IrContent

Absolutely Ir-Refutable Proof That Atheism Leads to Evil

May 15, 2008 · 8 Comments

In the wake of “all the religious scandals” of late I thought I’d point out some even more depressing news from the Atheist front. Since any act committed by someone with religious affiliation is used by atheists to argue against religion it seems to me they won’t mind if the same logic is applied to them.

Vienna has the lowest percentage of religious conviction of any Austrian province, therefore anything bad that happens in Vienna can clearly be attributed to atheism (don’t think too hard, just keep reading). And what has Vienna been in the news for recently??? CNN reports that:

  • An Austrian man (from Vienna!) has recently confessed to killing his parents, wife, and 7-year-old daughter with an ax. Vienna police said, “He is completely matter-of-fact … almost without emotion.”
  • Josef Fritzl, 73, confessed last month to holding his daughter captive in a cellar below the family home (Just outside Vienna!) for 24 years, repeatedly raping her and fathering seven children with her.
  • Just two years ago in Strasshof (another Vienna suburb!) a young girl escaped from the basement of a house after being held there for eight years and being repeatedly abused by her captor, Wolfgang Priklopil, who killed himself by throwing himself under a train.

Hmmmm - need I say more?

→ 8 CommentsCategories: Apologetics · Cogitatus Profundus

Salvation by (ceasing from) Works?

May 13, 2008 · 3 Comments

100th Post!!!

The Calvinism-Arminianism debate is often framed in terms of man’s autonomy. By autonomy is roughly meant “what natural man can do without God’s extra help.” For example, Calvinists believe that man can make no positive contribution to salvation until after God regenerates him. After that, man has the ability to believe. The Arminian sees a problem here. If regeneration alone results in belief, and only through belief can man be saved, then God is simply choosing to save some and not others. This seems to remove mankind from responsibility before God. But to the Calvinist it seems that if man can generate his own belief that this makes faith a work. Aagghh! There are other issues, but I think that a distinction might be made to alleviate some of the tension concerning belief-as-work.

First, I think we can all admit that regardless of which side we think is correct, the debate would not exist if the Bible did not seem to lay responsibility for man’s salvation on both man and on God. Second, we all agree that without God’s grace man could not be saved, and that works do not save. But if belief is thought of as a work then we must ask how a sinner could ever perform such a thing in the first place (Heb. 11:6) and how it would not nullify grace (Eph. 2:8-10). On the other hand, if belief is the result of God’s efficient causality then the blame for unbelief would seem to fall on God (Mt. 23:37). Scripture on both sides can be batted back and forth for both of these seemingly irreconcilable positions.

But I think there may be a better way to think about it. The Bible clearly presents natural man as God’s active, not passive, enemy (Rom. 5:10; 11:28). We are born battling God due to our selfish and sinful desires and we would not naturally switch to God’s side (Rom. 5:6). But couldn’t we choose to surrender? It is not required for one to positively affirm his enemy to give up the fight. Ceasing to strive against God’s grace is not, itself, striving (viz. law of non-contradiction). In fact, one might say surrender is the cessation of works! But choosing to cease is still an active choice on man’s part (e.g., ceasing to stand results in falling, but falling is not ‘by works’). This interplay of “actively making a passive choice” seems to be illustrated in the life of Jesus who, according to God’s predetermined plan (Acts 2:22), freely chose to lay down His life (Jn. 10:18), which resulted in Him being acted upon by men (Acts 2:23), who were held responsible for their choice (Acts 2:38).

This seems to (1) retain man’s responsibility for sin and unbelief while at the same time (2) affirm God’s efficient and active role in salvation, yet (3) relieve God from blame for leaving some to damnation if He must, and could, regenerate them to make belief possible but simply chooses not to do so in some cases.

→ 3 CommentsCategories: Theology

Book News!!!

May 7, 2008 · 10 Comments

My book from Moody Publishers has been given an official title and, as far as I know, cover art! It will be titled The Message Behind the Movie: Engaging a Film Without Disengaging Your Faith, and should be released early next year (Spring quarter 2009) if everything goes well.

The book is based on my seminar of the same title which covers the basics of film interpretation and evaluation with additional chapters on applying these messages to spiritually-significant topics such as Philosophy, Theology, Religion, and Ethics.

And as Frank Turek likes to say, “All proceeds from this book will go to feed hungry children . . . mine!”

If you have a group interested in the seminar please visit: www.dougbeaumont.org.

→ 10 CommentsCategories: Culture · News

Whine on Stein

April 23, 2008 · 7 Comments

Did anyone go see Ben Stein’s new documentary on Intelligent Design this weekend? “Anyone? . . . Anyone?” (Sorry, had to get that in there somewhere!). Well I did, and I thought Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed was pretty good. No, I don’t think it was the best documentary ever made, and I have to agree with some of the film’s negative critics - but not with most of their conclusions. Basically, their main issue is that the film is skewed in its presentation.

Well yeah, of course it is.

No one makes a documentary about something they do not think is important, and their take on its importance will usually come through. I would even say it should come through. While some film makers are better at hiding their agenda, this does not make more blatant messages false. Whether or not Expelled is 100% objective (I’d guess it was about 80.5% objective), its message is important if for no other reason than to wake America up to the fact that a considerable number of scientists disagree with the Darwinian hypothesis and are simply being lambasted into silence.

In its first week (the largest release of a documetary ever - just over 1,000 theaters) Expelled earned over $3 million . That’s very good for a documentary. True, this is substantially less than the $23 million Michael Moore’s anti-America “Fahrenheit 9/11″ claimed in 2004. However, I.D. is not exactly at the top of most Americans’ interests right now (which is a huge part of the problem, and one reason Stein’s film is so very important).

To make Expelled, Stein and company talked with educators and scientists who say they have been persecuted for questioning Darwin’s theory of natural selection. This included Dr. Richard Sternberg, who was fired from the Smithsonian Institution for publishing a paper that mentioned I.D. as a possible way to help explain life’s origins. Guillermo Gonzalez, an accomplished astrobiologist who was denied tenure at Iowa State University because of his pro-I.D. stance (which university officials admitted, BTW).

Also interviewed extensively is the Dickety-Doc himself, Richard Dawkins (Oxford University). Dawkins is the current pop-prophet and media darling of Darwinism. In a rather bizarre moment, between his typical rants about the evil of religion and how it holds back real science blah blah blah, Dawkins states that evidence of I.D. points to aliens who themselves were evolved along Darwinian paths. So, even if I.D. were to topple Darwinian evolutionary theory on earth the evolutionists will simply push it back to another planet??? Whoa! Talk about dying in the ditch for an ideology! How can that possibly be seen as authentic science? These people are so committed to keeping the supernatural out of the equation that they will stick to their theory even if it means positing a Darwinian evolution on another planet to explain its lack of presence here! I wish I had faith like that . . . not.

As stated above, critics of the film are whining quite a bit about the rhetorical devices employed by the film (examples of these with useful comparisons to Fahrenheit 9/11 can be found here). Stein’s use of holocaust imagery, communist film clips, and much anonymous footage to alternately make fun of and accuse evolutionism-ists is clearly designed to evoke emotional responses. My reply - so what? First off, this is typical documentary behavior (consider “Jesus Camp’s” use of Bush/Iraq news footage to frame their entire story of the so-called evangelical subculture, or, well, anything that Michael Moore has ever produced . . . ).

Second, it shows the atheists can’t take their own medicine. Is Expelled emotionally manipulative? Yes. Is the rhetoric overdone? Yes (if only slightly). Does the film use scare tactics? Yes. Is this the same tactics that these new militant atheists use with regard to religion? Absolutely. Blaming religion for what a handful of people over the centuries have done “in the name of God” . . . referring to scientists with better credentials than themselves as stupid because they don’t bow the knee to Darwin . . . it makes for brilliant satire if nothing else.

Most important though - none of this whining over rhetorical devices matters if it’s true!!! I was a member of the women’s abuse council at DSS. At our first meeting we listened to a 911 call from a child who was watching his mother being brutalized by his father. It was one of the most horrible things I have ever experienced, and it certainly made me want to help the group in passionately acting to stop such things. Was that propaganda? Was it emotionally manipulative? Did it use scare tactics? Yes. Did that matter? No.

What the critics seem to be failing to do is give me a reason to think Stein’s thesis is false. Rather, they have launched a series of their own emotive attacks - some very personal ones on Stein himself.

Richard Dawkins whines about everything from the title of the film being changed to being misrepresented when he tries to be nice to the “IDiots” (his phrase). He says that the interview was set up under false pretenses and that he didn’t even know who Stein was. OK, first, so what? He said what he said regardless of what he thought he was doing. Second, Dawkins is now attacking Stein (a lawyer, law professor, economist, and speech writer for two presidents) as “honestly stupid.” Dawkins even goes so far as to mock Stein’s reaction to his visit to a Nazi death camp (and if you don’t believe that he would do such a thing then you don’t know Dick!). Basically it boils down to him not being aware of the film’s agenda. What seems “honestly stupid” to me is not bothering to Google Stein’s name to discover his background before agreeing to be filmed for a documentary! Even if this was somehow Stein’s fault, the point is moot - facts are facts regardless of one’s purpose for exposing them.

Andy Klein (LA City Beat) gives this enlightened response to the film: ” In its simplest terms, Expelled sees Hitler’s push for racial cleansing as a natural result of Darwin’s ideas. Whoa. Big F—ng Whoa.” Brilliant! Insightful! Seriously Andy, have you read Mein Kampf? Consider this quote:

At some future period, not very distant as measured by centuries, the civilized races of man will almost certainly exterminate, and replace, the savage races throughout the world. . . it will intervene between man in a more civilised state, as we may hope, even than the Caucasian, and some ape as low as a baboon, instead of as now between the negro or Australian and the gorilla.

Is this not textbook Nazi racism? Nope - it’s from Darwin’s Descent of Man! Klein makes another rhetorical-yet-factually-lacking statement with regard to Planned Parenthood: “‘The spirit of eugenics lives on in Planned Parenthood’ – huh? – and then lumps together “abortion and euthanasia” in one breath. This is yet another tip-off as to Expelled’s true goal.” Wow. There is NO QUESTION about the eugenic origins of Planned Parenthood (Margaret Sanger, the founder, once said that, “The undeniably feeble-minded should, indeed, not only be discouraged but prevented from propagating their kind”); and the medi-ethical issues of abortion and euthanasia go hand in hand by definition (whether one is for or against either).

Jeannette Catsoulis (NY Times) called Expelled “One of the sleaziest documentaries to arrive in a very long time . . . a conspiracy-theory rant masquerading as investigative inquiry.” She then revealed startling ignorance when she stated that, “Every few minutes familiar — and ideologically unrelated — images interrupt the talking heads: a fist-shaking Nikita S. Khrushchev; Charlton Heston being subdued by a water hose in ‘Planet of the Apes.’” Excuse me? Is she seriously questioning the evolutionary links between evolutionary theory and communism or Planet of the Apes (a film wholly dedicated to the evolutionary hypothesis)???

Sorry guys, but these links have been recognized by scholars for quite some time. Discovery Institute fellow Dr. Richard Weikart explains the Nazi connections in his book From Darwin to Hitler (even a pro-Islam website shows many of these Nazi/Communist connections). While it’s true that Hitler did not mention Darwin by name, he hardly ever named thinkers from whom he derived ideas. Even if, like most people today, Hitler never even read Darwin, he would have learned evolutionary ideals in school, and popular media (again, like most people today). As Weikart notes, “Hitler believed that population pressure causes a struggle for existence between organisms that leads to evolutionary progress. He also believed that this struggle occurred between human races. This is completely Darwinian . . . and Hitler often described evolution in Darwinian terms. . . . Hitler’s anti-Semitism did not derive from Darwinism, but many of his ideas did have Darwinian roots.” Dawkins himself tries to make a strong distinction between Darwinism and its social ramifications when he says, “As I have often said before, as a scientist I am a passionate Darwinian. But as a citizen and a human being, I want to construct a society which is about as un-Darwinian as we can make it” (see “Dick” link above).

William Dembski pointed out the media ’s inconsistency with regard to these connections:

. . . the same weekend that “Expelled” opened in theaters saw the opening of another documentary, “Constantine’s Sword.” Here’s what the Village Voice has to say about that film: “X marks the spot, literally, where Christianity and the Catholic Church fostered the centuries of religious hatred and anti-Semitism that culminated in the Holocaust…” So, for our culture’s secular elite, a film that shows how Christianity “culminated in the Holocaust” constitutes cutting-edge cultural commentary. But a film like “Expelled,” which carefully documents how the Nazis appropriated Darwin’s ideas, is “bizarre and hysterical.”

Where are the facts??? Whether or not Expelled has any artistic merit, what few critics seem to be unable to do is find actual instances of outright falsehood. Besides vague references to “other issues” being involved with Sternberg’s firing I have not heard anything but outraged opinions about Stein’s outraged opinions.

But being outraged is not the same thing as being outrageous . . . not if you’re right.

→ 7 CommentsCategories: Cogitatus Profundus · Culture

Dick to tha Doc

April 1, 2008 · 2 Comments

dickdawk.jpg
In honor of April Fool’s Day I thought that a tribute to some of the Four HorseyMen was appropriate. Dick to tha Dawk features Richard Dawkins but includes appearances by Eugenie Scott, Sam Harris, Daniel Dennet, and even Charlie D. himself!. Ahhh yeeah.
My name is D to the I to C to the K,
Yeah I’m the Dickie D, I gots my PhD
and comin’ your way on the Youtube to bust your world view
so just listen to me and don’t you argue.

You see, this battle’s been ragin’ since Zeus was on the bottle,
‘tween Science like Democritus and Faith like Aristotle,
who said the mover was unmovin’ like some magic trick but
that’s no good logic, my posse is far too quick for this religious sthick.

Cos science is the only way to know y’all,
you stand with me y’all,
or you can fall y’all
So go ahead and take your pick

Yeah you tell him Rick
Cos if you don’t know me

You don’t know Dick!

CHORUS:
Yeah he’s the Dick to the Dawk to the PhD,
he’s smarter than you he’s got a science degree!
Yeah he’s the Dick to the Dawk to the PhD,
he’s smarter than you - he’s got a science degree!

On the shoulders of midgets we built up this machine,
YEAH!!!

Science silenced that watchdog wingnut Paley
growing stronger and harder almost daily,
storming Wilber by force as we framed the discourse
that faith and science are split in schismatic divorce.

Then Darwin took to the seas to see what no one had seen,
and ever since then we’ve been increasingly keen,
they may never adore us, but they’ll no longer ignore us,
give it to ‘em PZ hit these **** with the chorus!!!

Chorus
. . . he’s still smarter than you he studied biology!

Then there was Darrow
dukin’ it out with the straight and the narrow,
a ragin’ bull in the ring, he did his thing,
and took it on the chin like he was Bobby De Niro.

We might have lost at Scopes,
beaten down by the dopes, and the stooges of popes,
but in losin’ we coped, becomin’ more than we hoped,
creationists slipped on the soap of their own slippery slope.
What was impossible, improbable, is now wholly unstoppable untoppleable,
the Dick Doc’ll roll up as you creationists foldup
you haters talkin’ bull,
don’t you know that this Dick is un-****-frickin’ blockable???

Chorus

Now the machine of our making, sees culture ripe for the taking,
Cos I’m the rappinest, rabidest atheist who unlike the Catholic, Muslim or even the Jew,
believes that no God but science could ever be true,
hell if I was dyslexic I’d even hate “dog” too.

Time to open your eyes, get yourself wise,
the age of science will rise to be religion’s demise,
and while you churchies all cry, shouting ‘why God oh why,’
I’ll still be poppin’ my collar earning more dollars than Allah.

Hollah!

Chorus

→ 2 CommentsCategories: Fun Stuff

D&D Character

March 21, 2008 · 5 Comments

dndrocker.jpg

OK, so this is a super-nerdy thing to do, but I can’t help it - I love these things. I only played D&D once and spent most of my time irritating the DM with my insistence that I be given a “Blasting Guitar of Power” that, when played skillfully, would destroy my enemies. Anyway, here’s my results from Find out What Kind of Dungeons and Dragons Character Would You Be?, courtesy of Easydamus :

I Am A: Lawful Neutral Human Cleric (5th Level)

Ability Scores:
Strength-12
Dexterity-13
Constitution-11
Intelligence-15
Wisdom-12
Charisma-14

Alignment:
Lawful Neutral A lawful neutral character acts as law, tradition, or a personal code directs him. Order and organization are paramount to him. He may believe in personal order and live by a code or standard, or he may believe in order for all and favor a strong, organized government. Lawful neutral is the best alignment you can be because it means you are reliable and honorable without being a zealot. However, lawful neutral can be a dangerous alignment because it seeks to eliminate all freedom, choice, and diversity in society.

Race:
Humans are the most adaptable of the common races. Short generations and a penchant for migration and conquest have made them physically diverse as well. Humans are often unorthodox in their dress, sporting unusual hairstyles, fanciful clothes, tattoos, and the like.

Class:
Clerics act as intermediaries between the earthly and the divine (or infernal) worlds. A good cleric helps those in need, while an evil cleric seeks to spread his patron’s vision of evil across the world. All clerics can heal wounds and bring people back from the brink of death, and powerful clerics can even raise the dead. Likewise, all clerics have authority over undead creatures, and they can turn away or even destroy these creatures. Clerics are trained in the use of simple weapons, and can use all forms of armor and shields without penalty, since armor does not interfere with the casting of divine spells. In addition to his normal complement of spells, every cleric chooses to focus on two of his deity’s domains. These domains grants the cleric special powers, and give him access to spells that he might otherwise never learn. A cleric’s Wisdom score should be high, since this determines the maximum spell level that he can cast.

→ 5 CommentsCategories: Fun Stuff

Speaking at “Answers in Truth”

March 19, 2008 · No Comments

I will be speaking in Indiana this April on “Christian Apologetics” and “The Message Behind the Movies.” For more info click HERE.

→ No CommentsCategories: News

Extreme Apologetics

March 19, 2008 · No Comments

OK, I hardly ever just point to other people’s stuff here, but this is too great to miss: www.tektonics.org/extremeapologetics.html

→ No CommentsCategories: Apologetics · Fun Stuff

Zeitgeist Responses

March 7, 2008 · 2 Comments

The movie Zeitgeist was shown at Southern Evangelical Seminary (along with many other schools) Saturday March 15th along with a panel of professors to discuss its theories (primarily pt. 1 - the attack on Christianity). As the website says: “It is my hope that people will not take what is said in the film as the truth, but find out for themselves . . .”

My thoughts are that atheists should be offended that such tripe is being ascribed to their position. I could have made a better attack on Christianity than this. “Sun God” = “Son of God”? (come on - English didn’t even exist back then!) . . . tired old falsehoods regarding non-existent myth parallels . . . December 25 being Jesus’ birthday . . . pathetic. If I did not know better I’d think a Christian made this film to make atheists look ignorant, as it is little more than a collection of known historical falsehoods. While these claims have been debunked for years in various venues, here are some that seem to be the first internet-based direct responses to the film (the last one is a 10 minute video):

Please note that I have not reviewed these responses in full nor the websites on which they appear.

→ 2 CommentsCategories: Apologetics · Culture

[Spin] Doctors of the Church

February 18, 2008 · 16 Comments

internationalinstitute.jpg

 

Ministry used to be a verb. Apparently now it’s a noun.

I’ve been out of seminary for a few years now and I’ve noticed a trend lately that I think represents a very poor way of thinking about ministry. Many of the students and alumni I see these days are forming “ministries” instead of just going out and doing ministry. I can’t tell you how many students I know right now whose goal for getting educated is to “have a speaking and writing ministry.” Where are the pastors? Where are the teachers? Where are the evangelists? Ephesians 4 does not list “speakers and writers” as gifted positions God gave for the establishment of the Church!

Now, what these people are doing is a good thing so far as it goes, but the problem is that instead of involving themselves with the local church or schools they put up a false front and then attempt to fund their “ministry” by requesting donations. The thinking seems to be that doing ministry involves these steps:

  1. “Found” your ministry. (By “found” is meant “think up a title and make a website out of it.” The title should include words like National, International, Institute, Center, or Society.)
  2. Give yourself the title of “founder,” “director,” “president,” or whatever. (Note that from this point on you must never refer to yourself in the first person, rather you should use “us,” “we,” and “The Ministry.”)
  3. Get 501(c) 3 status for your “ministry” so you can accept tax exempt donations for your “ministry work.”
  4. Hit the road doing “speaking engagements” and ask for money for “The Ministry” so you can speak more.

The question these “ministries” need to ask themselves is why they should be siphoning off funding for the local church when it is the local church that should be paying them to preach or teach in the first place. What are these donations for anyway? If they are speaking they should be getting paid. And if they aren’t making enough doing speaking engagements then they should either get better or get another job! In the good ole’ days seminaries fed the churches. Students came to seminary in order to get training in how to support the Church - not compete with it by creating their own little tax-exempt solo careers. We need less superheroes and more laborers.

Sure, there will always be the Billy Grahams and James Dobsons of the world whose ministries are making a huge difference and require support from churches. But many today think that they should instantly be paid full time speakers just because they have a few PowerPoint presentations made from their class notes. It’s like the debt problem Americans face today. Kids graduate High School with nicer cars than people who have been working for twenty years and think they should be in a 3,000 square foot home by the time they’re out of college. They see the results of a lifetime of labor and think that’s just what they should have; so they go into massive debt instead of earning the income. In the same way, these “ministry founders” seem to think that being a Ravi Zacharias or a William Lane Craig involves nothing more than being able to parrot real scholars’ material in a 45 minute seminar. Then they beg for money because “the world needs to hear this stuff!”

I agree that the world needs to hear many of these messages - but it needs to hear them from all believers. And that requires training all believers (which is what Church is supposed to do). And I am talking about real training - not just weekend seminars. Churches and schools are the best places to prepare people for that sort of ministry - but what if all they do is run out and “found speaking ministries”? Sure, if these “ministers” become so popular that they can do it full time, fine. But people should not think that this is just what ministry is and simply ask people to fund them.

I think what irritates me the most, though, is the image manipulation. What right does an average seminary student or graduate have to act as though they are heading up some huge ministry when it is really just them trying to get paid to speak here and there? This is not doing ministry, this is spin doctoring. Does Gary Habermas have “The International Center for Resurrection Studies”? Does Tom Howe have “The Institute for Classical Hermeneutical Training”? And why doesn’t Win Corduan host “The National Society for the Philosophy of World Religions”? Because these “ministries” don’t exist (even though these guys could legitimately get them going if they so desired!).

Worse, if the terms used in titles like these are taken in their natural sense then it might even be seen as lying. These are not “centers” or “institutes” and they are not “national” or “international.” They are just people with websites. And that is enough! Why act like there is more to it than that? That is why I have dougbeaumont.org - not because of vanity, but because that’s all my ministry is: me, and what I do at school, church, and the venues where I speak. I am not “international,” I have no “institute,” and as far as I know no “societies” have formed because of me (unless they are secret societies and I have not been invited!).

Having a catchy title for a ministry is fine. Asking for donations because someone really can’t work and do her ministry well at the same time might be appropriate if her church cannot support her. But let’s be honest people . . . fake storefronts are no way to begin a legitimate ministry.

→ 16 CommentsCategories: Apologetics · Cogitatus Profundus