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H o p e
ForThe
Hurting
A Study in 1 Peter
www.confidentchristians.org
Why God…?
A Moral Cause
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
IntroductionDoes true right and wrong exist or is everything relative?
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
“You have your way, I have my
way. As for the right way, it
does not exist.”
– Frederick Nietzsche
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
Sometimes or Always Wrong?
• Torturing babies for fun.
• The Indian practice of widow burning (sati).
• Priests sexually abusing children and church authorities covering it up.
• Rape.
• Murder of innocent people.
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
“Nothing succeeds like excess
… nothing is good or bad,
only charming or dull.”
– Oscar Wilde
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
Is This Charming or Dull … or Wrong?
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
Right and Wrong
• Few deny that some acts are always morally wrong.
• This equates to there being objective moral values and duties in life.
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
“Any argument against the
objective reality of moral
values will be based on
premises that are less
obvious than the existence
of objective moral values
themselves.”
– Louise Antony
Atheist Philosopher
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
Defining Terms
• Objective: independent of opinion
(e.g. if 51% of the population said
rape was right, it would still be
wrong).
• Values: whether something is good or
bad; a description of worth.
• Duties: indicates an oughtness of
action; whether an act is obligatory.
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
Key Ingredients for Objective Moral Values/Duties
1. A Standard – provides a measure of good/bad, right/wrong.
2. An Authority – someone/thing that has the right to impose the
standard and enforce adherence.
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
“A man does not call a line
crooked unless he has
some idea of a straight line.”
– C. S. Lewis
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
A Key Distinction
• There is a distinction between the source of objective moral values and
duties and how we come to know them.
• The first is an ontological (source/origin) question.
• The second is an epistemological (knowledge) question.
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
1. The universe
2. Society/culture
3. The individual
4. A transcendent Creator
The Possible Sources of Objective Moral Values/Duties
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
Examining the OptionsWhat is the Source of Objective Moral Values and Duties?
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
From the Universe?
“A man said to the Universe,
Sir, I exist!
Nevertheless, replied the Universe,
That fact has not created in me
The slightest feeling of obligation.”
- Stephen Crane
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
From the Universe?
• From a cause/effect standpoint, an
effect must represent its cause in
essence/nature.
• How can an amoral, impersonal,
meaningless and purposeless universe
accidentally create personal moral
beings who are obsessed with meaning
and purpose?
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
“Life has no design, no
purpose, no evil and no
good, nothing but blind
pitiless indifference”
– Richard Dawkins
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
“When Darwin deduced the theory of
natural selection to explain the
adaptations in which he had
previously seen the handiwork of
God, he knew that he was
committing cultural murder. He
understood immediately that if
natural selection explained
adaptations, and evolution by
descent were true, then the
argument from design was dead
and all that went with it, namely the
existence of a personal god, free
will, life after death, immutable
moral laws, and ultimate meaning
in life.”
– William Provine
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
From Culture?
• In Kenya, the practice of “beading” is
carried out. A close family relative of a
young girl places a strand of beads around
the young girl’s neck.
• This effectively is a temporary engagement
and the relative can now have sexual
relations with her.
• Some girls are “beaded” when they are six
years old.
• Many young girls get pregnant and either
have abortions or kill their babies at birth.
• When they reach adulthood, the girls will
marry outside of their village, but taboo
dictates the girls will never be able to marry
if they keep their babies resulting from
beading.
• Is beading right or wrong…?
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
If Culture is the Source of Objective Morals/Duties Then…
• Widow burning can be morally
acceptable…
• Cannibalism can be morally
acceptable…
• Murder can be morally
acceptable…
• Unforgiveness can be morally
acceptable…
• Rape can be morally acceptable…
• Gratuitously torturing innocent
babies can be morally
acceptable…
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
From Culture?
• During the trials at Nuremberg, the Nazi
defense attorneys argued that Hitler’s
soldiers who were on trial were only
following the orders of their society and
should therefore not be held
accountable.
• A judge countered that argument with
the question, “But sir, is there not a law
above our laws?”
• We need an ultimate authority to appeal
to in matters that transcend history and
culture/society.
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
From Culture?
• What/who is mankind morally obligated to? Real moral
obligation exists, but to whom?
• Consider the issue of the “Reformer’s Dilemma”. How can a
culture ever be positively influenced from the outside if the
culture is the determiner of good and evil?
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
From the Individual?
• How do you decide between
differing moral opinions if each
individual is the ultimate decision
maker of what is good and bad?
• How does the statement “For me,
rape is wrong, but it might be OK
to you” sound?
• With individuals, everything boils
down to emotion and emotive
responses to morals without moral
global absolutes.
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
From the Individual?
In his debate with the atheist Bertrand Russell, the
Jesuit and philosopher Frederick Copleston looked
at Russell and asked, “Lord Russell, do you
believe in good and bad?” Russell replied, “Yes”.
Copleston continued, “How do you differentiate
between good and bad?” Russell replied, “The
same way I differentiate between blue and green
or yellow and green.” Copleston then said, “Wait a
minute, you differentiate between yellow and
green by seeing don’t you?” Russell said, “Yes”.
So Copleston challenged him by asking, “How do
you differentiate between good and bad?” Russell
replied, “I differentiate on those matters on the
basis of my feelings, what else?”
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
People May Espouse Relativism But They Demand Absolutes
• Watching how people react to being ‘wronged’ proves they want and
recognize absolute morality.
• Steal from a relativist; let them be the victim of false advertising; watch
how they respond when their spouse is relatively faithful to them vs.
absolutely faithful, and the reaction showcases the recognition of
absolute morality.
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
“You are right in speaking of
the moral foundations of
science, but you cannot turn
round and speak of the
scientific foundations of
morality.”
– Albert Einstein
What About Science?
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
“The moral landscape is a space
of real and potential outcomes
whose peaks correspond to
heights of potential well being
and whose valleys represent
the deepest possible
suffering. . . . Questions about
values are really questions
about the well being of
conscious creatures.”
– Sam Harris
What About Science?
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
Why Harris’Attempt Fails
• Harris redefines good to be “the
flourishing/well-being of conscious
creatures”.
• Harris admits in his book that it is
possible that the peak of the “moral
landscape” could be occupied by
flourishing rapists, murderers, and
thieves.
• So he admits it’s possible that
goodness and creaturely well-being are
not identical.
• Therefore, Harris’ moral theory
collapses.
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
1. The universe
2. Society/culture
3. The individual
4. A transcendent Creator
Where Does This Leave Us?
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
The Moral Argument for GodWhy a Transcendent Creator is Needed for Objective Moral Values and Duties.
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
One Moral Argument for God
• Laws imply a Law Giver.
• There is an objective Moral Law.
• Therefore, there is a Moral Law Giver.
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
Another Moral Argument for God
• If God does not exist, objective moral values and duties do not exist.
• Objective moral values and duties exist.
• Therefore, God exists.
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
“We might well argue that
objective intrinsically
prescriptive features
supervenient upon natural
ones constitute so odd a
cluster of qualities and
relations that they are unlikely
to have arisen in the ordinary
course of events without an
all-powerful God to create
them.”
– J. L Mackie
Atheist Philosopher
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
The Atheist Dilemma
• If there’s such a thing as evil, you must
assume there’s such a thing as good.
• If you assume there’s such a thing as
good, you assume there’s such a thing as
an absolute and unchanging moral law on
the basis of which to differentiate between
good and evil.
• If you assume there’s such a thing as an
absolute moral law, you must posit an
absolute moral law giver, but that would
be God – the one whom the atheist is
trying to disprove.
• So now rewind: if there’s not a moral law
giver, there’s no moral law. If there’s no
moral law, there’s no good. If there’s no
good, there’s no evil.
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
What About the Euthyphro Dilemma?
• Is something good because God
approves it, or does God approve
something because it’s good?
• The first makes God arbitrary.
• The second makes ‘good’
independent of God.
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
Solving the Euthyphro Dilemma
• God is the greatest possible
being.
• God’s nature is what grounds
absolute moral right/wrong.
• God has no obligations to
anything outside of Himself.
• He simply acts and what he
naturally does is good because it
comes from His nature/essence.
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
ConclusionsFinal Thoughts
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
The Source of Objective Moral Values and Duties
• God provides the only objective standard for moral values.
• God provides the only transcendent authority for enforcing the “oughtness”
of moral duties.
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
For More Information/Presentations
www.powerpointapologist.org
www.confidentchristians.org
The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause
For More Apologetics Resources
www.apologetics315.com
H o p e
ForThe
Hurting
A Study in 1 Peter
www.confidentchristians.org
Why God…?
A Moral Cause

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The Essentials of Apologetics Why God (Part 3)?

  • 1. H o p e ForThe Hurting A Study in 1 Peter www.confidentchristians.org Why God…? A Moral Cause
  • 2. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause IntroductionDoes true right and wrong exist or is everything relative?
  • 3. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause “You have your way, I have my way. As for the right way, it does not exist.” – Frederick Nietzsche
  • 4. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause Sometimes or Always Wrong? • Torturing babies for fun. • The Indian practice of widow burning (sati). • Priests sexually abusing children and church authorities covering it up. • Rape. • Murder of innocent people.
  • 5. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause “Nothing succeeds like excess … nothing is good or bad, only charming or dull.” – Oscar Wilde
  • 6. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause Is This Charming or Dull … or Wrong?
  • 7. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause Right and Wrong • Few deny that some acts are always morally wrong. • This equates to there being objective moral values and duties in life.
  • 8. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause “Any argument against the objective reality of moral values will be based on premises that are less obvious than the existence of objective moral values themselves.” – Louise Antony Atheist Philosopher
  • 9. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause Defining Terms • Objective: independent of opinion (e.g. if 51% of the population said rape was right, it would still be wrong). • Values: whether something is good or bad; a description of worth. • Duties: indicates an oughtness of action; whether an act is obligatory.
  • 10. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause Key Ingredients for Objective Moral Values/Duties 1. A Standard – provides a measure of good/bad, right/wrong. 2. An Authority – someone/thing that has the right to impose the standard and enforce adherence.
  • 11. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause “A man does not call a line crooked unless he has some idea of a straight line.” – C. S. Lewis
  • 12. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause A Key Distinction • There is a distinction between the source of objective moral values and duties and how we come to know them. • The first is an ontological (source/origin) question. • The second is an epistemological (knowledge) question.
  • 13. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause 1. The universe 2. Society/culture 3. The individual 4. A transcendent Creator The Possible Sources of Objective Moral Values/Duties
  • 14. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause Examining the OptionsWhat is the Source of Objective Moral Values and Duties?
  • 15. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause From the Universe? “A man said to the Universe, Sir, I exist! Nevertheless, replied the Universe, That fact has not created in me The slightest feeling of obligation.” - Stephen Crane
  • 16. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause From the Universe? • From a cause/effect standpoint, an effect must represent its cause in essence/nature. • How can an amoral, impersonal, meaningless and purposeless universe accidentally create personal moral beings who are obsessed with meaning and purpose?
  • 17. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause “Life has no design, no purpose, no evil and no good, nothing but blind pitiless indifference” – Richard Dawkins
  • 18. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause “When Darwin deduced the theory of natural selection to explain the adaptations in which he had previously seen the handiwork of God, he knew that he was committing cultural murder. He understood immediately that if natural selection explained adaptations, and evolution by descent were true, then the argument from design was dead and all that went with it, namely the existence of a personal god, free will, life after death, immutable moral laws, and ultimate meaning in life.” – William Provine
  • 19. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause From Culture? • In Kenya, the practice of “beading” is carried out. A close family relative of a young girl places a strand of beads around the young girl’s neck. • This effectively is a temporary engagement and the relative can now have sexual relations with her. • Some girls are “beaded” when they are six years old. • Many young girls get pregnant and either have abortions or kill their babies at birth. • When they reach adulthood, the girls will marry outside of their village, but taboo dictates the girls will never be able to marry if they keep their babies resulting from beading. • Is beading right or wrong…?
  • 20. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause If Culture is the Source of Objective Morals/Duties Then… • Widow burning can be morally acceptable… • Cannibalism can be morally acceptable… • Murder can be morally acceptable… • Unforgiveness can be morally acceptable… • Rape can be morally acceptable… • Gratuitously torturing innocent babies can be morally acceptable…
  • 21. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause From Culture? • During the trials at Nuremberg, the Nazi defense attorneys argued that Hitler’s soldiers who were on trial were only following the orders of their society and should therefore not be held accountable. • A judge countered that argument with the question, “But sir, is there not a law above our laws?” • We need an ultimate authority to appeal to in matters that transcend history and culture/society.
  • 22. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause From Culture? • What/who is mankind morally obligated to? Real moral obligation exists, but to whom? • Consider the issue of the “Reformer’s Dilemma”. How can a culture ever be positively influenced from the outside if the culture is the determiner of good and evil?
  • 23. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause From the Individual? • How do you decide between differing moral opinions if each individual is the ultimate decision maker of what is good and bad? • How does the statement “For me, rape is wrong, but it might be OK to you” sound? • With individuals, everything boils down to emotion and emotive responses to morals without moral global absolutes.
  • 24. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause From the Individual? In his debate with the atheist Bertrand Russell, the Jesuit and philosopher Frederick Copleston looked at Russell and asked, “Lord Russell, do you believe in good and bad?” Russell replied, “Yes”. Copleston continued, “How do you differentiate between good and bad?” Russell replied, “The same way I differentiate between blue and green or yellow and green.” Copleston then said, “Wait a minute, you differentiate between yellow and green by seeing don’t you?” Russell said, “Yes”. So Copleston challenged him by asking, “How do you differentiate between good and bad?” Russell replied, “I differentiate on those matters on the basis of my feelings, what else?”
  • 25. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause People May Espouse Relativism But They Demand Absolutes • Watching how people react to being ‘wronged’ proves they want and recognize absolute morality. • Steal from a relativist; let them be the victim of false advertising; watch how they respond when their spouse is relatively faithful to them vs. absolutely faithful, and the reaction showcases the recognition of absolute morality.
  • 26. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause “You are right in speaking of the moral foundations of science, but you cannot turn round and speak of the scientific foundations of morality.” – Albert Einstein What About Science?
  • 27. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause “The moral landscape is a space of real and potential outcomes whose peaks correspond to heights of potential well being and whose valleys represent the deepest possible suffering. . . . Questions about values are really questions about the well being of conscious creatures.” – Sam Harris What About Science?
  • 28. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause Why Harris’Attempt Fails • Harris redefines good to be “the flourishing/well-being of conscious creatures”. • Harris admits in his book that it is possible that the peak of the “moral landscape” could be occupied by flourishing rapists, murderers, and thieves. • So he admits it’s possible that goodness and creaturely well-being are not identical. • Therefore, Harris’ moral theory collapses.
  • 29. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause 1. The universe 2. Society/culture 3. The individual 4. A transcendent Creator Where Does This Leave Us?
  • 30. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause The Moral Argument for GodWhy a Transcendent Creator is Needed for Objective Moral Values and Duties.
  • 31. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause One Moral Argument for God • Laws imply a Law Giver. • There is an objective Moral Law. • Therefore, there is a Moral Law Giver.
  • 32. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause Another Moral Argument for God • If God does not exist, objective moral values and duties do not exist. • Objective moral values and duties exist. • Therefore, God exists.
  • 33. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause “We might well argue that objective intrinsically prescriptive features supervenient upon natural ones constitute so odd a cluster of qualities and relations that they are unlikely to have arisen in the ordinary course of events without an all-powerful God to create them.” – J. L Mackie Atheist Philosopher
  • 34. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause The Atheist Dilemma • If there’s such a thing as evil, you must assume there’s such a thing as good. • If you assume there’s such a thing as good, you assume there’s such a thing as an absolute and unchanging moral law on the basis of which to differentiate between good and evil. • If you assume there’s such a thing as an absolute moral law, you must posit an absolute moral law giver, but that would be God – the one whom the atheist is trying to disprove. • So now rewind: if there’s not a moral law giver, there’s no moral law. If there’s no moral law, there’s no good. If there’s no good, there’s no evil.
  • 35. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause What About the Euthyphro Dilemma? • Is something good because God approves it, or does God approve something because it’s good? • The first makes God arbitrary. • The second makes ‘good’ independent of God.
  • 36. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause Solving the Euthyphro Dilemma • God is the greatest possible being. • God’s nature is what grounds absolute moral right/wrong. • God has no obligations to anything outside of Himself. • He simply acts and what he naturally does is good because it comes from His nature/essence.
  • 37. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause ConclusionsFinal Thoughts
  • 38. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause The Source of Objective Moral Values and Duties • God provides the only objective standard for moral values. • God provides the only transcendent authority for enforcing the “oughtness” of moral duties.
  • 39. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause For More Information/Presentations www.powerpointapologist.org www.confidentchristians.org
  • 40. The Essentials of Apologetics – Why God: A Moral Cause For More Apologetics Resources www.apologetics315.com
  • 41. H o p e ForThe Hurting A Study in 1 Peter www.confidentchristians.org Why God…? A Moral Cause

Editor's Notes

  • #4: http://goo.gl/SGBvg
  • #12: http://goo.gl/SGBvg
  • #20: http://www.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/africa/05/11/kenya.children.beading/index.html?hpt=P1&iref=NS1
  • #27: http://goo.gl/SGBvg