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By Dr. Niclas Berggren
Personal Information:
Niclas Berggren, born in 1968, holds a Ph.D. in economics and
resides in Stockholm, Sweden. At the age of 16, independent of
his non-believing parents, he decided to become a born-again Christian
and joined the Pentecostal Church (doctrinally close to the Assemblies
of God in the U.S.). He remained an earnest, active member - which
included bible studies, evangelisation, prayer, speaking in tongues,
etc. - until 1994, when he began to question the rationale for
believing in the god of the Bible. In 1996, he left his Church
after having become an atheist through careful Bible study and
rational reasoning. Some of the basis for this radical, albeit
calm and gradual, change is presented in this essay.
1. Introduction
This essay will investigate the often-made
claim from Christians, that the Bible is the inspired word of
god, a corollary of which is that it is perfectly without error.
This view is exemplified by the following statement of Jimmy Swaggart,
a Pentecostal pastor: "One of the most basic tenants of the
Christian faith is that the Scriptures are inerrant. Because the
Bible is God's Word, it is entirely error-free." (Swaggart, 1987, p. 8)
[1] It will be argued that this view - which
will be referred to as Fundamentalism
- is the only possible logical view of the Bible for a Christian,
but that it is incorrect and, therefore, that the Christian god[2]
does not exist. More formally, the argument of this essay can
be expressed in the following manner:
-
- 1. If the Christian god (as defined
in footnote [2]) exists, there is a being
who is omnipotent, omniscient, and perfectly good.
-
- 2. If there is a being who is omnipotent,
omniscient, and perfectly good, his revelation is error-free,
unambiguously clear, and objectively verifiable as true.
-
- 3. The Bible is neither error-free,
unambiguously clear, nor objectively verifiable.
-
- C. The Christian god does not exist.
We shall begin by examining the nature of
this god and what implications it has for our analysis of the
Bible.
2. The Logic of Fundamentalism
Let us, for the sake of argument, proceed
under the premise that the Christian god does, indeed, exist (although
there are convincing reasons, independent of the arguments of
this essay, to reject a belief in his existence; see, e.g., Smith, 1979, and Martin, 1990, 1991).
The Christian view of god is that he is omnipotent[3],
omniscient, omnibenevolent, omnipresent and eternally existing.
Furthermore, he is perfect in all of his being, as well as the
utmost cause and sustainer of everything.[4]
It is the belief of Christians that their god inspired some humans
to write the 66 books of the Bible, a belief which is in line
with the following statement of Paul regarding the books of the
Old Testament: "All Scripture is God-breathed..." (2
Tim. 3:16, NIV). Apparently, god wanted to make some information
known to humanity, which is why he decided to make people convey
it in written form. Let us now turn to an analysis of what the
Bible would be like if it is the document of the Christian god;
four theoretical arguments expanding on this will be presented.
2.1 The original text
Since god is perfect in every way and, furthermore,
all-powerful and all-knowing, it is only logical to hold that
his only written revelation is inerrant in every respect. After
all, a perfect god could not possibly want
to produce an imperfect revelation, and since he can do anything
he wants, he could not possibly bring about an imperfect revelation.
Thus, Fundamentalism is the logical view of the Bible, given a
belief in the Christian god. If the Bible turned out to be less
than perfect, that forcefully and unambiguously implies that the
Christian god cannot possibly exist.
But, the more liberally inclined Christian
may object, if we find one error in any other book, say a school
book, we do not thereby throw out the entirety of what has been
written in that book: while realising the mistake, we do not automatically
assume everything else to be incorrect. So why do we not find
this approach appealing when dealing with the Bible? There is
a vital difference, and that is that the Bible is said to be the
written revelation of an almighty and perfect god. Such a deity
cannot, by definition, make a mistake. So if there is just one
mistake in the Bible, that mistake makes it clear to us that the
Christian god cannot exist.
2.2 Translations
First, the Fundamentalist is correct in
believing that a perfect, omnipotent god would produce nothing
but an inerrant revelation. But let us continue to use this logic
to its full extent and ask ourselves, Does this doctrine of inerrancy
also apply to translations
and later original-language manuscripts
of the Bible? The above-mentioned Jimmy Swaggart has the following
to say on this matter: "So while the Bible's original text
is without error, mistakes may have crept into the translated
versions." (Swaggart, 1987, p. 8)
Let us think about this for a moment. The
logic of the claim that the original text is inerrant is that
an omnipotent and perfect god wanted to reveal some things to
humanity, therefore his revelation could not possibly contain
any errors. Note that god used humans to write his revelation.
Now if god is interested in conveying his divine information to
others than those who speak Hebrew and ancient Greek, he must
see to it that his revelation becomes available in other languages.
Is there any reason for god to not use his omnipotence in producing
correct translations? Note that god could just as easily use humans
to translate his word as he used humans to write it in the first
place - he is, after all, all-powerful. And since he is perfect,
it is not in his interest to provide an imperfect revelation in
any place or at any time.
Hence, as a matter of logical consistency,
it must necessarily hold that god has provided error-free translations.
If one claims that god wanted to produce a perfect revelation
but that the versions which we can understand today are imperfect,
one must explain why god did not want or could see to it that
the translations are also error-free. Clearly, any such attempt
to an explanation is doomed to fail while retaining the Christian
concept of god. Thus, if it can be shown that any translation
of the Bible contains just one
error, the Christian god cannot exist.
But does this mean that there is just one
correct translation in every language? First, it is interesting
to note that the Bible has not been and still is not available
in all languages in the world. What this implies about a god who
supposedly does not show favouritism (Acts 10:34) is left for
the reader to ponder upon. In any case, the logic of Fundamentalism
does not necessarily imply that there is just one error-free Bible
translation in any language; but it does necessarily imply that
all
Bible translations are inerrant.
Now Jimmy Swaggart and his fellow Fundamentalists
must explain why a perfect and omnipotent god was able to produce
an error-free original manuscript of the Bible while at the same
time not wanting to produce error-free translations of this original
manuscript. Does their god only want those fluent in Hebrew and
ancient Greek to get his perfect revelation? After all, he could
do anything, including provide error-free translations.
A related conundrum for the Fundamentalist
who claims that the original document is inerrant but that later
manuscripts and translations may contain errors is: How is it
possible to know what the original document said, exactly? After
all, we are only in possession of possibly errant documents today,
and yet the Fundamentalist clings to these documents as
if they are inerrant - which,
by his own admission, they are not. (Of course, given the true
logic of Fundamentalism, as explained above, later manuscripts
and translations must also be inerrant.)
2.3 Clarity
Let us continue our logical journey of Bible
scrutiny and ask ourselves, Would it be in God's interest and
capacity to provide an unambiguous
revelation? That is to say, assuming for the moment that the Bible
is error-free, could it plausibly be the revelation of god if
its message is in any way unclear? We know that the Christian
god is omnipotent and omniscient: the former characteristic indicates
that he could
very well have produced a revelation without any ambiguity, and
the latter characteristic indicates that god knew before producing
his revelation that a less-than-unambiguous rendering would lead
not only to internal struggles amongst his followers, but also
to strong attacks from anti-theists. Both of these phenomena must
be considered undesirable from the point of view of god, and if
any of them can be shown to have existed or exist on the basis
of Bible ambiguities, then the Christian god is not real.
2.4 Competing revelations
Let us ask, Would god provide objective
means to verify that his written revelation is the only divine
revelation there is? As he is almighty, he could
do so if he wished. And since competing religious scriptures lure
some people away from the verity of the Bible, it is undoubtedly
in line with the Christian god's interest to wish just that. This
means that if there is no objective way to decide upon the authenticity
of the Bible, the Christian god cannot possibly exist.
2.5 Some possible objections
Before inspecting the evidence concerning
the inerrancy and truth of the Bible and the Christian god, it
is proper to analyse four possible objections to the theoretical
exercise of logic presented above. First, if human beings have
a free will, is it not logically impossible for the Christian
god to use his omnipotence to induce, or "force", people
to write his revelation without errors? That is, is Fundamentalism
not illogical at its core? The answer is "No", for the
following three reasons. (1) The doctrine of the general existence
of a free will is at odds with the Bible's teachings. Suffice
it to mention that the Bible instructs us that no
one can avoid sinning, i.e.,
break some moral rule pronounced by the Christian god (see, e.g.,
Rom. 3:23, Rom. 5:12 and 1 John 1:8-10). Hence, if any human being
necessarily commits sin, there is no general existence of a free
will.[5] (2) If
a free will generally exists,
there is nothing that prevents a person to want
to be an instrument of the Christian god and hence willingly submit
to serving him in writing down his revelation perfectly. In fact,
we would expect any Christian to be willing to contribute to the
provision of a perfect divine revelation. And since, with free
will, it is perfectly legitimate for someone to delegate influence
over one's actions to someone else, such as the Christian god,
the argument above falls. (3) If,
indeed, human beings have a free will (which we argue is not the
case, if we adhere to the Bible's teaching), and if
this precludes the writing of
an inerrant revelation from the Christian god (which we argue
is not the case, if Christians can be shown to want to assist
in producing a divine revelation), then we must conclude, on the
basis of this god's characteristics, that he would have used some
other means of producing this revelation, so that it could be
perfect (e.g., he could have let a perfectly written manuscript
sail down from heaven on a cloud). This he did not do. Thus, the
conclusion is that the doctrine of free will is incorrect: it
is at odds with biblical teaching and, to the extent that it implies
that the Christian god could not produce an inerrant written revelation,
it violates the logic of how an omnipotent, perfect god would
act. If he could not produce a perfect revelation by letting men
write it, he would have used another method.
Second, a related point, which unlike the
previous one deals not with the issue of human will, but with
the character of human beings, states that since god worked by
using fallible and frail human beings, is it not to be expected
that the writers of the Bible may have made some mistakes? It
needs first to be stressed that if one accepts the idea that the
original manuscript of the Bible does not contain any errors,
it is not logically possible to claim that translations of the
Bible may contain mistakes. But it is logically consistent to
believe that both the original manuscript and subsequent translations
are inerrant or errant. However, this latter view of general errancy
violates the nature of the Christian god. Remember: this god is
perfect and omnipotent. Why would he bring forth a written revelation
with errors in it? The answer is: he would not do that. Even though
the writers of the Bible were humans, as was and is the case with
translators, god is able to guide them and prevent them from making
any mistakes. Remember: he is almighty and can do anything.
Third, are not the demands that are put
on god too heavy? Certainly not, if we take god to be omnipotent,
omniscient, perfect, etc. These words are not just empty terms
but they entail a precise meaning. For instance, being omnipotent
means being able to do anything
which is logically possible, without any conceivable exception.
Thus, because of these infinite qualities of god, it is in no
way possible to put too heavy demands on him, in the sense that
he is not in any way limited (except by logic).
Fourth, are we not limited in our wisdom
and capacity to comprehend divine matters? Even if the reasoning
above appears correct, we may not be able to trust it. This is
a rather frequent argument from Christians when they encounter
things which they are unable to understand; these things are then
termed "mysteries." However, if we surrender our ability
to reason and make things intelligible, what can we possibly resort
to in its place? Blind faith in "mysteries" unsolved?
That hardly seems a more reliable approach. Let us instead continue
to make use of logic and rational discourse to analyse the claims
of mystics and others, and let us continue to do it in a critical
manner. In that spirit, we turn to some revealing evidence.
3. The Evidence
We have now arrived at a brief albeit illuminating
analysis of how the theoretical analysis above can be used to
prove that the Christian god cannot possibly exist. As the reader
knows by now, the basis for this argument is that the qualities
ascribed to the Christian god assist us in determining what kind
of written revelation he would bring about and compare it to the
Bible. If
it can be demonstrated that the Bible violates any of the basic
demands on a divine revelation, then the Christian god cannot
exist. If
we do not succeed in demonstrating this, this still does not mean
that the Christian god exists, but that other methods (aside from
the epistemological one of this essay) shall have to be used if
we are to disprove his existence.[6] However,
we boldly assert that the following demonstration is indeed sufficient
to prove the Christian god's non-existence. There will be one
point corresponding to each argument above.
- Argument:
The original document of the Bible is inerrant. Counter-argument:
There is a problem with the verification of this claim, and that
is that we are not in possession of the original document of the
Bible. But let us continue to investigate the argument, using
available translations (e.g., the KJV, the NIV, the NASB, the
RSV, the Darby, and the YLT). In combination, they use the available
documents, including the Masoretic Hebrew text, the Septuagint,
and the Dead-Sea Scrolls. Hence, our method brings us as close
as we can possibly get to the original text. We will look at three
Bible passages: Acts 13:17-22, 1 Chron. 29:27-28 and 1 Kings 6:1.
The first two in conjunction inform us that Solomon's reign began
at least
530 years after the Hebrews left Egypt. But 1 Kings 6:1 claims
that Solomon's reign began 476 years after the Hebrews left Egypt
- a discrepancy of at least
54 years.[7] Hence, the original manuscript
of the Bible contained at least one error (no matter if the Septuagint
is correct with reference to 1 Kings 6:1 or if all the other translations
mentioned above are correct), which means that the Christian god
cannot possibly exist.
- Argument:
Any Bible translation is inerrant. Counter-argument:
One example which disproves the just-made argument will be provided
from the King James Version (the same error is provided in the
RSV, the Darby, and the YLT). 2 Chron. 9:25 says, "And Solomon
had four thousand stalls for horses and chariots, and twelve thousand
horsemen..." while 1 Kings 4:26 says, "And Solomon had
forty thousand stalls of horses for his chariots, and twelve thousand
horsemen." This contradiction is de
facto in place in the KJV, which
renders that translation imperfect. Hence, the Christian god -
omnipotent and perfect - cannot possibly exist. (It is to be noted
that the Masoretic Hebrew text contains this contradiction, but
some Septuagint manuscripts do not. Thus, it is possible that
this contradiction is not in the original text, although we do
not know that; but it is certainly in most Bible translations.)
- Argument:
The Bible is clear and unambiguous. Counter-argument:
To claim this is quite stark, because history tells us that Christian
unity on doctrinal issues, even fundamental ones, as well as convincing
anti-Christian challenges, have been abundantly present. This
is one of the issues debated between Michael Martin and John Frame
(http://www.infidels.org/library/modern/michael_martin/martin-frame/),
and Martin convincingly states, "Let us recall that there
are differences among Christians over, among other things, the
morality of the death penalty, war, abortion, premarital sex,
homosexuality, private property, social drinking, and gambling.
Most of these differences are based on different interpretations
of Christian revelation. To suppose that there is a rational way
to reconcile these controversies by appealing to revelation stretches
credibility to the breaking point." And the list of intra-Christian
controversies could be made much longer: suffice it to mention
the papacy, the doctrine regarding Mary, the trinity, baptism,
speaking in tongues (where, interestingly, Fundamentalist Baptists
and Fundamentalist Pentecostals disagree), the issue of creationism,
predestination, purgatory, consciousness after death, and so on.
Since the Christian god is perfect and omnipotent, could he have
produced the Bible, on which perfect agreement cannot be reached
by humans? No. In addition, these type of unclear matters give
anti-theists plenty of ammunition, which god surely would have
prevented, should he have existed. In all, it is clear that he
cannot exist.
- Argument:
There is an objective way of determining which document is the
written revelation of god. Counter-argument:
There is no such objective way of determining whether the Bible,
the Koran, the Bhagavadgita, the Book of Mormon, the Edda, or
Homer are true divine revelations. It is often possible to prove
that a certain document is not
a true revelation of a certain god (which is what this essay is
doing with reference to the Bible and the Christian god), but
to prove that a document is truly divine in an objective manner,
one would need some type of additional revelation from god, which
in itself must be unambiguous. However, if this god can provide
such an unambiguous revelation, the question is why he did not
produce such absolute clarity in the first place. Without such
self-contained
evidence, one could never be certain that a document is truly
divine. (As an aside, necessary but certainly not sufficient conditions
for true divine inspiration are complete logical consistency and
inerrancy with regard to all facts external to the document itself.)
And since such evidence is not in existence, the Christian god
cannot possibly exist.
Any one of these points is, in itself, sufficient for us to understand
that the Christian god cannot exist. Taken together, they constitute
overwhelming evidence to this effect.
4. Conclusion
We began this essay by generously granting
the Christian the assumption that the Christian god does, indeed,
exist. We then used logic to derive what the characteristics of
this god's revelation would be like, and found that (i) the original
text must be inerrant; (ii) all later manuscripts and translations
must be inerrant; (iii) this revelation must be unambiguously
clear in every respect; and (iv) there must be some objective
way for humans to know that this document is "the real thing."
These four demands follow directly from the characteristics of
the Christian god, most notably those of perfection, omnipotence,
and omniscience: this god not only must want his only written
revelation to be inerrant in all dimensions, he is also capable
of seeing to its being produced in such a way.
We then proceeded by scrutinising how the
Bible does on these four points. The result was overwhelmingly
clear: the Bible is not inerrant in its original text, to the
best of human knowledge; it is not inerrant in all its later manuscripts
and translations; it is not unambiguously clear; and there is
no way to determine objectively if it, rather than, say, the Koran,
is divine.
The only possible conclusion from this is
that the Christian god - i.e., the god of the Bible - cannot possibly
exist. If one assumes that he does, as we did, and looks at the
implications of this assumption, one finds that the implications
are such as to violate what we detect in the real world.
Now it does not take much knowledge of psychology
to understand that the argument of this essay is very disturbing
to a Christian. He may bend over backways to try to rescue his
specific version of theism, but he must, if he is to retain intellectual
credibility, explicitly point out how a perfect and omnipotent
god can provide a revelation which violates his very nature. Or
he may resort to the classical way out: misology, i.e., to claim
that his god is a mystery which cannot be understood. One wonders
why one should believe in something which cannot be understood
when it is possible to opt for the alternative: to believe only
in things which are understandable.
So where does this leave one? Clearly, with
some useful knowledge, viz., that Christianity is false. It is
then advisable for one to proceed by analysing the larger issue,
if theism
is true or false. Reading Smith (1979)
is one way of doing this, and that leaves one an atheist - and
a basis for dealing with life as it is.
Footnotes
- For a similar statement, see Baptist
pastor Jerry Falwell (1987, p. 150).
- It should be noted at the outset that
"the Christian god" is equivalent to the deity presented
in the Bible; and this is the only god being discussed in this
essay. This implies that it is not possible to say that the Christian
god exists without any relationship to the Bible. This approach
is shared by (Fundamentalist) Christians, who refer to the Bible
to get information about what and who their god is.
- The term "omnipotent" and
the terms "almighty" and "all-powerful" are
used interchangeably. It is, following standard Christian thinking,
defined as being able to do anything which is logically possible.
There are definite problems with "omnipotence" in its
relationship to logic, as discussed by philosopher Michael Martin
in a debate with theologian John Frame, but we disregard that objection for the sake of argument.
- This description of the Christian god
is in line with that of Robertson (1987, pp. 45-46).
- On the concepts of free will and original
sin, see philosopher Ayn Rand (1961, p. 168 ff.).
- That is, failing to prove not-X does
not necessarily imply X.
- It should be noted that one translation,
the Septuagint, puts the number 440 instead of 480 in 1 Kings
6:1, but that need not concern us here, for the following reason.
If all other translations are correct, then the discrepancy of
at least 54 years holds. If the Septuagint is correct, then this
discrepancy does not vanish, but it is made greater (in fact,
at least 94 years).
Literary
References
- Falwell, J. (1987). Strength
for the Journey. New York,
NY: Simon and Schuster.
- Martin, M. (1990). Atheism:
A Philosophical Justification.
Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press.
- Martin, M. (1991). The
Case Against Christianity.
Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press.
- Rand, A. (1961). For
the New Intellectual. New
York, NY: Random House.
- Robertson, P. (1987). Answers
to 200 of Life's Most Probing Questions.
New York, NY: Bantam Books.
- Smith, G. H. (1979). Atheism:
The Case Against God. Buffalo,
NY: Prometheus Books.
- Swaggart, J. (1987). Straight
Answers to Tough Questions.
Brentwood, TN: Wolgemuth & Hyatt.
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