Richard Dawkins, a renowned evolutionary biologist and no
friend of Christianity, wants people to read the King James Bible but for
different reasons than you might think. In his article entitled Why I want all our children to read the King
James Bible (May 19,
2012), Dawkins shares three reasons to support his statement. The first two
reasons are, both of which one would find little cause to disagree with:
·
The value
of learning old English, including figures of speech: Dawkins
refers to a section of a book which he has written, The God Delusion, the section itself being titled “Religious education as a part of literary
culture." He boldly states in this article that “A native speaker of English who has never read a word of the King
James Bible is verging on the barbarian.”
·
To allow
people to understand European history: “European
history, too, is incomprehensible without an understanding of the warring
factions of Christianity and the book over whose subtleties of interpretation
they were so ready to slaughter and torture each other.”
Dawkins then plunges into his primary
point, a corrective rant of sorts, against which conservative Christianity will
have much to say:
·
To
disprove the Bible as a moral guide:
Dawkins believes that the Bible is wrongly labeled as a moral guide. By
encouraging people to read the Bible, he claims, this practice will cure this
wrong view (“pernicious falsehood”). “I
have an ulterior motive…. People who do not know the Bible well have been
gulled into thinking it is a good guide to morality. This mistaken view may
have motivated the "millionaire Conservative party donors". I have
even heard the cynically misanthropic opinion that, without the Bible as a
moral compass, people would have no restraint against murder, theft and mayhem.
The surest way to disabuse yourself of this pernicious falsehood is to read the
Bible itself.”
Throughout the remainder of his
article, the evolutionary biologist proceeds to share his arguments against
belief in the Bible as a legitimate moral guide, and thus to disprove the
legitimacy of the Bible in its entirety. His underlying argument (which is
obvious) is that there is no God, and thus no God-given revelation. Dawkins
points out what he considers to obvious observations that undermine Christian
claims, observations that mere theologians are unwilling to see. He addresses
all forms of Christianity, including those forms that largely deny what the
Bible says anyway. This is very broad swipe and ends up being a group of
confusing swings in every direction.
Dawkins’ arguments can be summarized
thus: (1) The Bible is not legitimate because of what it is; (2) the Bible is
not legitimate because of what it says; (3) the Bible is not legitimate because
of what Christians say or say about it; (4) the Bible is not legitimate because
of its core claims.
Argument
#1: The Bible is not legitimate because of what it is
Dawkins confidently directs his
initial attack squarely at the 10 Commandments. Dawkins believes he lands an
instant knockout blow by simply referring to the 10 Commandments: “Do you advocate the Ten Commandments as a
guide to the good life?”
Dawkins falters immediately. The 10
Commandments, though moral in nature, are not given as a guide to the “good
life” as he suggests. They indeed are a measure of “good,” giving a glimpse of
God’s perfect standard of living. However, the Bible is clearly teaches that
these 10 Commandments (as representation of the entire Old Testament Law) are not
given primarily as a moral guide. Instead the Bible shares that the Law
(represented by these 10 Commandments) is given to show that mankind is not
moral and does not measure up to God’s holy standard:
Now we know that whatever the law says, it says to those who are under the law, that every mouth may be stopped,
and all the world may become guilty before God. Therefore by the deeds
of the law no flesh will be justified in His sight, for by the law is the knowledge of sin.
(Romans 3:19-20)
Therefore the law was our tutor [to bring
us] to Christ, that we might be justified by faith. (Galatians 3:24)
In fact, the
Bible is clear that no person can be “good” or “justified” by keeping the law
(including the 10 Commandments). Instead, the law shows us that our only hope
was to be rescued by God. And He God did make a way for us to be “saved” or
rescued by allowing His Son, Jesus Christ, to take our penalty (for breaking
God’s law) for us!:
knowing that a man is not justified by the
works of the law but by faith in Jesus Christ, even we have believed in
Christ Jesus, that we might be justified by faith in Christ and not by the works of
the law; for by the works of the law no flesh shall be justified.
(Galatians 2:16)
For as many as are of the works of the law
are under the curse; for it is written, "Cursed is everyone who
does not continue in all things which are written in the book of the law, to do
them." But that no one is justified by the law in the sight of God is evident, for "the
just shall live by faith." Yet the law is not of faith, but "the man
who does them shall live by them." Christ has redeemed us from the curse of the
law, having become a curse for us (for it is written, "Cursed is
everyone who hangs on a tree "), (Galatians 3:10-13)
Argument
#2: The Bible is not legitimate because of what it says
Dawkins, building on this wrong
premise of the Bible being a moral guide, continues to show his hand by
attacking some of the 10 Commandments individually:
The first two – "Thou shalt have no other
gods before me" and "Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven
image" – come from a time when the Jews still believed in the existence of
many gods but had sworn fealty to only one of them, their tribal
"jealous" god.
This simply is not true. This view comes
from liberal Christian views that would reject what the Bible says, and who
would impose an outside view on the Scriptures which is not contained
in the Scriptures. Dawkins is fine applying this liberal evolutionary view
to the Bible, but he misses three important facts:
1. As
revealed in the Bible, the patriarchs (progenitors of the nation Israel)
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob were all monotheistic. They had communication
interactions involved just one God, which was initiated by God Himself.
2. God is
revealing Himself to the Israelites. Regardless of Israel’s history or
proneness to polytheism, He is declaring what is true.
3.
Israel as a nation, receiving God’s
declaration, was told this: "Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God, the LORD is one!” (Deuteronomy 6:4) There
was no evolving of views as implied by Dawkins (and liberal theologians). They
were instantly monotheistic as a nation around the same time that the 10
Commandments are given. (The book called Deuteronomy means “second law,” and
the 10 Commandments are repeated a second time in the very chapter where “the
LORD is one” is declared….)
Dawkins continues to hammer, in his
mind, more of the 10 Commandments. He believes he undermines the veracity of
the Fourth Commandment (“Remember the Sabbath to keep it holy”) because of a
harsh penalty that accompanied certain violations of that command (the death
penalty).
Here we need to point out that Dawkins
assumes that no God exists, and so all these commands are conjured up by crazed
men. However, the Bible declares the existence of God as the Creator of the
Universe, a holy God who deserves recognition and worship as such. One cannot
parse the Bible in pieces and create a context of one’s choosing – Dawkins is
doing just that.
As God Himself reveals in the Bible, He
created all the universe, including his highest creation, the human race. These
highest of creators are logically expected by God to worship Him and honor Him
as their Creator in the ways He communicates. What is so hard to understand about
that? Though the Sabbath penalty is a harsh one (as it was given to the nation
of Israel), it made the point: God deserved His day of attention each week, per
His commandment and per His design. Worship of God was no small matter, and God
wanted the Israelites to understand the consequences of not doing so. It was
that big of a deal.
From the Fourth Commandment Dawkins
proceeds to the Fifth Commandment (“Honor thy father and thy mother”). He jumps
backward in time (and in the Biblical text) to where God commanded Abraham to
sacrifice Isaac. Dawkins is convinced that this is a violation of the Sixth
Commandment: “do not kill.” Dawkins may not remember that God actually did not
have Abraham kill Isaac (which then did not violate anything). To be fair, the
Bible is also clear that Abraham did not know that God would prevent him from
killing Isaac, but he was certain that God would raise up Isaac if he did go
through with it (Hebrews 11:17-19).
This may bend Dawkins the wrong way.
However, God does reveal that He knows what He is doing whether we can
understand it or not. God accomplished what He desired in Abraham’s life.
Further, Abraham was to the point that, having been called by God, having
walked with God for years, and having been given a son in his old age, he was
fully confident that God could be trusted. That is the greater context of the
offering of Isaac.
Dawkins further objects to the Sixth
Commandment, stating that the command “do not kill” really meant, in practice,
do not kill those of your own tribe. This is simply not true. Again, Dawkins
assumes that God is a myth, that men made up this text, and that all killing is
condemned. He errs on all counts.
In the very beginning, in the Garden
of Eden, God issued the warning of death for eating of the forbidden tree. Death
is God’s justice, not man’s made-up choice. God, as the Creator of the
Universe, is the One Who makes the rules based upon Who He is (His nature and
character). He judges human beings and nations, and throughout the Bible, often
dispenses His justice on some human beings through the hands of others. In
fact, one only has to read to the ninth chapter of the Bible, Genesis 9, to see
that God required men to hold other men accountable (the basis for human
government). In Genesis 9:6 God commands Noah, “Whoever sheds man's blood, By man his blood shall be shed; For in the
image of God He made man.” This is reflected all the way into the New
Testament where the government is said not to carry the sword in vain.
Government exists to protect those that obey the law and to punish those that
do not (some crimes even requiring capital punishment).
Therefore, “you shall not kill” in
context means that you do not take matters into your own hands and murder
someone. God holds the arm of justice, whether judging individuals or nations.
We do not.
Argument
#3: The Bible is not legitimate because of what Christians say or say about it
Dawkins mocks some Christians who make
claims he rejects, and uses these to discard Christianity for yet another
reason. It might be good for him to exercise reason. It would only be fair (and
reasonable) to acknowledge that Christians do not claim to fully understand
their Maker nor all of the commands given by Him any more than scientists claim
to understand all that science involves. We both accept much on faith based
upon what we do understand.
It is fair to say that ridiculous
statements and actions by Christians (of which Dawkins gives examples) may
cause Bible believers to look foolish (as they often have). However, these
examples no more invalidate Christianity than previously held views of a flat
earth or a geo-centric universe invalidate
Dawkins’ pursuit of any field of science. Further, just because some
“sophisticated” theologians, as Dawkins puts it, reject what the Bible says and
seek to back-pedal and avoid obvious interpretations does not mean that all Christians
have abandoned what the Bible says.
Argument
#4: The Bible is not legitimate because of its core claims
Dawkins finally jumps to several
central themes of the Bible, which he wholly rejects (and which all who reject
God must reject). Dawkins rejects the historical Adam (by which sin
entered the world), and thus he rejects the concept of sin. Logically, then, he
rejects the payment for sin by Jesus
Christ, the incarnate Son of God, which He transacted by dying on the cross for
the sins of mankind.
Since Dawkins rejects God as an
evolutionist, he cannot understand that God revealed this plan of rescue
(salvation). Since He refuses to believe in anything supernatural, he is left
with no good options, and scorns the idea of God revealing truth to mankind.
Since Dawkins rejects sin, he offers no explanation for evil, but sees no
reason for its resolution – he rejects the only possible Source for its
resolution. Maybe to his own surprise,
the Bible is not caught off guard by this:
For since the
creation of the world His invisible [attributes] are clearly seen, being
understood by the things that are made, [even]
His eternal power and Godhead, so that they are without excuse, because,
although they knew God, they did not glorify [Him] as God, nor were thankful, but became futile in their
thoughts, and their foolish hearts were darkened. (Romans 1:20-21)
Summary
Dawkins accurately states that the
Bible is not a “moral book.” It is much more than that. It is true that the
Bible is full of instructions in righteousness for those that believe in God
and seek to obey Him. However, it also does not shy away from accurately recording
the history rebellious actions of those who failed to do so or refused to do
so.
The Bible claims to be the revelation
of the one true God, the Creator of the Universe, Who clearly and honestly
presents the human race in all of its immoral and rebellious detail while
declaring Himself to be the only solution to mankind’s core problem – sin. God
did so by sending His only begotten Son to bear the penalty for the pathetic and
helpless human race. God accomplished this in such a way that He could remain
holy while receiving the justice His holiness demanded, and yet forgive the
sins of those that believe in His Solution. God sent His only begotten Son to
suffer the sin penalty for the world by dying on the cross, that He might save
those that believe in that Payment.
It is not unreasonable to accept a
Divine Creator Who has the sovereign reign of the universe, and Who is holy and
metes justice as He sees fit according to that holiness. He is beyond our
understanding, but has communicated with us at times directly, through His
prophets, through the written Word, and through His Incarnate Son. God’s
communications truly make perfect sense, if you accept them at face value.
We are all for people reading the Bible, even if they are
encouraged to read it by enemies of the Bible. However, it is Dawkins that may
need to read the Bible more, without the assumptions or explanations of men who
reject it. It is then possible to gain what the Scriptures truly have to offer from
God Who has everything to offer.
[This was posted simultaneously on Caffeinated Thoughts: http://caffeinatedthoughts.com/2012/05/richard-dawkins-says-read-bible/]
Hi Kevin, I also sent you a FB friend request in an attmept to get your permission to reprint this in the August edition of Genuine Motivation: Young Christian Man. Please see our blog for more on our ezine: genmoycm.wordpress[dot]com.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your prompt reply,
Donna Lee Schillinger
Donna, You are welcome to reprint this article. Please link back here in some way as well. Thanks. - Kevin
DeleteDonna, You are welcome to reprint this article. I would appreciate a link back to here in some way. Thanks. - Kevin
ReplyDeleteDonna, You are welcome to reprint this article. I would appreciate a link back to here in some way. Thanks. - Kevin
ReplyDeleteDonna, You are welcome to reprint this article. I would appreciate a link back to here in some way. Thanks. - Kevin
ReplyDeleteDonna, You are welcome to reprint this article. I would appreciate a link back to here in some way. Thanks. - Kevin
ReplyDeleteDonna, You are welcome to reprint this article. I would appreciate a link back to here in some way. Thanks. - Kevin
ReplyDelete