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OK. You believe in God. Let me press you a bit here.
Defend your belief. Prove to me that there is a God. You
philosophy majors know there are several options (and the rest of
us know that this could become really, really boring really,
really quickly - I'll try to make this fast to keep that from
happening). Philosophers, if you want to show off, you can spout
off the big names for the arguments: there is the
"Cosmological," the "Teleological," the "Anthropological," and
the "Ontological."(3) No need to get the spelling - no test
afterwards - but it may help you to know and understand what the
names signify.
Start with the easiest, the Cosmological argument. The root
word helps us - cosmos - the universe. Just look at the whole
universe and ask this simple question: "How come?" Birds, bees,
rocks, clouds, stars, atmosphere - here they all are. How come?
How did they get here? This argument states that this all must
be accounted for by some cause equal to the task of bringing it
into existence and keeping it going. The Cosmological argument
insists the answer must be GOD.
The Teleological argument begins with its Greek root meaning
"complete" and looks at the universe a little more closely and
sees its intricate and amazing design. We look at the structure
of a leaf, the growth of a seed, the power of capillary
attraction, the stars in their course. Design and purpose seem
in interrelated in everything about us. Infinite design demands
an infinite Designer. Does a watch "just happen" without a
watchmaker? As has been asked many times: How long would it take
ten thousand monkeys hammering on ten thousand typewriters (and
monkeys and typewriters would have to be accounted for first) to
"just happen" to write the plays of Shakespeare? The
Teleological argument insists that this mind behind it all is
GOD.
Of course, one of the most amazing designs in the universe
is the human being - anthropos in Greek. Thus, the
Anthropological argument. Humanity involves personhood and has
what we call personality; could the human person come from an
impersonal source? Humanity is creative in so many ways; was the
source of existence UNcreative? Are Bach and Beethoven, DaVinci
and Michelangelo the accidental by-products of an accidental
process that began when the primordial slime (wherever that came
from) accidentally gathered together to produce the first living
cell? The Anthropological argument says NO, the source of this
must have been GOD.
Finally, the Ontological argument which points to
perfection. Several forms of the argument have appeared in the
history of thought, but that of Descartes is perhaps the
clearest. Descartes raises the question as to where this idea of
perfection comes from. It cannot be produced from the universe
that has in it many imperfections. It cannot come from the
person who is demonstrably imperfect; the idea of perfection is
actually the person's ideal for him- or herself. Whence this
idea, if not from humanity or from the external world? Must be
from another source; the idea has been implanted by some perfect
one. This could only be God.
Four big arguments. If you were not convinced of the
existence of God before, do any of those prove it beyond a
reasonable doubt for you now? I doubt it. The truth is NO
argument can PROVE the existence of God. But for most folks,
there is no need for proof anyway. According to all the surveys
in our own nation, year in and year out, 95% of American adults
believe in a god of some sort. The name might be different from
one person to the next, but there is no need to prove God's
existence.
That also happens to be the position of scripture. Nowhere
does the Bible ever offer proof about the existence of God. It
is just a GIVEN. We accept it. Faith. Go back to the first
words of Genesis. At the beginning of the creation story we
read, "In the beginning, God..." For those famous folks whose
names are enshrined in Faith's Hall of Fame, it was bedrock:
"without faith it is impossible to please God, for whoever would
approach him must BELIEVE that HE EXISTS and that he rewards
those who seek him." For the Bible, God always was, always is,
and always will be. No argument. That is just the way it is!
So what about this God who IS? As we say, 95% of us do not
doubt God's existence, but we do differ on what kind of God we
believe in. You, no doubt, have met some of the contemporary
caricatures that attempt to pass for God. One writer has
identified a half-dozen of them.(4) You may have more:
Do those sound familiar? You may have thought of some
others as we went through the list. Suffice it to say that none
of them adequately reflects the God we meet in scripture, and,
for that matter, no description would ever be adequate anyway, no
matter how orthodox. Remember this: no matter what we say about
God, it will never be enough. Listen to that again: no matter
what we say about God, it will never be enough. One more time:
no matter what we say about God, it will never be enough. The
God of heaven is beyond our human descriptions.
Perhaps that is good. I read this week of a little boy who
wanted to meet God. He knew it was a long trip to where God
lived, so he packed his suitcase with Twinkies and a six-pack of
root beer and he started his journey.
When he had gone about three blocks, he met an old woman.
She was sitting in the park just staring at some pigeons. The
boy sat down next to her and opened his suitcase. He was about
to take a drink from his root beer when he noticed that the old
lady looked hungry, so he offered her a Twinkie. She gratefully
accepted it and smiled at him. Her smile was so pretty that the
boy wanted to see it again, so he offered her a root beer. Once
again she smiled at him. The boy was delighted!
They sat there all afternoon eating and smiling, but they
never said a word. As it began to grow dark, the boy realized
how tired he was and he got up to leave. He turned around, ran
back to the old woman and gave her a hug. She gave him her
biggest smile ever.
When he opened the door to his own house a short time later,
his mother was surprised by the look of joy on his face. She
asked him, "What did you do today that made you so happy?"
He replied, "I had lunch with God. You know what? She's
got the most beautiful smile I've ever seen!"
Meanwhile, the old woman, also radiant with joy, returned to
her home. Her son was stunned by the look of peace on her face
and he asked, "Mother, what did you do today that made you so
happy?"
She replied, "I ate Twinkies in the park with God. You
know, he's much younger looking than I expected."(5)
"I believe in God, the Father..." One brief aside here.
Some folks have trouble with the phrase, "God the Father." There
is the legitimate concern over the gender-specific language. But
as our new Presbyterian Catechism says,
My friend Carlos Wilton passes on a story of a five-year-old
boy who is trapped in a burning house.(7) The parents have gotten
all their children out but this one. There he stands, outlined
against a second-story window, surrounded by blinding smoke.
"Jump and I'll catch you," his father cries.
"But Daddy, I can't see you."
The father shouts back, "I can see you that's all that
matters. Jump!" The boy jumps right into the safety of his
father's arms.
"I believe in God, the Father..." Do you remember the point
I tried to hammer home last week in the sermon, "I Believe...?"
I insisted then, and I insist now, that what we believe
determines how we behave. In terms of today's subject, "I
believe in God, the Father..." that means we are saying something
MORE than I believe that God exists. The key here is that little
preposition that is so easy to overlook. I believe IN! That IN
is incredibly important.
Some examples. I can honestly say I used to believe in my
government...TRUST my government...to be straight and truthful
and to look out only for the good of all. Then came the Pentagon
Papers, Watergate, and so on, and I learned I could no longer
believe IN the government. Oh, I could believe that my
government existed - all I had to do was check my tax bill, but
believe IN them? No. Or our justice system. I used to believe
in that. But then I saw the police with Rodney King and saw that
justice depended upon your color, I heard the O. J. Simpson
verdict and saw that justice depended upon your bank account, I
watch the impeachment hearings and see that justice depends on
who has the votes. Do I believe IN the system? Do I TRUST the
system? Not any more.
Want to know something I DO believe IN? Christie [my wife]. I trust
her completely. I know she will never lie to me, cheat me, steal
from me, be unfaithful to me, and will unfailingly have my best
interest at heart. If I ask her advice, I know it will be the
best she can muster. If I ask her assistance, I know she will
offer anything she has. No wonder I love this woman more than my
own life! I BELIEVE IN HER! And that has an effect on the way I
live. I do my best to care for her, support her, encourage her.
I would not be unfaithful to her. I try never to disappoint her.
I would absolutely give my life for her. You see, what I believe
determines how I behave.
What does it mean to me to say, "I believe in God, the
Father...?" It means, "Yea, though I walk through the shadow of
the next seven days, I will fear nothing...for my God, this one
whom I have come to know in scripture and experience as one who
loves me and cares for me even more than Christie does, is with
me and has my best interests at heart. That is why I will try to
rely upon God's daily presence, to know God's will for my life,
and to do my level best to make that will my very own set of marching
orders.
"I believe in God, the Father..." Our closing word is for
those of you who, for one reason or another, have terrible
trouble saying that, and who wish that you might. How can a
person who does not believe in God gain that faith?
Jack Redhead(8) reminds us of that passage in Lewis Carroll's
novel, Through the Looking Glass, where the Queen tells Alice
that she is a hundred and one years, five months, and one day
old. "I can't believe that," says Alice.
"Can't you?" asks the Queen. "Try again, draw a long breath
and shut your eyes."
That does not work, does it? Faith in God does not come
from shutting your eyes to truth and trying to force yourself to
believe what is not so. I think the answer lies in a willingness
to being open.
Start with this. If you believe nothing more than that
there is a difference between right and wrong, your good sense
will tell you that God, if there is one, is on the side of what
you believe is right. As you consciously give yourself to the
right over the wrong, the God who is there will come to meet you.
That is what Jesus meant when his enemies questioned his right to
teach, and he said, "Anyone who resolves to do the will of God
will know..."(9) Whenever you are willing to do that much of the
will of the Highest which you know to be true, you WILL know
more. Then the time will come...and soon, I know it will...when
you too can stand up and, with heart and soul and mind and
strength, say, "I believe in God, the Father..."
Let us pray.
O God , we grateful for your presence and power in our
lives. Help our affirmation of faith to make in difference in
the way we live. We pray in the name of Jesus. Amen!
1. James 2:19 NIV 2. Psalm 14:1 3. Addison Leitch, Interpreting Basic Theology, (Great Neck, NY: Channel Press, 1961),
pp. 17-19 4. Dan Baumann, Dare to Believe, (Glendale, CA: Regal Books, 1977), pp. 35-36 5. Thomas G. Bailey, "An Afternoon in the Park," posted by Joe Parrish, via Ecunet,
"Bottomless Drawer," #237, 1/19/99 6. Question 11, Presbyterian Study Catechism, approved by the 210th General Assembly,
PCUSA, 1998 7. From an unpublished sermon by Carlos Wilton, "By The Light of His Glory," delivered
at Point Pleasant Presbyterian Church, Point Pleasant, NJ, February 18, 1996 8. John A. Redhead, Uncommon Common Sense, Volume III, The Apostles' Creed
(Greensboro, NC: Worth Family Foundation, 1997), pp. 44-45 9. John 7:17
Only creatures having bodies can be either male or
female. But God has no body, since by nature God is
Spirit. Holy Scripture reveals God as a living God
beyond all sexual distinctions. Scripture uses diverse
images for God, female as well as male.(6)
Then why do we keep the archaic language? Simply because it
continues to be helpful. It offers us a picture of God's
relationship with us (and remember, whatever we say about God, it
will never be enough)...a picture that conveys love and care that
is so special between parent and child.

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