Science & Faith—Are They At Odds? Part 1
By Brandon Anchant, Senior Apologetics Intern It is a widely held view that science and faith cannot coexist—that one cannot hold to an intellectual...
To be entirely modern (which very few of us are) is to believe in nothing. This is not to say it is to have no beliefs: the truly modern person may believe in almost anything, or even perhaps in everything, so long as all these beliefs rest securely upon a more fundamental and radical faith in the nothing–or better, in nothingness as such.
Modernity’s highest ideal–its special understanding of personal autonomy–requires us to place our trust in an original absence underlying all of reality, a fertile void in which all things are possible, from which arises no impediment to our wills, and before which we may consequently choose to make of ourselves what we choose.
We trust, that is to say, that there is no substantial criterion by which to judge our choices that stands higher than the unquestioned good of free choice itself, and that therefore all judgment, divine no less than human, is in some sense an infringement upon our freedom.
This is our primal ideology. In the most unadorned terms possible, the ethos of modernity is–to be perfectly precise–nihilism.
David Bentley Hart, Atheist Delusions: The Christian Revolution and Its Fashionable Enemies (Yale University Press, 2009), 20-21.
By Brandon Anchant, Senior Apologetics Intern It is a widely held view that science and faith cannot coexist—that one cannot hold to an intellectual...
Session Recordings & Handouts In this post, we're sharing the session recordings and handouts from our recent conference. In case you missed it, on March...
By Brandon Anchant, Intern I was speaking with my friend Ralph at the climbing gym where I work. He is a sixty-something Englishman with a rather spicy...