| ALLIANCE IN THE INTELLECTUAL STRUGGLE
A Turning Point in History: The Fall of Atheism
There are significant turning points in the history
of mankind. We are now living in one of them. Some call it globalization
and some say that this is the genesis of the "information age."
These are true, but there is yet a more important concept than these.
Although some are unaware of it, great advances have been made in
science and philosophy in the last 20-25 years. Atheism, which has
held sway over the world of science and philosophy since the 19th
century is now collapsing in an inevitable way.
Of course, atheism, the idea of rejecting God's
existence, has always existed from ancient times. But the rise of
this idea actually began in the 18th century in Europe with the
spread and political effect of the philosophy of some anti-religious
thinkers. Materialists such as Diderot and Baron d'Holbach proposed
that the universe was a conglomeration of matter that had existed
forever and that nothing else existed besides matter. In the 19th
century, atheism spread even farther. Thinkers such as Marx, Engels,
Nietsche, Durkheim or Freud applied atheist thinking to different
fields of science and philosophy.
The greatest support for atheism came from Charles
Darwin who rejected the idea of creation and proposed the theory
of evolution to counter it. Darwinism gave a supposedly scientific
answer to the question that had baffled atheists for centuries:
"How did human beings and living things come to be?" This theory
convinced a great many people of its claim that there was a mechanism
in nature that animated lifeless matter and produced millions of
different living species from it.
Towards the end of the 19th century, atheists formulated
a world view that they thought explained everything; they denied
that the universe was created saying that it had no beginning but
had existed forever. They claimed that the universe had no purpose
but that its order and balance were the result of chance; they believed
that the question of how human beings and other living things came
into being was answered by Darwinism. They believed that Marx or
Durkheim had explained history and sociology, and that Freud had
explained psychology on the basis of atheist assumptions.
However, these views were later invalidated in
the 20th century by scientific, political and social developments.
Many and various discoveries in the fields of astronomy, biology,
psychology and social sciences have nullified the bases of all atheist
suppositions.
In his book, God: The Evidence, The Reconciliation
of Faith and Reason in a Postsecular World, the American scholar
Patrick Glynn from the George Washington University writes:
The past two decades of research have overturned
nearly all the important assumptions and predictions of an earlier
generation of modern secular and atheist thinkers relating to the
issue of God. Modern thinkers assumed that science would reveal
the universe to be ever more random and mechanical; instead it has
discovered unexpected new layers of intricate order that bespeak
an almost unimaginably vast master design. Modern psychologists
predicted that religion would be exposed as a neurosis and outgrown;
instead, religious commitment has been shown empirically to be a
vital component of basic mental health…
Few people seem to realize this, but by now it
should be clear: Over the course of a century in the great debate
between science and faith, the tables have completely turned. In
the wake of Darwin, atheists and agnostics like Huxley and Russell
could point to what appeared to be a solid body of testable theory
purportedly showing life to be accidental and the universe radically
contingent. Many scientists and intellectuals continue to cleave
to this worldview. But they are increasingly pressed to almost absurd
lengths to defend it. Today the concrete data point strongly in
the direction of the God hypothesis.1
Science, which has been presented as the pillar
of atheist/materialist philosophy, turns out to be the opposite.
As another writer puts it, "The strict materialism that excludes
all purpose, choice and spirituality from the world simply cannot
account for the data pour in from labs and observatories."2
In this article, we will briefly analyze the conclusions
arrived at by different branches of science on this issue and examine
what the forthcoming "post-atheist" period will bring to humanity.
Cosmology: The Collapse of
the Concept of An Eternal Universe And
the Discovery of Creation
The first blow to atheism from science in the 20th
century was in the field of cosmology. The idea that the universe
had existed forever was discounted and it was discovered that it
had a beginning; in other words, it was scientifically proved that
it was created from nothing.
This idea of an eternal universe came to the Western
world along with materialist philosophy. This philosophy, developed
in ancient Greece, stated that nothing else exists besides matter
and that the universe comes from eternity and goes to eternity.
In the Middle Ages when the Church dominated Western thought, materialism
was forgotten. However in the modern period, Western scientists
and philosophers became consumed by a curiosity about these ancient
Greek origins and revived an interest in materialism.
The first person in the modern age to propose a
materialist understanding of the universe was the renowned German
philosopher Immanuel Kant-even though he has not a materialist in
the philosophical sense of the word. Kant proposed that the universe
was eternal and that every possibility could be realized only within
this eternity. With the coming of the 19th century, it became widely
accepted that the universe had no beginning, and that there was
no moment of creation. Then, this idea, adopted passionately by
dialectical materialists such as Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, came
into the 20th century.
This idea has always been compatible with atheism.
This is because to accept that the universe had a beginning would
mean that God created it and the only way to counter this idea was
to claim that the universe was eternal, even though this claim had
no basis on science. A dogged proponent of this claim was Georges
Politzer who became widely known as a supporter of materialism and
Marxism in the first half of the 20th century through his book Principes
Fondamentaux de Philosophie (The Fundamental Principles of Philosophy).
Assuming the validity of the model of an eternal universe, Politzer
opposed the idea of a creation:
The universe was not a created object, if it were,
then it would have to be created instantaneously by God and brought
into existence from nothing. To admit creation, one has to admit,
in the first place, the existence of a moment when the universe
did not exist, and that something came out of nothingness. This
is something to which science can not accede.3
By supporting the idea of an eternal universe against
that of creation, Politzer thought that science was on his side.
However, very soon, the fact that Politzer alluded to by his words,
"if it is so, we must accept the existence of a creator", that is,
that the universe had a beginning, was proven.
This proof came as a result of the "Big Bang" theory,
perhaps the most important concept of 20th century astronomy.
The Big Bang theory was formulated after a series
of discoveries. In 1929, the American astronomer, Edwin Hubble,
noticed that the galaxies of the universe were continually moving
away from one another and that the universe was expanding. If the
flow of time in an expanding universe were reversed, then it emerged
that the whole universe must have come from a single point. Astronomers
assessing the validity of Hubble's discovery were faced with the
fact that this single point was a "metaphysical" state of reality
in which there was an infinite gravitational attraction with no
mass. Matter and time came into being by the explosion of this mass-less
point. In other words, the universe was created from nothing.
On the one hand, those astronomers who are determined
to cling to materialist philosophy with its basic idea of an eternal
universe, have attempted to hold out against the Big Bang theory
and maintain the idea of an eternal universe. The reason for this
effort can be seen in the words of Arthur Eddington, a renowned
materialist physicist, who said, "Philosophically, the notion of
an abrupt beginning to the present order of Nature is repugnant
to me".4 But despite the fact that the Big Bang
theory is repugnant to materialists, this theory has continued to
be corroborated by concrete scientific discoveries. In their observations
made in the 1960's, two scientists, Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson,
detected the radioactive remains of the explosion (cosmic background
radiation). These observations were verified in the 1990's by the
COBE (Cosmic Background Explorer) satellite.
In the face of all these facts, atheists have been
squeezed into a corner. Anthony Flew, an atheist professor of philosophy
at the University of Reading and the author of Atheistic Humanism,
makes this interesting confession:
Notoriously, confession is good for the soul. I
will therefore begin by confessing that the Stratonician atheist
has to be embarrassed by the contemporary cosmological consensus.
For it seems that the cosmologists are providing a scientific proof
of what St. Thomas contended could not be proved philosophically;
namely, that the universe had a beginning. So long as the universe
can be comfortably thought of as being not only without end but
also without beginning, it remains easy to urge that its brute existence,
and whatever are found to be its most fundamental features, should
be accepted as the explanatory ultimates. Although I believe that
it remains still correct, it certainly is neither easy nor comfortable
to maintain this position in the face of the Big Bang story 5
An example of the atheist reaction to the Big Bang
theory can be seen in an article written in 1989 by John Maddox,
editor of Nature, one of the best-known materialist-scientific journals.
In that article, called "Down With the Big Bang,"
Maddox wrote that the Big Bang is "philosophically unacceptable,"
because "creationists and those of similar persuasions… have ample
justification in the doctrine of the Big Bang." He also predicted
that the Big Bang "is unlikely to survive the decade ahead." 6
However, despite Maddox' hopes, Big Bang has gained credence and
many discoveries have been made that prove the creation of the universe.
Some materialists have a relatively logical view
of this matter. For example, the English materialist physicist,
H.P. Lipson, unwillingly accepts the scientific fact of creation.
He writes:
I think …that we must…admit that the only acceptable
explanation is creation. I know that this is anathema to physicists,
as indeed it is to me, but we must not reject that we do not like
if the experimental evidence supports it. 7
Thus, the fact arrived at finally by modern astronomy
is this: time and matter were brought into being by an eternally
powerful Creator independent of both of them. The eternal power
that created the universe in which we live is God who is the possessor
of infinite might, knowledge and wisdom.
Physics and Astronomy: The
Collapse of the Idea of a Random Universe and
The Discovery of the Anthropic Principle
A second atheist dogma rendered invalid in the
20th century by discoveries in astronomy is the idea of a random
universe. The view that the matter in the universe, the heavenly
bodies and the laws that determine the relationships among them
has no purpose but is the result of chance, has been dramatically
discounted.
For the first time since the 1970's, scientists
have begun to recognize the fact that the whole physical balance
of the universe is adjusted delicately in favor of human life. With
the advance of research, it has been discovered that the physical,
chemical and biological laws of the universe, basic forces such
as gravity and electro-magnetism, the structure of atoms and elements
are all ordered exactly as they have to be for human life. Western
scientists have called this extraordinary design the "anthropic
principle". That is, every aspect of the universe is designed with
a view to human life.
We may summarize the basics of the anthropic principle
as follows:
The speed of the first expansion of the universe
(the force of the Big Bang explosion) was exactly the velocity that
it had to be. According to scientists' calculations, if the expansion
rate had differed from its actual value by more than one part in
a billion billion, then the universe would either have recollapsed
before it ever reached its present size or else have splattered
in every direction in a way never to unite again. To put it another
way, even at the first moment of the universe's existence there
was a fine calculation of the accuracy of a billion billionth.
The four physical forces in the universe (gravitational
force, weak nuclear force, strong nuclear force, and electromagnetic
force) are all at the necessary levels for an ordered universe to
emerge and for life to exist. Even the tiniest variations in these
forces (for example, one in 1039, or one in 1028; that is-crudely
calculated-one in a billion billion billion billion), the universe
would either be composed only of radiation or of no other element
besides hydrogen.
There are many other delicate adjustments that
make the earth ideal for human life: the size of the sun, its distance
from the earth, the unique physical and chemical properties of water,
the wavelength of the sun's rays, the way that the earth's atmosphere
contains the gases necessary to allow respiration, or the Earth's
magnetic field being ideally suited to human life. (For more information
on this topic, see Harun Yahya, The Creation of the Universe, Al-Attique
Publishers, 2001)
This delicate balance is one of the most striking
discoveries of modern astrophysics. The wellknown astronomer, Paul
Davies, writes in the last paragraph of his book The Cosmic Blueprint,
"The impression of Design is overwhelming."8
In an article in the journal Nature, the astrophysicist
W. Press writes, "there is a grand design in the Universe that
favors the development of intelligent life."9
The interesting thing about this is that the majority
of the scientists that have made these discoveries were of the materialist
point of view and came to this conclusion unwillingly. They did
not undertake their scientific investigations hoping to find a proof
for God's existence. But most of them, if not all of them, despite
their unwillingness, arrived at this conclusion as the only explanation
for the extraordinary design of the universe.
In his book, The Symbiotic Universe the American
astronomer, George Greenstein, acknowledges this fact:
How could this possibly have come to pass [that
the laws of physics conform themselves to life]? …As we survey all
the evidence, the thought insistently arises that some supernatural
agency-or, rather Agency-must be involved. Is it possible that suddenly,
without intending to, we have stumbled upon scientific proof of
the existence of a Supreme Being? Was it God who stepped in and
so providentially crafted the cosmos for our benefit?10
By beginning his question with "Is it possible",
Greenstein, an atheist, tries to ignore that plain fact that has
confronted him. But many scientists who have approached the question
without prejudice acknowledge that the universe has been created
especially for human life. Materialism is now being viewed as an
erroneous belief outside the realm of science. The American geneticist,
Robert Griffiths, acknowledges this fact when he says, "If we need
an atheist for a debate, I go to the philosophy department. The
physics department isn't much use."11
In his book Nature's Destiny: How the Laws of Biology
Reveal Purpose in the Universe, which examines how physical, chemical
and biological laws are amazingly calculated in an "ideal" way with
a view to the requirements of human life, the well-known molecular
biologist, Michael Denton writes:
The new picture that has emerged in twentieth-century
astronomy presents a dramatic challenge to the presumption which
has prevalent within scientific circles during most of the past
four centuries: that life is a peripheral and purely contingent
phenomenon in the cosmic scheme.12
In short, the idea of a random universe, perhaps
atheism's most basic pillar, has been proved invalid. Scientists
now openly speak of the collapse of materialism.13
The supposition whose falsity God reveals in the Qur'an, "We
did not create heaven and earth and everything between them to no
purpose. That is the opinion of those who disbelieve…" (Qur'an,
38: 27) was shown to be invalid by science in the 1970's.
Quantum Physics and the Discovery
of the Divine Wisdom
One of the areas of science that shatters the materialist
myth and gives positive evidence for theism is quantum physics.
Quantum physics deals with the tiniest particles
of matter, what is called the sub-atomic realm. In school everyone
learns that matter is composed of atoms. Atoms are made up of a
nucleus and several electrons spinning around it. One strange fact
is that all these particles take up only some 0.0001 percent of
the atoms. In other words, an atom is something that is 99.9999
percent "empty."
An even more interesting fact is that when the
nuclei and electrons are further examined, it has been realized
that these are made up of much smaller particles called "quarks,"
and that these quarks are not particles in the physical sense, but
simply energy. This discovery has broken the classical distinction
between matter and energy. It now appears that in the material universe,
only energy exists. What we call matter is just "frozen energy."
There is a still more intriguing fact: The quarks,
those energy packets, act in such a way that they maybe described
as "conscious." Physicist Freeman Dyson, on his acceptance of the
Templeton Prize, stated that:
Atoms are weird stuff, behaving like active agents
rather than inert substances. They make unpredictable choices between
alternative possibilities according to the laws of quantum mechanics.
It appears that mind, as manifested by the capacity to make choices,
is to some extent inherent in every atom.14
What this means is that there is information behind
matter. Information that precedes the material realm. Gerald Schroeder,
an MIT-trained scientist who has worked in both physics and biology
and author of the famous book The Science of God, makes a number
of important comments on this subject. In his more recent book,
The Hidden Face of God: Science Reveals the Ultimate Truth (2001),
Schroeder explains that quantum physics-along with other branches
of science-is the tool for discovering a universal wisdom that lies
behind the material world. As he puts it:
It took humanity millennia before an Einstein discovered
that, as bizarre as it may seem, the basis of matter is energy,
that matter is actually condensed energy. It may take a while longer
for us to discover that there is some non-thing even more fundamental
than energy that forms the basis of energy, which in turn forms
the basis of matter.15
John Archibald, professor of physics at Princeton
University and recipient of the Einstein Award, explained the same
fact when he said that the "bit" (the binary digit) of information
gives rise to the "it," the substance of matter.16
According to Schroeder this has a "profound meaning":
The matter/energy relationships, the quantum wave
functions, have profound meaning. Science may be approaching
the realization that the entire universe is an expression of information,
wisdom, an idea, just as atoms are tangible expressions of something
as ethereal as energy.17
This wisdom is such an omniscient thing that covers
the whole universe:
A single consciousness, a universal wisdom,
pervades the universe. The discoveries of science, those that
search the quantum nature of subatomic matter, have moved us to
the brink of a startling realization: all existence is the expression
of this wisdom. In the laboratories we experience it as information
that first physically articulated as energy and then condensed into
the form of matter. Every particle, every being, from atom to human,
appears to represent a level of information, of wisdom.18
This means that the material universe is not a
purposeless and chaotic heap of atoms, as the atheist/materialist
dogma assumes, but is instead a manifestation of a wisdom which
existed before the universe and which has absolute sovereignty over
everything that exists. In Schroeder's words, it is "as if a
metaphysical substrate was impressed upon the physical". 19
This discovery shatters the whole materialist myth
and reveals that the material universe we see is just a shadow of
a transcendent Absolute Being. Thus, as Schroeder explains, quantum
physics has become the point where science and theology meet:
The age-old theological view of the universe is
that all existence is the manifestation of a transcendent wisdom,
with a universal consciousness being its manifestation. If I
substitute the word information for wisdom, theology begins to sound
like quantum physics. We may be witnessing the scientific confluence
of the physical with the spiritual. 20
Quantum is really the point where science and theology
meet. The fact that the whole universe is pervaded by a wisdom is
a secret that was revealed in the Qur'an 14 centuries ago. One verse
reads:
Your god is God alone, there is no
god but Him. He encompasses all things in His knowledge. (Qur'an,
20:98)
The Natural Sciences: The Collapse
of Darwinism and
The Triumph of Intelligent Design
As we stated at the beginning, one of the main
supports for the rise of atheism to its zenith in the 19th century
was Darwin's theory of evolution. With its assertion that the origin
of human beings and all other living things lay in unconscious natural
mechanisms, Darwinism gave atheists the opportunity they had been
seeking for centuries. Therefore, Darwin's theory had been adopted
by the most passionate atheists of the time, and atheist thinkers
such as Marx and Engels elucidated this theory as the basis of their
philosophy. Since that time, the relationship between Darwinism
and atheism has continued.
But, at the same time, this greatest support for
atheism is the dogma that has received the greatest blow from scientific
discoveries in the 20th century. The discoveries by various branches
of science such as paleontology, biochemistry, anatomy and genetics
have shattered the theory of evolution from various aspects. (See
Harun Yahya, Evolution Deceit, 2000). We have dealt with this fact
in much more detail in various other books and publications, but
we may summarize it here as follows:
Paleontology: Darwin's theory rests on the
assumption that all species come from one single common ancestor
and that they diverged from one another over a long period of time
by small gradual changes. It is supposed that the proofs for this
will be discovered in the fossil record, the petrified remains of
living things. But fossil research conducted in the course of the
20th century has presented a totally different picture. The fossil
of even a single undoubted intermediate species that would substantiate
the belief in the gradual evolution of species has not been found.
Moreover, every taxon appears suddenly in the fossil record and
no trace has been found of any previous ancestors. The phenomenon
known as the Cambrian Explosion is especially interesting. In this
early geological period, nearly all of the phyla (major groups with
significantly different body plans) of the animal kingdom suddenly
appeared. This sudden emergence of many different categories of
living things with totally different body structures and extremely
complex organs and systems, including mollusks, arthropods, echinoderms
and (as recently discovered) even vertebrates, is a major blow to
Darwinism. For, as evolutionists also agree, the sudden appearance
of a taxon implies supernatural design and this means creation.
Biological Observations: In elaborating
his theory, Darwin relied on examples of how animal breeders produced
a different variety of dogs or horses. He extrapolated the limited
changes he observed in these cases to the whole of the natural world
and proposed that every living thing could have come to be in this
way from a common ancestor. But Darwin made this claim in the 19th
century when the level of scientific sophistication was low. In
the 20th century things have changed greatly. Decades of observation
and experimentation on various species of animals have shown that
variation in living things has never gone beyond certain genetic
boundary. Darwin's assertions, like "I can see no difficulty in
a race of bears being rendered, by natural selection, more and more
aquatic in their habits, with larger and larger mouths, till a creature
was produced as monstrous as a whale."21 actually
demonstrates his great ignorance. On the other hand, observations
and experiments have shown that mutations defined by Neo- Darwinism
as an evolutionary mechanism add no new genetic information to living
creatures.
The Origin of Life: Darwin spoke about a
common ancestor but he never mentioned how this first common ancestor
came to be. His only conjecture was that the first cell could have
formed as a result of random chemical reactions "in some small warm
little pond".22 But evolutionary biochemists who
undertook to close this hole in Darwinism met with frustration.
All observations and experiments showed that it was, in a word,
impossible for a living cell to arise within inanimate matter by
random chemical reactions. Even the English atheist Nobel Prize-winner
Fred Hoyle expressed that such a scenario "is comparable with the
chance that a tornado sweeping through a junk-yard might assemble
a Boeing 747 from the materials therein."23
Intelligent Design: Scientists studying
cells, the molecules that compose the cells, their remarkable organization
within the body and the delicate order and plan in the organs are
faced with proof of the fact that evolutionists strongly wish to
reject: The world of living things is permeated by designs too complex
to be found in any technological equipment. Intricate examples of
design, including our eyes that are too superior to be compared
to any camera, the wings of birds that have inspired flight technology,
the complexly integrated system of the cells of living things and
the remarkable information stored in DNA, have vitiated the theory
of evolution which regards living things as the product of blind
chance.
All these facts have squeezed Darwinism into a
corner by the end of the 20th century. Today, in the United States
and other Western countries, the theory of intelligent design is
gaining everincreasing acceptance among scientists. Those who defend
the idea of intelligent design say that Darwinism has been a great
error in the history of science and that it came to be as the result
of materialist philosophy's being imposed on the scientific paradigm.
Scientific discoveries show that there is a design in living things
which proves creation. In short, science proves once more that God
created all living things.
Psychology: The Collapse of
Freudianism and the Acceptance of Faith
The representative of the 19th century atheist
dogma in the field of psychology was the Austrian psychiatrist Sigmund
Freud. Freud proposed a psychological theory which rejected the
existence of the soul and tried to explain the whole spiritual world
of human beings in terms of sexual and similar hedonistic motivations.
But Freud's greatest assault was against religion.
In his book The Future of an Illusion published
in 1927, he proposed that religious faith was a kind of mental illness
(neurosis) and that, as human beings progressed, religious faith
would completely disappear. Due to the primitive scientific conditions
of the time, the theory was proposed without the requisite research
and investigation, and with no scholarly literature or possibility
of comparison, and therefore, its claims were extremely deficient.
Indeed, if Freud had the possibility of evaluating his propositions
today, he would himself be surprised by the logical deficiency of
his claims and he would be the first to criticize such senseless
presuppositions.
After Freud, psychology developed on an atheist
foundation. Not only Freud, but the founders of other schools of
psychology in the 20th century were passionate atheists. Two of
these were B.F. Skinner, the founder of the behaviorist school and
Albert Ellis, founder of rational emotive therapy. The world of
psychology ended up by becoming the forum for atheism. A 1972 poll
among the members of the American Psychology Association revealed
that only 1.1 percent of psychologists in the country had any religious
beliefs.24
But most psychologists who fell into this great
deception were undone by their own psychological investigations.
It became known that the basic suppositions of Freudianism had almost
no scientific support and, moreover, that religion was not a mental
illness as Freud and some other psychological theorists declared,
but a basic element of mental health. Patrick Glynn summarizes these
important developments:
Yet the last quarter of the twentieth century has
not been kind to the psychoanalytic vision. Most significant has
been the exposure of Freud's views of religion as entirely fallacious.
Ironically enough, scientific research in psychology over the past
twenty-five years has demonstrated that, far from being a neurosis
or source of neuroses as Freud and his disciples claimed, religious
belief is one of the most consistent correlates of overall mental
health and happiness. Study after study has shown a powerful relationship
between religious belief and practice, on the one hand, and healthy
behaviors with regard to such problems as suicide, alcohol and drug
abuse, divorce, depression, even, perhaps surprisingly, levels of
sexual satisfaction in marriage, on the other. In short, the empirical
data run exactly contrary to the supposedly "scientific" consensus
of the psychotherapeutic profession.25
Finally, as Glynn says, "modern psychology at the
close of the twentieth century seems to be reacquainting itself
with religion"26 and "a purely secular view of
human mental life has been shown to fail not just at the theoretical,
but also at the practical, level.27
In other words, atheism has been routed also on
the field of psychology.
Medicine: The Discovery of
"How Hearts Find Peace"
Another branch of science that was affected by
the collapse of atheist suppositions was medicine.
According to results compiled by David B. Larson
and his team at the National Institute for Healthcare Research,
a comparison among Americans in relation to church attendance yielded
very interesting results. Risk of arteriosclerotic heart disease
for men who attended church frequently was just 60 percent of that
for men who were infrequent church attenders. Among women, suicide
was twice as high among infrequent as among frequent church attenders;
smokers who ranked religion as very important in their lives were
over seven times less likely to have normal diastolic pressure readings
than were those who did not.28
Secular psychologists generally explain such phenomena
as having a psychological cause. In this sense, faith raises a person's
morale and contributes to his well-being. There may be some truth
in this explanation, but if we look more closely we see something
much more dramatic. Belief in God is much stronger than any other
influence on the morale. In comprehensive research on the relationship
between religious belief and physical health, Dr. Herbert Benson
of the Harvard Medical School came up with some interesting results.
Although he did not have any religious faith, Benson arrived at
the result that faith in God and worship had a much more positive
effect on human health than could be observed in anything else.
Benson concludes that he has "found that faith quiets the mind
like no other form of belief."29
Why is there such a special relation between faith
and human spirit and body? The result arrived at by Benson, who
is a secular researcher, was, as he put it, that the human mind
and body are "wired for God."30
This fact, that the medical world is slowly beginning
to notice, is a secret revealed in the Qur'an with the verse, "Only
in the remembrance of God can the heart find peace." (Qur'an, 13:28)
The reason why those who believe in God, pray to Him and
trust in Him are physically and mentally more healthy than others
is that they behave in harmony with their nature. Philosophical
systems opposed to human nature always bring pain, sorrow, anxiety
and depression upon people.
The basic source of the peace experienced by a
religious person is that he acts in order to gain God's approval.
In other words, this peace is the natural result of a person's listening
to the voice of his conscience. A person does not live the morality
of religion simply "to be more at peace" or "to be healthier"; a
person who acts with this intention cannot find peace in its true
sense. God well knows that what a person stores in his heart or
what he reveals. A person experiences peace of mind only by being
sincere and attempting to gain God's approval. God commands:
So set your face firmly towards the
[true] religion, as a pure natural believer, God's natural pattern
on which He made mankind. There is no changing God's creation. That
is the true religion-but most people do not know it. (Qur'an, 30:30)
In the light of the discoveries that we have briefly
indicated above, modern medicine is starting to become cognizant
of this truth. As Patrick Glynn says, "contemporary medicine is
clearly moving in the direction of acknowledging dimensions of healing
beyond the purely material".31
Society: The Fall of Communism,
Fascism and the Hippie Dream
The collapse of atheism in the 20th century did
not occur only in the fields of astrophysics, biology, psychology
and medicine; it happened also in politics and social morality.
Communism may be considered the most important
political result of 19th century atheism. The founders of this ideology,
Marx, Engels, Lenin, Trotsky or Mao, all adopted atheism as a basic
principle. A primary goal of all communist regimes was to get society
to adopt atheism and to destroy religious belief. Stalin's Russia,
Red China, Cambodia, Albania and some Eastern block countries applied
immense pressure on religious people to the point of committing
mass murder.
Yet, amazingly, at the end of the 1980s this bloody
atheist system collapsed. When we examine the reasons for this dramatic
fall, we see that what collapsed was actually atheism. Patrick Glynn
writes:
To be sure, secular historians would say that the
greatest mistake of Communism was to attempt to defy the laws of
economics. But other laws, too, came into play… Moreover, as historians
penetrate the circumstances of the Communist collapse, it is becoming
clearer that the Soviet elite was itself in the throes of an atheistic
"crisis of faith". Having lived under an atheistic ideology-one
that consisted of lies and that was based on a "Big Lie"- the Soviet
system suffered a radical demoralization, in every sense of that
term. People, including the ruling elite, lost all sense of morality
and all sense of hope.32
An interesting indication of the Soviet system's
great "crisis of faith" was President Mihail Gorbachev's attempts
of reform. Since the time that he assumed the presidency, Gorbachev
was interested in moral problems as well as economic reforms. For
example, one of the first things he did was to initiate a campaign
against alcoholism. In order to raise the morale of society, for
a long time he used Marxist-Leninist terminology but he saw that
this was of no use.
Then, in the later years of the regime, he even
began to mention God in some of his speeches, even though he himself
was an atheist. Naturally, these insincere words of faith were of
no use and the crisis of faith in Soviet society continued to worsen.
The result was the collapse of the gigantic Soviet empire. The 20th
century documented not only the fall of communism, but also that
of another fruit of 19th century antireligious philosophy-fascism.
Fascism is the outcome of a philosophy which may be called a mixture
of atheism and paganism and which is intensely hostile to theistic
religions. Friedrich Nietzsche, who may be called the father of
fascism, extolled the morality of barbarous idolatrous societies,
attacked Christianity and other monotheistic religions and even
called himself the "Antichrist." Nietzsche's disciple, Martin Heidegger,
was an avid Nazi supporter and the ideas of these two atheist thinkers
gave impetus to the terrifying savagery of Nazi Germany. (The Holocaust,
one of the greatest act of evil in human history, was the result
of Nazi anti-Semitism, an ideology that hated Jews and the monotheistic
faith that has been the cornerstone of Judaism-and also Islam.)
The Second World War, that caused the death of 55 million people,
is another example of the calamity that atheist ideologies like
fascism and communism have brought upon humanity.
At this point, we must recall another atheist ideology-Social
Darwinism-which was among the causes for the outbreak of both
the First and the Second World Wars. In his book entitled Europe
Since 1870, Harvard history professor James Joll states that behind
each of the two world wars lay the philosophical views of Social
Darwinist European leaders who believed in the myth that war was
a biological necessity and that nations developed through conflict.33
Another social consequence of atheism in the 20th
century appeared in Western democracies. In the present day there
is a tendency to regard the West as the "Christian world." However,
since the 19th, century, a quickly growing atheist culture has held
sway with Christian culture, and today there is a conflict between
these two cultures in what we call Western civilization. And this
atheist element has been the true cause of western imperialism,
moral degeneration, despotism and other negative manifestations.
In his book God: The Evidence, the American writer
Patrick Glynn draws attention to this matter and, in order to compare
the God-fearing and atheist elements in the West, he takes the examples
of the American and French Revolutions. The American Revolution
was carried out by believers; American Declaration of Independence
states that all men "are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable
rights". Since the French Revolution was the work of atheists, the
French Declaration of Human Rights was very different, with no reference
to God and full of atheist and neo-pagan notions.
The actual results of the two revolutions were
quite different: in the American model, a peaceful, tolerant environment
was created that respected religion and religious belief; in France
the fierce hostility to religion drowned the country in blood and
unleashed a savagery such as had never been seen before. As Glynn
says, "there is an interesting historical correlation between
atheism, on the one hand, and moral and political catastrophe, on
the other hand."34
Glynn notes that attempts to turn America into
an atheist country have also caused harm to society. The fact that
the sexual revolution (for example) that spread in the 60's and
70's caused immense social damage is accepted even by secular historians.35
The hippie movement was a demonstration of this
social damage. The hippies believed that they could find spiritual
emancipation through secular humanist philosophy and by such things
as unlimited drugs and sex. These young people who poured onto the
streets with romantic songs-like John Lennon's Imagine in which
he spoke of a world "with no countries, and no religion too"-were
actually undergoing a mass deception.
In fact, a world without religion actually brought
them to an unhappy end. The hippy leaders of the 1960s either
killed themselves or died from drug-induced comas in the early
1970s. Many other young hippies shared a similar fate.
Those young people of the same generation who turned
to violence found themselves on the receiving end of violence. The
1968 generation, who turned their backs on God and religion and
imagined they could find salvation in such concepts as revolution
or selfish Epicureanism, ruined both themselves and their own societies.
The Dawn of the Post-Atheist
World
The facts that we have briefly summarized to this
point shows clearly that atheism is undergoing an inevitable collapse.
In other words, humanity is - and will be - turning towards God.
The truth of this assertion is not limited only to the scientific
and political areas that we have written about here. From prominent
statesmen to movie stars and pop artists, those who influence opinion
in the West are much more religious than they used to be. There
are many people who have seen the truth and come to believe in God
after having lived for years as atheists. (Patrick Glynn from whose
book we have quoted is one of these ex-atheists).
The fact that the developments which have contributed
to this result began in the same period, that is from the second
half of the 1970s, is quite interesting. The anthropic principle
first appeared in the 1970s. Scientific criticism of Darwinism started
to be loudly voiced at that same time. The turning point against
the atheist dogma of Freud was a book entitled The Road Less Traveled
published in 1978 by Scott Peck. For this reason, Glynn, in the
1997 edition of his book writes that "over the past twenty years,
a significant body of evidence has emerged, shattering the foundations
of the long-dominant modern secular worldview."36
Surely, the fact that the atheist world-view has
been shaken means that another world-view prevails, which is belief
in God. Since the end of the 1970's, (or, from the beginning of
the 14th century according to the Muslim calendar) the world has
seen a rise in religious values. Like other social processes, this
does not happen in a day and the majority of people may not notice
it because it has been developing over a long period of time. However,
those who evaluate the development a little more carefully see that
the world is at a major turning point in the realm of ideas.
Secular historians try to explain this process
according to their own principles but just as they are in deep error
with regard to the existence of God, so they are greatly mistaken
about the course of history. In fact, as the following verse reveals,
history moves as God as determined: "...You will
not find any changing in the pattern of God. You will not find any
alteration in the pattern of God." (Qur'an, 35: 43) It follows,
then, that history has a purpose and unfolds as God has commanded.
And God's command is the perfection of His light:
They desire to extinguish God's Light
with their mouths. But God refuses to do other than perfect His
Light, even though the disbelievers detest it. (Qur'an, 9: 32)
This verse means that God has sent down His light
upon humanity through the religion that He has revealed. Those who
do not believe want to extinguish this light by their "mouths"-
intimations, propaganda and philosophies, but God will finally perfect
His light and give dominion to religious values on earth.
This may be the "turning point in history" mentioned
at the beginning of this article as also indicated by the evidence
we have provided here, as well as the implications of various hadiths
and statements by scholars. Surely, God knows best.
Conclusion
We are living at an important time. Atheism, which
people have tried for hundreds of years to portray as "the way of
reason and science," is proving to be mere irrationality and ignorance.
Materialist philosophy that sought to use science for its own ends
has been in turn defeated by science. A world rescuing itself from
atheism will turn to God and religion. And this process has begun
long ago.
It is clear that believers have important duties
in this period. They must be aware of this major change in the world's
way of thinking, interpret it, make good use of the opportunities
that globalization offers and effectively represent the truth along
this road. They must know that the basic conflict of ideas in the
world is between atheism and faith. It is not a struggle between
East and West; in both East and West there are those who believe
in God and those who do not. For this reason, faithful Christians,
as well as faithful Jews are allies of Muslims. The main divergence
is not between Muslims and the "People of the Book" (Jews and Christians),
but between Muslims and the People of the Book on the one hand,
and atheists and pagans on the other. Of course, we must not show
hostility to such people but view them as people who need to be
rescued from their error.
The time is fast approaching when many people who
are living in ignorance with no knowledge of their Creator will
be graced by faith in the impending post-atheist world.
___________________________________________
(1) Patrick Glynn, God: The Evidence, The
Reconciliation of Faith and Reason in a Postsecular World , Prima
Publishing, California, 1997, pp.19-20, 53
(2) Bryce Christensen, in a review of Gerald Shroeder's
book The Hidden Face of God, Booklist March 15, 2001
(3) George Politzer, Principes Fondamentaux de Philosophie,
Editions Sociales, Paris, 1954, p. 84
(4) S. Jaki, Cosmos and Creator, Regnery Gateway,
Chicago, 1980, p.54
(5) Henry Margenau, Roy Abraham Vargesse, Cosmos,
Bios, Theos, La Salle IL: Open Court Publishing, 1992, p.241
(6) John Maddox, "Down with the Big Bang", Nature,
vol. 340, 1989, p. 378
(7) H. P. Lipson, "A Physicist Looks at Evolution",
Physics Bulletin, vol. 138, 1980, p. 138
(8) Paul Davies, The Cosmic Blueprint, London: Penguin
Books, 1987, p. 203
(9) W. Press, "A Place for Teleology?", Nature,
vol. 320, 1986, s. 315
(10) George Greenstein, The Symbiotic Universe,
p. 27
(11) Hugh Ross, The Creator and the Cosmos, p.
123
(12) Denton, Michael Denton, Nature's Destiny:
How the Laws of Biology Reveal Purpose in the Universe, The New
York: The Free Press,1998, p. 14
(13) Paul Davies and John Gribbin, The Matter Myth,
Simon & Schuster, New York, 1992, p. 10
(14) As quoted in Gerald Schroeder, The Hidden
Face of God, Touchstone, New York, 2001, p. 7
(15) Gerald Schroeder, The Hidden Face of God,
Touchstone, New York, 2001, p. 8
(16) Ibid. p. 8
(17) Ibid. p. 28
(18) Ibid. p. xi
(19) Ibid. p. 48
(20) Ibid. xii
(21) Charles Darwin, The Origin of Species: A Facsimile
of the First Edition, Harvard University Press, 1964, p. 184
(22) Charles Darwin, Life and Letter of Charles
Darwin, vol. II, From Charles Darwin to J. Do Hooker, March 29,
1863
(23) "Hoyle on Evolution", Nature, vol. 294, November
12, 1981, p. 105
(24) Edwin R. Wallace IV, "Psychiatry and Religion:
A Dialogue", in Joseph H. Smith and Susan A. Handelman, eds., Psychoanalysis
andReligion, John Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, 1990, p.
1005
(25) Patrick Glynn, God: The Evidence, The Reconciliation
of Faith and Reason in a Postsecular World , Prima Publishing, California,
1997, pp.60-61
(26) Patrick Glynn, God: The Evidence, The Reconciliation
of Faith and Reason in a Postsecular World , Prima Publishing, California,
1997, p.69
(27) Patrick Glynn, God: The Evidence, The Reconciliation
of Faith and Reason in a Postsecular World , Prima Publishing, California,
1997, p.78
(28) Patrick Glynn, God: The Evidence, The Reconciliation
of Faith and Reason in a Postsecular World , Prima Publishing, California,
1997, pp.80-81
(29) Herbert Benson, Mark Stark, Timeless Healing,
Simon & Schuste, New York, 1996, p. 203
(30) Herbert Benson, Mark Stark, Timeless Healing,
Simon & Schuste, New York, 1996, p. 193
(31) Patrick Glynn, God: The Evidence, The Reconciliation
of Faith and Reason in a Postsecular World , Prima Publishing, California,
1997, p.94
(32) Patrick Glynn, God: The Evidence, The Reconciliation
of Faith and Reason in a Postsecular World , Prima Publishing, California,
1997,pp.161-162
(33) James Joll, Europe Since 1870: An International
History, Penguin Books, Middlesex, 1990, pp. 102-103
(34) Patrick Glynn, God: The Evidence, The Reconciliation
of Faith and Reason in a Postsecular World , Prima Publishing, California,
1997, p.161
(35) Patrick Glynn, God: The Evidence, The Reconciliation
of Faith and Reason in a Postsecular World , Prima Publishing, California,
1997, p.163
(36) Patrick Glynn, God: The Evidence, The Reconciliation
of Faith and Reason in a Postsecular World, Prima Publishing, California,
1997, p. 2
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