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CHRISTIAN APOLOGETICS THE EXISTENCE OF GOD THE INSPIRATIONOF THE SCRIPTURES THE DIETY OF JESUS CHRIST DR. E. C. BRAGG TABLE OF CONTENTS THE EXISTENCE OF GOD I. Introduction II. The Being of God A. The Cosmological Argument 1. The Uniformity of the Law of Causation (A proof of its necessity) 2. The Efficient or First Cause 3. Summation of the Cosmological Argument B. The Ontological Argument (Greek - on or being) C. The Teleological Argument 1. Design in Nature 2. Beauty in Nature 3. Harmony in Nature 4. Uniformity in Nature 5. Purpose in Nature 6. Evidences of Teleology in Particular a. Botany b. Zoology c. Physiology (or Anatomy) 1.) Skeleton 2.) The Muscles 3.) The Nervous System 4.) Digestion and Assimilation 5.) The Senses (especially of hearing, smelling, and seeing). d. Astronomy e. The World below Us D. The Moral Argument 1. The Moral Law Compared to the Conscience 2. Moral Law and Conscience Evidences a Righteous God E. The Argument from Congruity CRISTIAN APOLOGETICS THE EXISTENCE OF GOD I. Introduction Text: "Be not afraid of their terror, neither be troubled (alarmed), but sanctify the Lord God in your hearts, and (moreover) be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is within you with meekness and fear" (I Peter 3:15). This text is a natural starting point for our course, since it contains the very word from which our course derives its name. It is the word "answer back"- apologian, translated into the English "Apologetics" -- to "answer back" -- so a defense, not an excuse: Here a verbal defense in logical account of your inward hope, but in the spirit of godly reverence and human meekness. It is the mark of any false system of science or religion that it cannot bear the light of research or investigation. It can only survive in the congenial atmosphere of superstition and credulity. It abhors honest criticism and reasonable investigation. the God of the Bible, however, hasn’t asked us for blind faith and superstitious acceptance of His Word. It is true that in the realm of answered prayer, we must, "believe to see the goodness of the Lord" not "seeing is believing," but when the word "faith" is used of the sum total of "what is most assuredly believed among us," as in Jude, "Earnestly contend for the faith which was once and for all delivered unto the Saints,” then it refers to our doctrinal tenets. Here God gives us "the many infallible proofs," solid evidences upon which reason may reflect and accept - not blind faith. Here we have "an apology for the reason of the hope that is within us." The Bible is not afraid of honest, friendly, logical investigation; but contrariwise it invites it. God has based His whole system of religion and divine revelation upon the firmest of foundations that will stand the test of honest criticism under the rules of evidences. This is what our entire course shall endeavor to prove. The God who made the human reason, appeals to it, "Come let us reason together, saith the Lord." He doesn't outrage it. He wants our faith to rest upon the dictates of intelligence as well as submission of faith. Christian apologetics, then, approaches the subjects of God, the Bible, the person of Jesus Christ and His work, from the standpoint of philosophy, appealing to reason. It answers primarily the "why" of what we believe. God has placed within the soul of every man an inquiring mind that won't be satisfied with half-answers, camouflage, or blind credulity. This innate, God-given attribute of our intellect is seen in the child's irritating oft repeated, "Why?" to every answer you give them. It is also seen in the scientists' research into all natural phenomena. We want to know the reason for things. As a child, it made me tear down the family clock to see what made it tick. This demand is no less seen in the realism of the spiritual, so, as our text that says, "To give a reason for the hope that is within you," not only to believe, but to know why you believe. This course is designed to remove all honest doubt. Note, we say "honest doubt." There is a dishonest doubt, which refuses all light because it wants to. White well says, "The mind of the bigot is like the pupil of the eye; the more light thrown upon it, the smaller it gets." Most dishonest doubt arises from a perversion of the will. The Bible variously describes it. Love darkness rather than light because their deeds are evil," and "they will not come to the light lest their deeds be reproved." Paul calls it, "An evil heart of unbelief." Peter calls it, "This they are willingly ignorant of." It arises from a heart opposed to God. Jesus said of them and evidences, "they would not believe though one arose from the dead." There is no proof, no demonstration, and no evidence, to convince such dishonest doubt. The will can so set itself against the light that it hoodwinks the mind into believing a lie, at the expense of reason itself. Jesus said, "If any man will do His will, He shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God, or whether I speak of myself" (John 7:17). There is such a thing, however, as an honest doubt, maybe implanted at school or by other means, honest inquiry, and the evidences will dispel such, or remove the cloak of sinful ignorance. Intelligent faith makes for steadfast believers, with a robust, solid foundation both upon which to build their own experiences and trust, and to win others. God's order is, "facts, faith, then feelings;" "faith cometh by hearing and hearing by the Word of God." II. The Being of God The Christian's viewpoint, from the Bible, is commonly called Theism. The denial of the existence of a personal God is called anti-theism, infidelity, and some which, in fact, mean as much, such as agnosticism. Atheists, because they cannot isolate a small particle of God’s essence in a test tube to analyze and synthesize, cannot bring themselves to believe in His existence. They bring the wrong faculties to the test of finding God. There are many realities, which cannot be so found. You cannot analyze love, friendship, kindness, hatred, beauty, harmony, truth, and justice in a test tube. Psychology has had the same hard time defining all these abstract facts or realities by materialistic concepts and origins such as glandular secretions or nervousness. A God, who could be analyzed or synthesized, would be no God at all; a God who could even be defined would be no God at all. A definition is to give the dimensions, outlines, borders, and limitations. How can you define the infinite God? In this division we shall array the evidences for the existence or character of the personal God, who is presented in the Bible. The Bible says of Him, "For the invisible things of Him from the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things which are made, even His eternal power and God head," (Romans 1:20), "so that they are without excuse." And "the heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament showeth His handy work" (Psalm 19:1). His handy work marks the footprints of the great Creator throughout all His great works. It is from these we are logically to deduce His eternal power and Godhead, Christian Apologetics would argue the invisible things of God from the things seen, yea, "clearly seen." Our faith in the existence and personality of God does not rest upon arguments, but is only confirmed and strengthened by them. We do not have to apply the syllogistic method of Aristotle to climb the ladder of logic to find out God. Neither is faith in God's existence a result of a long, complicated chain of inference. It starts as an intuition of the soul, but philosophical reflection may clarify the picture, verifying the truth by two witnesses. The Bible nowhere argues the existence of God but simply states and assumes the universal belief in God’s reality. See Genesis 1:1, "In the beginning God; Hebrews 1:1; John 1:1. (We develop this into the Ontological argument later.) We shall develop five principle arguments: The Cosmological argument The Ontological argument The Teleological argument The Moral argument The Argument from Congruity A. The Cosmological Argument The word Cosmological comes from the Greek, equaling world of orderly arrangement, and "Logos,” word, study, science, or discourse. It has been called also Causal Argument. Simply stated, the Cosmological argument rests upon the universal law of causation. Every event, every effect must have a cause. It is the arguing from effects to causes, until the first cause is reached. Every event must have a cause. That is the ultimate, simple, intuitive, universal, inexorable fact. It exhausts every phenomena we know. Naught can be excluded in our thinking of all observable phenomena, from the atom to the stellar universe. Each must have a definite, adequate cause. To remove the cause one time or a quintillion times backwards will not take it to causeless existence, except it be the adequate, powerful, first cause. If He had a cause, what a stupendous cause must it be, itself God. The believer has but one mystery, one unexplained cause, the First Cause, one incomprehensible - God. All else is explained. The atheist has everything incomprehensible, everything mysteriously run by some God called science, Mother Nature, or natural law, inherent forces, etc. The believer has one uncaused cause; the atheist has every effect without a cause. The intuitional reasoning, then, demands that every effect must have a cause. By illustration, in the early morning an Arab sees the footprint of a camel at his tent door. It makes but passing impression upon him. He knows the cause; he is familiar with the animal that made it. The stranger sleeping there that night, however, is all excitement and anxious to see the animal that made it. The atheistic scientist, naturalist, philosopher seeing the footprint of the Creator denies any casualty, and if driven to admit one, denies its know-ability. The evolutionists, the empirical psychologist, and many philosophers affirm, "The foot print made itself." It evolved from prior conditions of soil and wind by resident forces, but common sense says something made it, and by pattern, uniformity, etc. it must be an animal and not some magmata force. The law of causation stated. There are two methods of reasoning in a chain: The "a priori" method, which is the reasoning from cause to effect, from generalizations to particulars, deductive reasoning. In our apologetics this is impossible since the cause is what we seek to determine and therefore must be assumed in a priori reasoning. The second method is a posteriori - which is reasoning from effect to cause, from particular instances to generalization, or inductive reasoning. This is the method we use in the cosmological arid succeeding arguments. Here we start with no assumptions. The effects are facts needing no proof. They are not in dispute. It is the cause that is denied. Here we are reasoning from the particulars to the generalization, all the manifold effects point backward to one first adequate Cause. Webster defines effect - "That which is produced by a cause." Here is the basic truth, "every effect must have a cause." Given any effect and the mind automatically asks for the cause. There is no such thing as an uncaused effect. This basic intuitive principle is grounded in all rational thinking. Leibnitz considered the causal principle the most important primary law of logical thought. Given any effect and the mind unerringly asks for the cause. You see it in the persistent "why" of the child. You see it in the deepest of scientific exploration into nature's mysteries. Without it, there would be no science or discovery, no advancement. Furthermore, the law of cause and effect is universal. If you stay in Tampa some night, and awaken in the morning to the blast of an explosion, you absolutely must ask, "Why?" What caused it?” A Chinese, an Indian, an Egyptian must just as naturally ask "why" or "what caused that?" Will any be satisfied with the answer the atheist must give, "Nothing caused it." "It caused itself." "Inherent forces within itself caused it." "It is a causeless effect." I see an automobile, shining new, symmetrical, intricate parts, runs, etc., I say, who made that? The evolutionist says, "It had no maker, or some vague thing called natural law made it, or Mother Nature made it.” To deny any cause of its existence is certainly to outrage all logical processes of my mind. Why then should I be satisfied with their answer to all the wonders of the human body, the stars, nature, etc.? Did you know that it takes as long to make a cow as it does to make a battleship? Man can make a battleship, but only God can make a cow. Yet, man will allow that the battleship, as an effect, has a cause in man's intelligence and personality, but allow the same of a cow. A cow is a lot more intricately made than a battleship, more plumbing, fueling, locomotion, communication, distribution, reproduction, and useful than a battleship. 1. The Uniformity of the Law of Causation (A proof of its necessity) Mills, Comte, and Hume saw the force of the argument of Cosmology but tried to "explain" it, as an argument against it, by substituting the so-called law of succession without relation, (Bob Ingersoll with lesser ability tried to use it also.) In other words, any seeming relation between antecedent and sequence is only a coincidence. It is only a coincidence after all between cause and effect, and not a fixed law of relation. Here again it is only a philosopher ("foolosopher") who could have ever thought up that one. It is but a coincidence that H2O always makes water, only chance. Then why is it invariable? These philosophers give this illustration to try to prove their point. The ancients in Egypt noted that the Dog Star, Sirius, always appeared when the Nile began to rise, and therefore surmised that the star caused the Nile to rise. Here it was but coincidence. See, they say, that is all the so-called cause and effect. Coincidence is but a sham in accident, merely appearance not relation. All true cause and effect, however, has true relation; cause causes the effect, and does so uniformly. Given the same cause and always there is the same effect. What is that but real relation? If all causation were but coincidence, there would not be uniformity. Why is there never a break in true causation? Why is all farming based on the fixation of nature, all business, all science and research, all travel? We expect no change in natural law of cause and effect, no sudden repeal. We are not afraid to mix H2O for fear of getting an explosion instead of water. The chemist knows the same cause that affected water last year will do so this year and as often as he wishes to use it. The stability of the universe depends on the law of cause and effect. This uniformity points to the necessity of believing in the law of cause and effect, and points to it as an intuition of the mind. This leads us to the ultimate conclusion of cause and effect going backward. 2. The Efficient or First Cause Without going into the deeper, logical, philosophical chain of inference leading backward from every cause to a First Cause, we wish to state the simpler form of argument here. There are two axiomatic laws of nature set forth by physicists and natural philosophy, which have a bearing on our argument: a. The law of the status quo in nature, "in all the physical change in nature the quantity of matter remains the same," so creation could not be the result of any infinite chain of cause end effect. The amount would never have increased. For change effects no change of substance into a greater amount. Change creates not one iota of matter. Hence all atheists are led into the absurdity of "the eternality of matter" ascribing infinitude to the finite. The sum total remains fixed from some "beginning" neither increased nor decreased (Later, in teleology we shall see it is winding down in tension, however, and must have been wound up at once,) in the law of Entropy. Nature knows naught of creation or annihilation. The sum total of energy and matter remains fixed. Spencer, the evolutionist, said, "The genesis of an atom is no easier to conceive than the genesis of a planet." b. The law of inertia, "a body standing still will stand still forever unless a force outside itself starts it in motion. A body moving will move on forever unless a force outside itself stops it. Even Plato recognized the need of a mover." A motion requires a mover. With these two laws in mind, let us state our ultimate conclusion of God as the First and Adequate Cause of all phenomena. As we trace every effect to its cause, we are led backwards to an ultimate cause, and that an efficient cause, adequate to every effect. If there is no First Cause, then we must believe in an infinite chain of finite causes - a palpable absurdity; you cannot have an infinite chain made up of finite links. The ultimate, or First Cause, must be greater than all the effects germinating from it. It is axiomatic in Geometry, "The whole is greater than any of its parts." Also, the eternality of God is here postulated, since He must antedate every effect to affect it. He is more powerful than all the phenomena of nature from the tiniest atom, to the largest universe, all of it together. He is more eternal since He started it. Here the atheistic evolutionists show their illogical thinking. Their "explanations of origins" read like a fairy tale. For illustration: The atomic dust theory. Life came to this planet riding atomic dust, (Flaming meteor white-hot), but where did the dust come from, and where did the life come from? To push it to another planet, or universe doesn't "explain" its origin, I must press for First Cause. There is the atom theory of Democritus, an atheist, who wrote before Christ came to earth. He makes all chance, but fails to explain origins again. "In the ages past only original atoms, which by their own affinities were drawn together by combinations, various and singular, complex and simple, the earth and everything appeared," but, hold it a minute, "Where did the atoms come from (be just as many as now); Where did the motion, energy to draw, come from?" Berkley, from whom Mary Baker Eddy borrowed heavily, wound up in a fogbank - "No real universe at all, no real matter, just appearance, illusion, all in the mind." Where did the mind come from, to realize the mere appearance? Professor Edwin Conklin, one of America’s greatest biologists, of Princeton University said, "The probability of life originating from accident is comparable to the probabilities of the unabridged dictionary resulting from an explosion in a printing factory. Even Cicero wrote - "It is as sensible to suppose the Iliad was written by shaking the letters in a bag as to suppose the universe made itself." 3. Summation of the Cosmological Argument a. An infinite succession of finite changeable objects is a palpable contradiction incapable of logical belief that is an infinite chain of finite links hanging on nothing. b. If the effects we see are real, and not Berkley's illusion, then they must have had a Maker. c. All existence, as a result of causation, must have an exterior self-existence as a starter, superior to, and ulterior to, all existence. d. Either all the effects we see are self-existing (contrary to all observation) or they were made. e. If all effects were made, they must have had a Maker, f. As there cannot be an infinite progression of cause and effect, there must be an all-powerful, self-existing, sufficient, under rived, First Cause, who started it all. The argument is simple, conclusive and unanswerable. The greatest of philosophers have stumbled over it, denied it, but admitted it was a logical necessity to believe. Kant called it, "Spacious Sophism", but admitted its logical necessity. Would it be false then? One must choose Genesis 1:1, "In the beginning God" or chance, nothing; either God or nothing is the First Cause. B. The Ontological Argument (Greek - on or being) Strictly speaking, the ontological argument belongs to the realm of metaphysical speculation as in a priori argument. It is to be found first in germ form in the writings of Plato, Anselm, the schoolmen, Des Cartes, then Leibnitz. It is in their form open to serious criticism as any a prior argument. It is a profound argument, apprehended by but a few keen minds. We will give but a few forms of it here for your consideration, without using it ourselves. Kant outlines it thus, "Perfect being contains all reality, and it is admitted that such a being is possible; that is to say, that its existence implies no contradiction. Now, all reality supposes existence. There is, therefore, a thing possible in the concept of which is comprised existence. If this thing be denied, the possibility of its existence is also denied, which is contradictory to the proceeding,” (Kant’s Criticism of Cousin's Philosophy, p. 120). Anselm’s, in brief, stated, "This God, Who is the Greatest, for that is our concept of God, this Greatest couldn’t live in the intellect alone, for then it would be possible to conceive of a greater, which wouldn’t live in the intellect alone but in external reality. Hence the greatest must exist at the same time, in our thoughts as the Greatest, and also in reality. God, therefore, is not simply conceived by man, but really exists," (In his Proslogion). Leibnitz stated in essence - God is, if He is possible, because His possibility, that is to say, His essence itself, carries with it His existence and because it would be contradiction to recognize this essence and refuse it existence. (p. 123) Kant has raised some insuperable arguments against these forms of the ontological argument. We shall follow a simpler form using the universal intuition within man usually reserved for the Anthropological argument. Stated simply, our argument is - "The very idea of God is a proof that there must be a God. If not, where did the idea of God originate?” Here again the casual argument holds good. It is not enough to say blithely, "It came from tradition." That only explains transmission not origin. Neither will it suffice to say, "The idea of God is a product of universal reason." That doesn't take us to the answer, that is the very question we raise, "How came universal reason to get the idea first?" "If there wasn’t a God out there upon whom to think, how came man to think about Him in the first place?” If there is no God upon which to think, how could man have ever conceived the idea of God? Man has the idea of God. Every man has it. Why? The idea of God is as universal as the human race. Even the atheist arguing, "there is no God" is proving the ontological argument for God’s existence. The atheist who swears using God's name in blasphemy is proving the ontological argument. 1. The belief in God is intuitional, and proves there is a God. The intuition is that portion of our natures especially of reason, which contains elementary knowledge, which we do not have to learn, but is only recognized, classified, and expounded by learning. The truths, which are self-evident and innate to us, we do not come to their reality by learning and study, but we are born with them as logical original equipment. Therefore, when we say the belief in the existence of God is intuitional, it is written originally upon our very natures at birth. It doesn't mean that the child knows all about God and recognized God at birth or even in childhood, nor does it mean that the knowledge cannot be prostituted into wrong conceptions, but that it is a necessary belief. There are three unfailing marks of an Intuitional truth. a. Universality. There are no men anywhere without the Idea of God. Darwin mistakenly thought he had found some among the Patagonians, but it was his ignorance of their language and customs, not their lack of a god (And a lot of his own wishes). Religion is prior to civilization. The Bible brings no new faith in a Supreme Being to the aborigine, but a revelation of the true God and His love, like Paul at Mars Hill. b. Necessity. By this we do not mean it cannot be denied, but the mind is compelled to accept it. Kant defines it, "Necessity is that of which negation is impossible." The mind must accept it, is compelled to. To deny it is to lead into absurdity and contradiction, as we shall see of the soul and self-existence. c. Logical independence or priority; by this we mean irreducible minimum. The mind cannot go any further back, so a self-evident truth - self-authenticating truth, like the intuition of my self-consciousness. I do not need to prove to myself that I am, that I live, in fact, how can I? To me it is self-evident, so with my personal identity. I know I remember what happened to me ten years ago, that it was I, not someone else. All intuitions fall into these three markings, such as my own self-consciousness, to the fact of real matter, space, time, cause and effect, and God. Yet all have been denied by philosophers such as Berkley, the empirical philosophers as the sensationalists. You can only believe what your sensations tell you and they may be in error, and, of all the materialistic philosophers, who make man but the product of insensible nature, none explains the origin of intuition, especially of God in the soul of all men. Certainly, if there is no God, the biggest farce in the universe is man's belief in one, and the biggest lie in the universe is his intuition, without a reality. The very universal intuitive idea of God proves there is a God. There are two basic arguments we can use here to bolster our proofs: a. It is impossible for man to conceive absolutely new truth, or ideas. All our knowledge is relative. Men may distort, twist, and combine old truth into new grotesque forms, but it is still old, known facts. This is a well-known law of psychology and philosophy. In Locke’s words, "The mind can frame unto itself no new simple ideas." William James, Principles of Psychology, p. 302 – “The blind may dream of sights, the deaf of sounds for years after they have lost their sight or hearing; but the man born deaf can never be made to imagine what sound is like, nor the man born blind ever have a mental vision." A man may reassemble into all kinds of fantastic shapes known objects but not new simple ideas, outside his experience. Hence man could never have conceived the idea of God if there weren't a God who wrote on man's nature His reality. Here is the idea of God, universal, all compelling, and indelible. How can men say, "There is no God"? b. The law of correlation in nature. All naturalists recognize it. Every demand in nature demands also a supply. Every hunger demands some answering supply, every instinct a fulfillment. Appetite implies food; love of truth, the reality of truth; lungs implies oxygen; wings on birds imply air in which to fly; fins on a fish, water in which to swim; but, greatest of all, the idea of God, the hunger for God, the desire to worship Him implies a God in reality. Man’s feeling of obligations, we shall see in the moral argument, implies a Supreme Judge to whom he is responsible. The only correlation to the universal intuition of God is a real, living, personal, supreme God, or every intuition is a lie.

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christian apologetics . the existence of god . the inspirationof the scriptures . the diety of jesus christ . dr. e. c. bragg
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