Tag: Atheism

Not Even Satan Will Do This…

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If you look at the world today, and examine human history, you will see that evil often runs rampant, and at times, seems unbridled.

In the years following World War II, hundreds of veterans surrendered to the ministry and returned to the fields in which they fought in order to deliver the Gospel. Whether it was the concentration camps of Germany, or the cruelty of the Japanese empire, these men saw what a dark place the world becomes when denied the light of the Gospel.

Rewind the clock a few centuries, and you will see the cruelty of the Inquisition, the Crusades, the Dark Ages (appropriately named), and the Romans had cruelty down to a science.

Today, the world remains a cruel place, with genocide being common in the third world, and human abuses and degradation common in the first world.

When one looks at the evil in the world, and comes to the realization that all this came into the world when man sinned in the garden at Satan’s temptation, one rightfully concludes that Satan is the source of the evil in the world.

Furthermore, one wonders just how much worse things can get? How much farther down this rabbit hole can society go?

We will learn that when the Great Tribulation comes. In the meantime, as we take all this in, it is interesting to note that there is one sin in which Satan has never been guilty. Atheism.

This notion hit me this morning when a quote from Charles Spurgeon popped up on my social media feed. Concerning atheism, Spurgeon said, “Atheism is a strange thing, even the devils never fell into that vice, for even the devils fear and tremble.”

Of all the lies, evil and sin that Satan has perpetrated onto the world through his willing accomplices, atheism is not one of them. Mainly because Satan knows as well as anyone the existence and power of God.

Which makes atheism even stranger. Because, despite the universal belief in God in the spiritual realm, and the centuries of wisdom guided by a belief in God (even among non-Christians), the modern atheist sees himself as wiser than everyone else. But, he’s a fool.

Psalm 14:1 says “The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God. They are corrupt, they have done abominable works, there is none that doeth good.”

The fool says in his heart, “There is no God.”

Romans 1:21-22 tells us that, “Because that, when they knew God, they glorified him not as God, neither were thankful; but became vain in their imaginations, and their foolish heart was darkened. 22 Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools.”

The modern atheist has rejected God, has convinced himself there is no God, and in doing so, has become vain (empty) in his thoughts and dreams, and darkness has filled his heart.

Even though he thinks himself wiser than those around him, he is a fool.

Both Psalm 14 and Romans 1 go on to show us the darkness and sin that follow once someone convinces himself that there is no God. But, there’s another side to this story as well.

Often, the fool that says in his heart, “There is no God,” is not an avowed atheist. In fact, he may even be a professing Christian. However, he is living as if God didn’t exist.

You see, to engage in sinful behavior, you have to at least temporarily convince yourself that either God does not exist, or that He is not watching, or that He doesn’t care. Because if you did believe in that moment that God was present, watching and that He cared, you wouldn’t do the sin you are about to do.

This is not something a Christian does consciously, but rather a state of mind one unknowingly enters into when they are in the process of backsliding. It works like this.

The Christian becomes lax in his Spiritual discipline. He is not praying as he should, is not spending time in God’s word, and is not gathering with his church. As he drifts, so does his consciousness about God.

As that consciousness about God drifts, so does the Christian’s moral compass. He begins to lose sight of his God-given responsibilities, of God’s authority and expectation, and finds himself justifying the things that please his flesh in the moment.

As he does this, he backslides. Until God intervenes and disciplines him. Then, he repents.

The backslide is foolish to the point that even the Christian thinks to himself, “What was I thinking?” Often, there’s no answer to that question. But we know what he wasn’t thinking… and that is that God is present, active, and watching. So, even though he didn’t say “There is no God,” he acted as if that were true, and thus acted foolishly.

When Satan sins against God, he does so in cognizant opposition to God with the misguided thought of either overthrowing God, or hindering His will. When man sins against God, it’s often with the misguided thought that God either doesn’t exist, or doesn’t care.

Don’t fall into that pitfall. We will sin. We will miss the mark. But let’s not backslide by neglecting our Spiritual lives, and let’s not fail to preach the Gospel to ourselves daily and remind ourselves of God’s truth.

‘I miss Him’

Anselmo was a benevolent, peaceful man, raised in the church, and thrust into the perils of the Spanish Civil War. Having seen the atrocities of the war, Anselmo’s faith wavered.

Struggling to harmonize the sufferings of the war with the existence of God, he told Robert Jordan, “If there were God, never would he have permitted what I have seen with my eyes.

“Clearly I miss him, but a man must be responsible to himself.”

While Anselmo is nothing more than an imagination of the late Ernest Hemingway immortalized on the pages of For Whom the Bell Tolls, his unbelief and reasoning are typical of the modern mind, which struggles to understand how a loving, righteous God can allow evil to flourish in this lost and dying world.

Clearly the evil of this world cannot be overstated. Texas Child Protective Services are overwhelmed by caseloads as thousands of kids are abandoned, neglected, abused, harmed, and prostituted by their biological families. Human trafficking has become the modern day slavery, a dark underbelly of an otherwise prosperous and advanced culture.

Law enforcement is overwhelmed by the increased prevalence of illegal drug abuse to the point that law enforcement officials, politicians and correctional facilities are even beginning to wonder, “why bother?”

Contemporary Christians preach against judgmentalism and absolute truth while abusive husbands maim their wives. Yet, adding a coffee bar to the church foyer will somehow save the world.

Murder rates skyrocket and hope plummets in the inner cities, and students on college campuses have become incapable of debate without riots.

These are all first-world problems. Overseas, people sleep in fear of being captured and executed for no other reason than being born into the wrong tribe. The atrocities happening around the world are unprintable, but we’ll gladly pretend they aren’t happening if we can build a factory producing cheap electronics, or if we can buy cheap bananas from the despot in charge.

Modern man living in western culture has been blessed with technological and medical advancements that allow him to solve almost any problem that arises in his life. We have become comfortable with modern living.

Therefore, when faced with the suffering that man faces in the third world, and that man has faced throughout history, our perception of blessings versus suffering is challenged, and often, western man comes to the conclusion that suffering negates God’s presence, and with so much suffering in the world, God must not be present at all. Therefore, He does not exist.

This conclusion ignores the facts of God’s character as revealed in the Bible.

First, God did not create suffering, man did. In Genesis 1, God created a perfect world. In Genesis 2, God placed man in paradise. In Genesis 3, man tried to overthrow God, and was thus banished from paradise. In doing so, sin and disease entered in, as did ambition, avarice, lust and evil. The result, man suffers for his sin, and all too often inflicts suffering on others. God didn’t create this chaos, but He is working to correct it.

Since the fall of man, suffering is a natural part of life. Whether it is Adam eating bread in the sweat of his brow, or the Christians in Romans 8:35-39 who are killed all the day long, suffering is a common part of the human existence. In modern times, it manifests itself in political turmoil and physical illness. In other times and places, it manifested itself in conquests, persecutions, and famines.

God is present throughout the suffering. While modern man equates suffering with the absence of God, scripture actually teaches that God is present through the suffering. Romans 8:38-39 says:

For I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, 39 Nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.

Suffering is not the result of God withdrawing His presence. It is the result of sin and evil. Meanwhile, God remains present, working through the suffering to transform His children into the people He intends on them being, building our endurance, building testimonies for Him, and lining up the global geopolitical situation to bring about the return of Jesus Christ.

God Himself suffered. Or, as Romans 8:32-34 says:

He that spared not his own Son, but delivered him up for us all, how shall he not with him also freely give us all things? 33 Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God’s elect? It is God that justifieth. 34 Who is he that condemneth? It is Christ that died, yea rather, that is risen again, who is even at the right hand of God, who also maketh intercession for us.

God suffered in that He gave His only begotten Son, who suffered at the hands of sinners during the crucifixion which resulted in the payment for the sins of all mankind.

Hebrews 4:15 says, He was in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin. Jesus Christ lived the human experience in a country that was occupied by a tyrannical empire, working to survive in a meager economy, before launching his earthly ministry which saw Him live on nothing, sleep outside, and suffer the persecution and rejection of His own people.

God is not some mystic being who sits in comfort in the clouds completely oblivious to the plight of those who suffer. Bette Midler is full of baloney. He is one who has experienced our suffering, weeps when we weep, and takes our pain personally.

In For Whom the Bell Tolls, Anselmo made the false conclusion that the sufferings of the war negated the existence of God. As a result, Anselmo’s life lacked direction, meaning and comfort. Thus he said, “I miss Him.”

For us, it doesn’t have to be that way.

Recently, I was counselling with a young mother who wanted to get her kids involved in a youth program. She discussed how simple and good life was when she went to church as a girl. There were youth car washes where they raised funds for church camp. There was church camp, retreats, lock-ins, and Sunday night pizza.

“Those were good days,” she said. Truth be told, she was missing the peace and comfort that come from living by faith in the company of other believers. The fact is, this young mother can return to that lifestyle any time she chooses.

So, if you have wandered from the faith, and are finding your life empty and hopeless, address the root cause of your emotional strife. You miss God. But you don’t have to. You can return to His presence at any time. Turn from your sins, place your faith in Him, and then gather with other believers at a true church that teaches His word, and that fellowships together.

Do this, and God will not only give you the grace to endure, but you’ll understand the “why,” and then receive the peace that surpasses all understanding.