The one theology book all atheists really should read
The Guardian (UK) | 14 Jan. 2014
What if most modern arguments against religious belief have been attacking the wrong God all along?
One reason that modern-day debates between atheists and religious
believers are so bad-tempered, tedious and infuriating is that neither
side invests much effort in figuring out what the other actually means
when they use the word 'God'. This is an embarrassing oversight,
especially for the atheist side (on which my sympathies generally lie).
After all, scientific rationalists are supposed to care deeply about
evidence. So you might imagine they'd want to be sure that the God
they're denying is the one in which most believers really believe. No
'case against God', however watertight, means much if it's directed at
the wrong target.
Yet prominent atheists display an almost aggressive lack of curiosity when it comes to the facts about belief. In The God Delusion,
Richard Dawkins expertly demolishes what he calls 'the God hypothesis',
but devotes only a few sketchy anecdotes to establishing that this God
hypothesis is the one that has defined religious belief through history,
or defines it around the world today. AC Grayling insists that atheists
are excused the bother of actually reading theology – where they might
catch up on debates among believers about what they believe – because
atheism "rejects the premise" of theology. And when The Atlantic ran a piece last year entitled Study theology, even if you don't believe in God, Jerry Coyne, the atheist blogosphere's Victor Meldrew, called it "the world's worst advice." And on and on it goes.
My modest New Year's wish for 2014, then, is that atheists who care
about honest argument – and about maybe actually getting somewhere in
these otherwise mind-numbingly circular debates – might consider reading
just one book by a theologian, David Bentley Hart's The Experience of God,
published recently by Yale University Press. Not because I think
they'll be completely convinced by it. (I'm not, and I'm certainly not
convinced by Hart's other publicly expressed views, which tend towards the implacably socially conservative.)
They should read it because Hart marshals powerful historical evidence
and philosophical argument to suggest that atheists – if they want to
attack the opposition's strongest case – badly need to up their game.
The God attacked by most modern atheists, Hart argues, is a sort of
superhero, a "cosmic craftsman" – the technical term is "demiurge" –
whose defining quality is that he's by far the most powerful being in
the universe, or perhaps outside the universe (though it's never quite
clear what that might mean). The superhero God can do anything he likes
to the universe, including creating it to begin with. Demolishing this
God is pretty straightforward: all you need to do is point to the lack
of scientific evidence for his existence, and the fact that we don't
need to postulate him in order to explain how the universe works.
Some people really do believe in this version of God: supporters of 'intelligent design',
for example – for whom Hart reserves plenty of scorn – and other
contemporary Christian and Muslim fundamentalists, too. But throughout
the history of monotheism, Hart insists, a very different version of God
has prevailed. In a post at The Week, Damon Linker sums up this second version better than I can:
… according to the classical metaphysical traditions of both the East and West, God is the unconditioned cause of reality – of absolutely everything that is – from the beginning to the end of time. Understood in this way, one can’t even say that God "exists" in the sense that my car or Mount Everest or electrons exist. God is what grounds the existence of every contingent thing, making it possible, sustaining it through time, unifying it, giving it actuality. God is the condition of the possibility of anything existing at all.
God, in short, isn't one very impressive thing among many things that
might or might not exist; "not just some especially resplendent object
among all the objects illuminated by the light of being," as Hart puts
it. Rather, God is "the light of being itself", the answer to the
question of why there's existence to begin with. In other words, that
wisecrack about how atheists merely believe in one less god than
atheists do, though it makes a funny line in a Tim Minchin song,
is just a category error. Monotheism's God isn't like one of the Greek
gods, except that he happens to have no god friends. It's an utterly
different kind of concept.
Since I can hear atheist eyeballs rolling backwards in their sockets
with scorn, it's worth saying again: the point isn't that Hart's right.
It's that he's making a case that's usually never addressed by atheists
at all. If you think this God-as-the-condition-of-existence argument is
rubbish, you need to say why. And unlike for the superhero version,
scientific evidence won't clinch the deal. The question isn't a
scientific one, about which things exist. It's a philosophical one,
about what existence is and on what it depends.
But too often, instead of being grappled with, this argument gets
dismissed as irrelevant. Sure, critics argue, it might be intriguing,
but only a handful of smartypants intellectual religious people take it
seriously. The vast majority of ordinary folk believe in the other sort
of God.
As Hart points out, there are two problems with this dismissal.
First, you'd actually need to prove the point with survey data about
what people believe. But second, even if you could show that most
believers believe in a superhero God, would that mean it's the only kind
with which atheists need engage? If a committed creationist wrote a
book called The Evolution Delusion, but only attacked the general
public's understanding of evolution, we'd naturally dismiss them as
disingenuous. We'd demand, instead, that they seek out what the best and
most acclaimed minds in the field had concluded about evolution, then
try dismantling that.
Which is also why atheists should read Hart's book: to deny
themselves the lazy option of sticking to easy targets. Perhaps you'll
come away convinced. But even if all you do is clearly articulate why
you think he's completely wrong, you'll be helping to lift the
discussion far above what usually passes for debates about religion.
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