The
Measure of All Things
by Gary
DeMar
Have you ever wondered
why people don’t understand things the
way you do? The facts are there for everyone to see and comprehend. So
what keeps them from believing? At one level we know it’s a spiritual
problem. In some cases God blinds their eyes (John 12:40) or hardens
their heart (Ex. 4:21) so they will not understand (Matt. 13:13). In
other cases God gives “them over to a depraved mind” (Rom.
1:28). They couldn’t see the truth if it came up and bit them.
In addition to what God does to those seeking to be their own god, there
is also a pro-active side whereby individuals make the claim that they
are autonomous and “objective” truth seekers when in reality
they are biased truth concealers. They purposely “suppress the
truth in unrighteousness” (Rom. 1:18) and set their mind “on
the flesh” (8:6). They know the truth, but they cover it up so
they don’t have to abandon their adopted worldview. Finally, there
are those who have been taken “captive through philosophy and empty
deception, according to the tradition of men, according to the elementary
principles of the world, rather than according to Christ” (Col.
2:8).
Carl
Sagan shows in his book Cosmos how he had been “taken
captive through philosophy and empty deception” when he wrote in
the book’s opening line that “The cosmos is all that is or
ever was or ever will be.”1 Every
fact, experience, and piece of scientific evidence that he gathered was
filtered through this man-made, indefensible, and unprovable interpretive
grid. All that follows in the Cosmos worldview is measured by
this one-sentence interpretive yardstick rather than “according
to Christ” (Col. 2:8) who “made the world” and “upholds
all things by the word of His power” (Heb. 1:2, 3). Where the Bible
presupposes God and His creative activity (Gen. 1:1; Heb. 11:3), Sagan
presupposed the cosmos and nothing else. He then appointed himself as
the ultimate interpreter of what he believed existed. Sagan limited and
governed himself by his stated operating cosmic presupposition. If he
came upon a bit of evidence or an experience that did not seem to fit
his cosmos-is-everything worldview, then it was not a fact.
For
Sagan, the cosmos was god, a glorious accidental substitute for what
he believed were ancient, pre-scientific beliefs about God and the origin
and nature of the universe. The very idea of a personal God
is, in Sagan’s worldview, simply “the dreams of men.”2 Even
so, Sagan’s worldview is just as religious as that of the Christian’s
worldview:
When
Sagan excludes even the possibility that a spiritual dimension has
any place in his cosmos—not even at the unknown, mysterious moment
when life began—he makes accidental evolution the explanation for
everything. Presented in this way, evolution does indeed look like an
inverted religion, a conceptual golden calf, which manages to reek of
sterile atheism. It is little wonder that many parents find their deeper
emotions stirred if they discover this to be the import of Johnny’s
education.3
Sagan worshiped an eternal cosmos that he presupposed is
an evolutionary substitute for the eternal God of the Bible who gives
life and meaning to everything. Sagan said it like this: “It
is the universe that made us. . . . We are creatures of the cosmos.
. . . Our obligation to survive and flourish is owed, not just to ourselves,
but also to that cosmos, ancient and vast, from which we spring.”4 God’s
personal attributes are imputed to an impersonal cosmos. The “primordial
biotic soup”5 nourished our
ancient ancestors as they emerged from that first ocean of life. These
memories, according to Sagan, are eternally etched on our evolved psyche.
The
ocean calls. Some part of our being knows this is from where we came.
We long to return. These aspirations are not, I think, irreverent, although
they may trouble whatever gods may be.6
Sagan
makes it clear that there are no “gods” in the usual
sense in his universe, only “accidents”7 that
somehow developed into designed and meaningful entities. At times, however,
Sagan muses rhapsodic over a seemingly benign reverence of the cosmos
that hints at a deep religious commitment to atheism and elements of
paganism. “Our ancestors worshipped the sun,” he reflects, “and
they were far from foolish. It makes good sense to revere the sun and
the stars, because we are their children.”8 But
who made the cosmos? How did the cosmos get here? Why is there order
and complexity in the cosmos? Sagan never answered these questions. He
could not as long as the cosmos is all that is ever was or ever will
be.
So
then, the Christian, the pagan, and the atheist interpret the world by
an appeal to certain essential presuppositions. All worldviews—even
those espousing atheism—are presuppositionally religious. “This
means that many people may rightly call themselves atheists meaning that
they do not believe there are any gods (‘a-theist’ means
literally ‘no-god’), but they will still have a religious
belief if they regard anything whatever as the self-existent on which
all else depends.”9 Those beliefs “on
which all else depends” are presuppositions, and everyone has them,
from the bushman to the astronomer.
1. Carl Sagan, Cosmos (New
York: Random House, 1980), 4.
2. Sagan, Cosmos, 257.
3. William R. Fix, The Bone Peddlers:
Selling Evolution (New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., 1984),
xxiv.
4. From the 13-hour long television
presentation of Cosmos aired in the fall of 1980. Quoted in
Richard A. Baer, Jr., “They Are Teaching Religion in the
Public Schools,” Christianity Today (February 17, 1984),
12.
5. Prebiotic
means “before life.” It
refers to the hypothesis put forth by the Russian scientist A.I. Oparin
who claimed that life began in a sea of chemicals called a prebiotic
soup. The chance occurrence of chemicals and compounds eventually
led to molecules. The theory does not explain where the chemicals and
compounds came from and how they organized themselves into complex life.
6. Sagan, Cosmos, 5.
7. Sagan, Cosmos, 30.
8. Quoted
in Baer, “They Are Teaching
Religion in the Public Schools,” 13.
9. Roy
A. Clouser, The Myth of
Religious Neutrality: An Essay on the Hidden Role of Religious Belief
in Theories (Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 1991),
26-27.
Gary
DeMar is president of American Vision and the author of more than 20 books. His latest is Myths, Lies, and Half Truths.
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