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David Stanley Ford

Path to Tower of Babel

By Paul Greenberg    Comments Comment on this article13
Published: October 21, 2009

The way to the Tower of Babel

What ever happened to all those books attacking God, or at least the idea of God? They were quite fashionable not long ago. The bookstores were full of atheists on a roll — Richard Dawkins, Christopher Hitchens, Sam Harris….

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They were all here a minute ago. Where'd they go? They seem to have disappeared, or at least abated. Isn't it time for some money-making, best-selling sequels?

Or is everybody just a little sick of all that? Or just plain bored. The whole, familiar genre could be called By God Possessed, for these evangelical atheists seemed gripped by an idea they could neither believe nor let go. He works in mysterious ways.

Just as depressing, a separate but equally polemical school arose in reaction, determined to prove the existence of God as you would a geometrical proposition. Like someone out to climb Mount Olympus with ropes and pulleys. There is no end to the making of books, as the Preacher warns in Ecclesiastes. And that was even before Kindle.

These super-salesmen on both sides of the aisle tended to approach God as a matter of fact, something to be proved or disproved. Faith isn't like that. It's something one has or one doesn't, one has experienced or not. It's something one acquires or loses, that waxes and wanes, not a problem in a logic course.

On the eve of this Yom Kippur, the Jewish Day of Atonement, the sabbath of sabbaths, I found myself in a simple little synagogue repeating the old prayers, unable to bear looking at the state my sodden soul had reached since last Yom Kippur. I couldn't even see it under all the stains, the resolutions unkept and even unmade, the pride and lust and 101 other of my favorite sins, the forgivenesses neither granted nor asked, and all I could do was repeat over and over, “Lord help me!” I was so far away.

And yet I came away at sundown the next day, when the gates are closed and court adjourned, with perfect confidence if not perfect faith. Because, don't tell anybody, the fix was in. The trial was a set-up. (Just between us, the Judge loves us. You can feel it.)

I took comfort in thinking of a once obscure German Jewish theologian, or maybe anti-theologian, early in the last century: Franz Rosenzweig. He was existentialist before there was such a word to describe his thoughts. His problem with theology was that it was always setting down rules and regulations for the conduct of God.

As a promising young student in the golden year 1913, Herr Rosenzweig had before him a great career in history, or law, or medicine, or whatever he wished to pursue. As was the fashion with enlightened youth in any age, he decided to leave the faith. He chose to bid it adieu by going to one last Yom Kippur service at a simple little Orthodox synagogue he found in Berlin.

But something happened to Franz Rosenzweig that night. Something he had the wisdom even then not to analyze. As he wrote a friend after that Yom Kippur service, he found it neither necessary nor possible to stop being a Jew. And that was all he said about it. Faith is not something that can be proven, only experienced.

Years later, long after he'd decided to leave the academy and make his house a house of study for any and all who came by, Franz Rosenzweig would compare faith to marriage, which is not just “the empty announcement that two persons have married, or the showing of the marriage certificate. … The reality cannot be communicated to a third person; it is no one's concern and yet it is the only thing that matters, and the objective statement of the fact of the marriage would be meaningless without this most private, incommunicable reality. It is exactly the same with what one experiences about God; it is incommunicable, and he who speaks of it makes himself ridiculous. Modesty must veil this aloneness-together. Yet everyone knows that though unutterable it is not a self-delusion (which a third person might well think it!). All that is needed to believe is — to undergo this experience.”

Here endeth the lesson.

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David Stanley Ford





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Laws (Ten Commandments) have always been required in society. The thing I do not understand is where were these laws B.C? They were there long before the ten commandments and this was not a starting point of understanding when one lone man changed society. People have always known right from wrong. If you place your hand in a flame it is probably going to be uncomfortable. Religion only causes dissention between differing views. If someone challenges the church watch how righeous the church responds.
scott - Oct 22, 2009 at 7:38 am
T scott- surely you jest! Lets look at the Ten commandments for instance, Thou shall not steal, people stole back then as they do today. Then there were also people that did good deeds as they do today. So what has changed, people committed adultry back then and they do today so human nature as a whole hasn't changed at all. Part of nature of the individual is to grow and become better the same as they did 2000 years ago and before. Is envy 2000 years ago different than envy of today. Look at Fbi Profilers that have studied crime history, they can tell you what a crook is going to do next after a series of crimes becuase of Human nature.
jeff, Harrah - Oct 22, 2009 at 4:59 am
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TScott. It really makes no difference what humans do. But God does not change to suit the humans. But actually I agree in part with Jeff. During the years that Christ walked on this earth and even before and after His time on earth some followed God and some did not. It is the same today.
BERT, HENRYETTA - Oct 21, 2009 at 9:33 pm
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Human nature doesn't evolve? maybe not you jeff, but I have evolved considerably in my life and have witnessed the same in others throughout my life not to mention the rest of the world. that's a good one there jeff. you were joking weren't you?
T Scott, Oklahoma City - Oct 21, 2009 at 8:47 pm
Faith or belief in God is the same as long ago and today, what some are missing is human nature doesn't evolve and human nature has been the same from the beginning until today and onward.
jeff, Harrah - Oct 21, 2009 at 7:03 pm
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The belief in Christ does not evolve. God sais He is the same today , yesterday and forever
BERT, HENRYETTA - Oct 21, 2009 at 5:44 pm
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As Sam Harris pointed out best... why is it that all bodies of knowledge have evolved over time EXCEPT for religion.

One other thing, many people are 'spiritual' without beleiving religious dogma or even anything like a god.
Concerned, Central Oklahoma - Oct 21, 2009 at 5:11 pm
I agree. Do not speak of personal experiences about God. He who speaks of it makes himself ridiculous.
scott - Oct 21, 2009 at 2:10 pm
Someone is going to have to explain the benifit to mankind from religion through history. To paraphrase the Pope, I see lots of violence and intolerance, unless you're a Unitarian. They seem all groovy.
David, Norman - Oct 21, 2009 at 12:47 pm
What is an OCD literalist?
Matt1, OKC - Oct 21, 2009 at 12:27 pm
Pretty sad when a "news" organization resorts to preaching about the virtues of belief in god.

I personally think belief in god is ridiculous and I'm not sure the benefits of religion outweigh the costs (might be the opposite). But I'm not offended by other people's beliefs. I just wish people would keep their religion out of politics. Faith is not an objective truth. You cannot prove that your faith is better or more right than any other faith. Therefore, it has no place in public policy. Public policy should be driven by objective facts, reason and logic. Faith is the exact opposite of objectivity, reason and logic.

I think the world will be a better place when people learn to keep their religion to themselves.
S - Oct 21, 2009 at 12:21 pm
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Atheists are still here, and arguably our numbers are growing, and Dawkins has indeed just released a new book "The greatest show on earth". The author of this article apparently doesn't make the effort to find the new books--there are many. And Stephen, it takes no energy to not believe in gods--u just don't. Just as it takes no energy to not be a stamp collector. How much energy does it take you to not believe in Thor, Zeus, Odin, Apollo, Mithras. As Twain put it, "Faith is believing what you know ain't so."
- Oct 21, 2009 at 8:10 am
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Interesting column, applying in its logic equally well to the fundamentalists on both sides of the equation. I've long thought it took just as much energy to be a committed atheist as to be a bible-thumping and OCD literalist, and to pretty much the same effect.
Stephen, Ada - Oct 21, 2009 at 6:13 am

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