Your Brother Daniel
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The Hiding Place of Paradox
People – even smart ones
– say paradoxical things. Take Albert Einstein for example:
- The scientist is possessed by the sense of universal
causation…There is nothing divine about morality; it is a purely human
affair. His religious feeling takes the form of a rapturous amazement at
the harmony of natural law, which reveals an intelligence of such superiority
that, compared with it, all the systematic thinking and acting of human
beings is an utterly insignificant reflection. (The World as I See it, 29)
While Einstein regards
“the harmony of natural law” as a reflection of “an intelligence of such
superiority,” he dismisses moral law as “a purely human affair” – a thing we
made up! Why this sharp distinction?
The moral law is also
harmonious. Just consider several observations:
- When we live according to the moral law we find written
on our hearts (Rom. 2:14-15), we are healthier and happier, as indicated
by many surveys.
- When we violate this internal law, we suffer from
guilt, shame, and alienation.
- When we confess that we have violated this law, we feel
relieved and relationships are often restored.
Even atheists or
agnostics have traditionally recognized this moral law. Buddhists call it “the
law of karma” – what goes around comes around. However, they lack an explanation
of any mechanism that explains how justice is fairly delivered. (The delivery
of justice is no easy thing. It requires understanding and an appreciation of all the facts.)
Also, we can defy
physical laws. While flying in an airplane doesn’t cancel out gravity, it
certainly allows us to defy its natural consequences. However, morals laws seem
to be even more coercive. It would seem that God is investing them with His own
transcendent authority, since there isn’t any way to defy their impact. We not
only know that rape is wrong, we also know that there is no remedy, like an
airplane overcoming gravity, that will overcome the damage that this act
inflicts on us (and others).
Even though Einstein was
only willing to attribute “an intelligence of such superiority” to the physical
laws, why did he fail to follow through with the implications of his
observations? In other words, “What kind of intelligence is necessary to
account for these incredible, harmonious laws? Do impersonal forces like
gravity possess this kind of intelligence!”
Clearly not! As great
and awesome as gravity might be, it can do only one thing – attract! It can’t
tie my shoes, write a line of poetry, or even scratch my back. In other words,
the laws of nature do not seem to be the place to find this intelligence.
Instead, as rain comes from clouds, intelligence comes from personal, willful
minds.
Why do we often
experience an aversion to thinking further about this subject? A dear cousin
told me a story that continued to profoundly trouble her. Ironically, it was a
story about a miracle, which she had initially attributed to God, even though
she’s an agnostic. Initially, she felt great joy that her problem had been so
miraculously solved and also that there was a God who was looking out for her.
However, immediately after this, she was overcome by a feeling of great dread.
It was this feeling that she couldn’t explain. I gave her my interpretation:
- You immediately understood that if there is a God who
loves you, He also has expectations for you, and we want to remain the
captain of our own ship.
The explanation hit
home. She recognized that she had been fleeing from God. Her discomfort was the
background radiation.
We live paradoxical
lives because we prefer paradox to an encounter with a morally demanding,
sometimes even punitive God.
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