Advent
raises the question of God. As much as the culture tries to drown out the
spiritual in a holiday cacophony of commercialism and sentimentality, the Deity
peeks around every corner during December.
As a pastor I talk about God a lot during every season of
the year. I pray to God, teach about God, preach about God, and write about
God. I am more aware of God than I am of myself. I am more certain of God's existence
than I am of my own human existence.
I know that statement sounds strange to many ears. God is a
problem for increasing numbers of people. Atheism is on the rise in America. It
is the fastest growing category in religious surveys. So I see Advent as a time to raise the God
question.
In an age when people doubt God, how can I be so certain of
God? The answer is personal experience. I know that experience can be
deceptive. There are hallucinations, deceptions and delusions. Atheist Richard
Dawkins entitled his best-selling book The
God Delusion. He thinks religion is a sign of mental impairment.
When I have the opportunity to discuss God with atheists
(which I love to do!) some will compare belief in God to belief in Santa Claus
or the Tooth Fairy. They see the idea as a childish notion that any sensible
person outgrows in adolescence. I used to believe that also.
I grew up in church and went through Confirmation at the age
of 13. But by the time I entered college I was a confirmed atheist. I know the
atheist mindset by personal experience. In fact I reexamined my religious beliefs
just a few years ago. I revisited my undergraduate atheism, just to make sure
that I was not in fact deluded in my faith.
Atheism is a very attractive and consistent philosophy. But
I don’t buy it. It does not ring true to experience. I am a theist and a
Christian because of my awareness of God and Christ. The atheist arguments are
impressive, but you can’t argue with experience.
I understand that experience is fallible. People believe a
lot of strange things based on their experiences. I know the dangers of basing one’s
life on subjective experiences. But there is also a danger in dismissing
experience.
God is a confirmable hypothesis. Anyone can know that God is
real. In fact I would say that everyone already knows God is real at some level
of awareness. I wrote in a previous blog about uncovering the soul (Soul Searching)
– discovering one’s true nature as immortal soul. When one perceives soul, God
appears.
The soul is the doorway to the Divine. When one enters the
sanctuary of the human soul one steps into eternity. God is waiting for us there. We
don’t have to “believe” anything. (That comes later.) All it takes is the courage
to suspend one’s disbelief and see for ourselves. If we persevere in the
discovery of our own true nature, we will incidentally bump into God. Even an
atheist can do it.
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