Fear of faith, fear of doubt

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The Anchoress raises a good point: many people fear exploring especially — too closely, for fear that in so doing they might encounter something which would force them to change their thinking, and perhaps even require them to acknowledge that something exists “beyond” them. The human illusions of permanence and control are difficult ways of thinking to overcome, even when one comes face to face with the Creator who is above all other things; for many, it is too frightening a concept to dwell on.

This is, perhaps, especially true both of the Incarnation of and of the , which is a direct revelation and experience of Him.

[The human being, in all ages of history,] resists the consequence of the mystery made flesh, for if this Event is true, then all aspects of life, including the sensible and the social, must revolve around it. And it is precisely man’s perception of being undermined, no longer being the measure of his own self, that places him in the position of refusal.

The Anchoress notes a strange thing: doubt is almost sacrosanct to the skeptic and the agnostic, and yet doubt itself must not be cast into doubt. It is perhaps fortunate, then, that Christ will patiently grant people many chances to overcome their fear of certainity.

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Rehmat doesn’t do so well in a debate

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Jeeze…in the week or so since I last checked with Rehmatpedia, the website of Islamist blogger Shaukat Khawja (himself an employee of the nuclear power plant in , ), it seems that someone has really started taking him to task in his comments forms.

That’s good to see — whoever “Jew” is, he or she doesn’t seem intent on letting Shaukat get away with saying stupid stuff anymore.

rehmat-hijab.jpg

Screenshot for posterity — I can’t imagine Shaukat is going to let the comments stand for very long. It’s an interesting discussion on the mandate for religious headdress in , , and — and of course, the Islamic hijab ends up worse for wear (ahem) in the comparison.

Note also how Shaukat can’t help but try and make insulting comments about Jews, Israel, and/or Zionism.

Update: Called that one, didn’t I? Not two hours, and he’s deleted the comment by “Jew” which gives an effective rebuttal to his silly claims.

Ah, screenshots are wonderful things.

 

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I’ve felt this way more times than I can count

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I’m not a convert to , so I don’t get deluged with emails urging me to revert to the “true”, “Biblical” that I abandoned by becoming Catholic. So in that way, I can’t relate to what Mark Shea is talking about in this article.

But in the web forums I post to, I am unapologetic and open concerning my Catholicism, and I find that on a cycle almost as predictable as the cycle of atheistic commentators here at , I am periodically deluged by well-meaning, if misinformed, fundamentalists urging me to abandon the false, man-made teachings of in favour of true, “Biblical” and the inerrant, preserved Word of that is the of the Bible.

And in such matters, I take ’s response as my own:

Almost every other day, it seems, I will open my e-mail and find something like this specimen (culled from my “deleted” file):

Dear Mark, just came from your Web site and have some questions. It sounds like you were a “Protestant” before becoming a Catholic? I don’t know which church you were in but I have to question whether you were ever taught the Word of God there? If you had been in a church which taught the truth concerning Baptism according to the Word of GOD and not the “traditions of men” you would have learned that not only does baptism NOT save nor “grant justification” but it is ONLY for those who ARE BORN-AGAIN by the SPIRIT of GOD by placing their faith in the LORD JESUS CHRIST! It is to be symbolic of the new birth ALREADY ACCOMPLISHED by GOD as Romans 6 clearly teaches! PLEASE READ the Gospel of John and pray asking GOD to show you HIS TRUTH — HE LOVES THE WORLD and DESIRES TO SAVE the LOST — which we all are apart from the New Birth which IS FREELY offered to ALL! Please read and be saved! I will be praying for you in JESUS Name. Carolyn

You have to wonder what is going through the minds of people who write such stuff. What do they think they are accomplishing?

One is terribly tempted to reply: “The Word of God? What’s that? Never heard of such a thing. Is that, like, ? We used to read something called a ‘Bible,’ I think, at our old Church. But that was an awfully long time ago.

“Boy, thanks for setting me straight. I have never ever ever heard before that loves me and desires to save the lost with His free gift of grace! I always thought that I had to perform magical rituals to make God love me. But now that you have so thoughtfully set me straight, I see clearly that when that big black book we used to read in my old church-that-never-taught-me-the-Bible says ‘Baptism now saves you’ (1 Pet 3:21) what it means is ‘Baptism does not save you.’

“And thanks also for explaining that when Romans 6 says, ‘All of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death,’ and ‘We were buried therefore with him by baptism into death, so that as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might walk in newness of life,’ this has absolutely nothing whatever to do with . I really appreciate your setting me straight on that as well.

“And finally, thanks for making me see that all that stuff in John 3 about being born again of water and the Spirit really means water and the Spirit are complete opposites.

“Golly. It is so good to finally — after all these years — have somebody who really teaches the Word of God clue me in. Who would have thought that all those years of studying . . . what’s that big black book called again? Ah yes! ‘The Bible.’ Anyway, who would have thought that all those years of studying the Bible could have left me so totally ignorant of what Scripture really means? Thanks ever so much for enlightening me.”

Yes, kind of facetious and tongue-in-cheek. But sometimes, that’s all one can do to respond to the misguidedly overzealous persons one encounters on this big, wide .

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“Why did we have to wait for Bishop Michael Nazir-Ali…?”

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This is the question that bothers Peter Hitchens this week, and it’s a good one to reflect on given the recent confrontation with police had by Christian preachers Arthur Cunningham and Joseph Abraham, who were told by police officers that the area in which they were handing out literature was a Muslim community, that their evangelism was a “hate crime,” and that if they returned to the area ever again and were perchance beaten…well, they’d already been warned.

A police constable who was present during the incident in the area of is also alleged to have told the preachers not to return to the district.

It comes amid growing concern over the development of ic ‘no-go areas’.

The preachers, Americans and , are demanding an apology and compensation from .

They say their treatment breaks the , which guarantees freedom of religious expression.

The preachers, who have the backing of the pressure group, say they will take the force to court for breaching their if they don’t receive an apology.

They have accused the officer, PCSO , of behaving in an ‘aggressive and threatening’ manner. A complaint by their lawyers said he interrupted as they spoke to Muslim youths about their beliefs.

Mr Abraham, 65, who was born a Muslim in and is a convert to , said: ‘He told us we were trying to convert Muslims to Christianity and that that was a hate crime.

‘He was very intimidating and it concerns me that somebody holding his views can become a police officer, albeit at PCSO level.’

Mr Cunningham, 48, a fellow n Baptist missionary, said: ‘He realised we were Americans and then started ranting at us about George Bush and American foreign policy.

‘He said we were in a Muslim area and were not allowed to spread our Christian message. He said he was going to take us to the police station.’

At any rate, — the sane Hitchens brother, mind — muses thusly:

Why did we have to wait for Bishop , born and raised in Muslim , to remind us that, as he put it, ‘the beliefs, values and virtues of have been formed by the Christian faith’?

Just as important, why did we have to wait for him to urge us to do something about restoring that faith before we either sink into a yelling chaos of knives, fists and boots, or swoon into the strong, implacable arms of Islam?

Most of our homegrown prelates are more interested in or in spreading doubt about the gospel or urging the adoption of law.

Then again, why did it take the French President, , to explain to us that our parliamentary system was the best guarantee of liberty in the world and to remind us of the courage and valour of our people in war?

This is not what British leaders say or even think, not least because they are busy pulling the constitution to pieces.

It is not what our children are taught in schools.

In fact, any expression of national pride is viewed with suspicion by the state, by the education system and above all by the .

It was not always so. Half a century ago, we had churchmen, broadcasters, academics and military men who thought it normal to love their own country, normal to support the Christian faith which made us what we are, and were willing to defend it.

The question of what happened in the years between is one of the most interesting in history.

I suggest reading the whole thing — it isn’t terribly long, but is a good summation of just what has gone wrong with modern .

There was a time when the British had the gumption and courage to stand up to all manner of menaces, internal and foreign alike, and when the British people took pride in their nation. Those days would seem to have expired, as Britain sinks more and more into two separate chasms: that of rampant, primitive and violent Islam in its immigrant communities, and that of demoralized, nihilistic everywhere else. And the latter does not have the desire, strength, or courage to resist the advance of the former.

Update: Welcome, Steynians!

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Abortion: destroying the female gender

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brings to light a statistic of which I was not aware:

The ratio of girls per 1,000 boys in these areas hovers around the 700s and 800s, with as few as 300 girls per 1,000 boys in some high-caste urban areas of Punjab. As investigative journalist argues in her 2007 book, “Disappearing Daughters: The Tragedy of Female Feticide,” “Female is akin to serial killing. But female is more like a holocaust. A whole gender is getting exterminated.” The problem extends beyond ….

A new study suggests that female feticide may be disturbingly common in some n communities. In an analysis of 2000 Census data published recently in the Proceedings of the , economists and examined the ratio of births among U.S.-born children of Chinese, Korean and Asian-Indian parents. They found “evidence of sex selection, most likely at the prenatal stage.”

Abortion was supposedly the ultimate guarantor of ’s rights in this, the age of enlightened post-. Equally, it’s supposed to be the ultimate expression of a woman’s right to “control her own body” (whatever that actually means).

And seems, now, to be shaping up as the tool or mechanism by which women will all but disappear from many regions of the world.

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Coach fired because his associate evangelized Muslims

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I can honestly say that I’m not the least bit surprised that a school principal with a name like Imad Fadlallah is an anti-Christian bigot.

A veteran wrestling coach at lost his job amid concerns that his one-time assistant, who is a local minister and parent of a wrestler, attempts to convert local Muslim youths to Christianity.

The decision not to renew the contract of , a coach for 35 years at Fordson, sparked a firestorm of controversy, with 200-300 parents packing a Board of Education meeting Tuesday night to support the decision of the school’s principal, . The board directed administrators to consider reviewing the source of complaints against Fadlallah.

The developments occurred as officials and parents grapple with conflicts over , education and the future of a predominantly Muslim school, amid one of the largest Arab populations in the country.

Let’s just be clear on that: the veteran coach was essentially fired not because of anything he did, but because a former associate of his, a one-time assistant and parent of one of his pupils, attempted to convert Muslim youths to .

Let’s re-iterate: the coach was let go because of the actions of someone he kind of knew, not for anything he himself did.

“The principal has never, ever attended a practice or a wrestling meet,” Marszalek said. “But he makes judgments on the team according to which Arabic parent complains about another parent, who is a Christian minister, and I get lumped in.”

I agree with Mark Shea: I hope the guy sues. This is nothing less than religious bigotry on the part of the principal and various parents, not to mention an attack on what are in rights protected by the Constitution: expression and association.

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Well, we’ve been here once before…

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How unsurprising. This time around, from comes the same old story of a former Muslim who converted to ending up on trial for having done so. faces up to three years in prison for “abandoning the Islamic faith without government permission.”

Apparently, in Algeria, one needs a special permit to be a Christian.

It seems almost pedantic to say this, but it’s worth saying again: I honestly want to believe that there is something redeeming, or at least redeemable, about . I want to believe that it’s something more than a rather large cult obsessed with and violent death. I want to believe that it will not, given even the slightest opportunity, immediately and inexorably resort to persecuting those who do not follow it.

And I keep finding myself disappointed as story after story, from all around the world, makes it impossible to believe just those sort of things.

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Violent reaction against Christians

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Not that an atheistic government would persecute people of faith living under it or anything. Because we know, from history, that such atrocities have never happened.

And certainly, these German protesters give us no reason to think differently.

In what has been described as a blatant act of “Christianophobia,” a group of protestors physically and verbally assaulted some of the 15 thousand Christians peacefully gathered for the April 30 opening day of the German youth festival.

About 450 gathered into a No Christival group protest procession only hundreds of meters from the Christian youth event, reported christianophobia.eu. About 100 of the self-described “antisexist alliance” protestors broke down barricades, while other No Christival members set off fireworks.

German chants of “No God, no state, no patriarchy”, “Masturbation instead of evangelization,” and “Never again filled the air together with speaker announcements that compared the gathered Christians to s.

No Christival flyers also accused the hosts of Christival of holding “extreme conservative and right wing world views that are characterized by literal bible interpretation, homophobia and sexism”.

Attacks on Christians continued throughout the festival that concluded May 4.

If I had to sum up post-Christianity in two words, the two words I would use would be: pelvic issues. Seriously, you’d think that for some people, was the new deity.

If, you know, they weren’t so hasty to deny any belief in any kind of deity.

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Reader Mail: What’s wrong with Islam?

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Count Roland writes in with an answer to the question I posed at the end of this article: what is wrong with ?

It’s falsity?

It’s anachronistic binding to 7th century Arab culture through ?

It’s taking advantage of the West’s (its only real competition, given the Truth of at the West’s core — pace to the secularists) elites’ self-effacing policies of appeasement?

Oh, and Writer, I was blocked frfom seeing timeimmortal at the Catholic high school in [] because the software blocks “advocacy organizations” - I did not test if it blocks or or COLF or CCRL or . I wonder what you adsvocate that the software developers feel is inappropriate for grade 8-12 minds?

Apparently, I’m an “advocacy organization” now, O Reader! I as not aware of this fact. But I imagine that any sufficiently left-leaning IT personnel could find any number of objectionable things on this website, more than enough to justify (if only in their own minds, and not as a matter of substantive policy) blocking access to the site.

I would advise Roland to test the websites of those other organizations. Perhaps a pattern will emerge! If so, I would be most interested to hear what the pattern itself is.

As to Islam, the above are certainly legitimate criticisms — one need not look very far, nor dig very deep, to find examples of (especially) the second two points. Indeed, there is much about law that gives of a certain Bronze Age aroma, and it is only too easily observed that various Islamist groups are now making continual use of e.g. s (and other inventions of appeasement-driven, fearful Western governments) to in effect silence those who speak out against…well, just what Roland himself spoke of in the first half of his message.

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Reader Mail: Time Immortal

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Another wave of atheists seems to be upon me; while I can’t quite set my watch by them, at least I can be assured that there will be periodic sources of content not related to doings on any other blog save this one, which I appreciate.

In this case, the amusingly-handled Aspentroll writes in with a few thoughts on this article.

“Atheism will endure, as it has for many ages now. But it will never dominate a free people, and in due course gives way to the spiritual. Falsehood must necessarily give way to truth in the end, or at least to a less severe falsehood.”

The word “” above could be replaced by the word “” or “” and the rest of the quote would be just as true.

Atheists believe that is a huge falsehood and to pattern your life on such a nebulous writing is in most cases dangerous. You cannot govern a country using the laws of the bible which seems to be what some “fundies” want. We would all be up in arms if Law was allowed in the US, because it is archaic and discriminatory against and free thought.

Atheism, and free thought is the only check and balance we have to keep overly zealous delusional people from taking over and spoiling what is a normal modern way of life.

Did the reader note the tacit suggestion that religious people are necessarily delusional? The footnote to this more recent article seems relevant to mention here.

A good first question I might ask is: what checks and balances exist to keep overly zealous atheists from taking over and spoiling what is a normal, modern way of life that, in the West at least (though it perhaps does not always realize it), benefits greatly from reserves of Christian moral capital built up over the centuries? History has demonstrated that those states which have made atheism an explicit policy of the state have inexorably become brutal and bloody-minded, and several examples of the trend persist to this day.

The article I cited previously addresses this point rather directly: it is within human nature to desire to believe, and when force of will fails to ensure that the populace does not stray back toward the spiritual, force of arms is a necessary recourse of the atheistic state. It might be easy to laugh this off as fallacy, but one observes that in the explicitly atheistic regimes in places such as the , , , and (an incomplete list of examples, but sufficient for our purposes) did have something of a penchant for murderously cracking down on spiritual movements and religions within their borders. Certain exceptions to the trend exist, of course, but only in those cases where the religion(s) in question — the Orthodox Church in Russia, the “Catholic” Church in China — has allowed itself to be co-opted by the state.

One possible objection is that the generally secular regimes in many Western nations do not actively persecute the religious faithful in their midst. While the statement about persecution is up for debate, it is generally true that secular Western states do not, at least, murderously persecute their religious citizens. But then, even in various Scandinavian nations, the itself is not explicit state policy, and most of those states still acknowledge that there is a Christian aspect to their origins.

As to the quote of mine that Apentroll cites in opening his message, it should be observed that his attempt to gainsay it, in the first sentence of his response to me, really amounts to little more than saying “I know you are, but what am I?” Although it sounds more reasonable than that on the surface — heck, it even sounds somewhat rational — the statement itself can be revealed to be something of a patent falsehood, on several levels, upon closer examination.

First off, Christianity’s aim — and the aim of true religion (as opposed to the various false teachings one can stumble across from time to time*) — is freedom. And by freedom, I don’t mean being free “from rules of conduct or social constraints” (as the all-too talented authors of the character of Durandal in the Marathon series of games so eloquently word it). I do, however, mean being free “to understand, to imagine, to make metaphor.”

Freethinking, a misnomer if ever there was one, actually ruins freedom. “Freethinkers supposedly want “the pursuit of ideas for their own sake,” but no one pursues ideas simply for their own sake, but in order to understand, to act or to believe, or to have some combination of these. Men pursue ideas so that they may understand the world, and they seek to understand the world to have wisdom. Men desire wisdom in order to live well, and part of living well is to pursue and know the Good, and the Good is that which fulfills human nature and causes it to flourish. The desire to know is a natural desire, one implanted in us as part of our created being; we yearn to know and to enter into the unknown because we yearn for unity with the One Who desires that all things be united in Him. If no religion had ever caused men to live virtuously and flourish, religion would have disappeared ages ago. If no religion had produced saints and cultivated the finest aspects of human nature, very few would adhere themselves to it and even then it would only be the mad and obsessive. There is nothing interesting in rehearsing the catalogue of crimes that religious adherents have committed against each other, since men have always been slaughtering and oppressing one another and they have tended to do more of it when they are less in thrall to their religious tradition than when they are strictly obedient to it. What is remarkable is how much at least some religions have contributed to the civilisation and edification of men, which would hardly seem probable if they were not much more than elaborate exercises in self-deception and nonsense.”

One point, in particular, that can be taken out of the above quotation is that “we yearn to know and to enter into the unknown because we yearn for unity with the One Who desires that all things be united in Him.” It is the result of no accident that science and discovery flourished in the Christian West after ending up misfiring almost everywhere else in the world (historically speaking). As David Warren notes, “[to] those who know some history, the modern sciences emerged in an unambiguously Christian milieu. They flourished, over centuries in the West, as the direct result of the Judaeo-Christian teaching that “God does not contradict Himself.” The whole notion of unalterable physical laws, and thus a universal order that will repay inquiry, is the product of a theological position unique to the West. It is a view that has been glimpsed in other civilizations, but could only be doggedly pursued in this one. Science was stillborn in all other civilizations.”

And the same is true of the wider concept of freedom. Nowhere else in the world, save in a West born out of Christendom, did the concept of human freedom, individual liberty, and human rights genuinely flourish. It did not, certainly, flourish in the ic world, nor in the castes of in , nor in any of the places where took hold, nor in…any other place, really, save for the West that Christendom birthed. Indeed, the ideas that man should be free and that all men are “equal” is, ultimately, only defensible from within a teleological framework, and then a Christian teleology.

And in the numerous examples one could draw out of the 19th and 20th centuries, one can observe that in those regimes where atheism has, so to speak, become the law of the land, not only has human freedom been impaired and/or outright trampled on, but so too has science, to say nothing of human rights.

Now, I will grant that I stand in agreement with Aspentroll’s objetion to governance by “fundies” — fundamentalism leaves a bad taste in my mouth. Equally, though, I don’t think that society has any right to demand that a politician leave his Christianity at the door when he takes office.

Atheists are welcome to consider the Bible a book of falsehoods; I consider it God’s inerrant, infallible revelation to the world**. Who is to say which of us is right? I will grant that many, many people have a poor understanding of exactly what the Bible teaches, and fundamentalists seem especially prone to this unfortunate reality. But is it genuinely dangerous to pattern one’s life on the core teachings of Scripture? Exactly how terrible a place would the world be to live in if we all actually followed what Christ taught? Exactly how terrible a place would the world be to live in if everyone followed, as a bare minimum, the and the , and patterned their lives on the concepts articulated therein?

I very much doubt it would be a perfect place to live in…but I’ve no doubt that it would be a much better world. But then, had it exactly right when he noted that “the Christian ideal has not been tried and found wanting; it has been found difficult, and left untried.”

I also agree with Aspentroll that it would be horrible if Islamic sharia law became the law of the land, in or anywhere else. I suspect that Aspentroll, however, has temporarily taken leave of and erroneously assumes that because some types of religious law are brutal and evil, all forms of religious law must necessarily also be brutal and evil. It’s a rather common logical fallacy among atheists to assert this — is particularly vulnerable to it.

The main problem with the assertion is that a thing may be true even if certain individuals don’t accept it as being true. This is easily understood in the case of the fundamentalist objection to e.g. the theory of and the geological research that has revealed the approximate age of the Earth. Young Earth Creationism insists, passionately, that is a mere 6,000 years old, and most creationists of this bent do not accept as truthful or valid the various discoveries made in the fields of , , and evolutionary (among others). That doesn’t mean that the theories and discoveries aren’t true, however.

The same is true in regard to atheistic assertions regarding religions. Aspentroll would hardly be the first atheist to look at, say, the evils perpetrated in the name of Islam and declare that all religions are murderous death cults obsessed with paedophilia and suicide belts. That might come as news to Buddhists, and indeed to most Christians, but not everyone can be counted on to let facts get in the way of good rhetoric, especially if it sells books with provocative titles. And yet, a more reasonable, rational person would notice that there are many critical differences between, say, Islam and , visible both by a close analysis of doctrine and by taking an honest, objective look at the actions of the followers of each respective on a global scale.

As previously noted, the creature we call a human being is wired to be a believer, and the only real question is what said human being will believe in. We’ve seen this played out through history, and we see its logical consequences played out in that movement which denies this very aspect of human nature: atheism. In individual atheists like or , we see the beginnings of post-atheistic spiritualism beginning to creep in. The same trend can be observed in , in the wake of the collapse of an explicitly atheistic regime. It’s regrettable that the that such people are gravitating towards is, quite often, some new form of (or “new” in that “same as the old boss” sense of the word), although it is good that people are also finding, or rediscovering, .

There seems to be a rather pernicious lie going around that religion and freedom are antithetical to one another; this is not completely true. It is true in regard to specific religions (e.g. Islam), but not in regard to the Christian truth. Indeed, it was a particularly Christian sense of telos that informed the very constraints, concepts, and ideals which enabled the West to value freedom. By contrast, the application of atheistic ideals as the formative values of a state has tended to be the true antithesis of freedom, of science, and of .

And in perhaps the most amusingly ironic twist, I just realized that if I re-worded ’s message to me and flipped the references to religion and atheism in every instance (and substituted the title of any New Atheist tract for “the bible”), the message itself would not only be a lot more truthful, but also a lot more historically defensible.

* * *

* this statement said with tongue firmly implanted in cheek

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