by Patrick J.
Buchanan
For two millennia, the birth
of Christ has been seen as the greatest event in world history. The moment
Jesus was born in a stable in Bethlehem, God became man, and eternal salvation
became possible.
This date has been the
separation point of mankind’s time on earth, with B.C. designating the era
before Christ, and A.D., anno domino, in the Year of the Lord, the years after.
And how stands Christianity today?
“Christianity is in danger of
being wiped out in its biblical heartlands,” says the British think tank
Civitas.
In Iraq, Syria, Egypt,
Ethiopia and Nigeria, Christians face persecution and pogroms. In Saudi Arabia
and Afghanistan, conversion is a capital offense. In a century, two-thirds of
all the Christians have vanished from the Islamic world.
In China, Christianity is seen
as a subversive ideology of the West to undermine the regime.
In Europe, a century ago,
British and German soldiers came out of the trenches to meet in no-man’s land
to sing Christmas carols and exchange gifts. It did not happen in 1915, or ever
again.
In the century since, all the
Western empires have vanished. All of their armies and navies have melted away.
All have lost their Christian faith. All have seen their birthrates plummet.
All their nations are aging, shrinking and dying, and all are witnessing
invasions from formerly subject peoples and lands.
In America, too, the decline
of Christianity proceeds.
While conservatives believe
that culture determines politics, liberals understand politics can change
culture.
The systematic purging of
Christian teachings and symbols from our public schools and public square has
produced a growing population—20 percent of the nation, 30 percent of the
young—who answer “none” when asked about their religious beliefs and
affiliations.
In the lead essay in the Book
Review of Sunday’s New York Times, Paul Elie writes of our
“post-Christian” fiction, where writers with “Christian convictions” like
Walker Percy and Flannery O’Connor are a lost tribe.
“Where has the novel of belief
gone?” he asks.
Americans understand why Mao’s
atheist heirs who have lost their Marxist-Leninist faith and militants
Islamists fear and detest the rival belief system of Christianity. But do they
understand the animus that lies behind the assault on their faith here at home?
In a recent issue of New
Oxford Review, Andrew Seddon (“The New Atheism: All the Rage”) describes a
“Reason Rally” in Washington, D.C., a “coming out” event sponsored by atheist
groups. Among the speakers was Oxford biologist Richard Dawkins, author of “The
God Delusion,” who claims that “faith is an evil precisely because it requires
no justification and brooks no argument.”
Christians have been infected
by a “God virus,” says Dawkins. They are no longer rational beings. Atheists
should treat them with derisory contempt. “Mock Them!” Dawkins shouted. “Ridicule
them! In public!”
In “The End of Faith,” atheist
Sam Harris wrote that “some propositions are so dangerous that it may even be
ethical to kill people.”
“Since the New Atheists
believe that religion is evil,” notes Seddon, “that it ‘poisons everything,’ in
(Christopher) Hitchens’ words—it doesn’t take much effort to see that Harris is
referring to religions and the people who follow them.”
Now since atheists are still
badly outnumbered in America and less well-armed than the God-and-Country boys,
and atheists believe this is the only life they have, atheist suggestions to
“kill people” of Christian belief is probably a threat Christians need not take
too seriously.
With reference to Dawkins’
view that the Christian faith “requires no justification and brooks no
argument,” Seddon makes a salient point.
While undeniable that
Christianity entails a belief in the supernatural, the miraculous—God became
man that first Christmas, Christ raised people from the dead, rose himself on
the first Easter Sunday and ascended into heaven 40 days later—consider what
atheists believe.
They believe that something
came out of nothing, that reason came from irrationality, that a complex
universe and natural order came out of randomness and chaos, that consciousness
came from non-consciousness and that life emerged from non-life.
This is a bridge too far for
the Christian for whom faith and reason tell him that for all of this to have
been created from nothing is absurd; it presupposes a Creator.
Atheists believe, Seddon
writes, that “a multiverse (for which there is no experimental or observational
evidence) containing an inconceivably large number of universes spontaneously
created itself.”
Yet, Hitchens insists, “our
belief is not a belief.”
Nonsense. Atheism requires a
belief in the unbelievable.
Christians believe Christ
could raise people from the dead because he is God. That is faith. Atheists
believe life came out of non-life. That, too, is faith. They believe in what
their god, science, cannot demonstrate, replicate or prove. They believe in miracles
but cannot identify, produce or describe the miracle worker.
At Christmas, pray for
Hitchens, Harris, Dawkins and the other lost souls at that Reason Rally.
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