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Loving Wisdom

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LOVING WISDOM


Loving Wisdom A Guide to Philosophy and Christian Faith Second Edition

Paul Copan

William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company Grand Rapids, Michigan


Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. 4035 Park East Court SE, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49546 www.eerdmans.com © 2020 Paul Copan All rights reserved Published 2020 First edition published by Chalice Press 2007 Printed in the United States of America 26 25 24 23 22 21 20    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 ISBN 978-0-8028-7547-1 Library of Congress Cataloging-­in-­Publication Data Names: Copan, Paul, author. Title: Loving wisdom : a guide to philosophy and Christian faith / Paul Copan. Description: Second edition. | Grand Rapids, Michigan : William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2020. | Includes bibliographical references and index. | Summary: “­Presents a biblical philosophy of religion, addressing a wide range of topics and questions as they arise in scripture”—Provided by publisher. Identifiers: LCCN 2019047949 | ISBN 9780802875471 (paperback) Subjects: LCSH: Christianity—Philosophy. | Theology. Classification: LCC BR100 .C77 2020 | DDC 230.01—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019047949 Unless otherwise noted, Scripture quotations are from the NEW AMERICAN STANDARD BIBLE®, Copyright © 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1995 by The Lockman Foundation. Used by permission.


Christ . . . in whom are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge (Col. 2:2b–3) To Stuart C. Hackett—my first philosophy professor, whose wisdom, intellect, and faithfulness to God inspired me and so many others


Contents Preface

xi

Acknowledgments

xv

PRELIMINARIES ON PHILOSOPHY AND FAITH

1

1. The Blessings of Philosophy

3

2. Philosophy and Scripture

11

3. Faith and Religion

17

4. Kings and Priests

25

5. The Need for God

32

6. Wired for God

42

I

51

GOD

7. The Triune God

53

8. Talking about God and Knowing God

61

9. The Divine Attributes (I): Perfection, Necessity, and Self-­Sufficiency

68

10. The Divine Attributes (II): God and Time, Omniscience, and Human Freedom

74

11. The Attributes of God (III): Omnipresence, Incorporeality, Beauty, Omnipotence

85

12. The Attributes of God (IV): Immutability, Impassibility, Simplicity (?), Humility

93

vii


Contents 13. The God of Truth (I): Truth on the Decline

102

14. The God of Truth (II): The Inescapability of Truth

108

II

117

CREATION

15. Moving toward God: Reasoning, Imagining, Seeking

119

16. God—the Best Explanation (I): The Problems with Naturalism

130

17. God—the Best Explanation (II): The Naturalists Are Declaring the Glory of God

138

18. The Reasons for God (I): God as the Cause of the Universe

150

19. The Reasons for God (II): God as the Designer of the Universe

158

20. The Reasons for God (III): God as the Source of Goodness

170

21. Science, Nature, and God

185

22. Miracles

198

III

209

FALL

23. The Problem of Evil (I): Introductory Matters

211

24. The Problem of Evil (II): Evils Logical and Probabilistic

217

25. The Problem of Evil (III): Evils Natural and Demonic

226

26. Primal Sin

232

27. Original Sin

237

28. Hell

246

viii


Contents IV

REDEMPTION AND RE-­C REATION

259

29. The Incarnation

261

30. The Cross of Christ

270

31. Jesus’s Uniqueness and the Plurality of Religions

281

32. Body, Soul, and Immortality

294

Afterword

305

Discussion Questions

307

Notes

323

Index

351

ix


Preface Despite the claim that philosophy of religion isn’t really philosophy, such a view ignores the philosophy’s actual history going back to ancient times.1 What’s more, the number of Christian philosophy of religion volumes has burgeoned over the past few decades and shows no signs of letting up. Many of them are well written and are characterized by rational coherence and clarity of expression, and they exhibit just how intellectually fruitful the Christian faith is. So why a new one then? Well, it isn’t quite new. This is a second edition, although very thoroughly revised and expanded. A lot has happened since the first edition in 2007.

On Philosophy and the Biblical Metanarrative The book has certain key emphases. First, this book is a guide to Christian philosophy that engages with the biblical story or metanarrative and with texts of Scripture. I have a background in biblical studies and theology, and I find this quite helpful as I reflect and write on philosophical topics. Though many fine Christian-­authored philosophy of religion books exist, I try to interact more with biblical texts and with scriptural themes as they have a bearing on philosophical topics and discussions.2 To reinforce this Scripture-­philosophy combination, I’ve structured the book around the biblical “grand story” or “metanarrative”—beginning with the triune God and moving from creation and then the fall to redemption and re-­creation in Christ. This is indeed “the story of reality.” Various philosophical topics are incorporated into the structure of this book. For example, part III on the fall includes topics such as the problem of evil, primal sin, original sin, and hell. Second, this book attempts to make important philosophical themes accessible to a popular audience and present them from a distinctively Christian perspective. Over the years as a Christian philosopher, I’ve engaged in the task of reading, reflecting on, distilling, and summarizing the work of other philosophers in order to reach a wider, more popular-­level audience. One key subgroup is the church. I’ve attempted to show how ideas have consequences, how the academy influences the culture, and how Christians should be attuned to these realities in order to think through and live out their faith before a watching world. As is evident in this book, I greatly appreciate the work of Christian phixi


Preface losopher Alvin Plantinga. He has observed that many academicians have a disdain for the term popularizer. However, he urges Christian philosophers not to leave their work “buried away in professional journals” but to make it available to the broader Christian community. If they don’t connect their work to the life of the church, then they “neglect a crucial and central part of their task as believing philosophers.”3 Third, this book offers insight on how to think Christianly about important philosophical matters in our day—and to live out their implications personally and existentially, in relationships, and in our spheres of influence. “Jesus is Lord” (see Rom. 10:9) was a very early Christian confession. The implications of this terse declaration are immense. Jesus is ruler over all things—from every choice we make in life and how we use our time to every discipline in the academy to every particle in the universe. The earth is the Lord’s, and everything it contains (Ps. 24:1). Yet plenty of Christians engage in “sacred-­secular” compartmentalizing: “Reading the Bible and praying are spiritual while painting houses or repairing cars isn’t,” or, “Being a pastor or missionary is sacred, but studying biology or being a politician is secular.” This is a huge error. C. S. Lewis noted that while personal holiness and evangelism are important, they can’t be cordoned off from the broader culture. If we do that, we’ll just create a narrow, inferior, irrelevant subculture of our own. If Jesus is Lord over all things, we must bring him into the marketplace, the academy, and the political realm to show how in Christ all things hold together and are illuminated. The wisdom of Christ, the foundation of his Word, and the power of the Spirit present us with robust resources to be world-­engaging. Ours is a faith seeking understanding (fides quarens intellectum), as the philosopher-­ theologian Anselm maintained. All creation belongs to God; we can appreciate and study this world, and God can reveal something of himself through even the birds of the air and the lilies of the field (Matt. 6:26–28). The hymn “This Is My Father’s World” fittingly declares: “He speaks to me everywhere.” Even the lessons a farmer learns about how to plant and harvest can be said to be the result of God’s instruction and teaching (Isa. 28:23–29), whether the farmer is a believer or not. The church father Augustine affirmed that all truth is God’s truth. Yes, God has spoken to us through his incarnate Son (Heb. 1:3) and in his written Word (2 Tim. 3:16–17); this is special revelation. Here God reveals himself about his specific workings in history through national Israel and the Christ-­event to reconcile hopelessly lost human beings to himself; along with this, he shows us how to live increasingly transformed lives shaped by the life, cross, and resurrection of Christ. But that’s not all. God’s revelation has an even wider xii


Preface reach through general revelation. God reveals his existence and something of his character and basic truths to us through the use of reason and drawing proper conclusions, a pricked conscience, the beauty and order of creation, and the depths of human experience across the ages (Ps. 19:1–2; Isa. 28:23–29; Amos 1–2; Rom. 1:19–21). We don’t have to proclaim “The Bible says” to those who don’t take it as authoritative, but we can speak biblical truth and use the means of natural revelation to remind unbelievers of a God who is there and is not silent,4 as Paul did in Athens. Thus we hope to lead people to consider what this God has done to rescue us and support us as we live out our earthly lives as citizens of his kingdom. Fourth, a better philosophical grasp of the biblical story will enhance our proclamation of the good news of Jesus. Statistics reveal that the number of Christians having conversations about their faith is shrinking. The reasons they give include not wanting to make conversations awkward, create tensions, or be considered weird.5 But let’s change that! To be more thoughtful about our faith will enable us to freely and engagingly affirm the truth wherever it is to be found. Truth can be found in a chemistry textbook or in an epic film like The Lord of the Rings. Again, like Paul at Athens, we can affirm wise insights from pagan philosophers across the ages and praise displays of heroism, self-­sacrifice, forgiveness, and courage by non-­Christians. But as we’ll see, these truths and virtues scattered throughout the world and world history find their home and their ultimate basis in the cosmic Lord of history, Jesus of Nazareth. Though we, like Paul, might be angered and dismayed by idolatry around us, the “unknown God” has made himself known (Acts 17:16–34). Through our common human experience, creation, conscience, beauty, and reason, God provides us with an abundance of connection points and conversation starters to engage those around us in the academy, in the marketplace, and in our communities. Along the way, this book offers suggestions for engagement. Philosophizing as Christians shouldn’t be shaped by passing fads in the academy or culture; we shouldn’t focus our message on the identity politics of race, sexuality, class, nationalism, or other ideologies. Rather, our thinking is to be transformed by the reality that Jesus is Lord, and that we as subjects of King Jesus are to seek first God’s kingdom and his priorities (Matt. 6:33). Though being a thinking Christian can often involve theorizing and thought experiments and just plain imagination, a thoughtful Christian faith can’t be reduced to mere abstractions and technical definitions. Those who truly love wisdom will consider what it means to live wisely: loving God and neighbor, trusting in the power of God, being charitable toward others, persexiii


Preface vering in cultivating the use of our minds, and prayerfully and humbly telling others of the gospel hope we have within (1 Pet. 3:15). Though I stand in the evangelical tradition,6 I am attempting to write in the spirit of mere Christianity. The key creeds of the Christian church express this, being a distillation of what the Scriptures teach. Yet it is the triune God who unites believers to one another in Christ by his Spirit. One theologian expressed it this way: “In essentials, unity; in nonessentials, liberty; in all things, charity.”7

On Textual Criticism As noted, this book is a second edition. And it fits the pattern textual critics have traditionally taken when it comes to scribal tendencies. When comparing variations in manuscripts, they have considered the more difficult reading (the lectio difficilior) and the shorter reading (lectio brevior) to be the more likely wording in the original autographs. We’re told that scribes tend to smooth out difficult passages as well as to expand on a text that may need clarification. Well, as it turns out, neither of these guidelines is solid or foolproof. Both criteria have been questioned.8 This isn’t a book about textual criticism, but it fits the traditional picture of scribal tendencies. This second edition is longer than the first: I’ve added new chapters (there are now thirty-­two instead of twenty-­one, although some have been subdivided). And the book clarifies and extends themes to make for a less difficult reading than the first edition. I’ve thoroughly revised nearly all of the chapters from the first edition, and I have added a good deal of new material and topics. In addition to the “Further Reading” suggestions at the end of each chapter, study questions are included at the back of the book for those interested in using the book in discussion groups. One other upgrade: this new edition includes an index.

Further Reading Copan, Paul, and Kenneth D. Litwak. The Gospel in the Marketplace of Ideas: Paul’s Mars Hill Experience for Our Pluralistic World. Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2014. Keller, Timothy. The Reason for God: Belief in an Age of Skepticism. New York: Penguin, 2009.

xiv


Acknowledgments This book is gratefully and affectionately dedicated to the late Christian philosopher Stuart C. Hackett. His warm encouragement, daily prayers, faithful friendship, and philosophical rigor in his teaching, conversation, and writing instilled in me a love and appreciation for the task of philosophy. Special thanks to my sister Lil Copan. She strongly urged me to consider Eerdmans while I was upgrading and revising Loving Wisdom for a second edition (it had been published by Chalice Press the first go-­round). As this book has evolved, I appreciate helpful comments from Chad Meister, Christopher Weaver, Charles Taliaferro, and Peter Frick—not to mention my philosophy of religion students, who have offered their own perspectives and questions along the way. Thanks to my graduate assistant Liezl Bosch, who has read through and commented on the manuscript. She has also written the study questions to guide small group discussions, included at the back of the book. I am grateful to Palm Beach Atlantic University for granting me a splendid sabbatical in 2017—and to Oxford University’s Wycliffe Hall, where I was a visiting scholar (“academic visitor”) during the Hilary and Trinity terms. There I began work on this second edition. I am grateful for the warm hospitality, friendships, and kindnesses experienced there. I appreciate the editing suggestions of Jenny Hoffman at Eerdmans. Her comments have assisted in making this book clearer and smoother. Robust thanks to my beloved wife, Jacqueline, for her sweet partnership and unstinting support in this and other book-­writing and -editing endeavors.

xv


PRELIMINARIES ON PHILOSOPHY AND FAITH


1 The Blessings of Philosophy See to it that no one takes you captive through hollow and deceptive philosophy, which depends on human tradition and the elemental spiritual forces of this world rather than on Christ. —Colossians 2:8 NIV

Thank God for philosophy! Some Christians may think this a strange, if not downright heretical, affirmation—especially in light of the Scripture verse above. Perhaps they—along with plenty of “freethinkers”—believe that “Christian philosophy” is an oxymoron. After all, isn’t philosophy atheistic? Don’t those who’ve grown up in church leave the faith once they’ve studied philosophy at university? And what’s the need for philosophy? Isn’t Jesus enough? And shouldn’t we take Paul seriously when he calls philosophy “hollow and deceptive”? We’ll look at these questions shortly, but for now let us consider the blessings of being exposed to the study of philosophy and why we shouldn’t be so suspicious of it.

The Benefits of Studying Philosophy Philosophy Has Helped Us Articulate Biblical Doctrines First, every key Christian doctrine drawn from Scripture has been formulated or expressed in philosophical language. Think of the Christian doctrines of the Trinity or incarnation. As early Christian theologians attempted to distill biblical language and express it in creeds, letters, and books, they used terms such as being, substance, essence, and person to clarify and distinguish these doctrines from one another. Christian philosopher Diogenes Allen has taught Princeton Seminary students about the importance of philosophy to more clearly understand biblical doctrines. He wrote: “Everyone needs to know some philosophy in order to understand the major doctrines of Christianity or to read a great theologian intelligently. . . . Philosophical knowledge enables one to appreciate more deeply the meaning of virtually every major doctrinal formulation and every major theologian.”1 3


Preliminaries on Philosophy and Faith For example, when reading the theologian Augustine’s Confessions, keep in mind the influence of Neoplatonic philosophy; this includes the idea that the soul has fallen away, wandered from God, and experiences a kind of homesickness. Yet by God’s grace, the soul’s odyssey (perigrinatio animae) can bring us back to our true home. Most people know that to read theologian Thomas Aquinas well, we should understand Aristotle’s work. Even grasping the history of theology will require exploring important philosophical themes. When the Council of Nicaea (AD 325) used the philosophical term homoousion—Christ shares the same nature as the Father—it accurately expressed biblical teaching. As one biblical scholar observed, “In its own way, it expresses the Christological monotheism of the New Testament.”2 We shouldn’t be intimidated by philosophy’s close connection to theology. We should simply acknowledge this fact and do our theological best as we forge ahead. The church has benefited from philosophy from the first century onward and still stands to benefit from it today.

“Everyone Is a Philosopher” A second reason not to be suspicious of the notion of “philosophy” is this: you’re a philosopher whether you like it or not! My first philosophy professor—Stuart Hackett—reminded his students: “Everyone is a philosopher.” That is, each of us has a philosophy of life or “worldview.” We have beliefs about what is real (metaphysics), about how and what we can know (epistemology), about right and wrong and living the good life (ethics). At the heart of our philosophy as Christians is the central reality of the triune God, and the topic of God is an important theme in “metaphysics.” No, the Christian can’t escape philosophy. Some have desperately tried to dispose of philosophy. The late Cambridge physicist Stephen Hawking proclaimed that “philosophy is dead.”3 His solution? Physics must save us and furnish complete answers to who we are and where we’ve come from. That amateur philosopher Hawking was himself making a philosophical statement. Philosophy is unavoidable. After all, each of us belongs to the species Homo sapiens—or “thinking human.” You may be wondering: “Shouldn’t we talk about what philosophy is before promoting its virtues?” Well, we’ve already indicated that philosophy’s three major branches—metaphysics, epistemology, and ethics—are what we all inescapably think about at some level. We can’t dismiss it or even be neutral about it. So we do have something of a clue about philosophy already. As for definitions, some start with the literal meaning of philosophy (philosophia)—“the love of wisdom.” Alvin Plantinga writes that philosophical 4


The Blessings of Philosophy reflection is “not much different from just thinking hard.”4 Another definition is simply “thinking about thinking.” That is, we’re engaging in the philosophical task if we try to clarify concepts, justify positions, offer arguments, and piece together or integrate ideas into a worldview that is coherent.

Philosophy Can Be a Helpful Tool A third reason to appreciate philosophy is that, rightly used, it is your friend. The following statement has been falsely attributed to Socrates: “By all means marry. If you marry a good wife, you will be very happy. If you marry a bad wife, you will become a philosopher, and that is good for every man.” Now, ancient rumor does suggest that Socrates’s wife, Xanthippe, wasn’t all that easy to get along with—a “shrew,” some have called her. According the playwright Xenophon, Socrates claimed that if he could endure his own wife, he would have no difficulty in any other human relation. Of course, philosophers can and do have good wives (or husbands), but even if not, one can benefit from the resources of philosophy, if we’ll allow it. We ought to think of philosophy as a tool. People use hammers in home construction and repair, but some will misuse this fine tool. Before becoming a believer, one of my friends attempted to strike a lethal hammer blow on his father’s head. Psychologist Abraham Maslow once wrote of what we could call “the temptation of the tool”: “I suppose it is tempting, if the only tool you have is a hammer, to treat everything as if it were a nail.”5 Likewise, philosophy can be put to proper use—or suboptimal use. Those who say that only science can give us knowledge haven’t discovered this by scientific observation; it’s a philosophical assumption. So if you only have the “hammer” of science, you’re going to look for scientific explanations for everything. As we’ll see, this is a misguided starting point on which to build our lives. As C. S. Lewis wrote, “Good philosophy must exist, if for no other reason, because bad philosophy needs to be answered.”6 We can’t escape doing philosophy, but will we do it well or do it poorly? Bad thinking—as well as being unthinking—is downright disastrous personally and hazardous to our spiritual and moral lives. This is why Paul exhorts us: “In your thinking be mature” (1 Cor. 14:20 ESV). Ignorance may be bliss, but it is not a virtue.7 The point isn’t for all Christians to get a PhD in philosophy but rather to become more thoughtful about their faith. For example, thinking more clearly and deeply about the triune God or the incarnation of Jesus can only enhance our worship in both “spirit” and “truth” (John 4:23–24). If we’re muddle-­headed about these doctrines, our worship 5


Preliminaries on Philosophy and Faith will also be muddled. Whether we have had formal or informal exposure to philosophy or just become more reflective Christians, we’ll be able to steer clear of fallacious reasoning, junk arguments, bad philosophies, and confused worship. So whoever finds a more thoughtful Christian faith finds a good thing and obtains favor from the Lord.

Proper Philosophizing about God Will Include Living Wisely One comedian speaking at a Dartmouth College commencement told the parents in attendance: “If your child majored in fine arts or philosophy, you have good reason to be worried. The only place where they are now really qualified to get a job is ancient Greece. Good luck with that degree.”8 As it turns out, philosophy graduates often do well in a wide range of work settings—from teaching philosophy to working in law, politics, and business. The more important point is that good philosophy—which includes reasoning about God (theology)—will always be connected to how we live, and this is our fourth reason for studying philosophy: it has implications for how we live— the choices we are to make, the character we should cultivate, what the good life looks like. Philosophy—if done properly—will not be detached from life. The history of philosophy actually reveals that philosophy is concerned not only with the theoretical and the abstract but with the practical as well. Philosophy is a way of life, walking along the path of virtuous living; it is about becoming a certain person rather than simply knowing. The philosopher Plutarch wrote that “daily life gives us the opportunity to do philosophy.”9 The reality of our inevitable death turns us into philosophers as well. As Plato wrote in his Phaedo: “Those who really apply themselves in the right way to philosophy are directly and of their own accord preparing themselves for dying and death.”10 We’ve seen that philosophy literally means the “love of wisdom.” But what is wisdom? It is the skill of living. “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom” (Ps. 111:10; cf. Prov. 1:7): if we’re going be true lovers of wisdom, it will begin with being rightly related to God (“the fear of the Lord”). That is, wisdom is fundamentally theological. After all, how can our very thought and life be properly directed unless we are God-­oriented? God is the source of all reality outside himself, and he is the one who designed us to function and flourish when we live in accordance with that design (John 10:10). Even our eating and drinking can be carried out in light of that design (1 Cor. 10:31). Ultimately, we can’t truly have wisdom without being rightly connected to God and his Word. We’ll be out of touch with the human problem and its redemptive solution in Christ. That is, wisdom, at its heart, can’t be “secular.”11 6


The Blessings of Philosophy

Philosophy Can Guide Us in Our Doubting Another reason for appreciating philosophy is that it can help us wisely and discerningly grapple with our doubts. Think about friends of yours who have walked away from the faith—perhaps due to doubts of various kinds. It’s helpful to probe a bit here, though, as there are various types or “species” of doubt, not just one. Intellectual doubt: For honest intellectual questions, we should seek out intellectual answers where possible. Sometimes we have to settle for the best possible or even partial answers. Sometimes we may be asking the wrong questions. “Why did God permit this particular evil?” is one such example. Why think we should expect an answer to this? Jesus himself offers general guidance about getting right with God (“repent”) in the face of evils rather than trying to figure them out—something we’re not well positioned to do (cf. Luke 13:1–5). Emotional doubt: This springs from psychological insecurities—perhaps from not being able to trust earthly parents. No matter how plausible the answers given, the question “But what if . . . ?” always follows. Intellectual answers aren’t the solution to emotional doubt, even though emotional doubters may give the impression that intellectual questions are at the root of their doubt. Moral doubt: This emerges after someone crosses a moral line; he starts to have doubts about God’s existence now that he’s committed adultery or has started sleeping with his girlfriend. Doubts of this variety don’t require intellectual answers but repentance. Spiritual doubt: This version is the result of demonic assaults on us, which may come in various forms; demonic reminders of our inadequacy, failure, sin, and guilt leave us feeling condemned and in despair (Rev. 12:10), prompting us to doubt our standing before God. Martin Luther knew of this. In a letter to Jerome Weller (July 1530), he wrote: “When the devil throws our sins up to us and declares we deserve death and hell, we ought to speak thus: ‘I admit that I deserve death and hell. What of it? Does this mean that I shall be sentenced to eternal damnation? By no means. For I know One who suffered and made a satisfaction in my behalf. His name is Jesus Christ, the Son of God. Where he is, there I shall be also.’ ”12 “Doubt wisely,” the poet John Donne urged. Indeed, clear philosophical thinking can help us shake off certain kinds of doubt resulting from faulty thinking. For example, we can learn to doubt our doubts, as we often take our doubts too seriously and our beliefs not seriously enough. Also, consider how some Christians fall prey to a false assumption many 7


Preliminaries on Philosophy and Faith embrace—namely, that 100 percent certainty is required to believe anything. But that’s a misguided, deeply flawed expectation: how can we know with 100 percent certainty that knowledge requires 100 percent certainty? While professional philosophers will disagree about many things, this complete-­ certainty criterion for knowledge isn’t one of them. We know lots of things without being 100 percent certain. Philosophy Can Assist Us as Witnesses for Christ A sixth reason to appreciate philosophy is that it can enhance our Christian witness. Rutgers University philosopher Brian Leftow affirms that “it was Christianity that brought me to philosophy.”13 This shouldn’t be surprising. Consider this: from the second half of the twentieth century onward, the philosophy of religion has experienced a remarkable renaissance and has become its own scholarly discipline. A growing number of very capable philosophers— many of them believers in God—have written philosophy of religion textbooks as well as journal articles and books dedicated to specific topics in this field: the nature and coherence of God’s attributes, arguments for God’s existence, the problem of evil, the plurality of religions, the God-­science relationship, miracles, and so on. In fact, “philosophical theology”—also called “the philosophy of theology” or “analytic theology”—has become a discipline of note. Formally trained Christian philosophers have done much rigorous work on the doctrines of the Trinity, incarnation, atonement, divine providence, and original sin. As a result, the discipline of Christian systematic theology has been strengthened through philosophical influence. This is very encouraging as we proclaim the good news of Jesus in the marketplace of ideas. Many of us who engage in doing Christian philosophy have discovered that unbelievers often show a greater willingness to listen to the message of the gospel when they see how it makes sense of so many of life’s big questions. Christian intellectual giants, on whose shoulders we stand, have helped create a broader cultural context that enhances the taking of the Christian faith more seriously. So we should join them in this endeavor wherever we can.

Jesus and Paul as Philosophers Of course, Jesus—God in the flesh—was the most brilliant philosopher who ever lived. As the very wisdom of God (1 Cor. 1:24, 30; Col. 2:3), he was not only 8


The Blessings of Philosophy most truly human in faithfully carrying out his Father’s will and embodying divine love. He was was rigorous in his thinking and also masterful in his use of logic. He spoke with clarity, coherence, and insight about the nature of reality (metaphysics), knowledge (epistemology), living virtuously (ethics and character), and the meaning of life, which is bound up with loving God and loving others.14 Another philosopher was the apostle Paul. He was a man of “great learning” (Acts 26:24; cf. 22:3). This cosmopolitan man was born in Tarsus, one of three leading philosophical centers in his day—the other two being Alexandria and Athens. Paul rightly called himself “a citizen of no insignificant city” (Acts 21:39). Paul was not only in the upper 1–2 percent of the educated people of his day.15 According to New Testament scholar N. T. Wright, Paul would have been considered a “Jewish philosopher”; he would have been perceived as creating more a “new school of philosophy” than a “type of religion.”16 “Religion” in Paul’s day would have been more a private piety that didn’t threaten the public order or the stability of the Roman Empire. By contrast, a new “philosophy” would challenge the status quo. Socrates did this in Athens and would drink poison as his punishment. Likewise, Paul’s message—at whose heart was Jesus of Nazareth—presented an in-­breaking of God’s kingdom into human history through his agent, Jesus the Messiah. The implications were momentous: if Jesus is Lord, then Caesar isn’t. This conviction gave rise to a dramatically different way of understanding the world (metaphysics); it also demanded a radical new ethic that created a new social identity that challenged conventional social and cultural boundaries like “slave and free.” Paul was advocating that slaves and masters in Christ share meals together and “greet one another with a holy kiss” (Rom. 16:16; etc.)—the language of family in Christ. Turning upside down the Roman religious and social system was a threat (Acts 17:6), and Paul—like his philosophical predecessor Socrates—would be executed as a result. Indeed, Luke actually presents Paul as the Christian Socrates coming to Athens (Acts 17).17 He uses the very language of Plato’s Apology to describe his teacher Socrates’s activities: Socrates and Paul reasoned with people in the marketplace (agora), brought a “new” teaching, and were described as promoting “strange” or “foreign” deities. While at Athens, Paul talked with the Stoics and Epicureans—two notable schools of philosophy. He cited Stoics such as Epimenides (“in Him we live and move and exist” [Acts 17:28]) and Aratus (“we are his offspring” [Acts 17:28 NIV]). Toward the end of his life, noted British philosopher Antony Flew—an atheist for decades—came to believe in the generic God of Deism. Even so, he 9


Preliminaries on Philosophy and Faith considered the apostle Paul not only “a highly educated man” and a “first-­class intellectual” but a man with “an outstanding philosophical mind.”18 Some Christians who are suspicious of the life of the mind or a reflective faith may insist, “Just give me Jesus.” But they should remember that this Jesus was a brilliant philosopher—the very wisdom of God incarnate—and so was his dedicated follower, Paul. To use our minds for God’s glory and to understand our Master are part of our calling. To claim “the Bible is all I need” while repudiating the value of philosophy is to fail to realize just how philosophical books like Job and Ecclesiastes actually are. We need to remember that the cosmopolitan, intellectual giant Paul wrote a quarter of the New Testament, and he used his philosophical mind while doing so. Just read the carefully reasoned book of Romans! We’ve seen that we have strong reason to appreciate philosophy. As a human being, you’re a philosopher—a “thinking being.” As a Christian, your faith has been informed by deeply philosophical minds, with Jesus and the apostle Paul as the greatest examples.

Further Reading Copan, Paul. A Little Book for New Philosophers: Why and How to Study Philosophy. Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2016. Copan, Paul, and Kenneth D. Litwak. The Gospel in the Marketplace of Ideas. Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2014. Evans, C. Stephen. A History of Western Philosophy: From the Pre-­Socratics to Postmodernism. Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2018. Groothuis, Douglas. On Jesus. Wadsworth Philosophers Series. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth, 2003.

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2 Philosophy and Scripture The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom. —Psalm 111:10 In [Christ] are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge. —Colossians 2:3

“Faith is opposed to reason.” “Faith is just a leap in the dark.” “You’ll lose your faith if you study philosophy. It’s atheistic.” In our culture, we frequently encounter various dichotomies: faith versus reason, science versus theology, religion versus secularism, philosophy versus religion, empirical versus metaphysical. Yet pitting one against the other not only obscures the nuances between these categories; it can often—at least when it comes to the Christian faith—create wholly unnecessary, distracting conflicts. To clear up some of the confusion, let’s explore terms like philosophy, evidence, faith, and religion in the next couple of chapters.1

A Quick Review “What is your philosophy of life?” “Well, my personal philosophy is . . . ” The word “philosophy” is bandied about in everyday conversations, which shouldn’t be surprising. As we’ve observed, we’re all philosophers, whether formally trained in philosophy or not. We’ve talked about how philosophy is hard thinking about things, or that it’s thinking about thinking—specifically, as this thinking relates to reality, knowledge, right and wrong, and the meaning of life. Plato said that thinking is “a dialogue within the soul” and that true philosophy entails a preparation for death. We’ve also noted that philosophizing cannot be detached from daily living and the formation of character. Most importantly, we cannot truly love wisdom if we reject “the fear of the 11


Preliminaries on Philosophy and Faith Lord,” the beginning and foundation of wisdom. And what is this fear? It is a deep awareness of our dependence on God and our need to attend and listen to our Creator. This fear that begins with a relationship with God ultimately leads to obedience. The angel of the Lord tells Abraham concerning his offering up of Isaac: “Now I know that you fear [me] . . . because you have done this . . . because you have obeyed me” (Gen. 22:12, 16–18).2 Wisdom is inseparable from daily living before God and having our attitudes and habits transformed as a result. And not only does wisdom begin with rightly attending to God; it focuses in particular on paying heed to God’s self-­revelation in Jesus Christ, the very wisdom and power of God (1 Cor. 1:24) and the one “in whom are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge” (Col. 2:3). Nevertheless, the average person will associate philosophy with words such as irrelevance, confusion, and lofty abstractions. The French Enlightenment thinker Voltaire said this: “When he who hears doesn’t know what he who speaks means, and when he who speaks doesn’t know what he himself means— that is philosophy.”3 Perhaps the best that could be said of philosophy is that it is an incredible waste of time. Bring this question of philosophy to a church context and matters often get worse. Some Christians, including pastors and youth leaders, will tell you that philosophy is downright anti-­biblical and dangerous. It’s not merely “atheistic” and “skeptical,” but they’ll tell you that the Bible itself rejects philosophy, perhaps warning that philosophy inherently involves idolizing human reason rather than depending on the grace of God. But is this accurate?

Philosophy as “Atheistic”? Those who believe this will feel justified when they read the words of agnostic philosopher Luc Ferry: “The quest for salvation without God is at the heart of every great philosophical system. . . . Philosophy also claims to save us—if not from death itself, then from the anxiety it causes, and to do so by the exercise of our own resources in our innate faculty of reason.”4 Philosophy frees us from the shackles of blind “faith.” This bold statement sounds impressive, but it is false and represents a presumptuous effort at self-­salvation. Ferry’s perspective doesn’t actually reflect the history of philosophy itself. For one thing, if the tradition is true that the term philosophy—the love of wisdom—originated with Pythagoras (c. 570–495 BC), then Ferry is dead wrong from the outset! Pythagoras considered wisdom to be divine and believed that we mortals could aspire to divinity as we pursue the love of wisdom. 12


Philosophy and Scripture Second, the history of philosophy reveals many who believed in God; the Absolute or One; or a transcendent realm of truth, goodness, and beauty. They range from Plato to Plantinga and from Augustine to Alston. Third, we’ll see in the next chapter that “religion” itself is a vague, difficult-­ to-­define term and that “philosophy” and “religion” mean something different today than they did in, say, the first century. Finally, philosophy is inescapable for us as human beings, regardless of any traditional religious affiliation or worldview. “Everyone is a philosopher,” we’ve noted. Every person will take a stance on “the big questions,” even if she doesn’t articulate the specifics of her views or her underlying assumptions. And not only does each of us have a philosophy, but we practice philosophy—we inevitably live out our philosophy day by day in the moral decisions we make, in the kind of character we cultivate. Welcome to the world of philosophy! Furthermore, virtually every academic discipline has a “philosophy of ” connected to it: “philosophy of science,” “philosophy of history,” “philosophy of mathematics,” “philosophy of art,” and, as we’ve seen, “philosophical theology.” Perhaps you have seen enthusiastic, serious-­minded young Christians head off to university, only to have their faith rattled or even dismantled by atheistic or skeptical philosophy professors. The problem is not the discipline of philosophy, which has across the ages often been God-­friendly. The problem is more how philosophy is taught. The discipline of philosophy doesn’t oppose faith. Rather, those with a philosophy of atheism or skepticism often do.

Philosophy as “Anti-­Biblical” Aside from the false notion that philosophy is atheistic, where would Christians get the idea that the study of philosophy undermines faith in Christ or belief in God in general? Perhaps experience leads them to conclude this: they’ve just heard many such stories or have even encountered hostile atheistic philosophy or science professors. However, some Christians think that the Scriptures themselves oppose philosophy. Paul writes, “See to it that no one takes you captive through philosophy [philosophia] and empty deception” (Col. 2:8). And again: “Where is the philosopher [sophos]? Where is the scholar? Where is the debater of this age? Hasn’t God made the world’s wisdom foolish?” (1 Cor. 1:20 HCSB). And isn’t the gospel “foolishness to those who are perishing” (1 Cor. 1:18)? Why bother with philosophy since the “natural man”—and woman—doesn’t understand the things of God’s Spirit (1 Cor. 2:14)? Jesus himself tells Thomas the Doubter that those who haven’t seen the nail-­ 13


Preliminaries on Philosophy and Faith scarred, resurrection body of Jesus yet still believe are truly “blessed” (John 20:29). Surely, in the pursuit of evidence or reasons, we lose our capacity for “real faith.” We’re saved by grace, not by arguments, right? Beyond this, some might appeal to theologians for support. After all, Martin Luther himself called reason a “whore”; he also chided “theologians of glory” whose “sophistic” methods opposed a “theology of the cross” (theologia cruces). Such scholars present abstract “proofs” for God; in so doing, they run the risk of veiling a suffering God dying in nakedness and shame on the cross. Salvation comes to those who humble themselves before the cross, not to those who trust in their self-­supposed superior powers of reasoning. Did Luther think philosophizing implies a rejection of the cross? Is doing philosophy putting trust in human reason rather than the grace of God? Don’t experience, Scripture, and theologians fairly warn us about philosophy’s perils?

A Response to the “Anti-­Biblical” Charge Scriptural Responses What then shall we say to these things? We’ve pointed out how philosophy has come to the aid of theology and how philosophy really is inescapable. We’ve also noted that Jesus would certainly qualify as a philosopher, as would Paul—a Christian Socrates in Athens. Now people want to use select passages from Paul to dispose of philosophy! How things have changed! Let’s now offer a response to Bible prooftexts used to support the opposition of faith to reason. As we look more closely, we see something fishy going on—namely, a good bit of Scripture twisting. For example, when Paul talks about being taken “captive through philosophy and empty deception” (Col. 2:8), he isn’t talking about doing Christian philosophy (“according to Christ”); that would be the “good philosophy” C. S. Lewis talks about. Rather, Paul opposes the “bad philosophy” bound up with “the tradition of men” and “elementary principles”—with regulations such as “Do not handle, do not taste, do not touch!” (Col. 2:21) that imprison humans rather than set them free. What of 1 Corinthians 1–2, in which the “word of the cross” is “foolishness” to the person without the Spirit? What Paul is not saying here is that the gospel opposes philosophy or rationality. After all, God is a rational being who created humans in his image and calls on them to “reason together” with him (Isa. 1:18). Rather, Paul’s point is that the gospel stands as a challenge to human pride and self-­sufficiency. The context refers to the arrogant dismissal of the gospel—that a publicly humiliated, naked, crucified Messiah is the means of 14


Philosophy and Scripture reconciling humans to God. The cross strikes a blow to human self-­confidence, self-­salvation, and intellectual pretension. Another problem with citing texts from 1 Corinthians 1–2 is that the anti-­ philosophers simply stop there and don’t read to the end of the book. There Paul gives important evidence for Jesus’s bodily resurrection, which includes a list of witnesses to the resurrected Jesus (1 Cor. 15:3–11). Paul shows that presenting evidence isn’t opposed to preaching the anti-­pride message of the cross to the “natural,” Spiritless unbeliever. The same is true of the Jesus-­Thomas conversation in John 20—not seeing yet being blessed for still believing (John 20:29). Is this some blind-­leap irrationality? Not at all. Immediately following this verse is an affirmation of the weighty, remarkable evidences that warrant believing in Jesus: “Therefore many other signs Jesus also performed in the presence of the disciples, which are not written in this book; but these have been written so that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and that believing you may have life in His name” (John 20:30–31). Instead of trusting his close friends who said, “We have seen the Lord,” Thomas stubbornly insisted on viewing Jesus’s wounds for himself (John 20:25). Later, this same author writes as a fellow firsthand witness of Jesus, “the Word of life,” concerning “what we have heard, what we have seen with our eyes, what we have looked at and touched with our hands” (1 John 1:1–3). In addition, biblical language—particularly in John and Acts—includes “evidence” and “reason” terms like “signs,” “witnesses,” “persuade,” “dialogue,” and “[make a] defense,” and the Scriptures repeatedly attest to miracles as public evidence for the message of God’s prophets and apostles. In addition to Job’s philosophical merits, we’ve noted that Ecclesiastes is a very philosophical book that contemplates life’s meaning and its “futility,” according to the cynical Teacher’s “voice.” There we have various philosophical views represented—fatalism, hedonism, nihilism, and more. Another voice, however, offers a corrective to that perspective, concluding that we must “fear God and keep his commandments” (Eccles. 12:13).

Theological Responses What of Luther’s remarks about the dangers of “reason”? Luther is simply talking about reasoning without reference to God. At his trial at the Diet of Worms, he insisted that his accusers show from Scripture or “from evident reason” that he was mistaken. Luther even spoke with great admiration for the pagan thinker Cicero: “Cicero is the best philosopher. . . . He wrote the best 15


Preliminaries on Philosophy and Faith on natural, moral, and rational philosophy. . . . I hope God will forgive such men as Cicero their sins.”5 Even John Calvin, commenting on Colossians 2:8, observed: “Many have mistakenly imagined that Paul condemns philosophy.”6 At bottom, the problem isn’t philosophy. Rather, the problem is having a philosophy detached from Christ, philosophy that is adrift and without roots—ideas that are earthbound and rooted in mere human traditions and fashions. Justin Martyr was an early Christian philosopher who had been schooled in Platonism. Upon encountering Christ, he didn’t abandon philosophy but rather came to understand that in Christ are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge (Col. 2:3). He proclaimed that he had found “this philosophy alone to be safe and profitable. Thus, and for this reason, I am a philosopher.”7

Further Reading Copan, Paul. A Little Book for New Philosophers: Why and How to Study Philosophy. Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2016. Copan, Paul, and Kenneth Litwak. The Gospel in the Marketplace of Ideas. Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2014. Moreland, J. P., and William Lane Craig. Philosophical Foundations for a Christian Worldview. 2nd ed. Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2017.

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