Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Ethicss’ Category

The Question of “Questions”…


Alvin Plantinga, among many others, has wrestled with the philosophical Problem of Evil with earnestness and sincerity. It is perhaps the major difficulty within theistic systems.

But Plantinga has articulated a more central problem (esp. for the Judeo-Christian worldview). The problem is not why there is evil, but why there is SO MUCH OF IT–its extent and range and severity are staggering.

But let me apply this question mutatis mutandi to the issue of Christian evidences, especially in regards to the Scripture: The question is not ‘why are there difficulties in the Bible’, but why are there SO MANY? (more…)

Read Full Post »

What Science Can’t Prove

Gregory Koukl

If science can’t even disprove the existence of unicorns, how can it disprove the existence of God? divider

I often hear the comment, “Science has proved there is no God.” Don’t ever be bullied by such a statement. Science is completely incapable of proving such a thing.I’m not saying that because I don’t like science, but rather because I know a little about how science works. Science operates on induction. The inductive method entails searching out things in the world and drawing generalized conclusions about those things based on observation. Scientists can only draw conclusions on what they find, not on what they can’t find. (more…)

Read Full Post »

-To Err is Human

To Err is Human

Gregory Koukl

divider

A common attack on the Bible goes like this: Man wrote the Bible. Man is imperfect. Therefore, the Bible is imperfect and not inspired by God. This attempt fails for two reasons.

First, it’s not valid (the conclusion doesn’t follow logically) because the 1st premise subtly presumes what it’s trying to prove, that the Bible isn’t inspired by God. What’s at issue is whether natural man is solely responsible for the Bible or whether God worked through men and inspired the text. Since the first premise presumes the conclusion, the approach is circular.

Second, the argument is self-defeating. Consider this reply.

“Your argument is that man wrote the Bible and man is flawed, therefore, the Bible is flawed. If that’s true then it’s also the case that your argument, offered by you, a fallible human being, is therefore flawed. And if your point of view is flawed, then why should I believe it?”

It doesn’t follow that if man is capable of error, then he always does err. If so, then this argument itself would have to be false, because it also comes from an errant human. Taken at face value, this objection is self-defeating; it commits suicide.

It’s not going to be enough to dismiss the Bible simply by noting that “man wrote

top

Read Full Post »

Ethical Pain

Gregory Koukl

God has made us moral creatures and we are ethically guilty. To put it simply, people feel guilt because they are guilty. divider

I think the issue of guilt is very important and I think it’s a very important argument for the fallen condition of man. A couple of weeks ago I lectured at Whittier College in a philosophy class on the Christian view of human nature and guilt is one of the things that is very important in the Christian view of man. Not only is man finite, he’s creaturely; he’s also personal, transcendent in his worth. He has a soul. But there’s something else about man that we notice. That is that man is somehow screwed up, broken, he’s distorted, twisted. We know something is wrong and it is not just the fact that he’s chipped or broken or marred in some way, but there is an ethical element to that distortion. In other words, man is not just twisted, he is guilty. He is ethically and morally responsible for his twistedness. This brings us to the issue of guilt.There are two types of guilt. One is what I call moral guilt or ethical guilt and the other is what I call emotional guilt. Emotional guilt is the feeling of being guilty. It’s possible to feel guilty when we’re not guilty, and it’s possible to not feel guilty when we are. The other guilt that I’m talking about, other than the feeling, is the true moral guilt. In other words, there is a condition of true moral guilt in which a person is culpable, worthy of blame, morally responsible for something he did. Some people feel bad in their heart about something they did that was truly wrong. In that case you have true moral guilt and also emotional guilt. Other people do something that is truly wrong and feel no emotional guilt whatsoever. We generally call those people sociopaths. (more…)

Read Full Post »

When Is a Human Being Human?

Gregory Koukl

A simple response to give, next time someone tells you an unborn baby is a “human being but not a person.” divider

A baby is fully human from conception. There’s no question about it. Even to say that it’s fully human is missing something. Jot this down. The law of identity: a thing is itself and not something else. What that means is that whatever a thing is it remains what it is for as long as it exists. Things don’t change from one essential thing into another essential thing.People say, what if you became a cat? It’s impossible for you to become a cat because a cat is a different essential substance. If you became a cat, one could ask the question, what is it about the cat that is the same as what you were? There is nothing about a cat that is remotely human, and there is nothing about a human that is remotely cat. Even the soul of a cat is a different kind of soul than a human soul so you could never become a cat. You would be destroyed and some cat created in your place or maybe molded from your physical molecules, but that wouldn’t make you the cat. (more…)

Read Full Post »

Happiness as Ethics

Gregory Koukl

Greg explains the problem with making happiness the goal in life. divider

I’m trying to give tools to think about ethical things. I’m of the persuasion that ethics, morals, values are among the most important distinctions you can make in this world. They are among the most important kinds of things. There is no lack of ethical conversations, but there is a lack of clear moral thinking in this country. There is some going on but most of it is not. Part of my goal in teaching a class or doing a show like this is to give my listeners some categories that allow them to navigate in the field of ethical decision making. I am really convinced that once you learn some things about ethics, you’ll see that most people don’t deal with moral issues on a very high plane. (more…)

Read Full Post »

Whose Deck Is It?

 

Gregory Koukl

An apocryphal story of Greg’s backyard deck serves to illustrate an important lesson about the nature of human identity. divider

I’m having a dispute with my neighbor and I want you to help me settle it. I need your advice, because I want to keep good relations with my neighbor, but at the same time, I think he stole something from me, but I’m not sure.My neighbor and I both have decks in our back yards. In fact, our decks are exactly alike, almost. He built his long before I built mine. I liked what I saw, so I made one just like it, according to the exact same plan. I put it together with screws, just the way he did. But there was one, big difference. I used this new wood-polymer product called Trex which doesn’t splinter, rot, warp or split. It looked great.So, our decks looked identical, except that my was beautiful Trex and his was splintered and weather-beaten.

Well, I got back from being out of town one week and I noticed that a bunch of the planks of my deck had been removed and replaced with planks that were all worn out. When I looked over my fence, I noticed that my neighbor had beautiful Trex planking in the exact same spots that my deck had the old planks. Does this look suspicious or what?

A few days had passed before I had a chance to talk to him. I noticed that a lot more planks had been transferred. Then when I got back from Chicago two weeks ago I looked out in my back yard and, low and behold, my entire deck looked like his used to look, and his looked brand new with that beautiful Trex material that doesn’t splinter, rot, warp or split.

I think my neighbor stole my deck. But he says he didn’t. Now, he admitted that he exchanged the boards. Here was his explanation. Can you believe this?

He said, “No, that deck in your back yard is still the same deck. It still has the same shape. It’s located in the same place. It underwent some change, but the change was piece by piece. Therefore, it’s still the same deck–your deck–even though it now looks a lot older.”

I said, “Listen, if I have a lawn chair in my possession that is constructed of all the exact same physical parts that yesterday made up your lawn chair, even if I disassembled it on your property and reassembled it piece by piece on my property, it’s still your chair, right?”

I said, “Just because this deck was reassembled piece by piece in the same place–my backyard–it’s not the same deck because it’s made out of completely different stuff–your junky wood. And you want to say that just because that beautiful thing you now call ‘your deck’ is still in the same place in your yard and underwent its transformation piece by piece, that even though it looks different it’s still the very same deck, and therefore you own it?”

I said, “You’re nuts. Anyone can see that if you change all of the parts on my deck, it’s no longer the same deck. It’s a different deck. Period. I’m studying philosophy. I know how that works. I know about personal identity. You can’t pull the wool over my eyes.”

Here’s my question to you. Do I have a case? Whose deck is in his back yard? Did he steal my deck?

Now, I have a confession to make. This didn’t really happen. It’s a story. But there’s a very important lesson here about the nature of things, especially the nature of identity regarding physical things. If I smashed a chair to pieces, the physical stuff would still remain, but the chair would be gone. Purely physical things can be destroyed simply by disassembling them in some way.

A physical thing’s identity is determined by its precise physical makeup, the assembly of particular physical parts. If you change any of the physical parts of a thing, it’s not really the same thing, as a whole, that it was before. And if you change all of its physical parts, there can be no question in your mind that you don’t have the same physical thing anymore. That’s why it was no longer my deck in my back yard. He stole it from me.

If you’re clear on this, then I want to ask you the question I asked a young man at Cypress College last week. I was giving a lecture on the relationship between faith and science and whether there was a necessary conflict between the two. During the Q&A afterwards one young man got very hot under the collar and loudly challenged just about everything I’d said.

Now, he didn’t argue with me–I’m choosing my words carefully here–he yelled at me. It wasn’t an argument because he gave no reasons why my view was not accurate. He just kept telling me I was wrong, wrong, wrong, that science gave us facts about the world and religion was just silly opinion that no one could ever properly claim was true.

His point was, only science can give us true information about the world. Theology can’t, not even in principle.

I asked him why he believed that, what were some good reasons I should believe his view that religious claims could never be shown to be true, even in principle. There was an embarrassing silence, because he had no reasons to give. I asked him again. He accused me of twisting the issue and then loudly recited his opinion, without support, without reasons, without defense (which is a common tactic).

So I asked him this question, in true Columbo form: “When were you born?” More silence. He didn’t trust the question because he didn’t know where I was going with it, so I asked again. “Come on, when were you born?”

“1975.”
“What day?”
“May 1.”
“So you were born on May 1, 1975?”
“That’s right.”

Then I asked my follow-up question. “Is the body you possess today the same body you had on May 1, 1975?”

Again he balked. He tried to say it was, but then I pointed out that his physical body was quite a bit larger now, it has a different appearance, and it has different qualities. More to the point, it’s made up of completely different physical stuff. In fact the molecules in our bodies are almost completely exchanged every seven years. So at 21 years of age he’s had at least three completely different physical bodies. Just like the deck, it’s not the same thing any more.

I then pointed out the conclusion that was beginning to dawn on everyone, including him. “If you were born on May 1, 1975, and your physical body in front of me right now did not even exist as a physical body in 1975, then you are not your physical body, are you?”

“That’s totally irrelevant!”

Why? Because it’s not a scientific argument.

This man characterizes the tendency of some to simply ignore good arguments they don’t want to deal with or aren’t capable of answering (or maybe never even thought about). You’ll never hear, “Boy, that’s an interesting point and I don’t know how to answer it. It seems to make your case, but there might be something wrong with it. Let me think about it for a while to see if it’s flawed.”

No, they won’t do that. Instead, they resort to the steamroller. They overpower you with noise, aggressiveness and simple, unthinking denial.

Listen, if there are good arguments for something, and no arguments against it, then you have a rational obligation to believe it, at least until other evidence surfaces. That’s the way clear thinking works.

But in this case any argument was going to be irrelevant. Why? Because he was convinced of his own point of view regardless of evidence and regardless of reason. Nothing I said would ever make a difference. Some people are like that. Don’t let it be you.

Here’s the question. What is it about human beings that allows us to maintain our identity over time–such that we can say we’re still ourselves–even when we go through such radical physical changes that we can have entirely different bodies?

I’ll give you a clue, the same clue I gave to the young man at Cypress College: it’s not anything physical. Why? Because all the physical parts are replaced piece by piece every seven years. If you’re 42 years old you’ve had 6 completely different bodies. Can you ever possess a different body? Sure. You do it all the time.

What is it that makes the difference? If it’s not something physical, it must be something non-physical. That’s simple. You are not physical. You are a non-physical something that sustains its identity through time even though the physical body you possess and use makes radical changes.

What are you? Now we know. What are you called? I think the term rational soul does just fine. Don’t you?

 

top

Read Full Post »

No Eternal Punishment

 

Gregory Koukl

Is Hell eternal or everlasting? We have to be careful how we define the words. divider

I don’t believe in eternal punishment. Nor do I believe in eternal Heaven. No one goes to Heaven for an eternity. Now, I know I’ve got many of you sitting up saying, “Okay, Koukl has finally gone off the deep end. Sounds like heresy to me. Something is rotten in Denmark.” Well, I say there is no eternal punishment and no eternal Heaven because I am choosing my words very carefully. I know this raises some eyebrows because I think many of you might suspect what I am talking about is temporary Hell. I don’t think Hell is temporary, nor is Heaven temporary, but I don’t think it is eternal either. How could that be? It’s very simple. (more…)

Read Full Post »

Is God In Time?

 

Gregory Koukl

Is it possible that all of history is one big space-time manifold–a “block universe”? divider

Put your thinking caps on today. We’re going to talk about time.It’s common for us to make the comment “The spaceless, timeless God” or “Then we’ll pass out of time, into eternity.” However, the Scripture is not clear about God’s timelessness. Most of the verses seem to indicate God is in time: Rev 1:4; Rev 4:8, Ps 90, Jude 25, 2 Pet 3:8.Two popular books describe a picture of God as timeless. Philip Yancey’s book Disappointment with God and C. S. Lewis in Mere Christianity . Lewis and Yancey both flounder because of theological and philosophical problems that both seem unaware of. (more…)

Read Full Post »

Ten Steps Toward Sexual Sin

1. Falling in love with the present world.

For Demas, in love with this present world, has deserted me and gone to Thessalonica. (2 Timothy 4:10)

Once Demas was a partner in the work (Colossians 4:14, “Luke the beloved Physician and Demas greet you”; cf.
Philemon 24).

But the world became too attractive and desirable for him, and he forsook his leadership role in the church, and decided to go and satisfy his desire for the world.

What is it about the world that leaders are tempted to love?

Jesus pointed out several things: (more…)

Read Full Post »

Older Posts »

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 442 other followers