Is Christianity the problem?

 

Is Christianity the problem? Dinesh D'Souza will soon step into the ring to debate Christopher Hitchens on this question, fueled by the careful reasoning that shaped his new book: What's So Great About Christianity. We've asked particle physicist Stephen Barr his opinion of D'Souza's reasoned account on this theme. Professor Barr concludes that if he were to suggest one book as an antidote to the anti-Christian tirades of Dawkins, Dennett, Hitchens, et al, it would be What's So Great About Christianity.

 
October 9, 2007
by Stephen M. Barr
 

There is a great deal of ignorant nonsense in circulation about Christianity's historical role.  It is said that Christianity has been peculiarly intolerant, that it has been hostile to scientific inquiry, that it has been blind to social evils like slavery, that it has been oppressive to women, that it has stood in the way of political and economic progress, that it is superstitious.  The bill of indictment grows ever longer.  What is most galling to those who know some history is that most of these accusations are not merely inaccurate, but the very reverse of the truth.  And what is so refreshing about Dinesh D'Souza's book, "What's So Great About Christianity", is that it meets all of these accusations head-on and decisively refutes them.  In our day Christianity is subject to an uncompromising, root-and-branch attack.  D'Souza gives an equally uncompromising defense. Uncompromising in the good sense that he does not compromise with falsehood.  He does, however, take the arguments of his opponents seriously --- seriously enough to give them good answers.

The book discusses the influence of Christianity in social and political life, science and rational thought, and morality.  In the chapters on social and political life D'Souza shows how Christianity lies at the root of three enormously important ideas that have shaped Western society and, latterly, the world.

The first of these is the idea of "separating or disentangling the spheres of religion and government", which he traces back to Christ's words "give unto Caesar what is Caesar's and to God what is God's".

The second is that "ordinary people are fallible, and yet these fallible people matter".  From this core Christian belief have flowed, he argues, "the nuclear family, the idea of limited government, the Western concept of the rule of law, and our culture's high emphasis on the relief of suffering".

The third idea is fundamental equality of human beings and their dignity as creatures made in the image of God.  As he shows, "[t]his Christian idea was the propelling force behind the campaign to end slavery, the movement for democracy and popular self-government, and also the successful attempt to articulate an international doctrine of human rights."

One of the great virtues of this book is its breadth of spirit.  Sadly, at certain times in the past, members of various Christian groups have hurled accusations at each other, often magnifying each other's faults for the sake of short-term apologetic or polemical advantage.  Many of the exaggerated claims once made by Christians against each other are now picked up and used to discredit Christianity by those who have contempt for all religion.  D'Souza's book should help Christians to see things from a higher historical perspective, from which it is evident how all Christians, ancient, medieval, and modern, Catholic, Protestant, and Orthodox, have contributed in innumerable ways to the great historical achievements of the Christian religion.

The middle part of the book consists of seven chapters on the relation between Christianity and science.  In no area, perhaps, has there been more distortion of the historical record than here.  If one asks most people (and I have asked many audiences) what name they associate with the Church's relation to science, the name that jumps to their lips is Galileo. D'Souza devotes a whole chapter to the Galileo affair, showing how the polemics of the past have worked to give people a luridly exaggerated notion of what happened in that case.  But what is far worse is the way the whole rest of Christianity's relationship with science over 800 years has been almost completely blanked out by the obsessive focus on one highly atypical (though admittedly important) episode.

D'Souza shows how the Christian faith nurtured the roots of modern science in the medieval period, with the founding of the universities and the groundbreaking work of such scientists as Albertus Magnus, Robert Grosseteste, and Francis Bacon.  He shows how many of the great founders of modern science, such as Copernicus, Kepler, Galileo, Boyle, Faraday, and Maxwell were men of deep Christian faith, and how even in the twentieth century we find gigantic contributions to the development of science being made by men of faith like Fr. Lemaître, the Belgian priest who was one of the two founders of the Big Bang theory of cosmology.  But D'Souza's argument runs deeper.  He shows that the rise of modern science was not simply the result of the genius or wisdom of particular men, but rather flowed from deepest levels of the Christian world-view, with its embrace of reason, its faith in the intelligibility of the world that had been created by Reason (the Logos) itself, and its interest in the particularities of that world in all its materiality.

This part of the book is of special interest to me, as a research physicist and as one who writes extensively on matters of science and religion.  D'Souza's treatment of this subject is balanced and sophisticated. I especially appreciate his treatment of evolution, where he finds the sane middle ground that is occupied by the great majority of those Christians who are scientists.

The last part of the book addresses morality.  While many atheists are highly moral and even heroically so, atheism as a doctrine strikes at the root of morality.  It does so not only by making of man no more than a congeries of atoms and therefore a creature without the possibility of genuine moral or intellectual freedom, but also by eliminating the idea of an objective standard of morality that stands above the human mind, and by eliminating the idea that we shall all someday have to answer for our lives to an all-just judge.  D'Souza shows how dreadful the consequences of this can be, by examining the historical record of avowedly atheist political regimes.

I have not been able to do justice to this book in so short a review.  Perhaps I can sum up by saying that if I were to suggest one book as an antidote to the anti-Christian tirades of Dawkins, Dennett, Hitchens, et al, it would be this one.


Free Book Giveaway - A gift for loyal tothesource readers!

tothesource will send a free copy of Dinesh D'Souza's new book: What's So Great About Christianity to the first 250 tothesource readers who respond to this offer!!

Use this link to request the free book.http://www.tothesource.org/10_9_2007/10_9_2007_free_book_form.php


Particle physicist Stephen Barr changes the terms of the science religion debate by exposing the limits of the philosophical doctrine of materialism

Indeed, Modern Physics and Ancient Faith ranks among the most scientifically, theologically, and philosophically rigorous studies of the relation between science and theology to appear in recent years. That it is also written in a clear and highly accessible style makes it even more worthy of widespread notice, discussion, and debate.

Barr begins his book by pointing out that the methods and discoveries of modern physics can and must be separated from the philosophical doctrine of materialism, which so often serves as a dogmatic and, as Barr goes on to show with great power and effectiveness, unsubstantiated faith among physicists. According to Barr, it was never obvious that physics implied or presupposed a materialistic view of the universe, but the existence of such a connection has been rendered downright implausible by a series of developments in twentieth-century physics. In a series of lucid chapters, Barr addresses the question of whether the universe had a beginning, looks at the issue of whether the universe exhibits any evidence of design or purpose, and examines what contemporary physics (and mathematics) has to say about the nature of human beings—specifically on the question of whether our behavior is determined by physical laws and whether we have an immaterial nature. At each point, Barr shows that “recent discoveries have begun to confound the materialist’s expectations and confirm those of the believer in God.”

Robin Collins: First Things

Order the book:
http://www.amazon.com/Modern-Physics-Ancient-Faith-Stephen/dp/0268034710

Read more:
http://www.firstthings.com/article.php3?id_article=535


At 7:30 pm on October 22 Dinesh D’Souza will school Christopher Hitchens, author of God is not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything, on exactly What’s So Great About Christianity! New York City’s The King’s College hosts the showdown, with tothesource as the main sponsor.

http://www.tothesource.org/9_25_2007/event_dsouza_hitchens_debate.htm


"In his accessible and eminently readable new book, Stephen M. Barr demonstrates that what is really at war with religion is not science itself, but a philosophy called scientific materialism."

Notre Dame Press

http://www3.undpress.nd.edu/exec/dispatch.php?s=title,P00848


Gerald Schroeder   Stephen M. Barr

Stephen M. Barr is a professor of physics at the University of Delaware. He received his Ph.D. from Princeton University in 1978. He does research in theoretical particles physics, with emphasis primarily on "grand unified theories" and the cosmology of the early universe.  He also writes and lectures extensively on the relation of science and religion.  Many of his articles and reviews have appeared in First Things, on whose editorial advisory board he serves. He is the author of the book Modern Physics and Ancient Faith (Univ. of Notre Dame Press, 2003) and A Student's Guide to Natural Science (Intercollegiate Studies Institute, 2006).


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