Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Good Without God


Recently 10 billboards went up in the Sacramento area that read, “Are you good, without God? Millions are.” These ads are sponsored by a coalition of atheist organizations who want their message heard that morality is not the product of religious history or influence. The response has been as anticipated… as divided as our country continues to be over the issue of the separation of church and state. I for one am glad to be a part of a diverse community that gives voice to all its citizens. Not because I like such offensive and superficial in your face propaganda but because I know that open dialogue allows truth its best chance to surface. It often finds its sway in outlandish irony. One of the participants in the billboards is FACTS (First Atheist Church of True Science). This group meets at full moon once a month, sings, has a special drink, wears special clothing and discusses the meaning of life. Yet, doesn’t (ironically) see the influence of God/religion on their practice or rhetoric. Hello there!

To say you can be good without God is at best hypothetical because we all live in a world highly influenced by God’s presence! The atheist may chortle at Adam and Eve’s story in the garden but it’s their story. They want to eat of the tree of knowledge not for enlightenment or closer connection to their world but to displace God the Creator. Mankind in many ways, in many times and in many cultures has buried its head in the sands of its self-proclaimed knowledge to deny its need for God. At the altar of Science many a modern has relegated God as an emotional need or social pawn for the greedy or power hungry. They make broad and unfounded caricatures of believers and what they believe. They attack the Bible by reinventing it as the product of propaganda and legend devised to scare and coerce simpletons into blind belief and devotion. But the irony is their claim to rational and critical thinking is far from fair and balanced.

So where does this leave us? Hopefully, with open dialogue that asks even deeper questions… like, “Why should one be good?” And… “If we all fail to be good consistently –what are we to do? You see I’m not interested in a contest about whom is the most moral among us but rather how can I overcome my sinful ways! The cross was an unexpected place to find the answer to sin but it is there I’m redeemed and humbled so that I never again enter an argument about my goodness based on my own righteousness. Sorry billboard but I’ll never be good without God! -DAN