I’ve been thinking about the new atheist advertisements on the London busses which proclaim, “There’s probably no God. Now stop worrying, and enjoy your life.”
I thought the atheists were supposed to be really smart people. Usually one of their arguments against theism is that believers are all little kiddies who think there is a big sugar Daddy in the sky who will look after them, and that they have wrapped themselves up in a warm comfort blanket and are eating philosophical cotton candy. If this is the case, then believers aren’t worriers. Like the most convinced Calvinist who knows he’s one of the elect, we’re all smug, comfortable and have our ticket for heaven. So why advise us not to worry?
The other stick they use to beat believers is that we actually are worried all the time. We’re racked with guilt. We inflict guilt on little children. We’re neurotic. We’re think God’s up there about to punish us and we’re cowering in the corner all the time, and when we’re not we’re scampering off to confession in a paroxysm of scrupulosity. There are definitely some Christians like that too, but like the extreme Calvinist they are among our more crazy family members, and as any loving family does with their fruit loops, we love them and pray for them and hope they’ll snap out of it.
So the with the “what me worry?” ploy the atheists are setting up not one, but two straw men–both of them mutually contradictory. We can’t all be smug religious comfort bunnies and wild eyed quivering religious neurotics at the same time. What the atheist can’t get used to is the fact that there are an enormous number of people (in fact the majority of the human race) who manage to both believe in God and also live lives that are pretty normal, in fact not only do we believe in God and are fairly normal, we think that our belief in God is what helps us to be normal.
Now the other problem with the atheist’s arrogant little slogan is the curious word ‘probably’. Why on earth would a committed, really gung-ho, “I’m willing to put my money where my mouth is” atheist launch such a half hearted, watered down message? This ‘probably’ word is so lily livered. It’s so pathetic. Are they hedging their bets? If their message is only that there is ‘probably’ no God it’s no message at all, in fact it may be counter productive.
Let’s say I’m strolling through London, never giving God a thought. In that respect I’m the one who’s a real atheist. I’m the sort of person who lives for myself and tries not to harm anyone. I wake up. I go to work. I come home. I watch TV. I eat. I sleep. I wake up and it starts again. Then I see this bus saying that there is probably no God.
But only ‘probably’? This doesn’t help my atheism. What if there is therefore even the smallest chance that there is a God? What if he has set up a religion? What if there is, after all, a judgement and heaven or hell? What if I have to give an account of my life? I wish they hadn’t put that ‘probably’ in there. It indicates that the atheists have doubts, and that is not what I wanted.
There is ‘probably’ no God, but what if there is one? Then I’m better off being religious because when I die it is better to have been religious and find there is no God than not to have believed and discover there is a God.
So I get on the bus and this guy comes up and asks if I want to buy a lottery ticket. He’s wearing a uniform and all, and has this French accent. He’s wearing a name tag. It says, ‘Pascal’.
“That’s an odd name.” I say.
“Yes” he smiles, “In English ze name means ‘Easter.’
Yes, I know, Fr.Z is ahead by a sickening 1,000 votes, but stay with the underdog. Keep voting. We’re going to make an amazing surge in the final day.
Yeah, the “probably” part gets me too. Talk about standing up for your strongly held belief!And it’s not as if the believers aren’t “getting on with their lives.”
A very insightful post Father D.
“There is ‘probably’ no God, but what if there is one? Then I’m better off being religious because when I die it is better to have been religious and find there is no God than not to have believed and discover there is a God.”This almost sounds like you are promoting “playing it safe”, believing in god — just in case. Is this something your god would reward? I’m confident there is no god, I won’t be playing it safe. I’ll continue on my smug arrogant way, marching towards annihilation and take every opportunity to appreciate the beauty of the garden without having to imagine there are fairies at the bottom.
The irony is too rich, those convinced there is no God are constantly chanting it over and over (and apparently visiting religious blogs). If they were truly convinced they’d be picking lint out of their navels or something more productive than arguing against the existence of God. But they cannot let it alone. Something which does not exist will not let them alone.
Believing in God–just in case is better than not believing at all.It’s immature to be scared into heaven by the threat of hell, but its even more foolish to go to hell pretending there’s no such thing.
“Cell Phones probably don’t cause brain cancer, so call mum”
Well, I quite agree with everything you say here.The “probably” was added for legal reasons – for the posters to have read “there is no God” would, apparently, have been deemed to have been in breach of the advertising code, by stating an unproven fact.But the complete and utter disconnect between the first and second sentences of the poster…show the people behind the advert really don’t have a clue. None of Dostoyevsky’s atheists would have been so facile and banal
I wish we could get back to the proper understanding of ‘fairies’/faerie.Faerie is firstly a land. An outlying borderland. It is riddled with danger; with wonder and danger. This outlying borderland, while distinct from our own, brings about effects in our own; but not because this faerieland is screwed with attention to our land, but because that faerieland is more complete, more real than this land.Now, one cannot enter faerie without some effect happening, both to faerie land and to the person entering.Faerie is the outlying notion of that which intrudes into our safe insulated thinking about the world we occupy, and causes it to be at once shattered and enlarged.The person who discerns ‘faerie’ at the bottom of the garden is the healthy, adventurous, un-insulated one, for at the bottom of all the discernable facts lies the mystery of growth, and he catches on to a fragment whose cause is both close (due to the fragment which has an essence at bottom that the human mind cannot exhaust) and faraway; while the one who will only see vegetable matter ‘growing’ to some blind accidental force of physics is the one who desperately wants to be insulated, and who at the same time worries (doing ironic self-inflicted damage to his own comfort zone) his dogmatic atheism at times comes to the brink of being run over by illogic and madness.Faerie thus does not change. It will be there as an adventure or a threat; sometimes both.
When you are close to God the devil tries harder to get under your skin. The opposite is also true. Believe: Good will always prevail over evil.
It is because God exists that we CAN relax and enjoy this gift of life
Dominic said: The “probably” was added for legal reasons – for the posters to have read “there is no God” would, apparently, have been deemed to have been in breach of the advertising code, by stating an unproven fact.That’s funny. Many atheists claim to not believe anything that’s not a proven fact.
just a wee postscript on a “Eureka” moment I had reading your post on Pascal (we scientists favor the phenomenology of experience, including darned – not damned mind you – pagans like Archimedes in their bathtubs) this seeking for truth is the crux of the dramatic conflict in the recent PBS broadcast of a Masterpiece classic series, Hardy’s Tess of the D’Urbervilles: both male protagonists live as if there is no God while the eponymous female heroine struggles to trust in Him, even when what little evidence their is crumbles before her eyes, see discussion at http://teaattrianon.blogspot.com/2009/01/tess-of-durbervilles-part-ii.htmlGod BlessClare Krishan