The ideal of secular humanism is mankind itself as a part of
uncreated, eternal nature; its goal is man’s self-remediation without reference
to or help from God. Secular humanism grew out of the 18th century
Enlightenment and 19th century freethinking. Some Christians might be surprised
to learn that they actually share some commitments with secular humanists. Many
Christians and proponents of secular humanism share a commitment to reason,
free inquiry, the separation of church and state, the ideal of freedom, and
moral education; however, they differ in many areas. Secular humanists base
their morality and ideas about justice on critical intelligence unaided by
Scripture, which Christians rely on for knowledge concerning right and wrong,
good and evil. And although secular humanists and Christians develop and use
science and technology, for Christians these tools are to be used in the
service of man to the glory of God, whereas secular humanists view these things
as instruments meant to serve human ends without reference to God. In their
inquiries concerning the origins of life, secular humanists do not admit that
God created man from the dust of the earth, having first created the earth and
all living creatures on it from nothing. For secular humanists, nature is an
eternal, self-perpetuating force.
Secular humanists may be surprised to learn that many
Christians share with them an attitude of religious skepticism and are
committed to the use of critical reason in education. Following the pattern of
the noble Bereans, Christian humanists read and listen to instruction, but we
examine all things in the light of the Scriptures (Acts 17:11). We do not
simply accept every declaration or mental perception that enters our minds, but
test all ideas and “knowledge” against the absolute standard of the word of God
in order to obey Christ our Lord (see 2 Corinthians 10:5; 1 Timothy 6:20).
Christian humanists understand that all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge
are hidden in Christ (Col. 2:3) and seek to grow in full knowledge of every
good thing for Christ’s service (Phil. 1:9; 4:6; cf. Col. 1:9). Unlike secular
humanists who reject the notion of revealed truth, we adhere to the word of
God, which is the standard against which we measure or test the quality of all
things. These brief comments do not fully elucidate Christian humanism, but
they add life and relevance to the clinical definition given in lexicons (e.g.,
Webster's Third New International Dictionary, which defines Christian Humanism
as "a philosophy advocating the self-fulfillment of man within the
framework of Christian principles").
Before we consider a Christian response to secular humanism,
we must study the term humanism itself. Humanism generally calls to mind the
rebirth or revival of ancient learning and culture that took place during the
Renaissance. During this time, “humanists” developed rigorous modes of
scholarship based on Greek and Roman models and attempted to build a new Latin
style (in literary and plastic arts) and political institutions based on them.
However, long before the Renaissance “Christian humanism” thrived in the works
and thought of Augustine, Aquinas, Erasmus, and others. Some even see in Plato,
a pagan philosopher, a type of thinking that is compatible with Christian
teaching. While Plato offers much that is profitable, his assumptions and
conclusions were certainly not biblical. Plato, like Nietzsche, believed in
“eternal recurrence” (reincarnation); he (and the Greeks generally) paid lip
service to their gods, but for them man was the measure of all things.
Contemporary expressions of secular humanism reject both the nominal Christian
elements of its precursors and essential biblical truths, such as the fact that
human beings bear the image of their Creator, the God revealed in the Bible and
in the earthly life and ministry of the Lord Jesus, the Christ.
During the scientific revolution, the investigations and
discoveries of broadly trained scientists who can be considered humanists (men
like Copernicus and Galileo) challenged Roman Catholic dogma. Rome rejected the
findings of the new empirical sciences and issued contradictory pronouncements
on matters lying outside the domain of faith. The Vatican held that since God
created the heavenly bodies, these must reflect the “perfection” of their
Creator; therefore, it rejected the astronomers’ discoveries that the orbits of
the planets are elliptical and not spherical, as previously held, and that the
sun has “spots” or colder, darker areas. These empirically verifiable facts and
the men and women who discovered them did not contradict biblical teachings;
the real turn away from biblically revealed truth and toward naturalistic
humanism—characterized by rejection of authority and biblical truth, and
leading toward an avowedly secular form of humanism—occurred during the
Enlightenment, which spanned the 18th and 19th centuries and took root
throughout Europe, blossoming especially in Germany.
Numerous pantheists, atheists, agnostics, rationalists, and
skeptics pursued various intellectual projects not beholden to revealed truth.
In their separate and distinct ways, men like Rousseau and Hobbes sought amoral
and rational solutions to the human dilemma; moreover, works like Hegel’s
Phenomenology of Spirit, Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason, and Fichte’s The
Science of Knowledge laid the theoretical foundation for later secular
humanists. Whether consciously or unconsciously, contemporary academics and
secular humanists build on the ground laid before when they promote exclusively
“rational” approaches to social and ethical issues and antinomian forms of
self-determination in such areas as individual autonomy and freedom of choice
in sexual relationships, reproduction, and voluntary euthanasia. In the
cultural domain, secular humanists rely on critical methods when interpreting
the Bible and reject the possibility of divine intervention in human history;
at best, they view the Bible as “holy history.”
Going by the name of “higher criticism,” secular humanism
spread like gangrene in schools of theology and promoted its rationalized or
anthropocentric approach to biblical studies. Starting in Germany, the late
19th century “higher criticism” sought to “go behind the documents” and de-emphasized
the authoritative message of the biblical text. As Darrell L. Bock has noted,
the speculative nature of higher criticism treated the Bible “as a foggy mirror
back to the past” and not as the inerrant historical record of the life and
teachings of Christ and His apostles (“Introduction” in Roy B. Zuck and D. L.
Bock, A Biblical Theology of the New Testament, 1994, p. 16). For example, in
his Theology of the New Testament, Rudolf Bultmann, a leading exponent of
higher criticism, relies heavily on critical assumptions. As Bock points out,
the author is “so skeptical about the New Testament portrait of Jesus that he
barely discusses a theology of Jesus" (ibid).
While higher criticism undermined the faith of some, others,
like B. B. Warfield at Princeton Seminary, William Erdman, and others,
persuasively defended the Bible as the Word of God. For example, in responding
to skeptics who questioned the early date and Johannine authorship of the
fourth gospel, Erdman and other faithful servants of the Lord have defended
these essentials on critical grounds and with equal scholarship.
Likewise, in philosophy, politics, and social theory,
Christian academics, jurists, writers, policy-makers, and artists have wielded
similar weapons when defending the faith and persuading hearts and minds for
the Gospel. However, in many areas of intellectual life the battle is far from
over. For example, in American English departments and literary circles beyond
the academic world, the siren call of Ralph Waldo Emerson continues to hold
sway. Emerson’s pantheism amounts to a denial of Christ; it is subtle and can
beguile the unwary to turn away from the Gospel. Emerson held that the “Over
Soul” within individuals makes each person the source of his or her own
salvation and truth. In reading writers like Emerson and Hegel, Christians
(especially those who would defend the faith once and for all delivered to the
saints [Jude 3]) must exercise caution and keep the Word of God central in
their thoughts, and humbly remain obedient to it in their lives.
Christian and secular humanists have sometimes engaged in
honest dialogue about the basis or source of order in the universe. Whether
they call this reason or Aristotle’s prime mover, some secular rationalists
correctly deduce that moral Truth is a prerequisite for moral order. Although
many secular humanists are atheists, they generally have a high view of reason;
therefore, Christian apologists may dialog with them rationally about the
Gospel, as Paul did in Acts 17:15-34 when addressing the Athenians.
How should a Christian respond to secular humanism? For
followers of the Way (Acts 9:2; 19:19, 23), any legitimate form of humanism
must view the full realization of human potential in the submission of the
human mind and will to the mind and will of God. God’s desire is that none
should perish, but that all should repent and inherit eternal life as His
children (John 3:16; 1:12). Secular humanism aims to do both much less and much
more. It aims to heal this world and glorify man as the author of his own,
progressive salvation. In this respect, “secular” humanism is quite at ease
with certain religious substitutes for God’s true Gospel—for example, the
teachings of Yogananda, the founder of the Self-Realization Fellowship. By
contrast, Christian humanists follow the Lord Jesus in understanding that our
kingdom is not of this world and cannot be fully realized here (John 18:36;
8:23). We set our minds on God’s eternal kingdom, not on earthly things, for we
have died and our lives are hidden with Christ in God. When Christ—who is our
life—returns, we will appear with him in glory (Colossians 3:1-4). This is
truly a high view of our destiny as human beings, for we are His offspring, as
even secular poets have said (see Aratus’s poem “Phainomena”; cf. Acts 17:28).
One does not have to be a Christian to appreciate that
humanism powered by pure reason alone cannot succeed. Even Immanuel Kant,
writing his Critique of Pure Reason during the height of the German
Enlightenment, understood this. Neither should followers of Christ fall prey to
the deceitfulness of philosophy and human tradition, or be taken captive by
forms humanism based on romantic faith in the possibility of human
self-realization (Colossians 2:8). Hegel based human progress on the ideal of
reason as spirit “instantiating” itself through progressive dialectical stages
in history; but had Hegel lived to see the world wars of the 20th century, it
is doubtful that he would have persisted in detecting human progress in this
debacle of history. Christians understand that any form of humanism set apart
from divinely authored redemption is doomed to failure and false to the faith.
We ground a high view of man in a high view of God, since mankind is made in
the image of God, and we agree with Scripture concerning man’s desperate
situation and God’s plan of salvation.
As Alexander Solzhenitsyn observed, humanism offers no
solution at all to mankind’s desperate condition. He puts it this way: "If
humanism were right in declaring that man is born to be happy, he would not be
born to die. Since his body is doomed to die, his task on earth evidently must
be of a more spiritual nature.” Indeed. Mankind’s task is to seek and find God
(Acts 17:26-27; cf. 15:17), our true redeemer who offers us a better than
earthly inheritance (Hebrews 6:9; 7:17). Anyone who opens the door to Christ
(Revelation 3:20) will inherit that better country, which God has prepared for
those who love Him and are called according to His purposes (Ephesians 1:11;
Romans 8:28; Hebrew 11:16; cf. Matthew 25:34; John 14:2). How much more
excellent is this than all the proud and lofty goals contained in secular
humanist manifestos?
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