The Bible Begins with a Declaration of God, not a Defense of God

INTRODUCTION

The Thomistic (Thomas Aquinas, 1224-1274) approach to apologetics makes its appeal to natural theology. Aquinas employed the empirical tradition in philosophy which can be traced back to Aristotle. Apologetic thinkers who subscribe to the Thomistic approach do not deny the doctrine of original sin, but they seldom question the basic competency of human reason in philosophy. Of all the apologetic groups, clearly those who are of the Thomistic (natural theology) group have the most “cheerful” view of human reason (A. T. Hoover, “Apologetics” Evangelical Dictionary of Theology, Walter A. Elwell, Ed., p. 69).

Aquinas claimed that God’s existence could be established philosophically. His famous “five ways” of proof (teleological, cosmological etc.) are a posteriori arguments based upon God’s effects in the world. The “five ways” represent a natural, rational preamble. Aquinas saw a sharp distinction between nature (data open and accessible to all men), and grace (derived from revelation). A key feature that distinguishes Aquinas from presuppositional apologists is as follows: Aquinas saw the religious conclusions derived from revelation to be the perfecting, not the repudiation of the conclusions of human reason (Paul Helm, “Thomas Aquinas” The New International Dictionary of the Christian Church, J. D. Douglas, Ed., p. 61).

In 1 Corinthians 1:20-22; 2:1-6, Paul emphatically declares that the knowledge of God through Christ does not rest upon the methodology followed by the philosophers (see Bernard Ramm, “Apologetics, Bible” ISBE, 1:191). The person who knows God is one who has “become as a little child.” His starting point is the Bible’s “declaration of God.” He has presupposed the existence of the God of Scripture and consequently he believes in the infallibility of God’s Word.

The arguments for the existence of God that are used by the natural school of theology assume that man’s reason is neutral. By contrast, Scripture states that human reason is corrupted by depravity (see lessons in this syllabus on The Myth of Neutrality and The Nature of Faith). 

I. The Creator’s relationship to the creation.

“In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth” (Genesis 1:1). The Bible teaches that God created the universe in six days.

A. (Gen. 1). God created the universe out of nothing. He did not use any pre-

existing material or energy.

 

1. God did not create the universe because He was lonely or because He had to.

2. The work of creation was a free act of His will for His own good pleasure and glory (Rev. 4:11).

3. Time, space, matter, energy, spiritual beings (e.g., angels) and earthly

creatures (e.g., mankind) were all created by God and owe their existence

to Him. All created reality is totally and utterly dependent upon God at

every moment (Heb. 1:3; Col. 1:17).

B. After God created the universe He declared it to be very good (Gen. 1:3).

Therefore death, calamity, sin and evil were not original to God’s created

order.

 

C. God’s creation of the universe teaches us that there are two completely

different and separate forms of being: uncreated Being (God), and created

being. There is a Creator-creature distinction. There is an inseparable gulf

between created and uncreated reality.

 

1. God is uncreated, independent and self-sufficient. He is in need of

nothing outside of Himself. Man was created. He is a creature. Man is

totally, continually and always dependent upon God for his existence.

2. God is infinite, eternal, all-powerful, all-knowing and immutable (i.e.,

God being perfect, cannot change.) Man if finite, temporal (i.e., a creature

in time), limited in power, limited in knowledge and mutable (i.e., man

grows and develops; man learns; and man can sin and do evil).

D. Because God is perfect, unchanging, infinite, and all-knowing, He cannot

make mistakes. He is infallible. Therefore, God must be man’s source for all

truth, knowledge and ethics.

1. “In Your light we see light” (Ps. 36:9). What is true, what is good and

what is right is what God says is true, good and right.

2. God’s creation of the universe teaches us that God is the sovereign Lord

of everything that exists.

3. God created the universe from nothing; therefore, God owns and has

absolute authority over all reality. God owns every human being. God

has absolute authority and total jurisdiction over all mankind. His claims

upon His creatures are absolute.

E. God’s moral authority over all mankind is expressed in His commands.

Therefore, obedience and service to God are not voluntary, trivial or

unimportant.

1. God commands mankind to study, believe and obey His divine

revelation, the Bible. The God who created, and who sustains all

creatures every moment will some day judge all men (Rev. 20:11-15).

2. God’s creation of the universe shows His kindness and goodness. God

created the earth and proclaimed it to be very good (Gen. 1:31). The

beauty of the world God made for us to enjoy is intended to move us to

thanksgiving for His incredible creation.

3. Those who know God thank Him every day for His fantastic and glorious

creation. The antitheist attributes the bird’s song, the seasons and the

stunning wonders of creation to nothing more than atoms floating

randomly in the void. The natural man subscribes to the absurd notion of

a chance universe where unthinking particles somehow formed galaxies,

stars, planets, fish, birds, animals and people.

F. The concept of a universe based upon chance is a concept formed by the

fallen intellect of man.

 

1. “Pseudo-science” believes in much more incredible miracles than any

Bible-believing Christian does. It’s just that the world view of

evolutionary naturalism postulates that their “miracles” occur very

slowly (over billions of years).

 

2. Evolution is a religious faith without empirical evidence. It is a

philosophical absurdity (that chance and chaos can produce order,

complexity, purpose and meaning).[i][1]

3. Why is evolution so popular today? Because people love their sin and do

not want to make peace with God. They prefer to retain their imagined

autonomy, they refuse to submit to their Creator.

II. Male and female are created in the image of God

The Bible teaches that man and woman were created in the image of God

(Gen. 1:26-28).

A. To be created in the image of God is to be as much like God as a creature

could possibly be and yet remain a creature.

1. As the image of God, man is able to reason, to feel, to solve problems, to

interpret his environment, to reflect upon his own behavior, to create and

to relate.

2. Man the “namer” of things, man the researcher, man the lover of beauty

and man the fashioner of culture are all a function of bearing the image of

God.

B. Being made in the image of God has comprehensive holistic implications.

The meaning and purpose of the human race is grounded in the truth that

man is made in the image of God.

1. Thus, mankind’s existence as the image of God is inseparable from the

answer to every ultimate question. (Ultimate questions concern man’s

origin, purpose and destiny – “Why are we here? Where did we come

from? Who are we? etc.”)

2. Man as the image of God is inseparable from man’s origin and destiny.

(Carl Sagan, representing the evolutionary world-view, expressed great

optimism that the discovery of extraterrestrial intelligence would answer

the ultimate question, “Who are we?” Isn’t interesting that Sagan, who

rejects the Creator’s authoritative revelation, would submit his intellect to

the mind of an E.T.?)

3. Being made in the image of God explains who we are. The image of God

first and foremost defines man’s constitution, purpose, significance and

existence.

4. The image of God is the source of man’s dignity. Man’s honor

and worth are a function of man having been formed in God’s image. It

is this image that establishes man’s uniqueness, setting him apart from

the animal kingdom (Jer. 9:23,24).

C. Man’s purpose and significance are bound to his identity as the image of

God.

 

1. The meaning of man flows from God’s definition of man. Why does man

matter at all? Does man make a truly lasting contribution besides

passing on his genetic code to the next generation? Is it possible to make

a contribution that can never be lost? The answer lies in man’s created

purpose.

2. Man’s design and purpose belong together. Man is a “covenant” being,

designed by God to fulfill purposes that are both physical and spiritual.

Man’s role and task under God is that of a steward, a subduer, a laborer,

an inventor and a builder. As prophet, priest and king, man not only

rules over the works of God’s hands, he also interprets all things by the

Word of God and dedicates all things to the glory of God (Ps. 8).

3. The image of God is the reason why man cannot be accurately designated

an advanced animal. (Man is qualitatively not quantitatively different than

the animals.) [ii][2]

4. As the image of God, man is to reflect the divine attributes – Lev. 11:44ff;

1 Pet. 1:15,16 (e.g., attributes of love, righteousness, truth etc.).

a.) Man only functions as a faithful steward of the world and a truthful

interpreter of the universe when he is thinking God’s thoughts after

Him (that is by Scripture dominating exceptionally in his intellect).

b.) Man’s ability to carry out this cultural calling and divine mandate is a

function of his submission to God’s revelation, the Bible.

D. Man’s privilege and responsibility are a function of bearing the image of

God. It is an inestimable privilege to be the only order of creatures made in

the image of God. God’s condescension is seen in His crowning of man with

dignity and honor and in His placement of man over the works of His hands

(Ps. 8).

1. But man’s greatest responsibility is seen in the fact that the image of God

is a moral image. Man is designed to reflect the righteous character of

God.

2. Man’s effectiveness in reflecting the character of his Creator depends

upon his willingness to obey God’s commands. God’s commandments

form a fence or barrier that mark out man’s moral path on earth (Jer. 6:16;

18:15).

III. Redemption restores man’s ability to glorify God as His image-bearer. 

 As the image of God, man was created to receive God’s revelation. This is

the only way that he can know truth with certainty.

A. Apart from God’s authoritative Word, the Bible, man is set adrift on a sea of

epistemological uncertainty that leads to despair (i.e., apart from the Bible,

man has no hope whatsoever of finding absolute truth).

1. The Bible stresses that God can only be known through His authoritative

Word, the Holy Scriptures.

2. Since God is perfect in holiness and righteousness, He cannot permit

man’s fallen nature to be the ground of acceptance before Him.

3. Fallen man is totally incapable of generating a righteous work that is

recognized by God as meritorious. God’s standard of righteousness is

His own absolute holiness (Rom. 10:1-3).

B. God’s plan of redemption reveals His righteousness, compassion, love and

justice. God’s gracious character is revealed in His provision of a perfect

Substitute who acts in the room and place of fallen man.

1. The divinely appointed Substitute supplies the perfect righteousness God

law requires. The Substitute gives His life to satisfy the justice demanded

by the law of God.

2. The key is that the Substitute for fallen man is God’s only begotten Son.

He is the perfect, unfallen image of God – very God and very man. The

second Person of the Godhead took on human nature in order to become

our Substitute. In that redemptive role, He restored the broken image of

God that was lost in Adam’s fall. (Those who put their faith in the

Substitute are set right with God and restored as reflectors of His

righteousness and truth.)

VI. The cruelty of evolution’s lie is seen in its attempt to overturn the truth of

man’s identity as the image of God.

A. By denying that man is made in the image of God, evolution denies man’s

only hope. For God’s plan of redemption involves the restoration of sinful,

fallen man by a perfect image-bearer, the Lord Jesus Christ.

 

1. The divinely appointed Substitute came to restore what was lost in

Adam. If evolution is true and man is only an accidental product of

mechanistic determinism, then redemption is unnecessary.

2. By rejecting the truth that man was created in the image of God,

evolution contradicts the Person, character and commission of the

divinely appointed Substitute.

B. Evolutionary naturalism is religious in nature.

1. Naturalism may be broadly defined as the world-view which states that

nature or the material world is all there is. The origin of life is attributed

to impersonal, natural laws and mindless processes.

2. Naturalism embraces evolution as its universal. In other words,

evolution is seen as the unifying “truth” by which the numerous

particulars of our existence may be interpreted. (Everything from quasars

to ladybugs is attributed to evolution. Evolution is also the interpretive

“grid” through which the relationship of all things to one another is

viewed. )

C. Naturalism is the wholesale rejection of God’s revelation (“wholesale,”

because naturalism rejects the testimony of God’s wise design in nature and

it rejects God’s witness in Scripture of man’s sinful condition and need of

redemption).

1. Naturalism views man’s mind as ultimate (thus able to answer ultimate

questions without divine assistance).

2. By rejecting God’s truth about the creation of man and the universe,

naturalism posits a radically different “reality” that is materialistic. [iii][3]

D. As a consequence of denying God’s revelation, man must find counterfeit

sources of dignity, purpose, significance, responsibility and ethics.

1. As man looks to material sources for his ontological needs, he inevitably

worships and serves the creature and the creation (Rom. 1:25).

2. When man gives credit to nature for creating itself, the processes of the

physical world are “deified.” Chaos, time and chance become the pagan

trinity responsible for all existence.

E. The Bible exposes naturalism as a lie chosen by men seeking to give

intellectual credence to their rebellion against God.

1. Those who seek refuge in naturalism are attempting to nullify the

Creator’s claims upon their lives (Rom. 1:18-23).

2. The foundational issue in the debate between creation and evolution is

not about vast ages, mutations or natural selection. The real issue in the

conflict concerns the nature of reality. Naturalism contradicts the whole

idea of a theistic universe ruled by an almighty personal God. The actual

crux of the debate is, “God is” versus “God isn’t.”

3. Naturalism’s proponent’s often hold to an agnostic or soft form of

atheism. This entails an acknowledgement that a god exists, but his

deeds are inconsequential. He never did anything that really matters. He

is not creator, nor is he intimately involved with mankind. The god of

naturalism is finite and merely a part of the universe.

V. Naturalism has left mankind a legacy of immoral fallout.

 

A. Man in charge of his own meaning, morals and significance has left a terrible

legacy. A number of oppressive regimes have expressed their gratitude to

Darwin for providing an ideology to sanction their butchery (e.g., Stalin,

Hitler and Pol Pot among others). When God is dead, “Survival of the

fittest” as a credo can be a deadly bludgeon in the hands of the state, history

has proven it so.

B. Naturalism’s approach to morality is the polar opposite of biblical theism.

The God of the Bible asserts that His moral code is universal and eternal.

Naturalism views morals as merely social convention.

1. Public opinion becomes the source of ethics, not God. The Ten

Commandments are not regarded as God’s moral authority, but are

viewed as a tribal or cultural custom of the Jews. By way of example,

naturalism would see marriage as a human invention, not as a universal

institution ordained by God.

2. Since moral values are viewed as inventions, they can evolve.

Pragmatism or expediency provides the test of viability for a moral value.

Naturalism sees law and ethics as a way of protecting people from each

other as they seek to get what they want. (A world full of individuals

with competing self-interest must be governed by law.)

3. Having eliminated the sovereign Creator (and the purpose of life as living

unto Him), naturalism is left with nothing but the creature’s wants.

Naturalism is a philosophy that extols human independence from God.

“What people want” is the guide. Naturalism vaunts itself as true

freedom when in reality it is a prescription for paganism.

C. Naturalism was central in Enlightenment thinking. The goal of the “age of

reason” was to set free the culture from religion and tradition. Philosophers

sought a scientific understanding of reality. Enlightenment thinkers hoped

to usher in an age in which science could solve the greatest problems and

answer the toughest questions faced by mankind.

1. The legitimate role of true science is to investigate and explain

physical/material phenomena. When science arrogates to itself the mantle

of philosophy, ethics and theology, it is no longer empirical.

2. In seeking a “scientific” understanding of all things, naturalism

constructed a whole new view of reality. Morals were regarded as merely

social mores. With the loss of the absolutes and categories that flow from

theism, naturalism was left with moral relativism.

D. Moral relativism, the corrupt fruit of naturalism - Relativism states that truth

is relative to the individual and the time and place in which he acts. Without

universally applicable truth, knowledge and ethics are different for each

individual under different situations (i.e., situation ethics). Values are only

cultural – based upon personal interests. All value systems are equally valid.

 

1. Under relativism, values come from commonly expressed needs, not from

God’s universal laws. The classroom teacher is then shouldered with the

task of teaching the new morality of relativism (i.e., “value clarification”).

2. In the cultural/moral vacuum produced by naturalism, students are to be

imbued with the new morality of relativistic tolerance, pluralism and

inclusivism. (e.g., Homosexual couples have as legitimate a relationship as

married heterosexuals. Atheists are the moral equivalent of Christian leaders).

3. Naturalism comes in the disguise of tolerance, but is filled with

intolerance. Naturalism has its own categories of bigotry, evil and

oppression. Those who would teach sexual morality are viewed as

authoritarian and dangerous. Those who subscribe to a universal moral

order that issues from God’s moral authority are seen as backward

enemies of human freedom. Those who affirm that God’s absolute truth is

true for all are labeled intolerant bigots.

4. Christianity asserts that sexual morality is connected with the will of the

Creator. The Bible affirms that the knowledge of absolute right and

wrong issues from the authority of God.

VI. Naturalism is tantamount to a declaration of war upon God and His

rightful authority.

 

 A. Naturalism is seeking to erect an understanding of reality that makes man’s

mind ultimate (i.e., man becomes the measure of all things and by

autonomous reason he shapes and determines reality apart from God). [iv][4]

1. Naturalism is patently anti-God. It seeks to replace God (the omnipotent,

omniscient, purposeful designer) with man. If there is no personal, all

wise, purposeful Creator, then there are no sexual absolutes.

2. Naturalism is not simply pressing for scientific terminology. It

promulgates an agenda of moral relativism.

3. God is ultimate reality. He determines all truth and all categories. He

holds the future and He holds the definition of all things. “The beginning

of wisdom is the fear of the LORD” (Prov. 1:7).

4. In the 1st century, Christianity was hated because it contradicted man-

centered emperor worship and idolatry. In the 21st century, Christianity

is hated because it dethrones man and enthrones God the Creator.

5. Because we are created in God’s image, we have rationality. Man’s

faculties, including the laws of logic, are planted by God that man may be

able to receive His revelation and interpret all things by His revelation.

B. When man uses his reasoning faculties as a final authority instead of as the

tool of divine revelation, he descends into futility and irrationality (Eph.

4:17-19).

1. The issue is authority in the realm of truth and knowledge. God has

declared His authority. He has announced that creation testifies to His

power and wisdom so clearly that men are without excuse (Rom. 1:18-20).

2. When men use their God-given intellect to reject God’s testimony, their

willful misinterpretation of God’s witness in creation renders them guilty

before Him.

3. The truths of the Bible are not simply religious ideas held in the heads of

religious people. They are the truths by which the universe is to be

interpreted. They are absolute universal truths that are constantly in

force. They constitute reality because they are God’s thoughts and God is

ultimate reality.

C. Naturalism hides behind the disguise of empirical science, but it is shot

through with the presuppositions of an anti-theistic universe.

 

1. The theory of evolution masquerades as science. Its philosophical

purpose is to legitimize the anti-God assumptions of naturalism.

2. Wearing a lab coat as its costume, naturalism’s real intent is to give man

permission to govern by his own will rather than by the law of God.

When man denies the claims of God upon the creature, his bondage to sin

is strengthened. True freedom is to know God and enjoy Him forever.

“And you will know the truth and the truth will make you free” (Jn. 8:32).

 

Endnotes:

[i][1] Phillip Johnson, Teaching Children the Truth about Science, audiotape of lecture by Phillip Johnson, (Focus on the Family), tape # CS999/17515.

[ii][2] James F. Stitzinger, Apologetics and Evangelism TH 701, (Syllabus from The Master’s Seminary, Sun Valley, CA, copyright 1999) 34.

[iii][3] John D. Morris, “Things You May not Know about Evolution,” in Acts and Facts, (Back to Genesis, Apr. 2002, 31:4)d.

[iv][4] Robert C. Newman, ”Scientific Problems for Scientism” in Evangelical Apologetics, Michael Baumen et. al eds. (Christian Publications, 1996) 245.

 

 

The Book of Esther: A Display of God's Providence

The biblical book of Esther presents a powerful exhibition of God’s providence. Some of the smallest details mentioned in the book turn out to be indispensable links in the chain of events.

Consider the following occurrences which at face value appear to be inconsequential:

  • Vashti refuses to be “displayed” at the banquet.
  • The king begins the process of “interviewing” for a new queen.
  • Esther is an orphan being raised by her uncle.
  • Mordecai “by chance” discovers a treasonous plot to kill the king.
  • Haman listens to the counsel of his wife and friends on how he may vindicate his honor..
  • The king tries to deal with his insomnia by reading the court minutes.

Each of these seemingly insignificant details is essential in the development and outcome of the plot.

Each key figure in the narrative has their true character increasingly revealed and solidified as they face difficult decisions (e.g., Because Haman takes offense at one Jew who will not bow to him, Haman is willing to order a complete genocide against the Jewish nation).

In the Esther narrative, as in all of history, God’s providence is carried out through a string of second causes. A “second cause” is an act or decision performed by an individual. Central to the understanding of second causes is that the decisions people make are NOT made by divine compulsion (from the outside). The decisions made by people are decisions which are agreeable to their nature, character and wishes. Second causes brought Esther to the throne. Her selection was NOT like a lottery. Her advancement to the position of queen depended upon second causes -- her submission, her beauty, her wisdom, her teachability, her grace and her purity were all involved.

God normally accomplishes His providence through the use of ordinary means (the exception would be when He works above ordinary means by the supernatural and miraculous – God’s direct working through the miraculous falls under the category of first cause).

As the plot in the Esther narrative rises to its climax, the tension becomes like a taut rope ready to snap. In 3:13, the decree to annihilate all Jews and seize their property becomes irrevocable law (the laws of the Medes and Persians could not be overturned). In 5:14, Haman constructs gallows to have Mordecai hung. In 6:4-9, Haman’s timing in seeking permission to hang Mordecai could not have been more ill advised (the king wants to honor Mordecai at that very moment). In 7:7-10, Haman’s plea for his life at the banquet is interpreted by the king as an assault upon the queen.

Consider what God accomplishes in the account of Esther. Meek little Esther pushes for a one day extension for the execution of the Gentile anti-Semites until finally 80,000 are killed! Only God could allow Medo-Persian Gentiles to pass a law which would permit captive Jews to legally kill 80,000 Gentiles who were anti-Semitic. Think of it, a pagan king allows Jews in his kingdom to legally round up and execute every known enemy of theirs.

The truly amazing thing is how God did it. He brought it to pass by first allowing an irrevocable law to be passed that called for a total Jewish genocide (3:13). But God turned the tables, and He did so through a Jewish orphaned virgin whom He brought to the throne of a world empire.

The first decree that called for the destruction of the Jews was necessary in order to bring out of the woodwork every enemy of the Jews. The second decree reversed the whole situation in a moment of time, for suddenly the victims become the judges.

Only those who believed in the God of Scripture understood the might of God’s providential dealings. (So also, only the believer in God’s Word understands history.) Both Mordecai and Esther understood that God had ordained her rise to queen in order to rescue the Jewish nation from its bitter enemies (See 4:13,14).

QUESTIONS:

1.) How did the characters of the personalities in the book become increasingly revealed and manifested? (Name some of the circumstances that revealed character.)

2.) Why do you think that God allowed the circumstances to be so hostile to the Jews before He turned things around for their benefit?

3.) Discuss the risks taken by Esther in order to save her people.

4.) List the second causes that brought Esther to the throne.

5.) Comment on Haman’s speech before his friends and family. What did it say about his character? How did he respond to their suggestions?

6.) Explain why the “dread of Mordecai” came upon the people. How did God bring this about? (see 9:3 ff.)