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The Existence of God—
Morality
Apologetics Press Christian Evidences Correspondence Course
Bert Thompson, Ph.D. and Kyle Butt, M.A.
It is a well-known fact that actions have consequences. It also is a well-known fact that beliefs have implications. What a person believes is the main force behind how a person acts. Everyone in the world believes that some things are right and other things are wrong. Thus, every person has some system of morality and ethics.
MORALITY AND ETHICS
As we begin this study about the importance and origin of morality and
ethics, a brief definition of terms is in order. The English word “morality”
comes from the Latin word mores, meaning habits or customs. Morality, therefore, is the habit of following the rules of proper conduct. “Ethics” is from
a Greek word meaning “character.” The standard dictionary definition of
ethics is “the discipline dealing with what is good and bad or right and wrong;
a group of moral principles or a set of values.” Ethics, then, is the system that
a person uses to determine which things are right and wrong. Morals and
ethics deal with proper conduct, duty, and virtue (or, in short, how we ought
to behave). The question now before us is: How should we behave?
If concepts such as “good and evil, right and wrong” do exist, how do we
go about determining whether a particular thing is right or wrong? At times,
people do not agree on the exact way to decide whether something is right
or wrong. However, everyone agrees that some things are right and other
things are wrong. Morals and ethics are universally accepted traits among the
human family. Therefore, their origin must be explained. Simply put, there
are only two options. Either morality and ethics originate from the mind of
God, Who is the source of all goodness, or they originate from within man
himself.
One thing is for certain. The choices that we are being required to make
today are becoming increasingly complex. Should we approve of abortion?
Shall we encourage surrogate motherhood? Should we advocate the death
penalty? Shall we recommend euthanasia?We will not be able to answer
these and other similar questions in any meaningful way by relying merely
on our individual intuitions or emotions. Neither will we be able to answer them by appealing to the past. In many ways, the problems facing us today
are unlike those that faced generations long since gone. How will we set our standards?
The person who refuses to recognize the existence of God has only one
choice when it comes to explaining morality—it must have originated within
man. However, since man is viewed as little more than the last animal produced
by the long, meandering, chance process of evolution, this becomes
a problem. A lion is not plagued by guilt after killing a gazelle for its noon
meal. A dog does not experience remorse after stealing a bone from another
dog. Yet man, who also is supposed to have evolved, feels both guilt
and remorse when he commits certain acts that violate accepted standards
of morality and ethics.
If our society were based on the concept of godless evolution, this Earth
would be a miserable place to live indeed. Dr. Richard Dawkins, the famous
evolutionist of Great Britain, once admitted that believing in evolution and
then acting consistently upon that belief would produce “a very nasty society
in which to live.” Indeed it would. Some years ago, another well-known
evolutionist, Dr. Desmond Morris, wrote a book—The Naked Ape—about
the evolution of man. That title brings to mind an interesting question. Since
no other animal throughout evolutionary history has been able to locate and
live by moral standards, should we somehow trust man—as a “naked ape”—
to do any better? Matter—by itself—does not have the power to “evolve”
any sense of moral consciousness. If there is no purpose in the Universe
(which is the position evolutionists are forced to take), then there is no purpose
to morality or ethics.
Unbelief therefore must argue (and does argue!) that there is no ultimate
standard of moral/ethical truth and that, at best, morality and ethics are different
for everyone. If that were true, who could ever suggest that someone
else’s behavior was “wrong,” or that a person “ought” or “ought not” to do
something? The simple fact of the matter is that unbelievers cannot explain
the origin of morality and ethics. Whether the unbeliever is willing to admit
it or not, if there is no God then man lives in an environment where “anything
goes.” When the famous author Fyodor Dostoyevsky wrote his book,
The Brothers Karamazov, he had one of the characters (Ivan) remark: “If
there is no God, everything is permitted.” Oh how true! If evolution is correct
and there is no God, people can do anything they want. Thus, it is impossible
to formulate any system of ethics by which one can tell the difference
between “right” and “wrong.”
With no way to reach a rational conclusion on what is ethical, man finds
himself lost on a sea of despair where “might makes right,” where “the strong
crushes the weak,” and where each man does what is right in his own eyes.
Morals and ethics without God is not a pretty picture, as the following investigation
of some different systems of morality documents all too well.
Relativism, for example, says that there are no universal rules for determining
morals and ethics. Since all value systems are considered to be
the results of culture and environment, one system is just as good as another;
no one system has the right to claim it is the “correct” system that
men should use to determine their actions. According to relativism, if a society
wants to kill all children 8 years old or younger as a means of population control, no one could say (legitimately) that it is the “wrong” thing to
do. However, all humans know that some things are right and other things
are wrong. It is a difficult (if not impossible) thing indeed to find a society
where a man is applauded for betraying those who befriend him, willfully
murdering his own children, or committing treason against his nation. For
this reason, very few people are willing to defend absolute relativism.
Hedonism is the philosophy which claims that the aim of “moral” conduct
is to achieve the greatest possible pleasure with the least amount of pain.
In fact, one famous atheist, Aldous Huxley, said that he had his own reasons
for insisting on a society where “meaninglessness” reigned supreme.
He wanted a world with no meaning, he said, because he felt that morality “interfered with his sexual freedom.” You don’t have to “read between the
lines” of such a statement to understand his point, do you? Hedonism basically
says if an action provides pleasure to the person who is doing it, and
doesn't really hurt anyone, then it is acceptable.
Yet consider the ultimate consequences of this kind of thinking. Sexually
transmitted diseases are occurring in huge proportions all across the globe.
Teenage pregnancies are rampant. Babies are born already infected with
deadly diseases such as AIDS because their mothers contracted the diseases
during their pregnancies and passed them on to their unborn children. In
many places, divorces are so common that they equal or outnumber marriages.
Cities are filled with rapists, stalkers, and child molesters. What else,
pray tell, will have to go wrong before it becomes apparent that attempts to
live without God are flawed?
Utilitarianism is the system of belief which suggests that “good” is determined
by what produces the greatest amount of pleasure for the greatest
number of people. An accurate explanation of this view is found in a book
by Katherine Tait, the only daughter of renowned British agnostic, Bertrand
Russell. In My Father, Bertrand Russell, Mrs. Tait described what it was like
to live in the Russell household with her brothers. She commented, for example,
that her father firmly believed that parents should teach a child “with
its very first breath that it has entered into a moral world.” But as any evolutionist
would, her father had great difficulty in defending such a position.
Mrs. Tait recounted in her book the fact that, as a child she would say, “I
don’t want to; why should I?” when her father told her that she “ought” to do something. She observed that a normal parent might respond by saying,“because I say so,” or “because your father says so,” or “because God
says so.” Admittedly, however, Bertrand Russell was not your “normal” parent.
He would say to young Katherine, “Because more people will be happy
if you do than if you don’t.” “So what!” she would scream. “I don’t care about
other people!” “Oh, but you should,” her father would reply. In her youthful
naïveté, Katherine would ask, “But why?” To which her father then would
respond: “Because more people will be happy if you do than if you don’t.”
In the end, however, Mrs. Tait wrote: “We felt the heavy pressure of his rectitude
and obeyed, but the reason was not convincing—neither to us nor to
him.” Would it be convincing—for any rational human being?
Situationism is the idea that something is “right” because a person decides
it is right in any given instance. According to this philosophy, there is
nothing that always is right or always is wrong; each individual situation determines the correctness of an action.
If a sane man, therefore, decided it was “right” in a certain situation to kill
his business competitors, how could we (justifiably) ask someone (like the
police) to stop him? On the contrary, some things always are right and some
things always are wrong. Situationism is not a worthwhile philosophy because
it cannot deal with moral absolutes that are recognized by all humans
as both legitimate and necessary. Furthermore, when two people find themselves
in a real-life “sticky” situation, and one wants to do one thing while
the other wants to do something entirely different, who, then, is “right”? Without
any system of absolutes, who gets to choose?
Determinism is the idea that man is not really responsible for his actions.
This belief claims that the long evolutionary process has instilled in man certain
instincts that determine his actions. According to this concept, then, a
person can do anything that he feels like doing and not be held responsible
for it. For example, if a person steals something, who is responsible? Determinism
would claim that his “evolutionary past” is responsible, or that “his
genes made him do it.” Yet common sense tells us that every rational person
is responsible for his own actions—else why would we bother having
laws, police, courts, judges, or jails!
THE PRACTICAL IMPACT OF MORALS AND ETHICS WITHOUT GOD
What a person believes greatly impacts how a person acts. This fact can
be seen quite easily by looking at the effects of incorrect beliefs concerning
morality and ethics. What a terrible price we humans have paid because of
our incorrect beliefs—and the actions based on those beliefs! In the evolutionary
scheme of things, man occupies the same status as an animal. He
may be more knowledgeable, more intellectual, and more scheming than
his counterparts in the animal kingdom, but when all is said and done, he is
still an animal. And so the question is bound to arise: Why should man be
treated any different than an animal when his life no longer is thought to be
worth living? Truth be told, there is no logical reason that he should. From
cradle to grave, life—from an evolutionary viewpoint—is viewed as “disposable.”
Thus, it is not surprising that we see “weak” or “unwanted” humans
being destroyed just as if they were animals. On January 22, 1973,
the United States Supreme Court, in a 7-to-2 vote, decided that the human
embryo growing within the human womb no longer is “human.” Rather, it
is a “thing” that may be ripped out, slaughtered, and tossed into the nearest
garbage dump. And the lengths to which some will go in order to justify
this position defy description.
According to Charles Darwin, “weaker” members of society are unfit and,
under the laws of nature, normally would not survive. When a prize racehorse
stumbles and breaks its leg, and even the most highly skilled veterinarian
is unable to repair it, the animal often is put out of its misery with a
bullet to the brain. That racehorse, however, is not someone’s father, mother,
brother, or sister—which is why we shoot horses. Since nature “selects
against” the weaker animal, and since man is viewed as an animal, why should
man expect any better treatment? Who is weaker than a tiny baby growing
in the womb? The baby cannot defend himself, cannot feed himself, and cannot
even speak for himself. He (or she) is completely dependent upon the
mother for life. So should it surprise us that some are willing to figuratively“put a bullet in its brain” and murder it through abortion—as if it were as
dispensable as a broken-down racehorse?
Once those who are helpless, weak, and young become dispensable, who
will be next? Will it be the helpless, weak, and old? Will it be those whose
sickness makes them “unfit” to survive in a society that values the beautiful
and the strong?Will it be those who are lame, blind, or maimed?Will it be
those whose IQ falls below a certain point, or whose skin is a different color?
Some in our society already are calling for such “cleansing” processes to be
made legal, using euphemisms such as “euthanasia” or “mercy killing.”
After all, we shoot horses, don’t we?
MORALITY, ETHICS, AND THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
The late atheist of Harvard University, George Gaylord Simpson, once
wrote that “morals arise only in man.” By saying this, he verified (whether or not he meant to) the fact that morality is something unique to humankind. No two apes ever sat down and said, “Hey, I’ve got a good idea. Today
let’s talk about morals and ethics.” But all too often children are taught
that they are little more than “naked apes”—and they are intelligent enough
to figure out exactly what that means.
Convince children they evolved from animals—and they will act like
animals!With guns blasting, children (some as young as 10 or 11 years old)
bearing a grudge or wanting to settle a score walk into school hallways, classrooms,
and libraries, shoot until they have emptied every round from all the
gun’s chambers, and watch gleefully as shell casings, teachers, and classmates
alike fall silently at their feet. Then parents, administrators, and friends
congregate in the middle of the bloody aftermath and wonder, “What went
wrong.” Yet why should we be shocked or enraged by such conduct? According
to the laws of nature, only the strong survive. Children have been
taught that religion is an outward sign of an inner weakness—a crutch used
by people too weak and cowardly to “pull themselves up by their own boot
straps.” Why, then, should we be at all surprised when they react accordingly
(even violently!)? After all, the “law” of nature is “kill or be killed.”
The truth of the matter is that only the approach which states that morals
originate in the mind of God is consistent logically and internally; only
the approach that calculates God into the Universe can provide an objective, absolute set of morals and ethics. But why is this the case?
True morality is based on the fact of the unchanging nature of Almighty
God. He is eternal (1 Timothy 1:17), just and righteous (Psalm 89:14), and
always consistent (Malachi 3:6). In the ultimate sense, only God is good
(Mark 1:18). Furthermore, since He is perfect (Matthew 5:48), the morality
that comes from such a God is good, unchanging, just, and consistent—exactly
the opposite of the relativistic, deterministic, or situational ethics of the
world.
When people suggest that humans feel responsibility for wrong action,
they recognize that there is indeed within each man, woman, and child a
sense of moral responsibility which comes from the fact that God is our Creator (Psalm 1:3) and that we have been made in His spiritual image (Genesis
1:26-27). As the potter has the right to rule over the clay that he molds
(Romans 9:21), so our Maker has the sovereign right over His creation since
in His hand “is the soul of every living thing” (Job 12:1). As the biblical character
Job learned much too late, God is not a man with whom a person can
argue (Job 9:32).
Whatever God does, commands, and approves is good (Psalm 119:39,
68). What He has commanded results from Who He is, and therefore also
is good. In the Old Testament, the prophet Micah declared of God: “He has shown you,O man, what is good; and what does the Lord require of you but
to do justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God?” (Micah 6:8). In the New Testament, the apostle Peter wrote: “But as He who called you
is holy, you also be holy in all your conduct, because it is written, ‘Be holy,
for I am holy’” (1 Peter 1:15).
The main idea of ethics based on God concerns the relationship of man
to his Creator. God Himself is the unchanging standard of moral law. His
perfectly holy nature is the foundation upon which “right” and “wrong,” “good” and “evil” are built. God’s will is the ultimate ground of moral obligation.
Why are we to be holy? Because God is holy (1 Peter 1:16). Why
are we not to lie (Colossians 3:9)? Because God does not lie Hebrews 6:
18). Since God’s nature is unchanging, it follows that moral law, which reflects
His divine nature, is equally unchanging.
While there have been times in human history when each man “did that which was right in his own eyes” (Judges 17:6), that never was God’s plan.
He has not left us to our own devices to determine what is right and wrong, because He knew that through sin man’s heart would become “exceedingly
corrupt” (Jeremiah 17:9). Therefore, God “has spoken” (Hebrews 1:1), and
by speaking He has made known to man His laws and rules through the Bible (2 Timothy 3:16-17). Thus, mankind is expected to act in a morally
responsible way (Matthew 19:9; Acts 17:3) by following biblical laws and
rules.
Eventually, each of us will meet “the righteous judgment of God, Who
will render to every man according to his works” (Romans 2:5-6). It therefore
benefits us to “live soberly, righteously, and godly in this present age”
(Titus 2:12) because one fact is certain: All men will face the chilling waters
of death.Will you face death having lived your life with godless morals and
wavering ethics, or will you enter into death knowing that you followed the morals that are unchanging and certain because they originated from the nature
of the great Creator-God?
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