Can I Be Good Without God?

Can we be good without God? No. 
In fact, on our own we wouldn’t even know what goodness is. But in and through Jesus we can be forgiven and accepted anyway.

Because God exists we know what goodness is. And through Jesus we can be forgiven and accepted even though we don’t do it.1

Introduction

Today I want to think about whether we can be good without God. 

At the outset I want to clarify what I am saying and what I’m not. I’m not saying that it is impossible to be good without believing in God. It is, of course, perfectly possible to do good without believing in God. But it is impossible to do good without God. That is to say, if God does not really exist then doing good is impossible.

This is an important point but it is obvious if we substitute ‘fly to New York’ for ‘doing good’ and ‘aeroplanes’ for ‘God’.

It is perfectly possible to fly from London to New York without believing in aeroplanes. Believing in the aeroplane is irrelevant to your ability to rely on it and let it transport you. You might be unconscious for the whole flight. You might be mad and imagine that you are flapping your arms the whole way. 

However, it is impossible to fly from London to New York without aeroplanes. In the whole history of humanity until the invention of the plane, noone managed it because it could not be done.

I am arguing that while it is perfectly possible to do good without believing in God, it is impossible to do good if God does not exist.

My argument has three parts:

First, that morality – good and bad/right and wrong – is real. This is what I call the ‘moral law’.

Second, that the moral law’s reality depends on God or someone like him existing.

Third, that it is Jesus who shows us truly what the content of the moral law is.

  1. The Moral Law is Real

In Romans 2, St Paul argues that there is a moral law – a sense of right and wrong – and that deep down everyone knows this even without being told. 

To be plain, what I mean is that right and wrong are real things. They aren’t just questions of taste – like whether you prefer chocolate or vanilla ice-cream. Rather they exist independently of us and over us.

That is how we speak – how we argue – by appealing to principles that are above us. We assume that there is a moral law at work in the universe and that everyone ought to obey it.

It is fashionable to ignore this and deride it, particularly on the left. There is a great temptation to say that there is no such thing as objective morality that ought to be known and shared by others. Yet, the funny thing is that even those who argue for this position in one moment, then appeal to morality in the next. 

The man may say there is no moral reason people should keep their promises. But if you try and break a promise to him, he protests that you are not being fair. Or he tries to justify breaking his own promise by some other factor that means he hadn’t really broken the moral law at all. 

This was brought home to me when I studied legal philosophy at University. My teacher, a brilliant legal philosopher called Nigel Simmonds, knew that there were lots of smarmy undergrads who would object that right and wrong were not real. He offered to debate the point. But only with someone who really believed that the transatlantic slave trade was fine. Unsurprisingly, no-one argued the point. Everyone knows right and wrong are real things and those who say they are not are just playing games.

It is not an objection that different societies have different moralities. They differ in the way it works out (who we should be unselfish towards) but they always agree you should be unselfish to someone. They agree that you cannot kill whom you please but disagree about the precise way of working that out.

Here I am making a limited point. I’m not arguing that every culture, everywhere has agreed on right and wrong. They plainly haven’t. But they do all agree that there is something called right and wrong. They all agree that there are things that we shouldn’t do, not just because they are inefficient or hurt me. But because they are wrong even if they benefit me or enable me to get what I want.

This is the universal experience of humanity, even those who protest it.

Before moving on, we should note that we all break the moral law. We know it. That is why we feel guilty or ashamed at times. Noone has to tell us to feel that way; often no one knows what we have done. We can try to dampen down that feeling by making an excuse or blaming someone else. 

Ultimately, however, even our excuses demonstrate that we feel there is something we need to excuse. We know that there is a moral law. And we know that we break it.

  1. The moral law depends upon God

So the moral law is real. There is a sense of ‘ought’ that every human being shares and which governs the way they behave.

But what lies behind it?

There are basically only two explanations for existence.

The first is materialism. In this view, everything comes down to matter bouncing off itself and colliding with the world around it. The materialist believes that matter and space have always existed. Noone knows why, what caused them, and any question like that should not be asked because it is difficult to answer.

The matter bounced against other matter until, over time, by a mindbogglingly unlikely series of accidents, governed by the operation of laws (which came from nowhere and were caused by no-one but which are nevertheless extremely powerful), the matter rearranged itself into creatures that we call humans. On this view there is no such thing as a ‘mind’, ‘thoughts’ or ‘morality’. Only stuff. There is nothing fundamentally different between a man and a mountain except the arrangement of matter.

The other view is a religious view. 

On this view the universe was caused by a mind that chose to make it. The religious view argues that this great mind thinks about things, cares about things and has a purpose for the universe he created. Its laws are perfectly explicable because they are made by a lawgiver. It worked to produce creatures that think just as it thinks. 

The religious explanation accepts that the Creator works through physical processes. It accepts that stuff changes because it hits other stuff. 

The key difference is that for the religious explanation of existence, there is such a thing as mind and morals. Indeed, they are the most fundamental reality.

These views have both always been present in humanity. 

The argument can’t be settled by science because science does not and cannot address any of these questions. All science does is tell you what is physically happening. It doesn’t tell you what is behind it anymore than a TV replay can tell you conclusively why a football manager picked a player or waited to make a substitution.

Now that doesn’t mean that we cannot answer the question.  We have some information that helps us. 

We know that human beings universally experience themselves and the world around them as if minds and morality are real. 

In every place at every time people have behaved as if the moral law is real, even if they have disagreed about exactly what it means. Everyone knows there is something they ought to do and that sometimes they do not do it.

Let me put it more plainly. We know from our own experience and the experiences of every other person that the moral law is real. In the only place we could expect to find evidence that minds and morals are real, we find evidence that they are.

We find that we know that something or somebody wants us to behave in a certain way and that at times we don’t. This only makes sense if there is something directing me and everyone else. 

What is more, this is very much like a mind. Matter cannot give us a manual. Atoms cannot give advice. Only a person can do that.

And so we find that we have arrived at a second point in our argument.

There is such a thing as the moral law.

Behind the moral law must be a mind, a lawgiver. This is what we call God.

  1. Jesus

Everything we have said so far points to the idea that there is a God. It is almost impossible satisfactorily to account for the way human beings experience the world – which is the thing in the universe we have best evidence for – without God. 

We should note that this is a vision of God that is uncompromising and strong. The moral law is absolute – it tells you to do whatever is right, however hard it is to do. The mind behind the universe must not just be a bit good. Our experience suggests that he must be absolutely good. And that is terrifying.

We know three things.

First, we know there is a law because we all experience its effects. 

Second, we know that because there is a law, there is a law-giver. There is no other satisfactory explanation for its existence.

And third, we know that we break that law. And the universal experience of laws is that breaking them has consequences. This isn’t comfortable. But it is true. And truth is, at the end of the day, the most important thing.

So what do we do about it? What is the truth about this moral law? And how do we fix the problem of our breaking it? This is where Jesus comes in.

Christians don’t believe that everyone else in the world is completely wrong in their beliefs about the universe. 

Atheists believe that they are completely right and everyone else completely wrong. Christians are more generous. We believe that there is usually some echo of the truth in every culture and religion. It is there, a story that keeps being told, an intuition that can’t be shaken off. It is like everyone has had a dream they know was true but they can’t quite remember.

Now, to be clear, where other belief systems differ from Christianity, we believe that it is right and they are wrong. But there is something of God remaining everywhere. And Jesus fulfils and makes known to us this God. 

More than that, he takes the consequences of our breach of the moral law, of our continual failure to do what we know is right. 

Christians believe that in Jesus, God became one of us. 

In his teaching we hear the moral law that all societies know in part explained to us perfectly. To love one’s enemies, to care for the poor, to refuse revenge, to love and honour one’s spouse, to forgive. In these words we find the summation of the human moral project. Noone has improved on it. Those who have tried – like Marx or the Communists – have only succeeded in causing immeasurable damage.

Wherever Jesus’ message has gone, life is better. It improves the position of women, of children, of minorities. It is the foundation of modern legal systems protecting the oppressed, of the modern scientific method, of human rights, of the welfare state.

Jesus’ teaching is the supreme and purest explanation of the moral law.

In his life we see it lived out. A life lived for others, without grasping riches, healing the sick, teaching the poor, accepting the stranger, purifying the unclean, forgiving the unrighteous, challenging the strong, dying for his friends.

Jesus’ life is the supreme and purest demonstration of the moral law.

And in his death and resurrection he takes our failure to do what we know we should and he bears its consequences. His infinite goodness, his moral perfection, is swapped with our failure. Every breach of the law has a consequence. And he took mine.

In its place he offered me his perfect obedience. It is this that brings us back into a right relationship with the lawgiver. The breach is repaired and we are made right with him.

This is the distinctive claim of Christianity. And it is really good news.

Conclusion

So can you be good without God? No. 

In fact, on our own we cannot be good at all.

But in and through Jesus we can be forgiven and accepted anyway.

  1. In preparing this blog I am almost completely dependent not only on the Bible but on CS Lewis’ Mere Christianity. You need to read this. It’s one of the most influential books of the last 200 years. If you are wondering about Christianity, even if you are not sure and think you might not believe, you should read this book. ↩︎

Is Jesus True for Everyone?

Jesus is true for everyone. And that’s really good news.

Christianity is what is called a missionary faith. We are people with purpose – to bring the whole world to Jesus and to enable people to know him. We are explicit about it. We want to help people to convert.

This idea makes some people uncomfortable. In fact, for the reasons I’m going to explain, it not only makes sense, it is good. 

I’m not going to extract loads of Bible verses. But you might want to read these passages if you want to see some of the Scriptural background to what I’m saying.

  1. Christianity claims to be the truth.

First, we need to see that Christians make some profound claims about Jesus.

Jesus himself claimed to be one with God – his perfect representation on earth. That is what he is saying in the reading we heard from John’s gospel – when you look at Jesus, you see God.

That isn’t something later Christians made up. It goes right back to the beginning. In Colossians, written right at the start, Paul claims that God fully dwells in Jesus.

That doesn’t mean that Jesus is the only thing that tells us anything about God. We can learn something about him in lots of places – creation, culture, beauty, even the mathematical laws of science reveal the brilliant mind of God.

But it is in Jesus that we see God clearly, and fully.

More than that, Jesus is the only way to God. Everyone needs Jesus and it is only through Jesus that human beings can be forgiven their sin, healed, and receive eternal life. Everyone who is saved will be saved through Christ.

Again, these ideas are central to who Jesus claims to be. 

  1. Why This Makes Sense

Given that this is what we believe, it makes complete sense to argue that Christianity is the true religion and that it is true for everyone.

Against this some people argue that all religions are simply different paths to God. It doesn’t matter what you believe; all roads lead to the same place in the end. Therefore, it is said, we shouldn’t try to convert one another.

This argument is, to put it as charitably as I can, absolute nonsense. Even worse, it is patronising and slightly racist nonsense.

First, it doesn’t understand the way facts work.

When you claim something as an objective fact, it is either true or false. Universal facts aren’t true for some people but not for others depending on how they feel. They just are.

Suppose someone said that Swindon Town are in the Premier League this year. And I said that they aren’t. It doesn’t matter how strongly he feels about it, it is a question of fact. It is either right or wrong.

That is either true or it is not. What it cannot be is true for some people but not for others.

Everyone knows this but somehow forgets it when it comes to questions of faith.

That brings me to the second point: it doesn’t understand how religions work.

Christianity and other faiths make truth claims. They are at least as much about facts as feelings.

Christianity makes claims about the true nature of the universe. It claims certain facts to be true: that there is one God, that Jesus is his Son, that he did die and then he rose again. Moreover, it is through him that people are saved.

Christian theologians and evangelists support this arguments by appealing to philosophy (arguments about why it is sensible to believe in God), human experience (the desire to love and be loved), and history (the evidence for the life, death and resurrection of Jesus).

Muslims, by contrast, believe that Allah has no Son, that Jesus was not really divine, that he did not really die and that he did not rise from the dead. They don’t believe that people are forgiven by trusting in Jesus.

These are truth claims about the nature of reality and history. And they directly contradict Christianity. 

Christianity and Islam cannot both be true. They contradict one another. Just like the earth cannot both be a globe floating in space and a flat desert carried on the backs of a giant turtle.

That isn’t to be critical of Islam or any other religion. Quite the opposite. It is to take them seriously. 

By contrast the person who seems to love all religions equally actually despises and patronises each of them.

It is nonsense to suggest that they are just different ways of saying the same thing. 

Nor is it arrogant to suggest that if one is right, the other is wrong – it is simply reality.

  1. It is Good to Try to Convert Each Other

Still, maybe it is bad to try and persuade people to change their religion.

This argument sounds kind. But it is also really bad:

It treats people like children who don’t have the ability or the right to make their own decisions. More than that, it actually leaves them in danger. Finally it ignores and treats as unworthy of respect the stories of those who have decided to change religion, even in terribly difficult circumstances.

Trying to persuade someone to change their mind about something important is both a mark of respect and, if it is because you want their good, an act of love.

We persuade people of important things because we think they are able to make decisions for themselves. It is a mark of our respect for them. They don’t need to be coddled or wrapped in cotton-wool in case an idea upsets them. They are a real person, with their own mind and desires and eternal soul.

Moreover, we should try to convert them not just because we respect them but because we love them. If Christianity is true, then their eternal soul is dying from the inside out. They are in danger of eternal death. To try and prevent that is not disrespectful or unkind; it is a mark of profound love.

Finally, to believe in preaching the gospel and trying to bring people to Christ is to take account of the lives and stories of those who have given everything to follow Jesus and found profound joy and peace in it.

I could tell you of the 45 Ugandan martyrs who converted to Christianity. They were executed by the Ugandan king, Mwanga II, in 1880 when they refused to renounce Christ.

Or in 2015, of the 21 Egyptian Orthodox Christians who were kidnapped and executed by Islamic State for refusing to renounce Jesus. They died audibly praising his name.

Or of those I myself have baptised who have fled their homes and countries in the Middle East for the sake of choosing Jesus and are unable to return.

I could tell you story after story of men and women who have lost enormous amounts in order to gain Christ and consider it a brilliant trade. Christianity takes their stories, often from within marginalised and ignored communities seriously.

So what should we do about this?

  • Lean into Jesus and commit to him. The truth about Jesus is far better, more profound and more satisfying than we often remember. If you are a Christian, lean into your faith. Get to know it. It is very cool and deeply joyful.
  • Be humble, curious and prayerful with friends from other points of view. Evangelism is only morally good when we genuinely care about those we are going to; it is only effective when they understand and trust that we care about them.
  • As you listen, seek points of overlap to give away to share Jesus with them. Because you respect and love them, try to convert them. 

Jesus is true for everyone. And that’s really good news.

The Benefit of the Doubt

Doubt is not always bad. If we handle it in the right way, doubt can spur us on to a richer, more satisfying and deeper faith.

Doubt is not always bad. If we handle it in the right way, doubt can spur us on to a richer, more satisfying and deeper faith.

Everyone experiences doubt at some point in their lives. This can affect our relationships with each other. Drawing on his own counselling ministry and research, the Christian writer and philosopher, Gary Habermas, observes in his excellent Dealing with Doubt that ‘Doubts concerning the ideas or persons most important to us might be called an almost universal fact of life.’ 

This is true both for religious people and atheists, for matters of faith and any other area of life in which we have to deal with things of significance. 

CS Lewis reflected on his own experience of periods of doubt as both an atheist and a Christian:

‘Now that I am a Christian I do have moods in which the whole thing looks very improbable; but when I was an atheist I had moods in which Christianity looked terribly probable.’

Uncertainty is a part of human existence. That means that doubt is, too.

Doubt is not always bad. As we will see, Jesus doesn’t condemn it in the disciples. Moreover, if we handle them in the right way, periods of doubt can spur us on to a richer, more satisfying and deeper faith.

We should also note that doubt isn’t simple. We can be tempted to imagine that it is always an intellectual phenomenon. In reality, those involved in counselling people experiencing periods of doubt in different contexts have found that there are actually different types of doubt, each of which requires its own response.

In this passage we see Jesus’ response to three types of doubt.

  1. Doubt in the emotions
  2. Doubt in the mind
  3. Doubt in the will

Emotional Doubt

In Luke 24:36 Jesus’s first words to his disciples when he appears to them after his resurrection are ‘peace to you’

The first species of doubt is emotional. This is where doubt arises largely from our feelings rather than a particular intellectual problem. Habermas estimates that more than ⅔ of doubt he has come across in church is actually emotional.

Doubt can often seem to be about ideas when actually it is about feelings. 

This is a classic example. The disciples have been through a terrible trauma. They are utterly exhausted. They are also scared, probably angry, have been betrayed by their mate, and seen everything they believe in apparently crash around their ears.

They are having a very bad week.

In the midst of tiredness, hunger, and pain we can begin to doubt in a visceral way.

Lewis expresses it in this way:

Our faith in Christ waivers not so much when real arguments come against it as when it looks improbable–when the whole world takes on that desolate look which really tells us much more about the state of our passions and even our digestion than about reality.

When we experience this type of doubt we need to be healed, not persuaded. That is why Jesus just says: ‘Peace be to you.’

This healing has three parts:

  1. Physical:
    Get some sleep. Take some time off work if you are burnt out. Do something fun. Eat well.
    For example, I never take seriously anything I think after 10pm. It’s tiredness talking.
  2. Mental:
    If you are assailed by an idea you know to be false (like I’m too awful for God to love), identify the idea, name it, and challenge it with truth. Memorising Scripture is good for this.
  3. Spiritual:
    Learn to pray, particularly contemplative prayer. If you struggle to think of ways to pray, speak to me. 

Intellectual Doubt

Second, we can experience doubt in our minds. 

This is what is going on in Luke 24:37-39. The disciples are struggling to believe that someone really could rise from the dead. They can’t get their heads around it. So Jesus offers them evidence to explore.

Every thinking Christian at some point will have questions about the faith.

They might be about the reliability of the gospels: how do we actually know that Jesus lived and died and rose from the dead?

They might be about the existence of God: what arguments are there for believing that there is something more than the material world?

They might be about specific questions such as the problem of evil or reconciling scientific discoveries with the content of Scripture and the faith.

These questions are not new – they have been well canvassed by some of the most brilliant minds in the history of the world, from both science and philosophy. And many of those asking these questions end up as Christians.

So how do we deal with this type of doubt:

  1. Maintain a strong devotional life.
    Staying in the Scriptures, and have a regular pattern of prayer feeds our minds and our souls.

Lewis said:

…make sure that, if you have once accepted Christianity, then some of its main doctrines shall be deliberately held before your mind for some time every day. That is why daily prayers and religious reading and church-going are necessary parts of the Christian life. We have to be continually reminded of what we believe. Neither this belief nor any other will automatically remain alive in the mind. It must be fed.

  1. Look for answers.
    Jesus offers his disciples evidence for his claims. There is really, really good evidence for Christianity.
    The questions we have are ones that brilliant minds have considered (not least Lewis himself). If you are really struggling with doubt in your minds about a particular question, look into it.
  2. Be patient.
    None of us is that smart and we need to be patient if we don’t get everything right away. Some things are really difficult. God is really big. We are really small.
    That doesn’t mean don’t apply your mind. It does mean having a healthy humility about your capacity to reason to the answer on every question in your own time.

Doubt in the Will

The third type of doubt flows from the will.

This means that God is asking us to do something we don’t want to do. It is usually characterised by knowing the facts but not being willing to do the thing they seem to imply.

This is suggested by what Jesus says in Luke 24:46-49

By this stage the disciples know that Jesus is alive. The question is, are they going to go and tell anyone about him?

Types of challenge that can cause this species of doubt can include ethical problems (I really want to sleep with my boyfriend even though I know I shouldn’t), to come to church (I know I should go but I want to stay home) or missional (I know God wants me to do something for him but I don’t want to).

This type of challenge can lead to doubt. It isn’t a rational process: we rarely think ‘I don’t want to do [X]  so I don’t believe anymore’.

Rather it manifests itself in raising up small, ‘picky’ issues that on any objective view aren’t really relevant to a life of faith or in refusing to accept, or even really consider, any answers or explanations that are given to apparent problems. The dispeace or uncertainty therefore continues and nothing can touch it.

This happens because faith isn’t just a question of belief but of action. It implies a choice about what I will do – what Paul describes as the obedience of faith.

How do we address this type of doubt? Jesus’ response to the disciples suggests two things:

  1.  We need to exercise our wills.
    Ultimately only we can choose to follow Christ. By God’s grace, every one of us has that agency. We are treated like grown-ups.
    It can be hard, painful and require the support of friends. But the choice is ours. 
  2. We need the Holy Spirit.
    Christ knows that the task is too difficult for them to do on their own. It is too difficult even to begin on their own. I think that is not only because they need the power to do it. It is because they need the courage to choose it.
    This implies prayer. When we are facing a hard choice, we need to be those who come to Jesus and ask for the Spirit’s power to choose well. Or even to desire to choose well. Don’t underestimate the power that is available to one who seeks it.

Application

I’ve offered ideas about how we respond in each of these areas as we have gone along. Nevertheless, I want to close by offering some general principles for dealing with doubt.

  • Keep together.
    Doubt, whether in our minds, emotions or wills is not something to be ashamed of or gone through alone. Talk to people.
    Obviously, be careful who you speak to if it is personal. But this is part of why God puts us in churches.
    For example, if you are wrestling with the problem of evil or the relationship between Creation, evolution and Scripture, come and talk to a pastor or theologian. You can even email me. I won’t judge you; the chances are I have thought about the same things. 
    If stuff is hard emotionally and you are starting to doubt your faith, talk to a friend or life group. You might find something as simple as a hug, or crying with them, makes a huge difference. Or it might take much longer.
    But use each other.
  • Keep praying.
    Above all else, keep Christ before you. If you are wondering if it’s worth it, I would ask: why not? What are you losing by continuing to pray and to come to church? And often it is through prayer and worship that we find ourselves united to Christ in a way that relativises all our doubts.
  • Keep humble and be patient.
    Always remember how small even the smartest and most together of us are compared to God, the universe and the things we are dealing with.
    There is such a big temptation to want to rush to conclusions or take immediate action in response to every thought. I cannot stress how important it is to resist that temptation.
    Be patient. With yourself, with God, with the answers. Stuff takes time to heal, to find, to understand and to accept.

Doubt is not always bad. If we handle it in the right way, doubt can spur us on to a richer, more satisfying and deeper faith.

Is Christianity Good for Diversity?

Jesus creates, commands + delivers the most diverse movement in human history. If you value diversity, follow Jesus.

This year I’m writing a series of talks thinking about big questions that lots of us have about Christianity, Jesus and faith. Some of them are about how we can live well, some are doubts we often have but don’t know how to express.

In preparing these talks I have used a book that I whole-heartedly recommend: Rebecca McLaughlin’s, “10 Questions Every Teen Should Ask (And Answer) About Christianity”

Everything I’m saying, Rebecca said first and better. In fact, more than that, I want to urge you to get and read, particularly if you are under 25 (but also if you’re older than that).

Summary (TL;DR)

I always try to give a summary of what I’m going to say in one or two sentences so it is easy to remember. Here is today’s:

Jesus creates and delivers the most diverse movement in human history. If you value diversity, follow Jesus.

  1. Jesus Creates Diversity (or why believing in the dignity and equality of all depends on there being a Creator).

For Jews and Christians, the equality of every person, whatever their race, ethnicity or background is rooted in our belief that every person is made in the image of God. That is why they are worthy of respect.

To be made in God’s image doesn’t particularly mean to look like him physically. It means to be like him, to reflect something of his character and what he is like. Jesus did this perfectly. St Paul tells us that he was the exact image of the invisible God.

If you want to know what God is like, look at Jesus.

That applies perfectly to him but in a distorted and different way to every human being.

This belief is the foundation of all modern movements for equality, inclusion or justice.

Secular society takes for granted that everyone is of equal worth and dignity. But that idea comes from the Christian (and Jewish) commitment to the concept that everyone is made in God’s image.

This is a historical fact.

Historian Tom Holland explains that the idea of human rights – that human beings are equal and all of value arose specifically out of Christianity in Europe.

It was Christians, reflecting on the central idea of Genesis 1:27 (that humanity is made in God’s image), who argued for this. And in doing so they changed the world. Without that, and without the idea that human beings are made in God’s image, it wouldn’t have happened at all.

In case you think Tom (who isn’t himself a Christian) and I are making this up, we know what happens when you reject the idea that human beings are made in God’s image.

In 1859, Darwin published his book, commonly called On the Origin of Species. It’s full title was actually: On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life

In it Darwin specifically commented that:

The western nations of Europe … now so immeasurably surpass their former savage progenitors [that they] stand at the summit of civilisation … The civilised races of man will almost certainly exterminate, and replace the savage races through the world.1

This led to the Eugenics movement (getting rid of the weak), to scientific racism and then inevitably to Nazism and the attempt to exterminate the entire Jewish race.

This isn’t to reject evolution as a scientific idea. It may well be a brilliant description of a tool that God, as the great designer and Father of all, has used to shape the world around us. (For what it’s worth, I can quite see how the development of speciation fits with Genesis’ symbolic description of humanity formed from the earth and yet filled with the presence of God but I wouldn’t insist upon it).

But a solely material picture of human origins without God in the picture gives us no reason to believe in equality or dignity – and every reason to reject it.

Without the Christian commitment to the idea that God made us and that we all bear his image, then we are left with no reason to believe in equality, in dignity, in diversity at all.

This has been taken up by the contemporary historian, Yohann Harari. Harari rejects the idea that human beings are made in God’s image. He is a materialist. And that means he doesn’t believe in human rights or equality as anything other than a nice idea:

“The Americans got the idea of equality from Christianity, which argues that every person has a divinely created soul, and that all souls are equal before God. However, if we do not believe in the Christian myths about God, creation and souls, what does it mean that all people are ‘equal’?”2

We believe in equality, in diversity, in the rights of all, because we are Christians. 

Jesus creates and delivers the most diverse movement in human history. If you value diversity, follow Jesus.

  1. Jesus Delivers Diversity (or why Jesus is the root of movements for justice).

So it is a Judeo-Christian view of humanity, made in God’s image, which is the foundation of modern commitments to equality and human rights. It is the root of why we value diversity.

But what about Jesus?

Jesus’ Teaching

Jesus explicitly taught and demonstrated that his kingdom went beyond ethnic, racial or class boundaries. It was truly diverse.

The most famous example of this is the parable of the Good Samaritan. We tell this story as an illustration of how we should help one another. That is a part of its meaning. But it is more profound than that.

When Jesus said that the second greatest commandment was to ‘love your neighbour’, he was immediately challenged by another teacher: but who does that mean? The other guy wanted to keep his obligations narrow – I love them, because they are like me but I don’t need to love them because they are not. 

In particular, in that period there was an ongoing religious and racial conflict between the Jews and the Samaritans. They hated each other in part because the Samaritans were ethnically different.

Jesus’s parable is designed to cut through that. The one who shows mercy, who keeps the commandment, is not the pure, religious Jew. It is the unclean, alien Samaritan.

The whole parable is about welcoming in a stranger and recognising that all are equally in need of God’s grace and all can equally receive it. It becomes the ultimate anti-racist message.

Early Church Teaching

This wasn’t just Jesus. St Paul explained the logic of it in his earliest churches.

The gospel, St Paul explains, requires that we treat all people equally.

  • Everyone, without exception, is made in God’s image and is loved by him.
  • Everyone, without exception, sins and needs Jesus.
  • Everyone, without exception, is made a Christian only by trusting in Jesus. 

So no-one can be treated better or worse because of where they come from or their ethnic background or their social class.

This was taken up by the later Christian leaders. The church fathers always accorded equal rights to people irrespective of whether they were slaves or free. Augustine, a Bishop working in an African city and probably the third most influential man in Western history after Jesus and St Paul, denounced slavery as against God’s intentions in creation and tried to organise for the church to intercept slave traffickers and set the slaves free.

St Gregory of Nyssa, one of the great theologians of the church condemned the institution of slavery outright and called for its abolition.

The Horror and Rejection of Slavery

Now I want to acknowledge later on, some Christians were complicit in the horrors of American slavery.

Historians and sociologists Michael Emerson and Christian Smith have shown that that came about because men and women bowed to the pressure of their society to turn their back on the teachings of Jesus and the early church in favour of the apparent progress of their society. The dominant view, the view of the elites and of business, was that slavery was necessary to build their empires.

And so elements of the church bowed to the demand to get with the times, to move with the forces of progress, to change their faith to gain favour with society because it was apparently outmoded.3

My friends, in passing, never forget – never – that when we change the teachings of Jesus to keep up with the changing mores and values of society, the world is a worse place. Christian involvement in slavery was a progressive heresy. And the ones who overturned it were Evangelicals and Catholics who wanted to return to the old-faith, the faith of Jesus.

Even then the movement to stop the slave trade and liberate slaves will fight for equality was led by committed Christians who acted not in spite of their faith but because of it.

Time won’t permit me to name them all but here are just a few of the fathers of the anti-slavery, anti-racism movement who named Christ as the reason for their work:

  • William Wilberforce, the MP who campaigned to end the slave trade:
    “God Almighty has set before me two great objects, the suppression of the Slave Trade and the Reformation of Manners”.
  • Harriet Tubman, the escaped slave, nicknamed “Moses” for helping others to escape:
    “I always tole God, I’m gwine [going] to hole stiddy on you, an’ you’ve got to see me through.'”
  • Martin Luther King Jr, the civil rights campaigner:
    There are a lot of people that I find it difficult to like. I don’t like what they do to me. I don’t like what they say about me and other people. I don’t like their attitudes. I don’t like some of the things they’re doing. I don’t like them. But Jesus says love them. And love is greater than like. Love is understanding, redemptive goodwill for all men, so that you love everybody, because God loves them. You refuse to do anything that will defeat an individual, because you have agape in your soul.

In other words, where parts of the church gave into the temptation to go along with slavery, and even baptise it in Christian language, it was Jesus and the Christian tradition that led to the error being corrected and overthrown.

The Diversity of the Church

But did it work? Is the church actually a place for every race and ethnicity?

Yes.

According to the researchers at the Gordon Conwell Centre for the Study of Global Christianity, the elite, the cream of religion researchers, “[i]n 2000, 62% of Christians globally were of colour (1.2 billion). In 2015, 68% of Christians were of colour (1.6 billion).

In other words, Christianity is incredibly diverse. It could not be more so.

This isn’t just an abstract idea. We live in one of the whitest, most British parts of the UK. Yet a couple of years ago I counted the number of different nationalities in this church. We had people regularly attending from 15 different countries, from 4 different continents while our material is regularly read and watched on another 2. I’m working on Antarctica but it’s harder than you’d think to convert the Penguins.

That is just our little church. But it is typical of other, bigger churches too.

The average Anglican is a Sub-Saharan woman in her 30s.

God made diversity, Jesus commanded diversity, the Spirit delivered diversity in his Church.

Jesus creates and delivers the most diverse movement in human history. If you value diversity, follow Jesus.

Application

What does this mean for us as we try to know hope, show hope and share hope:

  • First, don’t feel challenged or threatened by contemporary criticisms of Christianity as intolerant or anti- diversity. They are founded on ignorance and reliant upon the values given them by the faith they despise.
  • Second, don’t form in-groups and out-groups. Everyone has a measure of dignity + value because of their Creator. Everyone is a potential brother or sister in Christ. There will be times they need to be resisted. It doesn’t mean being weak. But it does mean being merciful even when we have to be strong, playing the ball and not the man.
    As part of this we must be as clear as possible: discrimination or hatred on the basis of race or ethnicity is morally wrong, against Christian doctrine and has no place in the Church or society. For the avoidance of any doubt, that includes antisemitism.
  • Finally, think about those you find hardest to love or to include and set your heart to pray for them regularly. That might be someone with a different ethnicity. It might be someone with different politics or a different faith. It might be a bully.
    Pray for them because they need Jesus just like you need Jesus.

Jesus creates, commands + delivers the most diverse movement in human history. If you value diversity, follow Jesus.

  1. Charles Darwin, Origin of Species, Vol II, pp. 796-797 ↩︎
  2. Yuval Noah Harari, Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind (Vintage, 2015), p 109. ↩︎
  3. Michael O. Emerson and Christian Smith. Divided By Faith: Evangelical Religion and the Problem of Race in America. Oxford University Press, 2000, p.24] ↩︎

How Can I Live My Best Life?

If you want to live your best life, follow Jesus and go to church.

This year I’m writing a series of posts thinking about big questions that lots of us have about Christianity, Jesus and faith. Some of them are about how we can live well, some are doubts we often have but don’t know how to express.

I want to say at the outset that in preparing these posts I have extensively used a book that I want to recommend: Rebecca McLaughlin’s, “10 Questions Every Teen Should Ask (And Answer) About Christianity”

Rebecca and I were both studying at Cambridge at about the same time, although as far as I can remember we never met. That is one of my few regrets from those years because she is one of the most interesting and insightful Christian writers around and I would have loved to have got a headstart on hearing what she has to say.

Everything I’m saying, Rebecca said first and better. I want to urge you to get the book and read it, particularly if you are under 25 (but also if you’re older than that).

The Big Idea

I always try to give a summary of what I’m going to say in one or two sentences so it is easy to remember. Here is today’s:

If you want to live your best life, follow Jesus and go to church.

Readings

A lot of this post isn’t going to be me going through Bible passages. But there are some things that Jesus said that help us to think about this:

“[Jesus said], I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full.” (John 10:10)

“Then [Jesus] said to them all: “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me.” (Luke 9:23)

“This is how we know what love is: Jesus Christ laid down his life for us. And we ought to lay down our lives for our brothers and sisters.” (1 John 3:16)

“[St Paul taught] that by this kind of hard work we must help the weak, remembering the words the Lord Jesus himself said: ‘It is more blessed to give than to receive.’” (Acts 20:35)

[St Paul wrote] give thanks in all circumstances” (1 Thessalonians 5:18)

The rest of this post is going to be hard and fast and fun.

In the Old Testament there’s a phrase about getting ready: “gird your loins” – it literally means,  “put your big boy or girl pants on because it’s going to get real”.

So, here are 5 big reasons why living your best life means going to church and following Jesus. 

  1. Going to Church Makes You Happier and Healthier

In the past there were people, very clever people, who have argued that people would be better off without religion. Lots of people like that argument – it can feel comfortable to be told that you’re better off without God.

Unfortunately for them, but fortunately for us, we now have loads of evidence that the opposite is true. 

Tyler VanderWeele is the Professor of Epidemiology in the Departments of Epidemiology and Biostatistics at Harvard University. That basically means he is one of the elite guys working on public health in the world.

His research, together with 20 years of studies by others, shows that going to a religious service weekly gives you a significant chance of living longer, living more healthily, being less depressed, less prone to addiction, less likely to commit suicide, and generally more optimistic.

In case you were wondering if this applies to any regular group activity – like joining a football or golf club – it doesn’t. Studies show that doing something non-religous even with the same people every week doesn’t work the same way.

Professor VanderWeele describes going to church as “a miracle drug”.

This doesn’t mean Christian life is easy. Jesus himself suffered and said we would too at times. Globally 11 Christians are killed for their faith every day. But even with those trials, being in church is demonstrably the best way to live a healthy, happy and long life.

If you want to live your best life, follow Jesus and go to church.

  1. Love Adds Life

So being in church is good for you in every measurable way.

What about following what Jesus taught?

Christians believe that “God is love”. Jesus’ most famous command was that we should “love one another as I have loved you”.

That kind of love isn’t about feeling warm towards someone or being romantic with them. It means putting their interests above your own, even when it hurts. It means being willing to sacrifice for them. 

We know what love is by looking at Jesus. That’s why we fill our halls and homes and necks and clothes with crosses. Because love adds life. And this is how we know what love is.

Again, we find that Jesus’s teaching was right and 2,000 years ahead of modern thought.

Scientists at Harvard University studied happiness for 75 years. People thought that happiness would come chiefly from success, fame, or wealth. But it wasn’t any of these things that really made a difference. The thing that makes the biggest difference is having good relationships with friends and family. 

Love adds life. 

One of the teachings most central to being a follower of Jesus is his promise that “Whoever would save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake will find it”. 

Again, Jesus said it 2 millennia ago. Now we have the data to show he is right. Scientists have shown that helping others is good for us. It might even be better for us than the person we help.1 Selfishness makes us miserable. Selflessness makes us happy.

But maybe you think that you don’t need to go to church to be unselfish. Obviously you’re right. But you are much, much more likely to be unselfish if you do. As Rebecca observes “in America, people who go to church every week give three-and-a-half times as much money to charity and volunteer twice as much as people who never go to church.”2

If you want to live your best life, follow Jesus and go to church.

We’re half way through now. Take a moment to pause, catch your breath and turn to the person next to you. Ask them : “Are you alright?”

  1. Gratitude and Forgiveness Are Good For You

So we’ve covered going to church and the big commandments. But what about the little stuff. Like the prayer we pray each week saying thank you to God for what we have, asking for forgiveness and offering it to others?

One of the defining things about Christians is that they say thank you. We thank God for the goodness of the world, the relationships we have in it, for Jesus being willing to give himself for us to bring us life.

But saying thank you doesn’t feel amazing.

I love Christmas. It’s great. But the worst part comes afterwards when someone responsible, I’m not going to name her, turns up with a box of notes and announces : “it’s time to write thank you cards”.

Saying thank you sounds like a chore. We have to remind young children (and sometimes adults) to do it. 

But again, psychologists have found that choosing to be grateful – to say thank you – makes us happier and healthier.3

It’s the same with forgiveness. 

Jesus was huge on forgiveness. Every week we pray “forgive us … as we forgive”. St Peter once asked if he should forgive seven times. Jesus said “no, seventy x seven”. He even forgave people as they executed him.

Forgiveness is hard because anger and hatred and bitterness feel good in the moment. But forgiving others makes you live longer, and feel better mentally and physically.4

If you want to live your best life, follow Jesus and go to church.

  1. Grit is Good

I love the Rocky movies. I watched them as a kid, introduced Heather to them when we started going out (it’s a true test of a girl’s commitment), and then watched them with my kids. One of my proudest moments was when, after a month of Rocky, my daughter Abi wrote in a year 4 essay that she didn’t like to see animals fight but liked watching men fight. 

Rocky has what psychologists call grit. I can’t put it better than the great man himself .

What Rocky is describing is something psychologists call “grit”. It is the ability to keep going when times get tough, to persevere even in hard times. Psychologists have found that this quality makes more of a difference to success in the long term than intelligence, beauty or talent.

Grit is all over the New Testament. Jesus teaches us to follow him by walking a hard road, St Peter calls Christians to self-control and perseverance, the writer of Hebrews urges us to “run with endurance.”

And instead of just relying on our own grit, our own ability to get hit and keep moving forward, God gives Christians a Helper, the Holy Spirit, a kind of Divine support team who encourages us, empowers us and keeps us.

If you want to live your best life, follow Jesus and go to church.

  1. Mo’ Money, Mo’ Problems

Finally, I want to quote a giant of 20th century theology, the Notoriouis B.I.G.,

I don’t know what they want from me
It’s like the more money we come across
The more problems we see
5

I’ll keep this one short. Jesus says thatNo one can serve two masters. Either you will hate the one and love the other, or you will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and money.

As St Timothy explained, “the love of money is a root of all kinds of evil.

Again, Jesus turns out to be right. 

In fact, if you want a career in psychology it’s probably safer to just assume Jesus is right and start from there.

When this has been studied it turns out that choosing money over friends and family leads to unhappiness.6

By all means try to get money. It’s good to have money. If you’re going to use it to help others and serve God. Otherwise you’re going to end up miserable, broken and away from God and others.

If you want to live your best life, follow Jesus and go to church.

Application

What does this mean for us as we try to know hope, show hope and share hope:

  • First, if you want to know hope, make coming to church and following Jesus a priority this year. If you want to be happier, healthier, stronger and more influential this year, come to church and follow Jesus.
  • Second, if you want to share hope, find someone to help and show love to. It will make their life better and yours too.
  • Finally, if you want to share hope, then invite someone else to come to church. It really can make a huge, measurable difference to their life not just in a mystical or spiritual sense but in every sense.

If you want to live your best life, follow Jesus and go to church.

  1. Caroline E. Jenkinson, et al., “Is Volunteering a Public Health Intervention? A Systematic Review and Metanalysis of the Health and Survival of Volunteers,” BMC Public Health 13 (2013): 773. For a study on caring for others being more beneficial for the carer than the cared for, see for example, Susan Brown, et al., “Providing Social Support May Be More Beneficial Than Receiving It: Results from a Prospective Study of Mortality,” Psychological Science 14, no. 4 (2003): 320–27. ↩︎
  2. She cites Arthur Brooks, Who Really Cares (New York: Basic Books, 2006), p.34. ↩︎
  3. Robert A. Emmons and Michael E. McCullough, “Counting Blessings versus Burdens: An Experimental Investigation of Gratitude and Subjective Well-Being in Daily Life,” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 84, no. 2 (February 2003): 377–89. ↩︎
  4. “Forgive to Live: Forgiveness, Health, and Longevity,” Journal of Behavioral Medicine 35, no. 4 (2012): 375–86; Loren L. Toussaint, Everett L. Worthington, and David R. Williams, eds., Forgiveness and Health: Scientific Evidence and Theories Relating Forgiveness to Better Health (Dordrecht: Springer, 2015). ↩︎
  5. Bernard Edwards / Christopher Wallace / J Phillips / Mason Betha / Nile Gregory Rodgers / Sean Combs / Steve Jordan – Mo Money Mo Problems lyrics © Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC, Warner Chappell Music, Inc ↩︎
  6.  for example, Jonathan Haidt, The Happiness Hypothesis: Finding Modern Truth in Ancient Wisdom (New York: Basic Books, 2006), 88–89. ↩︎