|
Probe Ministries
Why Isn't the Evidence Clearer?
By John A. Bloom
Edited by Lou Whitworth
[Note: "Why Isn't the Evidence Clearer?" is the name of a chapter
in the Probe book, Evidence for Faith: Deciding the God
Question, an excellent collection of articles on Christian
evidential apologetics. The chapter (pp. 305-17) was written by
John A. Bloom (Ph.D. in physics, Cornell University, Ph.D.
in Ancient Near Eastern Studies, Dropsie College, and now Associate
Professor of Physics at Biola College). This
essay is an edited and condensed version of the chapter as found in
the book. For the documentation of this material, please see the
original. The book was edited/compiled by Dr. John Warwick
Montgomery, who holds eight earned degrees in philosophy, law, and
theology. Evidence for Faith is available through Probe
Ministries for $11.00, plus S/H. See our order page.]
Sometimes unbelievers complain, "If God really exists, why isn't
the evidence more plain and simple?" "Is God tricking us by making
us hunt and search for answers?" They say, "Why isn't the evidence
for the God of the Bible clearer?" That is, why isn't the evidence
for the truth of the Scriptures so obvious and undeniable that
virtually everyone would acknowledge it, repent, and accept Christ
as personal savior?
In his book, Contact, Carl Sagan satirically asks why God
doesn't place a glowing cross in the sky at night to serve as
irrefutable proof of Jesus' resurrection? One could extend this
line of thought further and ask why God doesn't have His own
television channel and toll-free "hotline"?
Despite Sagan's ridicule, he has a legitimate point. Why must we
read a two-thousand-year-old book and study ancient history for
proof of the existence of God? Why isn't the evidence for the
existence of the God of the Bible made obvious to everyone, no
matter how rebellious or blinded by sin? What we are really asking
is, "Are there any reasons for the evidence to appear obscure other
than the possibility that the God of the Bible doesn't exist?" This
question should be addressed seriously, and, as we do so in this
brief discussion, I think we will find that the answer is more
profound than many realize.
There are two reasonable demands for any set of evidence. First,
the evidence should be clear enough to be intellectually sound at
the same level of certainty one uses in making other important
decisions. Second, the evidence must be clear enough to select one
set of claims over another (that is, clear enough to select
Christianity over other religions).
Some are tempted to apply the rule that "the more critical the
decision, the clearer the evidence must be." They demand that the
evidence for Christianity must be extraordinarily and especially
clear to win their allegiance. The problem with this standard is
that it assumes that there are no consequences to the decision. If,
however, there are cataclysmic consequences to the observer, he
will have to settle for "sufficient evidence, or the most
trustworthy evidence."
The more appropriate rule is: "The more severe the consequences,
the less we should take risks." Therefore, even if biblical
Christianity has a less than one-in-ten-million chance of being
true, we should accept it because the possibility of an eternal
Hell is such a great torment. If the available evidence shows that
biblical Christianity is "the most trustworthy" of all religions,
then we are on even firmer ground.
For the balance of this pamphlet, we'll be looking at this issue of
the clarity of the evidence from several perspectives. We'll
consider the scientific and historical perspectives on this
question; we'll attempt to look at it from God's point of view and
from our own human vantage point. Finally, we'll summarize the
results of our analysis in light of God's grace and our human
accountability.
The Scientific Perspective
The chief task of the scientist is to comb through "raw" data and
attempt to extract useful information from which he constructs a
hypothesis. He then tests the hypothesis against the original data
and against new data from experimentation. Often the data are
inconclusive or ambiguous preventing a rigorous conclusion.
However, abandoning the research and pronouncing that no one can
ever discover the answer is poor methodology. The fact is that the
natural order rarely produces ideal data, and nature appears to be
more far more complex the more we know about it. Is it logical to
expect the Creator to be less complex than His creation?
The scientist should have a healthy skepticism and desire careful
experimentation. However, the extremely skeptical position we
mentioned above--Carl Sagan in demanding a glowing cross in the sky
as proof of Christ's resurrection--is not scientific. It is like not
believing in galaxies unless someone has one in his laboratory.
Some people may refuse to believe in the authority of the Ten
Commandments because they aren't written on the surface of the
moon, but those same people would consider a person an idiot if he
said he doubted the authority of the periodic table because it
wasn't written on the surface of the moon. The point is that
clarity is relative, not absolute; thus skepticism must have
practical limits.
In addition, the clarity and conclusiveness of experimental data
must be judged relative to competition, that is, alternate
explanations. In our case, the clarity of the evidence for the
truth of biblical Christianity would be obscured by competition
from other belief systems if any of them had comparable evidence to
support their truth claims. Scientists have learned that they
cannot wait for irrefutable data.
The Historical Perspective
Arguments against the Bible based on a "Why isn't it clearer?"
foundation can appear stronger than they really are because of the
distortions inherent in recording history. For example, a casual
reading of the Bible might lead one to the conclusion that miracles
were a daily occurrence in ancient Israel. Thus the absence of
similar miracles in modern times could lead one to assume that "God
is dead" or that those events which the ancients thought were
miracles were only natural events which were not understandable at
the time.
In fact, a close study of the Bible indicates that miracles were
rare and mainly cluster around four specific points:
- Moses and the Exodus,
- The time of Elijah and Elisha,
- The lives of Jesus and the Apostles, and
- The still future Second Coming of Christ.
The clusters of miracles appear in conjunction with some new aspect
of God's plan or new revelation and seem more prominent than they
really are because of the historical compression of the biblical
record.
God's Perspective
We have been looking at the question of why the evidence for the
truth of the Bible isn't clearer, and now we will look at this
question from God's perspective. In other words, could God have
reasons for not making the evidence so striking that even the most
sinful and rebellious person would see it and repent?
First a few observations about God. Ancient thought often held that
the gods made man because they were in need of servants. Much
modern thought argues that God made man because He was lonely or
did not have anyone around to love or appreciate Him. However, the
God of the Bible is in no way dependent upon mankind even for love
or worship. That He reveals Himself at all is for our benefit, not
His.
But even if He reveals evidence of Himself only to benefit us, why
isn't He more forthright about it? This much seems clear: If He
made His presence or the evidence too obvious, it would interfere
with His demonstration, which is intended to draw out or reveal the
true inner character of mankind. We know from several passages of
Scripture that this is part of God's purpose for maintaining a
relative silence. For example, in Psalm 50:21-22 we read, "These
things you have done, and I kept silence; you thought that I was
just like you; I will reprove you, and state the case in order
before your eyes." From these statements we come to see that God is
not struggling desperately to gain man's attention. Actually He is
restraining Himself in order to demonstrate to human beings
something about our inner character, or tendency to evil. We might
call this "the Sheriff in the tavern" principle--people tend to be
good when they think they are being watched by an authority. If a
sheriff wants to find out or reveal who the troublemakers are in a
tavern, he must either hide or appear to be an ineffective wimp,
otherwise the bad guys will behave as well as everyone else.
Of course we should not push this analogy too far: unlike the
Sheriff, God doesn't need to see men's evil actions in order to
accurately judge them. Moreover, He has not stated His full reasons
for allowing men to demonstrate their evil intent through their
actions. The point we are trying to make here is that there are
reasons that we can understand that may explain to some degree why
God has chosen to run the world the way He has.
So why isn't the evidence clearer? To use another analogy, it is
because God is like a good scientist who doesn't want to disturb
His experiment by intruding into it. The problem of disturbing an
experiment while measuring it is the bane of the experimental
sciences in that any and every measurement changes and thus
distorts to some degree the system it measures. Of course God is
not running an experiment because He already knows the outcome. It
is more like a demonstration with the results saved for Judgment
Day.
The Human Perspective
We have been dealing thus far in this essay the question of why the
evidence for the truth of the Bible isn't clearer, that is,
overwhelmingly and inescapably clear. Now we want to examine this
question from man's viewpoint, that is, the human factor that is
involved whenever a person tries to judge the quality of the
evidence.
In Romans 1:1-8 Paul wrote that God has given human beings
sufficient evidence that He exists. However, some people cannot
bear to think that there is an authority or power greater than
themselves, especially one that they cannot control and to which
they should be subject. We should not be surprised, therefore, when
we find that many people often distort the evidence that God has
already given them (yet keep demanding more).
Given this tendency on the part of man, how clear does the evidence
have to be before people would universally recognize the existence
of the God of the Bible? Would a cross in the sky actually be
sufficient to convert Carl Sagan? Would the performance of an
undeniable miracle in a scoffer's presence be enough? However
impressive such feats would be, the records of history show that
most people choose to ignore whatever evidence they have, no matter
how clear it may be.
During the wilderness wanderings, the Israelites, who had
personally observed the miracles in Egypt and who were being fed
and guided daily by miraculous means (manna and the pillar of
fire), repeatedly rebelled against the God-directed leadership of
Moses. The miracles performed by Elijah and Elisha were not
sufficient to convert he Northern Kingdom of Israel to unperverted
forms of biblical worship. In the New Testament Jesus healed the
lame and the blind and even raised the dead, yet the Jewish
leaders, who could not dispute the genuineness of His miracles,
wanted to kill Him.
In His account of an unnamed rich man and a poor man named Lazarus,
Jesus Himself makes our point clear: The rich man, now in hell,
pleads with Abraham to send Lazarus back from the dead to warn his
brothers so they will not face the same torment that he is
experiencing. Abraham replies, "If they do not listen to Moses and
the Prophets, they will not be convinced even if someone rises from
the dead."
From the human perspective, why isn't the evidence clearer? Because
God knows, and has already demonstrated, that no matter how clear
He makes the evidence, it will never be sufficient for some. More
evidence by itself will not convince people whose minds are already
emotionally attached to an opposing view, because people are not
always rational. The mind is all too often the servant of the
desired fantasy.
Is God frustrated and defeated by the fact that man is so sinful he
will not pay attention to God no matter how big the flag is that
God waves in front of him? Only if we assume that God's purpose in
giving evidence is to convert everyone.
God's Grace and Man's Accountability
In this discussion we have observed that the God of the Bible does
not intend to make His presence so obvious that it curbs the
actions of evil men, and that most men will ignore whatever
evidence they receive anyway. This being the case, why does God
bother to give any evidence at all? Why doesn't He hide Himself
even better? From the Bible we deduce that God gives the level of
evidence He does because He is both a gracious God and a God who
holds men accountable for the evidence they receive.
Some people will repent on seeing even a low level of evidence; for
others a higher level is required. Some people will get much more
evidence than is needed to convert others but still not repent.
Despite the varying levels of evidence to which people are exposed
throughout various times and cultures, God states that He has given
each person enough so that they know better than to continue doing
evil. Given the willful rejection of the evidence which they do
receive, God is not obligated to provide more.
At the very least, the evidence which God gives includes His glory
as seen in nature, evidence which in our day we tend to obscure by
ascribing it to less personally demanding causes like "chance" or
the "laws of nature."
However we might personally feel about it, God says that He has
provided evidence clear enough that every human being is morally
responsible to respond to it. The evidence He has provided is
sufficient; therefore, He is saddened but not frustrated that many
do not respond. Those who choose to ignore His evidence will have
to answer to Him and it is not an enviable task--somewhat like
arguing with a Judge over a speeding ticket: How can we say we did
not see the sign when the Judge himself posted it? How foolish
would we be if we tried to argue that we saw the sign but thought
it was too small and too quaint to take seriously?
This points out the main purpose for miracles and biblical
evidence: they are warning signs to get us to pay attention to the
message associated with the sign. A traffic sign may simply advise
us to slow down around a curve, but it may also warn us that a
bridge is out ahead. We would be foolish indeed to accelerate past
a "Bridge Out" sign because the sign seemed a little too small or
too old. But the warning God gives through miracles and biblical
evidence is far worse than a bridge being out. Man is accountable
to God, and there is eternal torment ahead for those who brush
aside God's warning signs and refuse to repent.
On the other hand, humble seeker for truth will find that the
evidence is indeed sufficient. Why? Because the biblical data, when
compared to that offered by other religions or by atheism, is clear
enough to show that the God of the Bible really exists and that His
warnings should be heeded.
In Matthew 12:38-39 the Pharisees challenged Jesus by demanding
that He perform a sign impressive enough to force them to believe
His warnings. But God does not feel obligated to cater to the egos of
the morally and sexually corrupt who bend whatever evidence they
receive to suit their own ends.
These demands express a sovereignty over God at the opposite
extreme from repentance. Should we expect God to jump through any
hoop we set up to please us? Is God so insecure that He needs our
approval? Yet some people deal with the Creator of the universe as
if He were a dog. But in spite of such attitudes, God provides
sufficient evidence for self-centered people.
© 1994 Probe Ministries
About the Author
Louis D. Whitworth is the former senior editor at Probe
Ministries, and is currently affiliated with Christian Information
Ministries. He is a graduate of Northeast Louisiana University
(B.A., Sociology and English, and M.A., English) and Dallas
Theological Seminary (Th.M., Pastoral Theology). Prior to
joining Probe, Lou taught English literature and composition
at the college level and served with Campus Crusade for Christ
in the Military Ministry as well as the Singles Ministry.
He is the author of the Probe booklet, Literature Under the
Microscope: A Christian Look at Reading.
What is Probe?
Probe Ministries is a non-profit corporation whose mission is to reclaim the
primacy of Christian thought and values in Western culture through media,
education, and literature. In seeking to accomplish this mission, Probe provides
perspective on the integration of the academic disciplines and historic
Christianity.
In addition, Probe acts as a clearing house, communicating the results of
its research to the church and society at large.
Further information about Probe's materials and ministry may be obtained by
writing to:
Probe Ministries
1900 Firman Drive, Suite 100
Richardson, TX 75081
(972) 480-0240 FAX (972) 644-9664
info@probe.org
www.probe.org
Copyright (C) 1996-2010 Probe Ministries
Email this to a friend
copyright
© 1995-2010
Leadership U. All rights reserved.
Updated: 14 July 2002
|