Saturday, February 23, 2013

DOES GOD EXIST?: THE BOOK THAT EVERY BELIEVER WILL MUST (AND ALL ATHEIST WILL FEAR) READ Extract from Part I, Chapter 1 – “Preliminary epistemological questions”


(Are welcome the guidance and indications, emails, web address, name of head of area publications, etc. - about publishing houses and institutions that could publish the book).

Nature and scopes of the demonstrations of God’s existence

With respect to its nature and scopes, demonstrations of the existence of God here present will be characterized by:

1) Be reasonable

Here we present reasonable proof that can convince reasonable people. It is not our purpose the elaborate those absolutely accurate proofs that convince irrationally obstinates atheists and agnostics. That is simply impossible. When the will reject what the intellect knows no sense argue. As Saint Augustine said: “For those who want to believe I have thousands arguments, but for those who do not want to believe I have none”.

One can only to reason with reasonable people. Consequently, it is not relevant or necessary to prove with absolute certainty the existence of God to the obstinate atheist. Simply you give him reasonable evidence showing that theism is set up as a world view much more rational than atheism because, after all, one can not have absolute certainty of anything but even so relies on what is reasonable and acts accordingly. For example, I can not make an absolutely accurate demonstration that will exist day tomorrow. Might well happen, for example, the destruction of the universe for a unknown cause by scientists. I have no way to prove with absolute certainty that this will not happen. But even so think that will not happen reasonably and act accordingly. It would be foolish to say: “Well, as I can not prove with absolute certainty that will exist day tomorrow I have no reason to enlist my business”. However, this is not very different from the case of the atheist or agnostic who says (or thinks): “As I have not been persuaded with mathematical certainty that God exists will continue living my life as if He does not exist”. That's not reasonable. While it is true we can not be absolutely certain of anything, and that ultimately we have to believe everything by faith, it is also true that there are some “faiths” that are more rational than others and -as we will show throughout this book- atheism is a “faith” especially irrational (or better said anti-rational).

2) Be philosophical

Evidence for the existence of God that we will present in this book will be primarily philosophical. Consequently, those who seek direct scientific demonstrations will be disappointed, and not by our fault. It is a big epistemological error to think that science by itself can not prove or refute the God’s existence. He is not a piece more of what exists and therefore can not be coherently absorbed by single causes which act within reach of telescopes or microscopes. Then, it is absurd to demand direct scientific proof of the existence of God.

In other words: the question of God's existence is not really a matter of physics but of metaphysics because, as the pope John Paul II said, “science can not by itself resolve the issue, it is necessary that knowledge that rises above physics and astrophysics, and that is called metaphysics” (1).

However, this does not mean in any way that we will not appeal to the advances of science to illuminate the issue. Quite the opposite. This book will seek to show that the philosophical proofs of the existence of God are entirely consistent with the current cientific evidence.

Our methodology will be starting from facts of reality perceptible to prove the existence of God and, therefore, it’s evident that we have to appeal to scientific knowledge to better elucidate the basic premises and respond to objections. However, it should be noted that in any case the validity of our reasoning depends primarily of what is reasonably established by philosophy in general and not so much on what is provisionally established for science in particular. Science can change but even so we may continue concluding, with equal metaphysical rigor, that God exists. Thus -at least philosophically speaking- the atheists “have no excuse” (cf. Rom 1:20).

3) Do not substitute the knowledge and personal relationship with God

Finally, the most important of all the clarifications that we will do in this book: be rationally convinced that “God exists” does not necessarily mean “to know God”. These are different things. For example, I can establish that exists a certain John Pérez talking with people who know him, seeing his birth certificate or searching for him on the Internet, but that does not mean I really know John Pérez.

Perhaps someone thinks that this clarification is trivial. But no. It is of utmost importance. What would happen, for example, if John Pérez is the most important person in the universe? Or if he is the only person that can give real meaning to my life? Or if he is the only person who can make me truly happy? Or if he is the foundation of happiness? Would I be happy just knowing that “he exists”? Would not it be personal relationship with him the most important thing in life? Well, for our case, “John Pérez” is God.

It is therefore of paramount importance that believers who will delve into the present book never forget that, as the great Christian apologist William Lane Craig said, “the belief in God is, for those who know him, a properly basic belief grounded in our experience of God. Now, if this is right there's a danger that arguments for God's existence could actually distract your attention from God himself. (…) We mustn't so concentrate on the external arguments that we fail to hear the inner voice of God speaking to our own hearts” (2).

“There are only two kinds of people who can be called reasonable: those who serve God wholeheartedly, because they know him, and those who seek God wholeheartedly because they do not know him”, said the philosopher and mathematician Blaise Pascal (3). So those who know God take this book to serve Him wholeheartedly through the preaching apologetics, helping the conversion of his brothers atheists. And those who do not know God use the present book to begin to look for Him with their whole heart.

References:

1) John Paul II, “Speech to the participants in the plenary session of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences”, October 3, 1981.
2) William Lane Craig, “The existence of God”, debate against Christopher Hitchens, held at Biola University on April 4, 2009, opening speech.
3) Blaise Pascal, Thoughts (1670), Ed Espasa-Calpe, 7th ed., Madrid, n. 194.