Know-it-all Christians Who Can’t Prove God’s Existence

Marie Jon'
Marie Jon’

While reading the Word on a flight to visit a family member who recently moved from Southern California, I overheard some remarkable comments. I have had some really amazing discussions on airplanes, when a small white Bible seems to become a controversy.

For instance — “You Christians believe you know it all.” Then the next few words that follow are “But you can’t prove that God really exists.” And you know, to some degree, they are correct. It is a tough proposition to prove God’s existence, but not impossible.

And then there is the unfortunate fact that a lot of Christians come across as religious know-it-alls. They know how to spout and fume, but it takes more than an affirmation of one’s faith to convince a thinking mind to believe in God.

What can you say when you meet an atheist who challenges your belief in God? Most atheists think that Christianity is an enormous leap of faith. Allow me to show you what happens when former atheists take that step.

090518jonAdoniram Judson

Little Adoniram Judson was an intelligent child. His father did a lot of traveling, which left his mother to do most of the child’s tutoring. When Pastor Judson came home, how surprised and delighted he was to hear that his three-year-old boy could read far beyond his age. We often see much praise for homeschooling and the dedicated parents who provide an excellent education for their children. Needless to say, Pastor Judson was one happy man when his little son picked up the family Bible and read an entire chapter out loud to perfection.

Yes, Adoniram Judson was a very bright boy. However, there’s a risk in being mentally brilliant. It is virtually guaranteed that geniuses will begin to say “Prove it” to everybody about anything and everything. By the time Adoniram arrived at Brown University, he was ready to question all of his professors.

Author Eugene Myers Harrison describes Adoniram in Giants of the Missionary Trail,” a story about a very clever academic who was “enamored of his brilliance” and mentally “entertained the most extravagant ambitions. [Adoniram's] imagination ran wild as he contemplated his future eminence.” He fancied himself as “an orator, greater than Demosthenes,” who inspired the masses with his eloquence. He thought of himself “as Homer, writing immortal poems,” or as “Alexander the Great, [saddened] because there were no more worlds to conquer.”

It is ironic and pathetic that gifted men and women who receive the gift of wisdom, directly from God’s hand, in many cases turn right around and reject the Giver.

The Apostle Paul was an academic genius who once used his abilities to fight against heaven. Later he wrote: “But the manifestation of the Spirit is given to each one for the profit of all: for to one is given the word of wisdom through the Spirit, to another the word of knowledge through the same Spirit” (1 Corinthians 12:7).

According to the Word, wisdom and knowledge are special gifts from God. When extremely brilliant people reject God, they reject the source of their enormous gifts. Young Judson did just that.

Brown University

In its earlier days, Brown University was known as Providence College. Through the providence of the Almighty God, Judson received his many distinct abilities and insights. Yet he willfully decided that providence had nothing to do with it.

The history books are full of names of intellectual giants who came to a similar conclusion. Take, for instance, men like Friedrich Nietzsche and François-Marie Arouet, better known as Voltaire. Voltaire’s miraculous abilities, coupled with his doubts and vehement opposition to organized religion, were unquestionably precursors to a very bloody French Revolution. Atheism soon followed and became an official religion.

Unfortunately, Voltaire’s attitude and endless skepticism eventually infected the United States of America. By the early 1800’s, Yale University was blown over by the gale force winds of godlessness. Almost all of its students were atheists. Shamelessly, many of the young men on campus shed the baptismal names given to them by their parents and began calling each other by the names of their favorite infidels.

Providence College in Rhode Island was plagued with the same problem. Judson felt the effects of the crossfire. By the time he finished school, he declared himself to be an atheist. Because God had gifted him mentally, whenever he and his father engaged in a discussion about God, Adoniram usually won.

A matter of faith

Christians too often don’t win arguments with atheists. It’s impossible to always be the victor, because at some point people of faith have to turn to the Book and say: “I hold the Holy Bible to be true.” And then the atheist can easily say that “you can read and quote from that book all you want to, but I’ll have nothing to do with it.” They don’t see any evidence. They often say, “If God wants me to acknowledge Him, then He must prove His existence to me.” They need something tangible that their eyes can see or their hands can hold. “It is written again, You shall not tempt the Lord your God” (Matthew 4:7).

Matthew 4:14 tells us that Jesus was hungry following his 40-day fast. Satan appealed to the natural appetite and desires of Jesus. The Savior was tempted like any other human person. He humbled himself and became a human, with all the human weakness, frailties, and desires.

Satan tempted Christ, saying, “If you are the Son of God, tell these stones to become bread.” Satan questioned Christ’s calling and mission.

Satan uses the same question to tempt people today. “If Jesus is the Son of God. . . .” “If God exists, then why . . . ? You can fill in the blank.

Friedrich Nietzsche and Charles Darwin shook their fist at heaven and said, “There is no God.” Maybe the “Great I Am” should have zapped them with a bit of heavenly reality.

I’m amazed when I read the story of Job in the Bible. With all the trials and tribulations it’s a wonder that he didn’t finally become an atheist. “Why don’t you curse God and die?”, his wife said (Job 2:9). For many people, taking their own lives would have been considered an option when life’s problems continually pile up. Job had everything bad happen to him. In one day, he lost his children, and their families were also killed. He lost his home and his wealth. His health became unbearable. All of his worldly fortune was no longer, while his prayers seemed to go unheard. It would have been more than enough to make anybody feel doubtful that God existed. Sure enough, a righteous man named Job began to struggle with matters of faith.

Job actually said: “Why do the wicked live and become old, yes, become mighty in power? Their descendants are established with them in their sight, and their offspring before their eyes. Their houses are safe from fear, neither is the rod of God upon them. Their bull breeds without failure; their cow calves without miscarriage. They send forth their little ones like a flock, and their children dance. They sing to the tambourine and harp, and rejoice to the sound of the flute. They spend their days in wealth, and in a moment go down to the grave” (Job 21:7-13). Job also said: “Though [God] slay me, yet will I trust in him: but I will maintain mine own ways before him” (Job 13:15).

Coming to grips with reality

In today’s society, Christians are getting verbally beaten up and told to shut up. It’s very unfair and very telling of those who claim to be open to diversity.

However, as a society, we have to collectively find values that seem to work. Our nation was founded on Judeo-Christian principles. Yet we are being told by President Barack Hussein Obama said that America is not a Christian nation. His words are a false misrepresentation of our country. It is apparent that the “progressive” agenda is at play to foster a redefinition of ourselves.

Elections have ramifications that are not always the change God is pleased with. “Ye shall know them by their fruits” (Matthew 7:16).

Was God pleased with a youthful Adoniram Judson? Let’s find the young man marching down the aisle of Providence College — the class of 1807. The organ is playing “Pomp and Circumstance” while he follows in the footsteps of his best friend, named Jacob Ames. His friend played a key role in helping Judson disregard and abandon his Christian faith.

Allow me to give you some good advice before I bring you to the end of a true-life story that took place a long time ago. Doubts befall all of us. Please understand that doubting is not a sin. Lucifer overwhelms us with dark thoughts and with unanswerable questions. It is then that you pray to God and carefully give voice to your doubts to Him. There is a danger to voicing your fears out loud to others. Fall on your knees at night and ask God to show you His truth. Ask The Almighty to keep you from confusing a fragile friend or a trusting child with your doubts. Long after you recover, they might still be doubting. Do not become a stumbling block to others.

Remember that there are two key people highlighted in this true story of faith. Besides Adoniram Judson, who attended a Christian college, there was his classmate and friend, Jacob Ames, who encouraged Judson to discard his Christian worldview.

Ames was an amazing intellectual. However, in the midst of their friendship, an intense, unhealthy rivalry developed. Both men studied politics, philosophy, and religion. Too often they would openly debate with fervor before other students. Much of what was said was self-aggrandizing and unscriptural. Over the short span of two years, in such a setting, Judson’s religious faith began to erode. The constant liberal barrage of atheistic philosophy had its effect on him.

The university seemed to embrace the so-called days of enlightenment. Many scholars were freeing themselves from religious influence and recognizing the great possibilities of the human mind, while forgetting that the Almighty God is a giver of good gifts — not mere man.

It was shortly after commencement that Judson went home. There he sat his parents down and made the announcement that he no longer wanted anything to do with religion or God. He proclaimed himself to be an atheist. He wanted to taste the pleasures of a worldly life. There was no reasoning with him. He broke the hearts of his mother and father. He wanted to be like his friend Jacob Ames, who filled his life with unrighteousness. He left for New York City in hopes of experiencing all the world had to offer. He filled his life with immorality and drunkenness.

Eventually Judson and Ames lost track of each other. One day, Judson decided to go on a trip, way back when people traveled on horseback. Judson and several of his carefree friends spent quite a time clip-clopping their way from one scampish adventure to the next.

In his own words, it was a “wild, careless and reckless life.” After a while, he decided to leave his group of party-seeking friends. He continued sightseeing alone.

One night, he came to a country inn where there was one vacancy. The inn keeper told Judson that the man in the next room was extremely ill, and was probably going to die sometime during the night. It did not bother Judson because, as he told the inn keeper, he was an atheist and death had no sway over his feelings about the matter.

He checked into the inn, and tried to get some sleep. Through paper-thin walls, he could hear the dying moans of a man in pain. He sensed that the anonymous person next door wasn’t just facing death. He heard a man in fear. The poor fellow was evidently dying in terror. And it was then that Judson decided to help. He wondered what he could say to comfort him. After all, he was an atheist. He wasn’t supposed to be afraid of death, but at this moment he realized how little he had to say that might comfort another, or himself for that matter. So he did nothing to help a suffering human being. In his own mind, he felt he had no words of peace to offer.

Death — and life

At the end of your life’s journey, you can be comforted by two thoughts. First, you lived a rich, full and generous life and were a blessing to others. Secondly, there is the promise of an even better eternity that awaits you. The two thoughts can mean a lot to a dying person.

Dr. Adrian Rogers shares an account from the late Jess Moody in his book titled Expect a Miracle But Trust in Jesus. The words have a special meaning as we ponder and consider a young man who feared death:

“In a hotel room, Judson heard the desperate cries of another person. Adoniram Judson’s face was filled with horror and shame. He realized that he was a man without hope. What could he say to a dying man? He pondered just what would he feel like himself when the Grim Reaper came to claim his own life one day.

“Young Adoniram Judson thought with [profound] despair, remembering his friends at Providence College. All of those wasted nights in the boarding house where he had entertained them mocking religion and the Christian faith. Their boisterous laughs rang in his ears, while he took a long look at himself in the mirror. What he saw in his reflection was fear. What would his intellectual friends say now if they could see him cowering?

“The night passed in slow agony. At last it was quiet, and still. The next morning, his soul still [shuddering] over the horrors of the night before, he went to the inn keeper to check out.

“The inn keeper asked the young graduate, ‘Do you have any idea who he was?’

“Judson nodded as he dared to take a look at the face of a dead man who turned out to be his friend, Jacob Ames. He then replied to the inn keeper, ‘He was a scholar from Providence College.’

“Can you imagine? This distraught young atheist had to get on his horse and ride away, knowing full well that his best friend, the scholar who had led him into a barren world of disbelief, had just died in empty fear. Ames, the friend he had admired, passed away while alone and in agony.” (For additional accounts, see Christian Biography Resources )

The good news of Christ

Please pay close attention, because I want to point out something. Even if you are an atheist, there is good news. It’s not too late to be saved as promised in the scriptures. Until this “great controversy” is over and we are up in heaven with God Himself, we are going to live with some unanswered questions. There are always going to be things we don’t know, and heavenly issues we can’t prove. However, God invites us to decide and take a step toward Him even before we learn all the answers and see all the evidence.

And speaking of miracles, that’s precisely what happened to Adoniram Judson. After that night at the inn, he went home and pleaded with his Christian father, “Give me a faith that will stand the test of life and of death of time and eternity.”

Adoniram became a Christian and adopted Ephesians, chapter three, as his enduring motto: “How wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ.”

He was determined to do whatever God asked. And like those Jewish priests at the edge of the Jordan, he promised God that he would take those first steps of obedience, even before “proof” might come from heaven.

Song: Casting Crowns- East to West

Keep the faith, America. We have a country worth saving and a heaven to win.

“I, in my own mind, have always thought of America as a place in the divine scheme of things that was set aside as a promised land. It was set here and the price of admission was very simple: the means of selection was very simple as to how this land should be populated. Any place in the world and any person from those places; any person with the courage, with the desire to tear up their roots, to strive for freedom, to attempt and dare to live in a strange and foreign place, to travel halfway across the world was welcome here.” — Ronald Reagan

Christian Activism: What can I do to help preserve America?

Click here to understand how to be pro-active saving America

They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength. — Isaiah 40:31

Marie Jon’ is a political/religious-based writer and founder of www.DrawingClose.org and www.PeoplePoliticallyRight.com–sister websites to RenewAmerica. Marie extends her hand of welcome; visit DrawingClose and receive your free gift of salvation by taking an online Bible study.

Marie’s writings have appeared on many sites, including The New Media Journal, ChronWatch, and ABCNews, to name a few. Marie brings a refreshing and spirited point of view that is reflected in her writings. Marie is a nurse, a lay student of the Bible, and a patriot. She is an advocate for American troops serving abroad, as well as the Blueand Gold Star Mothers of America and their families. Marie enjoys Townhall.com radio, Rush Limbaugh, Bruce Elliott Saturdays 5AM-9AM EST and her friend Larry Elder.mj4242

Note: Reader comments are reviewed before publishing, and only salient comments that add to the topic will be published. Profanity is absolutely not allowed and will be summarily deleted. Spam, copied statements and other material not comprised of the reader’s own opinion will also be deleted.

  • Digg
  • Yahoo Buzz
  • Reddit
  • Yahoo Bookmarks
  • Delicious
  • StumbleUpon
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Windows Live Favorites
  • Technorati Favorites
  • NewsVine
  • Share/Bookmark
  • Jason
    And yet, for all the length and emotion of your post, you presented nothing to help us differentiate between the teachings of Christianity and the ravings of a lunatic. That's not to say that Christianity is not true, but how are we supposed to tell without any proof beyond your word & the word of centuries-dead Jews?
  • That's a journey of differentiation each person has to embark upon for themselves, Jason. You can be brave and begin the journey to figure out whether the truth-claims of the Bible are accurate, or you can simply take the coward's way out by claiming it's too complicated a task and just avoid the question altogether. But the responsibility for being wrong--and the consequences--either way is yours and yours alone.
  • Brian Rutledge
    Bob,

    You have ask me how something like....say murder, could be a fundamental wrong when viewed from an atheist/evolutionary world view. The implication, as you have said, is that some moral authority like a deity can only decide what is fundamentally wrong or immoral.

    Immoral is defined as a deliberate act of violating the accepted principles of right and wrong. Throughout the history and many civilizations of man-irregardless of their religion or lack thereof-you will find that murder has been in general considered fundamentally wrong. Man has developed reason and evolution has provided a species of man that rewards the harmonius, nonmurdering clan more tha it does the clan that destroys itself internally.

    I dont beiieve in God at all, but do deeply believe in the sanctity of life. I find life is precious and rare. I believe to end it with murder is fundamentally wrong. I also believe to walk up to an innocent polar bear and blow its brains out is fundamentally wrong. I dont need the supernatural to tell me that.
  • I'm glad you believe in the sanctity of life; I'll take you at your word, despite the cavalier attitude about saving unborn human life and disabled human life you have displayed in comments on other posts.

    But beyond practical considerations, why is life sacred? Fundamentally why is it so important that we call it "sacred"?

    It would be stupid, counterproductive and impractical for me to throw a hammer through my TV set, but it wouldn't be immoral.

    Why is it fundamentally wrong to kill an innocent person? And is there any difference in killing a polar bear versus a human being? If so, why? If not, why not?
  • Brian Rutledge
    Why is it fundamentally wrong to kill an innocent person ? Because life is so vasly rare-even in the entire unverse as far as i know. Life on earth is also vastly precious on earth, because as far as I know, it is the only earthly life we will have. Life can also be filled with wondrous things if we search for them. It can be filled with great joy. It can be filled with love. It can be filled with beauty. It can be filled with great compassion. It can be spent helping others. It can be spent alleviating suffering.It can be spent teaching a child to respect their fellow man.

    It is MY fundamental belief that all these things are true and it is MY fundamental, personal set of principles that feels no one should be able to take all those possibilities away from another human through murder.

    And of course there is a difference between killing a polar bear and a human because the polar bear cant do all the things mentioned above . but i still feel a polar bear shouldnt be killed needlessly becasue i respect its life also.That also is a fundamental belief.

    I believe the human is unique and special.It is my fundamental belief. I just dont think a deity is needed for me to have those fundamental beliefs
  • Diamonds are very rare; is it fundamentally wrong to destroy a diamond? Neodymium is even more rare--is it fundamentally immoral to destroy it?

    With 6 billion people on the planet, " a dime a dozen" seems to come to mind. Some liberals even think we need to drastically reduce the earth's population.

    I fundamentally believe Dr. Pepper is the best soft drink a person could possibly drink; does that make it a fact? I fundamentally believe these big pickup trucks with the lift kits are a nuisance and shouldn't be allowed on the road; does that make it an enforceable moral imperative?

    A PC can do a whole lot more than a polar bear, and compared to most people a PC is far more useful to me than most other human beings. It would seem that on this basis it would be far more immoral for me to destroy a PC than to kill a person.

    You see, all the things you mentioned fall into the category of practical considerations, preference and opinion. You mentioned no fundamental reason why killing an innocent human being is wrong.

    Do you think it is fundamentally wrong to kill an innocent human being? Or is it simply an opinion that most people agree on (knowing that opinion is fickle, often not based on sound logic, and changes easily)?
  • Brian Rutledge
    Lets take the person who dedicates their live to helping others.Lets take the person who spreads joy and happiness wherever they go. Take the person who always tries to put others before themselves. The person who commits kind acts and expects nothing in return. One who teaches by example. Does no harm. The person that has these as their goals in life.

    You might consider these as practical considerations, preferences or opinions on my part as to why I fundamentally dont believe that person should not be murdered, but i do not. I think qualities like those ARE THE REASONS why that person has intrinsic value, intrinsic worth, intrinsic meaning and intrinsic purpose. It is a fundamental BELIEF I have .

    You may want to reduce it to merely an opinion, but I believe it to my core. You believe fundamental right and wrong is given to us by God. Since I do not, i could also call YOUR BELIEF merely an opinion. I dont though. I do think you believe it.We both might think the other is misguided, but we both feel we have reasons to back up our claims.

    By the way,I also have the fundamental belief that anyone who randomly takes the life of another, should be put to death
  • Those might be your values and priorities, and they may be admirable.

    But what if they aren't the values and priorities of other people?

    Other people might not care in the slightest about helping others. They might not see the slightest value in helping or building up another person. In fact, they might see the other person and the other person's priorities as being in conflict with their own. Consequently, they might consider it deeply important to take what that other person has, or even remove that person from existence altogether. That may be their most fundamental, deeply-held BELIEF.

    Are they wrong? And if you believe they are wrong, why are they wrong and not you? Perhaps it is you who are wrong, for taking such a naive and counterproductive position. How do you know whose deeply held beliefs is the right one and which is the wrong one?
  • Brian Rutledge
    Other peoples values and priorities have no bearing on mine. Do other peoples values, who differ from you, have any bearing whether yours are right or wrong ?
  • That is an extremely relevant question. If there is no transcendent truth, then how do you know that what you believe is accurate? Someone else's deeply held beliefs could be just as correct--or incorrect--as your own.
  • Brian Rutledge
    I could be wrong. Never intimated otherwise. I guess there could be a moral, supernatural authority who dictates that murder is right. However, for any human to say they absolutely cant be wrong implies they know absotute truth and to make that claim, they must have direct contact with that absolute truth. I know of no man on earth who claims that. For example, any man of the Jewish faith who claims to have direct contact with God is considered delusional .

    Humans can only go on what they feel, are taught, are inspired by, perceive,intuit, reason etc.

    So if i were to take a test and the question was " As far as you know, is murder an absolute wrong? " I would answer yes everytime. It is a deep, intrinsic belief I have and it is not superficial or cavalier

    The only way to absolutely know that there is an absolute source for right and wrong is to die. If my view is right, we'll never know. If yours is right, then it will be known. That must give you great solace

    Of course the corollary would be " Why does Bob Ellis believe the Bible is true ? "
  • Brian, I'm too tired to do anymore critical thinking today. I can still manage a few things like scientific fundamentals right now, but philosophy and ethics requires a little more brain-RAM than I have available right now. :-) Sorry.

    I'll have to get back to you on this one tomorrow when I have a spare brain cell or two. I appreciate your patience.
  • DCM
    People forget that no matter how intelligent someone is, that doesn't necessarily make them *right". It's not only possible to be intelligent yet extremely unwise -- it's extremely common.

    If you don't recognize & accept truth even when it comes out of what seems like a deranged fool, you wouldn't recognize & accept it if it was coming out of every authoritative expert in the world.
blog comments powered by Disqus