Dr. William Lane Craig joins The Ben Shapiro Show Sunday Special with host Ben Shapiro to talk about his new book, En Garde, and to discuss the decline of Christianity in the West and the role of evangelicalism as a replacement for Christianity in American society. Dr. Craig also discusses the decline in the influence of the old mainline denominations like the Episcopalians, the Catholics, the Presbyterianians, and the Congregationalists, and how this is a reflection of the growing secularization of American society and the move toward secular values and away from Christian values. He also talks about the growing role of secularism in American culture, and why he thinks Christians should not have to go to church on Sunday morning unless they actually believe what they're taught in the Bible. Thanks to our sponsor, PolicyGenius, for sponsoring the Sunday Special. Go to policygenius.co/TheBenShapiroShow to get 20% off your first month with discount code: PODCASTPRODUCER20 at checkout. To find a list of our sponsors and show-related promo codes, go to gimlet.fm/OurAdvertisers. We'll be looking out for the best deals on all kinds of promo codes and discount codes to help get your products and services out there! Subscribe to our newsletter! Become a supporter of the show: bit.ly/support-the-ben-shapiro Show. Learn more about your ad choices and get 10% off the first week of the new ad-free version of The Ben's new show, The Ben s Lawyer's Lawyerzine with code: BONUS! Ben's Lawley to help you save $10, get 15% off a month and save $5,000 off the entire month, and get 5% off his next month, plus free shipping, plus a FREE shipping throughout the rest of the world gets a free ad-only version of the ad-posting discount, plus he'll get an ad discount when you sign up for two months, and a FREE VIP membership starts in two weeks, and two months get a discount, and he'll also get a FREE PRICING WEEKEND OFF THE FIRST MONTH AND VIP PRICREALIZED, AND FREE VIP PACKAGE AND VIP SUPPORTING THE MONEY IS A MONTH TO BUY TWO MONTH OF VIP SUPPORT THE MISSION AND PATREON PROMETRY?
00:00:00.000In the absence of some defeater, it seems to me that we're perfectly within our rights in believing that there is an objective realm of moral values and duties, just as we're within our rights in believing that there is a world of physical objects around us.
00:01:43.000We're living in an increasingly secular age where people by polling number, seculars are now by polling numbers the largest religious constituency in America.
00:01:52.000Why do you think we're seeing such a decline in religious belief in the West right now?
00:01:56.000I think what's happening is not so much increasing secularization, Ben, as the collapse of the old mainline Christian denominations like the Episcopalians, the Catholics, the Presbyterians, the Congregationalists, and so forth.
00:02:13.000And as a result, there is an increasing polarization in American society.
00:02:19.000People are evacuating the middle and going either to the secular end or to the evangelical end.
00:02:28.000Evangelicals are maintaining their percentage of the American population, keeping up with the population growth.
00:02:35.000But the impression of increasing secularization exists because the middle is emptying out, and these old-line denominations are collapsing.
00:02:45.000Why do you think they are collapsing in on themselves?
00:02:47.000And we're seeing it in Judaism as well, that the old conservative Jews and Reform Jews, they're kind of dying away, and you're getting the modern Orthodox movement even moving toward more Orthodoxy.
00:02:56.000Why do you think that's happening right now?
00:02:58.000That's very interesting, and I think it's a reflection of the fact that People who are just nominally religious, in a sense, come to the realization that they don't really believe this.
00:03:11.000And so, why should you get up in the dark and the cold on a Sunday morning to go worship somebody you don't really think is there?
00:03:19.000And so, as a result, those who have been simply nominal in their beliefs I think are increasingly recognizing that, in fact, they're secular.
00:03:31.000And the unfortunate byproduct of this is that Christianity has lost its place of cultural influence in the United States as this middle mainline denomination empties out.
00:03:47.000And it's my hope that in coming decades, increasingly these evangelical denominations, which are holding fast to biblical truth, will begin to assume that position of cultural influence that was once held by the mainline denominations.
00:04:04.000Well, Friedrich Nietzsche declared the death of God back in the late 19th century, and it took a while for that to become a reality in the United States, as far as occupying any significant portion of the public mind.
00:04:14.000We're still significantly more religious than Europe, but starting in the 1960s and moving beyond, there was a real move away from religious belief generally.
00:04:26.000Considering we have a civilization built on Judeo-Christian values, we're incredibly prosperous, incredibly free, and yet we seem to be moving away from a lot of the religious beliefs upon which our society is based.
00:04:37.000Well, I think in Europe and in Canada, it's the lingering shadow of the Enlightenment that swept away The church, along with the monarchy, because these two were aligned and resulted in a deep disaffection with Christianity, which was seen to be aligned with the old order.
00:04:58.000In the United States, I think it's hard to underestimate the influence of the Vietnam War.
00:05:07.000That war tore this culture in two and resulted, I think, in the alienation of many, many young people from the values and the beliefs of their elders.
00:05:21.000And I suspect we're still living with the results of that.
00:05:25.000There's sort of a mainstream discomfort with religion that we see these days.
00:05:29.000Religious believers are seen as sort of anachronistic.
00:05:31.000If you say that you believe in the Bible or the God of the Bible, then you're seen as somewhat of a fool these days.
00:05:37.000As somebody who speaks on college campuses a lot, and I speak in purely secular forms about politics, whenever I'm asked about religion, it's always phrased in a sense of derision or condescension.
00:05:48.000Why would you believe all that old stuff?
00:05:50.000Well, your work has been based on the idea that faith is, in fact, backed by reason, and that the presence of God is a reasonable assumption to make about the universe.
00:05:57.000Why do you think that, first of all, there's that gap that occurred, that breach that occurred between reason and faith, that you were considered to be mutual buttressing and supportive of one another for centuries?
00:06:09.000Well, I do think that this is confined to certain disciplines at the university, particularly the soft sciences and the social sciences.
00:06:21.000Those who were disaffected by the Vietnam War and the Cultural Revolution went into anthropology, sociology, women's studies, literature, religious studies, and so forth.
00:06:35.000But in the hard sciences and in my discipline, philosophy, I think, frankly, there's a renaissance of theistic belief.
00:06:44.000And there is a virtual revolution going on in Anglo-American philosophy right now where Christian philosophers represent a significant and respected voice in the philosophical community.
00:06:58.000So I find there's tremendous interest on university campuses in these topics.
00:07:04.000When I debate a secularist on our university campuses, we will have hundreds and sometimes thousands of students attend these debates, and the discussions are always rational, respectful, deliberative. and the discussions are always rational, respectful, deliberative.
00:07:22.000And so my experience is that there is tremendous interest in our culture and in the university age group in hearing a rational, fair discussion of issues related to religious belief.
00:07:40.000One of the things I think that's happened in the religious community is you see people who are brought up in religious homes and they're taught the stories of the Bible.
00:07:46.000They're never taught any deeper philosophy or theology that attaches to that, so they have sort of a children's eyes view of what God is and how to think about God, sort of think of God still as the old man in the sky who's controlling things.
00:08:00.000What in your opinion is the most reasonable proof of God?
00:08:03.000What have you found to be the most convincing proof of God's existence?
00:08:05.000Well, I think that those are two questions.
00:08:07.000For me, My favorite argument for the existence of God that I find the most compelling is a version of the cosmological argument, which goes like this.
00:08:21.000Something can't just come into being from nothing.
00:08:24.000Secondly, the universe began to exist.
00:08:27.000I think we have both good philosophical arguments and scientific evidence for the finitude of the past from which it follows.
00:08:34.000Third, therefore, the universe has a cause.
00:08:37.000And when you do a conceptual analysis of what it is to be a cause of the universe, You arrive at a being which is an uncaused, beginningless, timeless, spaceless, enormously powerful personal creator of the universe.
00:08:54.000So for me, that is a very convincing argument for God.
00:08:59.000But I find that with university students, that's not the most convincing argument.
00:09:04.000You can ignore philosophical arguments for the finitude of the past or scientific evidence for the beginning of the universe.
00:09:13.000But the argument that they find I think the most compelling is what I call the moral argument.
00:09:45.000Now, this is an argument which is impossible, I think, to ignore because every day you get up You answer by how you treat other people, whether you regard them as having intrinsic moral value, or whether they are mere means to be used for your ends.
00:10:06.000And so this argument, I find, tends to be the most convincing for people.
00:10:11.000So for purposes of elucidating these arguments, I'm going to play devil's advocate with you a little bit on both of these arguments.
00:10:16.000Let's start with the cosmological argument that you're making.
00:10:19.000So the Richard Dawkins comeback, the one that you hear most frequently, with regard to the finitude of time and the idea that everything has a cause, is okay, well then what caused God?
00:11:15.000If you had to go through an infinite number of prior events one at a time, that would be like trying to count down all the negative numbers one at a time ending at zero, which seems an absurd task.
00:11:28.000Moreover, we have remarkable scientific evidence from the Big Bang expansion of the universe and the thermodynamic properties of the universe, which suggests that the universe cannot be infinite in the past, but must have had a beginning around 13.8 billion years ago.
00:11:48.000So I think that second premise is very powerfully supported both philosophically and scientifically.
00:11:53.000Okay, and then on the other argument, the moral argument, the argument that I've heard made in contravention of that, it's an argument made by Dawkins, Harris, Brett Weinstein, evolutionary biologists, who suggest that morality, there is a certain sense of morality that is innate to mammals that you see even in species that are not our own.
00:12:11.000A sense of primitive altruism, a sense of kinship protection, for example.
00:12:16.000So, is it possible that that morality is embedded This response is almost a textbook example of the genetic fallacy.
00:12:25.000give an objective morality that we think about and therefore enact, that it's just embedded in the natural code?
00:12:30.000This response is almost a textbook example of the genetic fallacy.
00:12:36.000The genetic fallacy is trying to invalidate a point of view by showing how that point of view came to be held.
00:12:44.000Even if evolution and social conditioning has programmed into us a certain set of moral beliefs, that does nothing to show that those beliefs are false.
00:12:55.000In fact, Indeed, if moral values are gradually discovered rather than gradually invented, then our gradual and fallible apprehension of the moral realm no more undermines the objectivity of that realm than our gradual, fallible apprehension of the physical world undermines the objectivity of the physical realm.
00:13:16.000In the absence of some defeater, it seems to me that we're perfectly within our rights in believing that there is an objective realm of moral values and duties, just as we're within our rights in believing that there is a world of physical objects around us.
00:13:32.000So, I want to ask you to steel man the opposing argument.
00:13:36.000So, you're the atheist in the room and it's your job to attack the arguments that you've just made.
00:13:40.000What do you think are the strongest objections to the cosmological argument and the strongest objections to the moral argument that you've made?
00:13:48.000Well, I think that the first premise of the cosmological argument is unassailable for any sincere seeker after truth.
00:13:56.000With respect to the philosophical arguments, perhaps what the skeptic might simply say is that infinity is just a really strange thing, and yes, it leads to counterintuitive consequences, but that's just the way things are.
00:14:11.000With respect to the scientific evidence, he can always hold out hope That the advance of physical theory will overturn the current consensus in astrophysics and cosmology and restore a past eternal universe.
00:14:30.000And that's about the best he can do, I think.
00:14:32.000There isn't much prospect for that, but he could hold out hope.
00:14:37.000So in a second, I want to ask you about the Bertrand Russell theory that essentially posits brute facts in place of God as the beginnings of these sorts of arguments.
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00:15:46.000So philosopher Bertrand Russell suggested that God is sort of unnecessary to these conversations, that instead of trying to look for a final cause, this is just the way things are.
00:15:54.000So in other words, if you go back to the very beginning, okay, so something sprang from nothing.
00:16:01.000This is a different cosmological argument that Russell was responding to.
00:16:06.000This argument goes something like this.
00:16:09.000Everything that exists has an explanation of its existence, either in the necessity of its own nature or in an external cause.
00:16:19.000Number two, if the universe has an explanation of its existence, then its explanation is a transcendent, eternal cause.
00:16:28.000Premise three would be the universe exists, and from that it follows logically that therefore the explanation of the universe is an external, transcendent cause.
00:16:39.000Now, what Russell denied was the first premise.
00:16:43.000He said that there doesn't need to be an explanation, either in the necessity of a thing's nature or in an external cause.
00:16:56.000But notice that that skeptical response doesn't apply to the first version of the cosmological argument, because in that case we're talking about something that begins to exist, something that comes into being.
00:17:10.000And I don't think even Russell would have affirmed that something could come into being Without a cause.
00:17:17.000Even if for some eternally existing universe, you might say, well, it just exists with no explanation.
00:17:24.000So one of the counters that's sort of been posited nowadays to that idea is the sort of David Hume, well things pop in and out of existence and people tend to point to quantum mechanics as the basis of this.
00:17:36.000So how do you respond to the quantum mechanical argument that it appears that certain particles are almost literally winking in and out of existence?
00:17:43.000Let me first respond to Hume on this because I think he's been misunderstood.
00:17:48.000What Hume said was that you cannot prove the causal principle either by demonstration or intuition.
00:17:56.000But he said in a letter to John Stuart, I never affirmed anything so absurd as that something could come into being without a cause.
00:18:05.000I only said that it's not proved through demonstration or intuition.
00:18:10.000Now, in quantum mechanics, things don't come into being out of nothing.
00:18:14.000The quantum vacuum is definitely not what the layperson means by vacuum, namely a state of nothingness.
00:18:22.000The quantum vacuum is a sea of roiling energy having a rich physical structure and governed by physical laws.
00:18:32.000And therefore, when people like Lawrence Krauss and certain others say, well, the modern physics shows that something can come from nothing, this is a deliberate abuse of science and is grossly misrepresentative of, in fact, what the science says.
00:18:49.000So I'm going to go through one more argument with you, and then I want to talk about the importance of religion as opposed to theology, which are not quite the same thing.
00:18:57.000Because you're making some reason-based arguments for the existence of God, but these aren't obviously arguments for Christian revelation or Jewish revelation or anything like that.
00:19:05.000No, although I do think there are good reasons to be a Christian theist.
00:19:10.000And I want to get to that in just one second.
00:19:12.000But I first want to tackle another argument that you hear made a lot, and that seems, I think, to be given short shrift.
00:19:18.000The ontological argument, the St. Anselm argument.
00:19:21.000So the ontological argument, if you could spell that out, and then why people seem to get this so wrong.
00:19:25.000Because the way they posit it is that it's this simplistic argument.
00:19:29.000If we just posit an island, then you could somehow debunk it, which would make no sense, because any person could have discovered that when St. Anselm said it, as opposed to spending hundreds of years trying to figure it out.
00:19:41.000The ontological argument in a nutshell says that if it's even possible that God exists, then it follows that God actually exists.
00:19:51.000And this argument has been stated and defended with great sophistication by philosophers like Alvin Plantinga, for example, and I, like you, am persuaded that this is actually a sound argument.
00:20:03.000And basically what Plantinga says is, define a maximally great being to be a being that is metaphysically necessary, omnipotent, Omniscient and morally perfect.
00:20:19.000Now, if it's possible that there is such a being, then there's a possible world in which that being exists.
00:20:27.000But if a maximally great being exists in any possible world, it exists in all possible worlds.
00:20:34.000That's part of what it means to be maximally great.
00:20:38.000Therefore, it exists in the actual world.
00:20:40.000Therefore, a maximally great being exists.
00:20:43.000And the steps of this argument, your viewers may be surprised to learn, are actually relatively uncontroversial.
00:20:51.000The whole argument stands or falls with the first premise.
00:20:55.000Is it possible that a maximally great being exists?
00:21:00.000If you think it's possible that God exists, then you ought to believe that God actually exists.
00:21:06.000The atheist has to say not merely that God does not exist, but that it's impossible that God exists.
00:21:13.000So the typical comeback doesn't even meet this argument.
00:21:17.000So just for the folks who haven't studied the ontological arguments at all, the typical comeback is, imagine a maximally great island, the greatest island you've ever heard of, well then it must exist using the exact same principles here.
00:21:27.000But what you would say is there's no possibility of a maximally great island because...
00:21:31.000But that description is simply too vague.
00:21:33.000There's no way to actually write that down.
00:21:34.000That would be one of the problems with it.
00:21:36.000What contributes to the greatness of islands?
00:21:38.000Do you prefer a desert island or one chocked with hotel resorts?
00:21:44.000There isn't any really objectively such a thing as the greatest conceivable or maximally great island.
00:21:50.000So it turns out that these attempts to parody the argument by talking about a maximally great pizza or a necessarily existent lion all fail because they postulate incoherencies.
00:22:06.000When the idea of a maximally great being, that is to say a being that is omnipotent, omniscient, and morally perfect in every possible world does seem to be An intuitively coherent and therefore possible idea.
00:22:21.000So how do we get from the idea of an unmoved mover in some of the arguments that you've been making to the idea of a moral god who cares about us and is involved in the world?
00:22:30.000Well, it's quite right that arguments like the cosmological argument or the teleological or design argument, which we haven't talked about, don't get you the moral properties of the creator and designer of the universe.
00:22:44.000But the moral argument and the ontological argument do.
00:22:49.000Both of those lead to a being which is the moral paradigm and source of all moral value and moral obligation.
00:22:59.000And so those arguments complement the cosmological and teleological arguments by telling us something about the moral properties of the creator and designer of the universe.
00:23:10.000Now, looking at those properties, what makes that being a god of mind?
00:23:16.000And what makes that being constant, meaning like present now, as opposed to the kind of deistic conception of a god who laid things in motion, maybe embedded moral codes within us, and then walked away?
00:23:27.000What makes god Okay, now, there's a couple of questions there.
00:23:36.000First, with regard to why I think this is a mind, most all of the arguments that I just shared do lead to a personal, intelligent The first argument does.
00:23:47.000The teleological or design argument leads to a cosmic intelligence that has created the world.
00:23:53.000The moral argument leads to a personal embodiment of moral value, because persons are the source of moral value, not inanimate things.
00:24:04.000The ontological argument leads to a being who is omniscient and morally perfect and therefore is a person.
00:24:10.000So, these theistic arguments don't just leave you with some kind of unmoved mover.
00:24:15.000They give you a personal creator and designer of the universe who is perfectly good.
00:24:22.000Now, some of them give you a being that is metaphysically necessary.
00:24:26.000The second version of the cosmological argument that I mentioned leads to a being who exists by a necessity of his own nature and therefore cannot fail to exist.
00:24:37.000The moral argument leads to a being who is the paradigm and source of all moral value.
00:24:42.000Now, if you believe that some moral values are necessary, which most ethicists do, that means this being is also necessary in its existence.
00:24:53.000And therefore, having demonstrated that a being like that exists, it cannot fail to be present in the world today.
00:25:00.000That means that this being also exists now.
00:25:04.000Now, that still leaves open the question of deism.
00:25:07.000Has this Creator and designer of the universe, perfectly good, revealed himself to us in some way that we can know him more personally.
00:25:19.000Or has he remained aloof and distant from the world that he's made?
00:25:23.000That's still an open question to talk about.
00:25:26.000Okay, so let's talk about that question.
00:25:29.000The proofs that you're talking about, many of them can be traced back to Aristotelian roots.
00:25:34.000Aquinas obviously talks about a lot of these proofs himself, but he's getting them from Aristotle because they're also present in Maimonides.
00:25:43.000So with all of that said, that sort of brings us to the Tertullian question, which is, okay, so why do you need Jerusalem?
00:25:50.000So we've got Athens, you've got this idea of of a God that's present in the universe and that has a moral component to him, is the unmoved mover, all of these things.
00:25:59.000So why do you need the idea of revelatory God who speaks to human beings?
00:26:03.000The arguments that we've discussed already narrow down the field of the world religions to basically the great monotheistic faiths, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, or perhaps deism.
00:26:18.000The question as to which of these is true, I think stands or falls upon the person of Jesus of Nazareth.
00:26:26.000Who do you think Jesus of Nazareth was?
00:26:29.000Jesus claimed to be the decisive self-revelation of God.
00:26:35.000And I believe that we have good reasons to believe that those claims were true and that therefore the God revealed by Jesus of Nazareth exists.
00:26:47.000So what is the proof that Jesus was who he says he is in the Gospels?
00:26:53.000Well, first we need to establish who he thought he was.
00:26:57.000When you look at the religio-historical context of the life and ministry of Jesus, I think you can show that among the historically authentic words of Jesus,
00:27:10.000were claims that he thought he was the Jewish Messiah, that he believed himself to be the Son of God in a unique sense that set him apart from Jewish kings and prophets, and finally, that he thought that he was the Son of Man predicted by the prophet Daniel, to whom God would give all dominion, power, and authority.
00:27:36.000So he had this radical self-understanding of being Messiah, Son of God, and the Son of Man.
00:27:45.000And at the trial scene before the Sanhedrin in Mark 15, all three of these titles come to a head When the high priest asks him, are you the Messiah, the Son of the Blessed One, that is, the Son of God, and Jesus says, I am, and then virtually quoting from Daniel, and you will see the Son of Man coming on the clouds of heaven and seated at the right hand of the power.
00:28:14.000And at that point, the high priest rips his robes and says, you have heard the blasphemy.
00:28:22.000And Mark says they all condemned him as worthy of death.
00:28:26.000And that enabled them, since they didn't have the ability to carry out capital punishment, to deliver him over to the Roman authorities by slandering him as a pretender to be king of the Jews and therefore A political figure who could be tried for treason and sedition and crucified.
00:28:47.000So, from the Jewish perspective, this narrative has some holes in sort of Jewish philosophy.
00:28:52.000The narrative begins with the idea that Jesus appears in front of the Sanhedrin and then claims to be the Messiah.
00:28:59.000Well, there's nothing actual criminally in any of the tractates that say that if you declare yourself the Messiah, this is actually a punishment, a punishable offense even.
00:29:08.000There are many Jews, including Bar Kochba, who have declared themselves messianic figures.
00:29:13.000The real gap here is that in the Gospels, Jesus' vision of himself as the Messiah is completely different from the prior vision of what the Jewish Messiah is and is actually outside the scope of how Jews describe the Messiah or really have ever described the Messiah.
00:29:28.000The Messiah in Judaism has always been a political figure who is destined to do certain things, restoring the kingdom of Israel, maintaining control of that kingdom, bringing more Jews back to Israel.
00:29:40.000All of these things are considered sort of political things that the Messiah does, but the idea of the Jewish religious philosophy going all the way back to the beginning.
00:29:51.000So even the idea that the Sanhedrin would be questioning him in those terms and would get from that, that what he means is, I am God, which would be a much more punishable offense, presumably that would be actual blasphemy.
00:30:04.000I think you're absolutely right in saying that Jesus' understanding of the Messiah was radically different from the prevailing cultural understanding of the Messiah among the chief priests and the common people, and he didn't meet their expectations.
00:30:23.000Indeed, that's what helped to get him crucified.
00:30:28.000Being the Messiah, you're right, in and of itself isn't a blasphemous claim.
00:30:32.000But to claim to be the Son of God in a unique sense, and then especially the Son of Man prophesied by Daniel, sitting at the right hand of the power, that is truly blasphemous and is sufficient for his condemnation.
00:30:50.000Now the question, I think, that is raised by your Your interpretation, Ben, is this.
00:30:59.000Why should we believe Jesus' reinterpretation of the Messiah rather than the one that the chief priests and the people held?
00:31:11.000And I think the answer to that is his resurrection from the dead.
00:31:16.000Jesus' resurrection from the dead is Yahweh's public and unequivocal Vindication of the man whom the chief priests had rejected as a blasphemer.
00:31:30.000It is the divine demonstration that These allegedly blasphemous claims are in fact true, that he was who he claimed to be, and that therefore I follow Jesus in his conception of what it means to be the Messiah.
00:31:51.000So when it comes to the resurrection, why is resurrection proof of divinity?
00:31:56.000That was why I wanted to emphasize the religio-historical context before we talked about the resurrection.
00:32:04.000A miracle taken in isolation is inherently ambiguous.
00:32:08.000The proper interpretation of a miracle is going to be given by the religio-historical context in which it occurs.
00:32:15.000And the resurrection of Jesus is not just the resurrection of any old body.
00:32:20.000It's the resurrection of the man who claimed to be Messiah, Son of God, and Son of Man, and who was crucified for those allegedly blasphemous claims.
00:32:32.000If God has raised this man So one of the counterclaims to some of this is that the Gospels are written significantly after Jesus lives.
00:32:39.000Even the earliest Gospels written, what, 70 C.E.?
00:32:41.000blasphemous claims. - So one of the counterclaims to some of this is that the gospels are written significantly after Jesus lives.
00:32:48.000Even the earliest gospel is written, what, 70 CE?
00:32:51.000Somewhere 40 years after Jesus is crucified.
00:32:55.000So, what's to say, I mean, that, like most historical events, there is some play in the joints here?
00:33:01.000So that this would be the historical argument against the exact veracity of the gospel revelations, for example.
00:33:08.000Now, I think it's important to understand, Ben, that in order for a historical document to be reliable, it isn't required that it be inerrant.
00:33:17.000Contemporaneous, of course, of course.
00:33:20.000What I would argue is that underlying the inference to the resurrection of Jesus are three great independently established facts which are supported by the historical evidence and which surprisingly—I did my doctoral work on this in Germany—are recognized as such by the majority of New Testament
00:33:46.000Scholars today who studied the historical Jesus, and these facts would be that after his crucifixion and burial by a member of the Sanhedrin named Joseph of Arimathea, the Jesus tomb was discovered empty on the first day of the week by a group of his female followers.
00:34:06.000Secondly would be that various individuals and groups of people then witnessed appearances of Jesus alive.
00:34:16.000And finally, number three would be that the original disciples suddenly and sincerely came to believe that God had raised Jesus from the dead, despite having every predisposition to the contrary.
00:34:32.000The vast majority of scholars have come to accept as convincing the evidence in support of those three facts, not assuming biblical inerrancy or inspiration, but treating the Gospels as ordinary historical documents.
00:34:47.000You can show, for example, That the fact of the discovery of the empty tomb is attested by at least six independent sources in the New Testament, some of which are extraordinarily early.
00:35:02.000No scholar denies that individuals and groups saw post-mortem appearances of Jesus.
00:35:08.000The only question is whether you should or could dismiss them as hallucinatory.
00:35:12.000And again, nobody denies that the original disciples suddenly and sincerely came to believe that God had raised Jesus from the dead.
00:35:20.000So these three facts are pretty firmly established, and the only question is then how do you best explain them?
00:35:26.000And down through history, attempts have been made to explain these facts without recourse to the resurrection, like the conspiracy theory, the apparent death theory, the hallucination theory, and so forth.
00:35:41.000And I would argue that none of these naturalistic theories meets the criteria for being the best historical explanation of the facts.
00:35:54.000And None of them is as good an explanation as the one that the original disciples gave, that God raised Jesus from the dead.
00:36:02.000And if that's right, then I think we have good grounds, indeed we're almost compelled To revise our typical understanding of who the Messiah was supposed to be.
00:36:13.000So we can have the historical argument back and forth, obviously, and I think that there are arguments that you can make, I think there are arguments that I can make, but I honestly find them relatively uninteresting, is the truth, simply because I'm not sure that we're going to come to any sort of consensus on them.
00:37:09.000So I wouldn't know, but if somebody claimed 2,000 years from now that his tomb was empty, or claimed 70 years from now that his tomb was empty, then... Yeah, that's an important difference, Ben.
00:37:19.000The important time gap is not the gap between the events and the present.
00:37:26.000Good evidence doesn't become bad evidence just because of the lapse of time.
00:37:31.000The critical event, as you just said, is The time gap between the events and the recording of those events.
00:37:40.000And in the case of the events of the life of Jesus and his resurrection, that time gap is extraordinarily narrow.
00:37:50.000We can push back even before the writing of the Gospels and the epistles of Paul by discerning The traditions upon which they relied when they wrote, and some of these go back to within, it's estimated, five years after Jesus' crucifixion.
00:38:10.000I'm thinking of the ones that Paul transmits to the Corinthian church in 1 Corinthians 15.
00:38:16.000So, we're on pretty good ground there in terms of the earliness and the multiplicity of our sources for the life of Jesus.
00:38:24.000So, let's talk for a second about sort of the necessity for Judeo-Christian revelation because, and here I'm going to merge the two in terms of the idea of God Personally speaking to people and giving them the morality of the Old Testament, which largely is reflected in the New Testament.
00:38:42.000And the New Testament is part of the Old Testament, according to Christians anyway.
00:38:45.000It reflects the chief morality of the Old Testament.
00:38:49.000The Old Testament doesn't become nothing just because the New Testament comes around.
00:38:53.000So that's why I'm now moving back toward the kind of theological question, which is, what's the purpose of the revelation?
00:38:59.000Meaning, could we, would it be sufficient To work within the framework of the first half of our conversation with regard to rational pushes not toward revelation and the presence of God in human form in Christianity or the presence of God on top of a mountain in Judaism.
00:39:16.000Would a God of reason alone be sufficient or do you need to have, for what purpose do you need to have a God who is speaking directly to people at Sinai or speaking through Jesus in Christianity?
00:39:27.000I think that the answer of both the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament can be put into one word, atonement.
00:39:36.000What is needed is atonement for sin and in the Levitical sacrifices In the tabernacle and later in the temple, you had a sacrificial system whereby atonement was made for sin through the sacrifice of various animals.
00:39:55.000And Jesus himself And the authors of the New Testament think of Jesus as being the ultimate sacrificial offering to God to make atonement once and for all for the sins of mankind, so that in his sacrificial death on the cross, he fulfills all of these Jewish antecedents or foreshadowing of
00:40:26.000A decisive atonement for sin that will reconcile us to God and bring forgiveness and pardon and cleansing.
00:40:35.000So you've debated a bevy of atheists and agnostics on a variety of topics.
00:40:40.000Which was the debate that you felt was most challenging for you?
00:40:44.000I think the best debate that I've ever had was with a professor of philosophy at North Carolina State University named Doug Jessup.
00:40:53.000The backstory behind this debate is that even though I would be on the affirmative and therefore normally go first, he insisted on going first in the debate.
00:41:05.000And I thought, something is suspicious here.
00:41:08.000He wants to launch a preemptive attack on my argument so that before I even get up, I'm already behind the eight ball.
00:41:16.000And so I insisted that I go first in the debate.
00:41:20.000And we had to decide it by a coin flip of the departmental secretary, and he won and so got to go first.
00:41:27.000And so sure enough, he got up there and in his opening speech, he launched into a withering attack on every one of my five arguments for God's existence before I even got up to speak.
00:41:41.000And I thought, oh man, how am I going to get out from behind this?
00:41:45.000Well, I had prepared A short speech for my opening so that it would leave me about five minutes of time extemporaneously to respond to his preemptive attack and try to level the playing field again.
00:42:10.000And afterwards, I went up to him and I said, you are a very good debater.
00:42:15.000And he said, thanks, I was on my university debate team.
00:42:19.000And I thought, oh man, so here's a guy who had both the philosophical training and the debate training that I have, and as a result it was a great Contest.
00:42:33.000Now, in one of those conversations, have you ever found yourself doubting your own principles?
00:42:36.000Have you ever found yourself thinking that maybe the other person might be right, or shifting on your moorings a little bit?
00:42:40.000Not really doubting, though I think there have been a couple of times, rather rare, where the other fellow's thrown a curveball at me that I wasn't expecting.
00:42:49.000I prep hard for these debates and prepare briefs, like a lawyer would, for anticipated objections.
00:42:56.000But in my debate, for example, my first debate at Purdue University with Austin Dacey of the American Humanist Society, he threw a couple of arguments out there that I hadn't thought about before.
00:43:11.000And after the debate, I was rather dissatisfied with my performance.
00:43:14.000And I thought, if I ever get a chance, I want to debate Dacey again.
00:43:19.000And sure enough, a couple years later, I got an invitation to have a debate at Fresno State University with Austin Dacey.
00:43:26.000And this time I was prepared to the hilt, and so it went much better.
00:43:31.000So there have been times when there have been curveballs, so to speak, but for the most part, Honestly, Ben, for the most part, these fellows don't prepare.
00:43:46.000They're so sure of themselves that they think they're just going to blow away this Bible-pounding ignoramus, and that if they just trot out their arguments from Philosophy 101 that everything will go well.
00:44:08.000The most common one that I've heard, of course, is the problem of evil, the suggestion that how can God be good if so much evil takes place in the world?
00:44:16.000The more sophisticated version of the argument to me is not the problem of human evil, which seems pretty easily disposable, but the problem of natural evil things happening to children, a child with cancer.
00:44:28.000In dealing with this problem, I think it's really important that we distinguish between what I call the intellectual problem of evil and the emotional problem of evil.
00:44:38.000In dealing with this problem, I think it's really important that we distinguish between what I call the intellectual problem of evil and the emotional problem of evil.
00:44:49.000There is no doubt that emotionally, the evil and suffering in the world make it very difficult to believe in God.
00:45:01.000But intellectually, considered dispassionately as a philosophical problem, it's extraordinarily difficult to show that there's either any inconsistency or improbability between the existence of an all-loving, all-powerful God and the evil and suffering in the world.
00:45:22.000The atheist would have to show that it is either impossible or improbable That God has morally sufficient reasons for permitting the natural and moral evil in the world.
00:45:37.000We're simply not in a position to make those kind of probability judgments with any confidence.
00:45:45.000And so I think that the problem of evil, as difficult as it may be emotionally, Intellectually, it lays a burden of proof on the shoulders of the atheist, which is so heavy that it has proved to be unsustainable.
00:45:59.000These days the other argument that is brought up an enormous amount is the supposed backwardness of the Bible itself and biblical morality.
00:46:06.000This happens largely with regard to, for example, Homosexual marriage, it's been brought up with regard to abortion, which I think is more, again, easily disposable, because I think there's a solid secular argument in favor of the protection of human life.
00:46:20.000But homosexual marriage is the one that most often comes up.
00:46:23.000You also hear arguments that the Bible permits slavery.
00:46:26.000So if the Bible is so wonderful, then why are there all these weird sections of the Bible where it talks about wiping peoples from the earth, where it talks about enslaving other human beings?
00:46:35.000Some things that we would certainly consider moral evils today are Well, let me address briefly first this question of slavery.
00:46:47.000When we hear the word slavery, Ben, we think of slavery as it existed in the American South.
00:46:54.000And as you know, that is nothing like The system that existed in ancient Israel.
00:47:00.000In ancient Israel, there was no social safety net sponsored by the state.
00:47:09.000So if a man got himself into a situation where he couldn't pay his debts, He could keep his family together and retain his self-respect by selling himself as an indentured servant to his creditor until he could work off his debts, and then he would have to be set free.
00:47:29.000After seven years, he had to be set free in any case.
00:47:33.000So this was really a form of indentured servanthood.
00:47:36.000It wasn't slavery as we think of that term.
00:47:39.000This was actually an anti-poverty program.
00:47:43.000And in some respects, I think it's better than what we have in modern Western culture, which destroys families, ruins people's self-respect because they're not working.
00:47:56.000Whereas in ancient Israel, a man retained his self-respect, he worked for an income, he paid his debts, he kept his family together.
00:48:05.000And to call that slavery is just a gross misrepresentation.
00:48:09.000Now, the first thing you mentioned, I've forgotten.
00:48:14.000With respect to some of these other moral questions, I think we need to remember the first premise of the moral argument.
00:48:25.000If there is no God, Then there are no objective moral values and duties.
00:48:31.000Everything is socio-culturally relative.
00:48:34.000So who's to say that the moral values of a society that discriminates against people and oppresses people is worse than one which is liberal and tolerant?
00:48:46.000We just sort of assume that the liberal values are the ones that would be objective, when in fact they're just as relativistic As any of the other ones on atheism.
00:48:59.000So, if we need God to be the anchor point for objective moral values and duties, we cannot escape the question, when thinking of moral right and wrong, well, what does God think of this?
00:49:13.000And if God proscribes something, it seems to me that's entirely within his right.
00:49:22.000If God were to say, thou shalt not eat beans, or thou shalt not eat pork, that would be our moral duty, and we should obey it.
00:49:31.000That is his prerogative as the moral lawgiver and the supreme good.
00:49:36.000And so if God says, my plan for human sexuality is heterosexual marriage, that's his prerogative.
00:49:44.000And there is no basis for calling that, I think, into question.
00:49:48.000So let's talk about the evolution of morality.
00:49:50.000And I want to go back to slavery for just a second.
00:49:52.000So it is true that Hebrew enslavement, the Jewish enslavement of others is really more indentured servitude.
00:49:58.000And there's a whole section in, I believe it's Numbers or Leviticus, I think it's Leviticus maybe, where it speaks specifically about the slave who doesn't want to leave and you're supposed to pierce his ear on the doorpost as a punishment for him not wanting to leave and all of this.
00:50:11.000But by the same token, enslavement of people who are not inside the Israelite, inside the Jewish kind of tradition, that's not proscribed.
00:50:22.000So the idea of war captives is obviously taken into account and not banned.
00:50:28.000So certain things are banned in the Bible, certain things are not banned.
00:50:29.000Now the way that biblical believers have practiced over time is that very early in the church's history, they're already starting to eliminate slavery, although not for people who are captured.
00:50:38.000And then over time, the West is the first place to eliminate slavery altogether.
00:50:43.000Specifically citing the sections of the Bible that talk about human freedom and the innate value of every human being.
00:50:49.000So, is that an evolution of morality, or is that a realization of a fundamental principle that was originally given to people who couldn't necessarily understand the full extent of the principle?
00:50:59.000Oh, I think it's the latter, and I love the way you put it.
00:51:05.000Jesus said something very much like this with respect to Old Testament regulations on divorce.
00:51:12.000They asked him whether or not it was lawful to divorce a woman for any reason, and Jesus said, Moses allowed you to write a certificate of divorce, but it was not so from the beginning.
00:51:24.000And he cites then the creation story of Genesis of Adam and Eve and said what God has put together and let not man put asunder.
00:51:35.000So what Jesus was saying there was that the law of Moses was a temporary prescription accommodating the hardness of heart of the people at the time, but it didn't represent the perfect will of God for human marriage, which was grounded in the creation story.
00:51:56.000So how exactly do we determine when we have moved beyond the biblical text in terms of the evolution of that morality?
00:52:03.000When are we fulfilling a broader goal that was kind of held back by temporary constraints, and when are we moving utterly beyond it?
00:52:12.000And again, here I'm thinking of same-sex marriage.
00:52:14.000So when it comes to same-sex marriage, the argument is now being made by people in liberal churches, including Pete Buttigieg, who's running for president, that basically Jesus was seeking equal respect for everyone.
00:52:29.000And the prescriptions on homosexuality were really more, and homosexual activity were not eternal precepts, but were really attempting to crack down on the promiscuity of the time, or they were temporary expedients.
00:52:45.000When you look at these regulations, both in the Old Testament and then they're repeated in the New Testament in the strongest terms in Romans chapter 1.
00:52:56.000There's no doubt that Paul is thinking of this as a moral law that has abiding significance, and it's grounded again, I think, in the creation story, that God has created
00:53:12.000Human sexuality has created man and woman in such a way that the fulfillment of that relationship will take place within the safety and security of a heterosexual marriage, and that outside of that, Sexual activity is not to be indulged in, and this is a law that God has given us for our good.
00:53:37.000So I do not think that this is capable of simply being relativized to time and culture.
00:53:44.000So when you argue with students, when you talk with students and discuss with them, what do you find is the best way to approach them when it comes to the precepts of traditional Judeo-Christian morality?
00:53:53.000Do you come at it from the natural law perspective, or do you come at it from the biblical perspective?
00:54:00.000I guess I share with them the moral argument that I shared earlier in our interview.
00:54:06.000This moral argument is very powerful with students because, on the one hand, they've been taught relativism.
00:54:14.000They are scared to death of imposing their values on someone else.
00:54:20.000So it seems right to them that if God does not exist, that objective moral values don't exist.
00:54:25.000They think they're subjective, person-dependent, and relative.
00:54:29.000But then secondly, the premise also seems true to them that objective moral values do exist.
00:54:35.000They think it's objectively wrong to impose your moral values on someone else.
00:54:41.000And the values of tolerance, open-mindedness, and love have been deeply ingrained to them.
00:54:47.000And so, they believe both of the premises, but have just never connected the dots.
00:54:53.000to see what logically follows from it.
00:54:55.000And this can lead to some bizarre conversations.
00:54:58.000I remember with one fellow, when we would talk about premise one, he would agree with it and deny two.
00:55:04.000So when we talk about premise two, he'd agree with that and then deny one.
00:55:08.000And so we went back and forth, back and forth with this poor fellow flailing to try to escape the logical conclusions of what he himself believed.
00:55:19.000So I find approaching it through this moral argument is the best way.
00:55:24.000One of the things that's been fascinating to watch is people broadly accepting the efficacy of the precepts of religion without accepting the underlying truth of religion.
00:55:33.000So here I would Point to my friend Jordan Peterson who talks a lot about the practices of basically what are religious practices.
00:55:41.000The idea of make your room, do the moral thing, duty.
00:55:45.000But he doesn't talk in specifically religious terms, he speaks in Jungian terms.
00:55:48.000He talks about the idea of deeper precepts that are embedded in myth, which is really embedded in the human psyche.
00:55:54.000He doesn't make the kind of truth of religion argument.
00:55:57.000He instead makes the, if you want to get ahead, you're going to have to do this stuff argument.
00:56:00.000If you want to be happy, you're going to have to do this stuff argument.
00:56:02.000And that has tremendous cultural appeal.
00:56:10.000I think it's beneficial, but it's not enough.
00:56:13.000When I had a dialogue in Toronto last year with Jordan Peterson, rather than attack his position, what I tried to do was to be invitational and say, look, you and I both affirm the objectivity of moral values and meaning in life.
00:56:32.000I want to offer you a grounding for those values that we both hold dear.
00:56:37.000Because for him, as you say, Ben, they're just sort of floating in the air.
00:56:41.000They don't have any metaphysical ground in his worldview.
00:56:46.000So he's got the right values and meaning by and large, but he has no basis for them.
00:56:52.000And I'm still hopeful that he will come to embrace God as an objective metaphysical reality who will provide a basis for those values and meaning in life.
00:57:05.000I mean, one of the things that I've found really fascinating is, as I say, so many people are embracing fundamental principles of religion, and even the sort of quasi-pantheistic idea, but the religious idea nonetheless, that there is a moving force behind the universe or implicit in the universe, and yet, the minute you say God, people tend to run for the hills because they immediately identify their boring Sunday school class.
00:57:25.000So how exactly do we bridge that gap for folks who may have been alienated from religion by a sort of simplistic view of religion that they got growing up?
00:57:35.000How do you re-educate people in the precepts of religion?
00:57:37.000Well, as you probably noticed in talking with me, Ben, I don't lead.
00:57:43.000With the Bible, I lead with philosophical arguments, beginning very generally.
00:58:12.000And then finally, and ultimately, I'll try to make the personal application and say, what difference could this make in your life?
00:58:19.000And sometimes I'll share then my story, personally, of how I, raised in an unbelieving family, came to believe in Christ at the age of 16 and had my life completely upended and turned around.
00:58:35.000And so, by beginning Philosophically, I think you can lead into then a more religious and personal faith that people will feel comfortable with.
00:58:47.000Well, maybe you could share that story.
00:58:53.000We became fully Orthodox when I was 11 and was with my parents, my whole entire immediate family.
00:58:59.000But how did you become a religious person?
00:59:02.000I don't think of myself as religious, but I understand that you're using the word in a neutral sense.
00:59:11.000In high school, I was going through a deep existential crisis, looking for meaning in life, the meaning of my existence, who I was.
00:59:19.000I later discovered existentialist philosophers were asking the same questions, and I never knew it.
00:59:27.000So I was filled with Darkness and despair as I saw my impending death, the impending death of the universe, and no meaning to it all.
00:59:39.000And I walked into my high school German class one day and I sat down behind a girl who's one of these types, you know, that is always so happy it just makes you sick.
00:59:49.000And I tapped her on the shoulder, and she turned around, and I said to her, Sandy, what are you always so happy about anyway?
00:59:56.000And she said, it's because I know Jesus Christ is my personal Savior.
01:00:06.000And she said, well, that's not enough, Bill.
01:00:07.000You've got to have Him really living in your heart.
01:00:10.000And I said, well, what would he want to do a thing like that for?
01:00:13.000And she said, because he loves you, Bill.
01:00:17.000And that just hit me like a ton of bricks.
01:00:19.000Here I was so filled with despair and anger.
01:00:23.000And she said there was someone who really loved me.
01:00:28.000And who was it but the God of the universe.
01:00:31.000And that thought just staggered me to think that the God of the universe could love me, Bill Craig, that worm down there on that speck of dust called planet Earth.
01:00:43.000Well, I went home that night and found a New Testament.
01:00:47.000And for the first time in my life, I opened it and began to read it.
01:00:51.000And as I did, I was absolutely captivated by the person of Jesus of Nazareth.
01:00:57.000There was a wisdom about this man's teachings that I had never encountered before, and there was an authenticity about his life that I couldn't deny.
01:01:08.000And as I read the New Testament, I saw why God seemed so unreal to me.
01:01:12.000It was because my sin, my moral wrongdoing, it created a separation between me and God, so that I was alienated from Him and couldn't experience that love relationship that He had created me to have, but that He had sent Christ to atone for those sins and that through Christ I could have forgiveness and a restoration of that relationship.
01:01:35.000And so, after about six months of the most intense soul-searching that I've ever been through, one night I just came to the end of my rope and cried out to God.
01:01:48.000And I felt this tremendous infusion of joy Like a balloon being blown up and blown up until it was ready to burst.
01:01:58.000It was a warm, Midwestern September evening.
01:02:02.000And as I looked up at the sky, I could see the Milky Way from horizon to horizon.
01:02:07.000As I looked up at the stars, I thought, Come to know God!
01:02:13.000And that moment changed my whole life.
01:02:15.000Because I had thought enough about this during those six months to realize that if Bill Craig ever became a Christian, I could do nothing less than give my entire life to spreading this message among mankind.
01:02:28.000Because if this is really the truth, if it's really the truth, it's the greatest news ever announced.
01:02:35.000And so my call to Christian ministry was simultaneous with my conversion experience and I've never looked back.
01:02:43.000So in just a second, I want to ask you one final question, which is, in a world where it seems like religion, as you say, seems to be waning more broadly, even if it's being held more dearly by a smaller number, do you see people filling the void with sort of ersatz meaning?
01:03:01.000And where do you see the gravest threats to civilization coming from?
01:03:04.000I'm going to ask you that question in just one second, but if you want to hear Dr. William Lane Craig's answer, you actually have to subscribe over here at Daily Wire.
01:03:10.000To subscribe, go to dailywire.com, click subscribe, you can hear the end of our conversation over there.
01:03:15.000Dr. Craig, thank you so much for stopping by.
01:03:16.000I really appreciate your time, I really appreciate your work, and if you go check out more of Dr. Craig's work at reasonablefaith.org.
01:03:22.000I think you're going to find a lot there that is edifying.