Faith in a scientific era, by Andy Fehler
Friday, July 17th, 2009
[This is the transcript of Andy's talk from the Purpose for Life mission in March '09. You can listen to the talk here].
There is no doubt that we are living in a scientific era. If a time machine was to bring someone from 1909 to modern day Sheffield, it would surely seem like landing on a different planet and the vast majority of changes would be directly or indirectly due to the onward march of science. And science is brilliant isn’t it and by science I mean the body of knowledge we call science as well as the process of experimentation to get answers.
Today, we know incomparably more about the Universe we inhabit than ever before. Whether it is about the subatomic particles that everything is made of, the DNA in all our cells coding vital instructions about our makeup, the organisms that inhabit this planet alongside us or the Solar system and far off galaxies; our knowledge is extensive and ever-increasing.
But it is not just knowledge that science offers, science has massively changed our way of life, bringing improvements to almost every sphere of our existence, like medicine, communication agriculture and leisure (to name just 4).
For some of the big problems this world faces, the best hope for the future seems like it will be found in science. Whether it is dealing with climate change, producing enough food for the Earth’s increasing population or dealing with a long list of devastating illnesses and medical conditions – all eyes are on scientific research.
But what of faith – is there any place left for it in this modern age? Compared to science’s rigorous methodologies and of course it’s tangible results, the world of faith seems somewhat lacking. It seems old fashioned and irrelevant, an embarrassment in this day and age. Whilst science offers so much for our futures, faith just seems like some crutch from the past that helped people get on with their lives when they understood little about the world around them.
But what do we actually mean by faith and is it only the religious who have faith?
Faith is defined by one famous, atheistic, Oxford based, Biologist as…
“…The great cop-out, the great excuse to evade the need to think and evaluate evidence. Faith is belief in spite of, even perhaps because of, the lack of evidence…Faith is not allowed to justify itself by argument.”
To be honest if that is faith then I agree – what a cop out! If religions, and lets be more specific here, this is an openly Christian event, if Christians and their Bible define faith in those terms, then I am against it. Anything that cannot be knocked about in the arena of evidence is not something I want anything to do with. The thing is, no Christian would define faith in such terms, it is a great example of a straw man, being set up and then knocked down. If I define faith in my terms then I can ridicule it on my terms.
If on the other hand we really consider what Christians and the Bible think faith is then we will see this particular atheist has a bit more work to do to convince me that faith is as laughable as he says it is…
The only type of faith in the Bible that is praised is faith in God; this faith is a confidence or a trust in God because He is known to be trustworthy. People are praised for having faith when they trust God despite being in difficult situations where it would be hard for the person to believe in God and accept what he has told them. Hebrews 11, a great chapter devoted to the topic of faith, states that faith is “the assurance of things hoped for the conviction of things not seen.” But again this is not a pie-in-the-sky hope; it is a confident trust in God. The many people that the chapter then goes on to hold up as our “faith role models” had lots of reasons to trust in God, but their lives were still hard as they had to trust and look into the future. They were praised for living by faith, not sight, for believing not despite the evidence but when everything and everyone around them was telling them to give up on God.
If we then look at how Christian thinkers understand faith, again we see not blind faith, but faith built on evidence.
One theologian puts it like this:
Faith “affects the whole of man’s nature. It commences with the conviction of the mind based on adequate evidence; it continues in the confidence of the heart or emotions based on conviction, and it is crowned in the consent of the will, by means of which the conviction and confidence are expressed in conduct.”
If you missed that he just said evidence affects our emotions, and these two together affect our actions.
So to start with we cannot throw faith out simply on the basis of a made up, and inaccurate definition. But there is a further complication. The very sceptics that criticise religion for their faith actually need faith too, but whereas a Christian would acknowledge this, they deceptively pretend they are just going on the facts.
We all have our own worldview, which will colour the way we look at the world and it’s important to know what our worldview is to ensure that our take on the evidence is not biased. But, instead of remaining objective as scientists should, many science writers have let their own worldview’s determine the conclusions they reach. Some have claimed that if only we would stick to the facts we would see that there is no God, no meaning to life, no purpose other than to pass on our selfish genes! We are only here through chance and the choices we make in life are largely immaterial as our genes predetermine our actions.
But this is not hard fact, this is a philosophy dressed up as science. Science has NOT conclusively disproved God, no experiment has set out to find the meaning of life, and no evidence proves that genes determine our every action. The claim that the only option for an honest enquirer faced with the scientific evidence is to reject God is just ludicrous – the most Science can lead us to is agnosticism – scratching our heads and saying we just don’t know.
This is partly because of the methodological materialism that science has to use in order to investigate cause and effect, but without reference to God. Note this doesn’t mean Scientists have to be atheists, it merely means they seek to leave God out in any explanatory capacity. With God out of the frame, so to speak, it is impossible for science then to comment on his existence! This is just not in science’s job description. Taking scientific findings into the realms of philosophy also damages real science, as one writer puts it: “When proponents of scientific thinking move to become prophets of life and meaning, science is weakened for it cannot sustain such a role.”
On top of all that even good science requires us to have faith (as long as we mean trust, not the blind faith version) we must believe the findings of individual scientists and their peer reviewers. We have to have faith that this is a universe governed by solid dependable laws otherwise we would have no basis for even doing science.
So we need to move away from facing off science and faith – they are not enemies. Indeed we all have faith, just in different things. Let me give you an example:
Some people may think climbers are mad. There they are hanging onto a cliff with their fingers, wearing funny rubber boots, protected from falling to their death only by a thin rope held in place by a few tiny bits of metal and the quick reactions of their buddy holding the other end of the rope. But the reality is, if you get into climbing, you see that rather than it being an act of madness it is a very reasonable and exhilarating way to spend your day. The ropes and gear are tested to incredible limits – they will hold me! – whether you trust the person belaying you and your placement of gear is another thing. But the point is it is faith – reasonable faith (or trust) in your kit, your skill and your friend. We put similar faith into action when we sit on a chair! We look at it and weigh up whether it will hold us and then if we are convinced that it will we sit on it.
As soon as we shift to thinking of faith as trust we can see that it is crazy to see faith as some inexplicable quality of a person – in the sense that someone might think when they say “I wish I had your faith!” Instead it shifts the focus from the person with the faith to the object of that faith.
When Christians put their faith in Jesus, they are not blindly leaping into the dark, instead on the basis of evidence they believe it is reasonable to do so. Facts and objective reasoning will on their own get you to being a Christian – but that is true for any worldview, perhaps particularly atheism!
Indeed, it was deliciously ironic earlier this year, that the British Humanist Society (an atheistic group that is convinced there is no God) had to add the “probably” into their bus campaign stating unconvincingly “There’s probably no God. Now stop worrying and enjoy your life.” That’s really reassuring isn’t it…probably? But what if there is? I am worrying now more than ever! The slogan ended up sounding like a philosophical version of the Carlsberg ad.
The Christians conviction is that there is enough evidence to remove the probably and scrub out the no – “there is a God, enjoy living His way!”
If you look at the evidence for Christianity – the way the Bible hangs together even though it was written over thousands of years, the remarkable life of Jesus Christ – a man who is very hard to categorise except using his own words, his strange death and then the claimed resurrection, the changed life of his disciples from scared men to people who turned the world upside down. And Christians would add to that their personal experience of God today and the impact He can have on our lives. When all these things are considered, we are not forced to be believers, but it is becomes reasonable to have faith in Jesus Christ.
The Bible talks about great people of faith who believed God because they had seen his acts and knew him to be trustworthy. Living today thousands of years later, if anything we have even more reason to trust in God, as we see how the Bible story pans out.
All the way through the Old Testament God promised to restore the broken relationship between Him and His those he has created, in the New Testament, we see God sending his Son Jesus to die on a cross in our place, taking our punishment. Through Jesus it is possible for us to be forgiven and to start a new friendship with God. This shows us that God does keep his promises even thousands of years later.
One of the Bible writers, Paul, sums up his feelings on the good news that comes through Jesus (which he shorthands as the gospel):
“For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek [that is all who aren’t Jews]. For in it the righteousness of God is revealed from faith for faith, as it is written, ‘The righteous shall live by faith.’” Romans 1:16-17
The righteousness of God is the way we can be made right with God – this comes through faith. That means that in order to have our relationship set right with God we have to have faith and trust Him and the gospel. Not through keeping rules or being good, or in fact doing anything at all, but simply by believing. All we have to do is have faith in Jesus and what he did on the cross.
Finally, faith should always lead to action – we can assent that something is true, but we don’t truly have faith in it unless we act on that faith, whether that is climbing a wall, sitting on a chair, believing the findings of a scientist or becoming a Christian. If something is worthy of our faith we must act on that.
I would maintain that Christianity is not anti-Science, and rightly understood Science itself is not anti-Christian. My conviction is that when we see a contradiction between the Bible and science, we have either done bad science or bad Bible study.
So if you have never looked into Christianity – then can I encourage you to consider what your faith is in, and then consider the person of Jesus Christ? Pick up a gospel and read about Him, see whether he fits into the neat box you always put him in. You may well find him harder to dismiss than you thought. If you are not convinced when you consider him that there is something more to pursue, then you have lost nothing. But if there is something in it and you reject Jesus because of preconceived prejudices or because you have accepted the dogmatic words of another then you stand to lose everything.