22 July 2018

A Study in Fools: Veneers and Big Questions


This NPR story caught my attention the other day and I had to dig up the link and transcript and have another look. It's about parents that want to wrestle with the 'big questions'... apart from religion.
They want to discuss love and compassion and yet not restrict these ideas to a religious framework or one that approaches such questions with a degree of certainty.


Of course as Christians we understand that God is love and in terms of human relationships love is both an emotion and an ethical commitment in which we place the interests of another above ourselves.
And yet why would we do this? Why would anyone? As Christians we can answer that.
An evolutionary worldview cannot. If the perpetuation of species and survival of the fittest are the mechanisms and imperatives of biology, then love is not love. It's a largely self-serving instinct at best and thus it cannot be 'love' unless we re-define the term. And compassion is not only empirically and ethically meaningless it could be argued it is a corruption, a violation of the cosmological imperative... which is to propagate your species and utilise resources in an efficient manner. Let the weak die. Isn't that the moral thing to do?
Couldn't emotions such as love and compassion be viewed as something of a bad side effect from mankind's earlier attempts to form and find meaning to existence? But clearly in this scientific age, this era in which science defines all... we should know better. Right? Compassion and love are aberrations and hindrances to the species. The quest for meaning is itself meaningless.
Of course these parents know there's more to life and human existence than such cold and calculated concepts and thus they show themselves condemned. They flirt with spirituality and ethics even though they have embraced a secular philosophy that cannot account for them.
Right and wrong? What do these terms even mean? They have abandoned objective principles or the idea of intrinsic truths, let alone any kind of understanding of God. Rejecting the idea of a God who speaks and who has the power to issue imperatives based on His holiness and character, let alone his prerogative as Creator to make His will known.
Life and death? Why are these troubling 'big questions'? Apart from the existence of a God, what do they mean? What can they possibly mean? Obviously these folks cannot hope to know and if they do make knowledge claims, once again the evolutionary philosophy of secularism must govern such inquiries. Life and death are essentially meaningless and one cannot hope to attach any kind of significance to them. It would seem the answer to the 'big questions' is to learn to shut them out and no longer ask them. Men revert to being little more than beasts.
As far as who we are? I'm afraid they can't even account for what we are let alone who or...why.
Sadly they're left with a secular version of Joel Osteen's fraudulent 'Your Best Life Now'. All of their ethics and principles have nothing to do with right or wrong but instead focus very simply on results. Drugs, drinking and crime aren't wrong per se. How can they be? They're only wrong because they will harm your life, shorten it or lessen its quality.
It's no wonder Behaviorism is so popular. Rather than wrestle with the questions that lie at the heart of what man is and why he does what he does, it just seeks to manipulate the external factors and treat symptoms. But to what end?
What an empty existence.
These parents want their children to have rich, fulfilling and liberated lives. Why? Why be content with the mundane, the life and aspirations of the middle class? That's the values they're emulating and yet why should I or their kids embrace such thinking? It's not very compelling.
I suspect they have no answer apart from some empty hope of having an impact on society or being remembered.
We are told there are lots of ways to raise children to be moral...
Really, is that so? Morality then is not a 'big question', but an opinion, a social convention, something subjective and malleable.
That's the answer, the conclusion to their worldview. There are no big questions. The only big question is why do people still think such things as 'big questions' exist at all.
Here's why. The answer is simple.
Because secularism is in the end an untenable philosophy, one that cannot be lived out. No one is able to actually live by its precepts and follow through on its conclusions. The results are too terrible to contemplate and though they keep telling themselves this is how it has to be... they don't really believe it.
A couple of generations ago these young parents would raise their kids within the framework of a semi-Christianised Western Liberalism. And yet clearly many people, if not most, were not actual Christians. They did not possess a Biblical faith and so when the chips were down, being at heart unbelievers they all too easily succumbed to immorality, in the raising of their children, in their marriages, in their work, in their social relationships, in their politics and in their hopes and dreams.
When pressed, since the principles were but a veneer they were all too easily abandoned. Some Christians celebrate this reality, that there was an outward veneer of morality and worldview and thus lament that it is rapidly disappearing in our own day.
The present reality is disturbing, cruel and because wickedness abounds sometimes it feels like love is growing cold. I know it has in my own heart.
And yet, there is a positive to the present. It is more honest.
Even though these parents are fools and they are raising their children to be the same, they won't have to be unconverted to get converted. In some ways the Gospel can (humanly speaking) prove more effective with people like that than with the children of the veneer. The latter are sometimes the hardest group to deal with. The veneer is something Christians often celebrate and wish to return to. They view it as a positive, something that helped to bring people to faith.
I think the opposite is true. I think the Christian veneer that dominated the West for centuries created the conditions which have brought us to the tragedy of today. It helped to gloss over sin and obscure truth and though the present is awful to contemplate I don't miss the removing of what was in the end an empty profession.