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May 16, 2012

Home > 2009 > DecemberChristianity Today, December, 2009
Contra Mundum
The Problem of Goodness
It's not just the problem of evil that baffles the secularist.




This time of year, good works are as plentiful as Christmas lights. The joyful sounds of Salvation Army bell-ringers are matched with the cheerful clink of change. The same person who cut you off in traffic last month may be ladling out soup at the local homeless shelter. Our favorite Christmas movies and stories are rife with examples of generosity: Ebenezer Scrooge buying the Cratchits a Christmas turkey twice the size of Tiny Tim, and George Bailey giving away his honeymoon money for the folks of Bedford Falls.

Every year I get a front-row seat to witness the amazing generosity of Christians participating in Prison Fellowship's Angel Tree program—purchasing gifts for hundreds of thousands of prisoners' children and delivering them along with the Good News. While I'm always moved by the kindness of believers, quite frankly, I'm not surprised by it. Jesus called us to a life of good works. And at Christmas we are especially reminded of the generosity of God in providing his own Son to take on flesh for us. It stirs in us the desire to put flesh to our good works as well.

But it's the generosity of unbelievers that does at times take me aback. A recent book, Who Really Cares, by scholar Arthur C.Brooks, reveals that religious conservatives donate far more money to charitable causes than do secular liberals. Still, the fact that secularists can sometimes give quite generously, even self-sacrificially, is an undeniable fact—and one that is difficult to reconcile with the basic tenets of their worldview.

I was struck by this when attending a special-needs basketball game for my autistic grandson, Max. He played alongside about 30 children who suffered from autism, Down syndrome, cerebral palsy, and other conditions. The gym was filled not just with parents, but also with volunteers and coaches who donate their time for these kids on a regular basis. But why are they doing this?

How could anyone look at a gymnasium like that and accept Darwin's theory of natural selection? According to his theory, so-called weaker ones like these children would have been eliminated. Survival of the species is the highest good. What Darwinism has never been able to account for is human kindness or altruism.

While Darwin himself never acknowledged the difficulty posed by altruism, his acolytes have. Their responses have led to the creation of the discipline known variously as "evolutionary psychology" or "sociobiology."

But the evolutionary explanation for altruism is really just selfishness in disguise. According to this reasoning, when a volunteer offers to give his time to help a child like Max, it's not goodness—it's a kind of enlightened self-interest. We do what we perceive as good for others so that they, in turn, might do the same for us, thus increasing both of our chances of survival.

Because we are created in the image of God, we not only don't have to struggle against our neighbors, we also can love them and even die for them.

But that, of course, isn't altruism at all. Perhaps you could call it "cooperation." But in the Darwinian model, true altruism has no place.

In contrast, Christians understand that while all of us are born with the capacity for selfishness and cruelty, we are also capable of caring for others. Because we are created in the image of God, we not only don't have to struggle against our neighbors for survival, we also can love them and even willingly die for them.

Recent advances in neurobiology show that the impulse toward altruism may even be hardwired. For instance, practically from birth a baby who hears the cry of another baby will cry also. However, when scientists play a recording of the sound of that child's own cry, rarely will the baby respond. By about 14 months, not only will that infant cry when he hears another infant crying, he will also try to soothe the other child in some way.





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Displaying 1–5 of 20 comments

Paul M. Dubuc

December 28, 2009  12:17pm

The problem I have with Dawkins' "selfish gene" hypothesis for moral behavior is that even if some level of altruism is hard wired into us and some animals display altruistic behavior, no one would deny that modern human beings have the intellectual capacity to override their genetic predisposition for good behavior for the sake of self-interest. Evolutionary explanations are of little help in answering the question of why genocide, or even an individual case of murder, robbery or rape here or there is wrong and ought to be opposed or punished. As C. S. Lewis put it, "Now that I know that my impulse to serve posterity is just the same kind of thing as my fondness for cheese--now that its transcendental pretensions have been exposed for a sham--do you think I shall pay much attention to it? ... If we are to continue to make moral judgments (and whatever we say we shall in fact continue) then we must believe that the conscience of man is not a product of Nature."

H. D. Schmidt

December 26, 2009  1:55pm

Let me suggest to America especially, the Nation under God and its money says, In God We Trust, that if Jesus were to appear in person today, he would again, weep bitterly like he wept over the then chosen nation! Yes, simply and because, Christendom celebrates his birth; and yes, and becasue of such not having been mandated by Jesus himelf back then, it is, that it is now evermore nothing really, but pervasive and pagan materialism, performed in his name, by Christians and non-Christian alike. Yes, America yearly spends billions on gift giving while most closets are so full that it is impossible to close the doors and how about the garages and now the growing businees of personal storage? Than to add insult to injury, America is now the bellicose nation of all times "Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed". By Dwight D. Eisenhower. So?

Jan Fredericks

December 26, 2009  9:25am

So, why do we celebrate Jesus, the Prince of Peace by supporting factory farming with what we eat? If we really are serious about 'saving souls' then we would live by 1 Cor. 10:31-33 and someday we will be held accountable for every creature as Hebrews 4:13 states. God put animals in our care to protect, not for us to abuse and use. Hopefully, our Christian leaders will lead the way. God's Creatures Ministry

Ranger

December 25, 2009  5:46pm

The evolutionary psychology presented by some in the comments may explain "how" we come to have the urges to act morally, but if free will exists and if we live in a world sans God, then Colson wants to know "why" individuals should behave in this manner. Of course, this leads many secularists to deny free will altogether. Dawkins dilemma at the end of The God Delusion is that he wants to keep morality and meaning while rejected God. He struggles to find a grounding for morality, urging that his readers transcend their evolutionary origins and live as a social Christian. He wants them to reject the myth of religion, but keep the myths of morality and meaning...to be good for goodness sake. Religion is the creation of man and therefore must be rejected as false...but meaning and morality are also the creation of man...which we shouldn't reject because...crickets...so stop worrying and enjoy your life. As in many other areas the secularist worldview is totally incoherent.

Dale W

December 24, 2009  11:37am

Okay, I may have stretched a bit far with "intellectual objectivity" but it does seem this article is more objective and graceful than other writings by the author. I find it important for us to be able to be altruistic from the heart with even our enemies. Negatively characterizing another's altruism repels me from the judgments made by any of us arm chair quarterbacks. But, I am trying. If someone "screams" his view it is harder for me to listen.

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