Your Brother Daniel
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The Rise of the Christian West – The Fall of the
Secular West
Today, it is common to
hear how Christianity is the source of almost every evil, even the major
obstacle to scientific advancement. As these errant ideas take root in the now
secular West, people are more tempted than ever to abandon the church. I
therefore think that these allegations have to be challenged.
Historian Rodney Stark
writes that,
- The
success of the West, including the rise of science, rested entirely on
religious foundations, and the people who brought it about were devout
Christians (The Victory of Reason, xi)
Secularism is often
erroneously associated with science and scientific advancement. However,
regarding the Scientific Revolution, Stark writes,
- Some
wonderful things were achieved in this era, but they were not produced by
an eruption of secular thinking. Rather, these achievements were the
culmination of many centuries of systematic progress by medieval
Scholastics, sustained by that uniquely Christian twelfth century
invention, the university. Not only were science and religion compatible,
they were inseparable – the rise of science was achieved by deeply
religious Christian scholars.
(12)
Many people cite Greece
and Rome as proof that democracy has little to do with Christianity and even
that our democratic roots aren’t Christian but Classical. However Stark
reflects that,
- The
rules that Plato laid out concerning the proper treatment of slaves were
unusually brutal, for he believed not that becoming a slave was simply a
matter of bad luck but that nature creates a “slavish people” lacking the
mental capacity for virtue or culture, and fit only to serve. (26)
Consequently, only the
worthy were suitable for Greek “democracy.” Aristotle likewise,
- Drew
upon Plato’s biological claims – slavery is justified because slaves are
more akin to dumb brutes than to free men: “From the hour of their birth,
some are marked out for subjection, others for rule.” (27)
In contrast, democracy
finds its sufficient and enduring foundation in the Biblical concept of human
respect and our essential equality, as the third century Christian theologian L.
Caecilius Firmianus Lactantius wrote:
- The
second constituent of Justice is equality. I mean this…in the sense of
treating others as one’s equals…For God who gives being and life to men
wished us all to be equal…But someone will say, “Don’t you have poor and
rich”…Not at all! This is precisely the reason that we address one another
as “Brother,” since we believe that we are one another’s equals [despite
the superficial differences]. Since human worth is measured in spiritual
and not in physical terms, we ignore our various physical situations:
slaves are not slaves to us, but we treat them and address them as
brothers in the spirit, fellow slaves in devotion to God. Wealth, too, is
no ground for distinction, except insofar as it provides the opportunity
for preeminence in good works. To be rich is not a matter of having, but
of using riches for the tasks of justice…By conducting oneself not merely
as the equal of one’s inferiors, but as their subordinate, one will attain
a far higher rank of dignity in God’s sight. (77-78)
It is no surprise that,
given the Classical understanding of humanity, democracy couldn’t endure long. Sadly,
now, as our Christian roots are decaying, so too are our democratic principles
and productivity. Stark concludes:
- Without
a theology committed to reason, progress and moral equality, today the
entire world would be about where non-European societies were in, say,
1800: A world with many astrologers and alchemists but no scientists. A
world of despots, lacking universities, banks, factories, eyeglasses,
chimneys, and pianos. A world where most infants do not live to the age of
five…The modern world arose only in Christian societies. Not in Islam. Not
in Asia. Not in a “secular” society – there having been none. And all the
modernization that has since occurred outside Christendom was imported
from the West, often brought by colonizers and missionaries. Even so, many
apostles of modernization assume that…similar progress can be achieved not
only without Christianity…(233).
It is amazing that these
same “apostles” of secularism continue to confidently wave the banner of
“progress” as the West implodes.
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