By James Bowman on 10.22.07 @ 12:07AM
Which drives the enlightened Christopher Hitchens bananas.
The recent debate, sponsored by the Ethics and Public
Policy Center, between Christopher Hitchens and Professor Alister
McGrath on the existence of God was rather a disappointment to me.
I thought that Mr. Hitchens clearly had the better of it, but only
because Professor McGrath chose to fight on his opponent's ground.
The Hitchens argument in essence boiled down to this: if God
existed, He would have to be as much of a liberal humanitarian as I
am. Since the misery in the world and the violence in the Bible
show that He obviously isn't any kind of a liberal humanitarian, it
must be equally obvious that He doesn't exist. Q.E.D. The
tautological nature of this argument appeared not to have been
noticed by the professor who was, perhaps understandably, reluctant
to concede the point that the Author of the moral law -- along, of
course, with everything else -- might not be "ethical" in human
terms.
But "ethics" as we know it, along with the rest of the moral law
as it has been defined for us by the Enlightenment, only makes
sense on the assumption of equality. It is a system of reciprocal
obligations derived from models of citizenship that depended on the
flattening-out of social inequalities that had been taken for
granted in the hierarchical societies that preceded them and that
had been universal at the time of the founding of the world's great
religions. The Biblical characterization of God as "Lord" was
explicitly based on these social hierarchies, since it was obvious
to everyone up until relatively recent times that the rules
applying to lords, if any, were completely different from those
applying to ordinary people. Likewise, the metaphor of God's
fatherhood drew on the general assumption that fathers could as a
matter of course not be bound by the same rules they naturally laid
down for their children.
Now, this idea of a two-tier morality -- one for lords, another
for commoners, one for fathers, another for children -- is becoming
almost as hard for us to grasp as the more ethical, egalitarian
kind would have been for those to whom the Gospel was first
preached. In the same way, we have come to take for granted the
liberal and utopian myth that "no one is above the law." What
nonsense! If the law has any force, someone must be above
it. Who decides to invoke it, when he does so, and what he decides
to do with it are questions that can only be determined by someone
who is above it, at least to that extent. The law does not enforce
itself. But the tacit assumption that it might, or that it should,
has been a useful ploy of the left, wielding its plainly bogus
maxim, in the long political struggle waged in America since
Watergate over who it is that we shall trust to be above the law,
the elected executive power or unelected judges, bureaucrats, and
other experts and "intellectuals."
Against "no one is above the law" the ancients had a proverb:
quod licet Jovis non licet bovis -- which is to say, that
which is permitted to the gods is not permitted to cattle. What an
outrage that seems to us! Christopher Hitchens has scaled the
summit of the best-seller lists by exploiting the unwillingness of
so many of our contemporary fans of human dignity to be regarded as
cattle vis-a-vis their god. But once such people grant that any god
which treated them in so radically inegalitarian and disrepectful
(not to mention so unethical) a way would be a scandal they are
almost inevitably driven to Mr. Hitchens's conclusion that the God
of the Bible cannot possibly exist. If He is at all accurately
characterized therein -- or, for that matter, in the other holy
books of the world's religions -- then he has no more respect for
human dignity as such than cancer does.
All religions teach submission to the will of God, which is just
a way of formally acknowledging that He cannot be bound by the same
rules we are. There would be nothing to submit to if He were. To
me, the most interesting argument for God's existence is precisely
the one that Mr. Hitchens cited against it, namely that it beggars
belief to think that a loving, compassionate Divinity could have
stood by for 100,000 (or 250,000) years and allowed mankind to
perish like the beasts of the field before deciding, all in His
good time, to introduce us to our salvation in Jesus Christ. But
the fact that the god who is God starts out as a tribal deity --
like every other god -- and becomes the God of Christianity by a
process of historical evolution like our own seems to me at once
more miraculous and much more compellingly believable than either
the Aristotelian Prime Mover or the cosmic Big Brother that Mr.
Hitchens seems to insist logic demands.
He objects strenuously to the doctrine of original sin, but what
if original sin means just that: the tribalism which has
characterized most of the human race for most of human history? At
a certain point it became possible for God to show us how that
tribalism could be redeemed just as, later, and in an analogous
act, He showed us how our physical flesh could be redeemed by
taking it on himself. We think that one of the worst things that a
man can do is to "play God" for we have seen the worst that comes
of it when men have done so. But it is meaningless to object to
God's playing God, which is what, in effect, Mr. Hitchens is doing
by berating him for not being a liberal and a humanitarian.
The people who gave us our religion never supposed He was those
things. Those things were scarcely imaginable to them. It's one
thing to doubt the existence of the God of the Bible, but it seems
a bit thick for a Johnny-come-lately like Hitch to object that the
God of the Bible ought to have been quite a different sort of God
if he expected us to believe in him. It's just because He is so
unlike any god we could have imagined for ourselves, so unlike that
wish-fulfilling cosmic bellhop (as Professor George Abernathy of
Davidson College used to call him) that, rather illogically, the
anti-religious polemicists also object to, that unbelief is even
harder, for many of us, than belief is.
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