Friday, March 13, 2015

Doing Evil Leads to Atheism - A Reflection on this Week's Gospel Message

This week at Mass we hear the words of Christ from John 3 proclaimed (emphasis mine),
Which I shared on my Google+ page (follow me there, if you don't already) and which occasioned an interesting exchange with an atheist follower there (see the original exchange here if interested). The atheist first objected to Jesus' words on the grounds that atheists can be good people too. Of course, he's exactly right, atheists can be and are good people too. We've recently covered this very topic a couple times on the blog including here: If Atheists are Good People Too, Why Be Christian where I shared some thoughts from CS Lewis, Fr. Barron, and this video from William Lane Craig which does a great job of explaining that "the moral argument for God" has nothing to do with suggesting that atheists are immoral or even are less moral than Christians,



Of course, Jesus isn't saying that all atheists are immoral so the atheist's comment, while valid, misses the point entirely. Jesus is commenting on the relationship between doing "wicked things" and unbelief, but our atheist commentator got the relationship exactly backwards. Jesus isn't saying, "everyone who hates the light does wicked things,"(i.e all atheists are immoral), He is not saying,





but rather is saying, "everyone who does wicked things hates the light" (i.e. all those who persist in immorality will become atheists),





Jesus, then, is speaking not to whether or not atheists can be "good people," but to whether those who love sin can keep the Faith and He firmly comes down against such an idea.



As someone who has had many conversations with many atheists I can personally attest, from experience, to the truth of  what Jesus is saying here. Often times I've engaged atheists who have no real arguments against the Holy Faith, but are active and proud homosexuals, cross dressers, fornicators, divorced and remarried, contraception users, etc (and that is just looking at sexual sins). When we embrace these sins, when we idolize them, when we "call evil good, and good evil" (Is 5:20) we put ourselves on a path that invariably ends in rejecting Christ, His Church, and eventually religion itself.

As the Venn diagrams above show, Jesus isn't saying all people who reject Him are addicted to "wicked things." He isn't saying that the only reason for disbelief is attachment to sin. There can be other reasons. Some common other reasons I've encountered include:

If you're an atheist ask yourself, would you even want Christianity to be true? Even if you think it as likely to be true as flying through the air "Superman-style," would you even want it to be true? If not, why not? If because of a particular sin you enjoy that you would have to abandon, then you are precisely the person Jesus is talking about here.

If you're a Christian ask yourself, is there a sin in my life that I refuse to repent of? Is there something I know Jesus and His Holy Church condemns that I still cling to? If so realize you are walking a dangerous line, one which will, according to Jesus, lead to disbelief and end in atheism. You can't worship two gods - one your sins, the other Christ. You'll have to choose. Will you be a child of the light or a son of darkness? Which will it be?

3 comments:

  1. Being atheist is not about sining, if I wanted to sin, I would become a preacher and rape children.

    It's about the lack of evidence for your god. There are gay religious persons and there is a religious person for every ridiculous act you mentioned.

    Your argument is flawed in ever sence of the word and so are WLC's, who talks a lot but says nothing, just as you do.

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  2. DOrian, YOUR argument is flawed! The article is not saying that sinners are atheists, but rather that Christians who consistently choose sin over righteousness will become atheists eventually. EVERYONE sins, by comparison to the objective measurement. But atheists simply deny that such a measurement exists, while believers who habitually choose to sin will eventually find themselves to be atheists.

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    Replies
    1. Yeah, I thought the Venn diagrams made that clear, but what can you do? By the way, nice profile pic. Outlaw Josey Wales, right? My second favorite Eastwood western.

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