
widely seen that way is itself an index of our depravity. In fact, the
best-informed atheists commonly acknowledge the connection between morality and
belief, between immorality and unbelief. There is a famous passage in Huxley
that acknowledges that one of the driving forces behind atheistic naturalism is
the desire to tear away any sort of moral condemnation of otherwise condemned
behavior. In a passage scarcely less famous, Michel Foucault, one of the
theoreticians behind postmodernism, frankly acknowledges that it became
important for him to destroy traditional notions of truth and morality because
he wished to justify his own sexual conduct. A few years ago, Foucault died of
AIDS.
‘We must not misapply this
text. Within the framework of their own presuppositions, there are many honest
atheists. But the framework itself is wrong. That framework is never established
by a single individual. It is built piece by piece until certain beliefs are
culturally possible, then probable, then almost inevitable—and each generation,
each individual, has contributed to this massive rebellion, this lust for
autonomy that refuses to recognize the rights of our Maker and our obligations
to him. Atheism becomes not simply an individual choice but a social degeneracy.
The ultimate result is the sweeping condemnation of Psalm 14:2-3. Compare Romans
3:10-18: sin is not merely ubiquitous but universal, and results in massive
social damage (Psalm 14:4-6). At the end of the day, there is no help but in the
Lord (14:7).’"
From, For the Love of God;
Volume Two, D. A. Carson (Crossway Books, Wheaton, Illinois; 1998)
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