Redemptionsong
Well-Known Member
Let's take a step back and look at the differences between a humanist outlook and that of a believer in the Bible as the Word of God.There is no knowledge of Jesus, just faith-based beliefs asserted as fact without evidence.
A humanist draws a very clear epistemological boundary when determining what can be known.
Here is an extract from the American Humanist Manifesto (version 111) 2003:
'Knowledge of the world is derived by observation, experimentation, and rational analysis. Humanists find that science is the best method for determining this knowledge as well as for solving problems and developing beneficial technologies. We also recognize the value of new departures in thought, the arts, and inner experience—each subject to analysis by critical intelligence.'
Two phrases used in this passage, 'rational analysis' and 'critical intelligence', tell us all we need to know about the limitations of human knowledge as understood by Humanists. There is no spiritual dimension to life. This means that there can be no God or Creator, no life after death, and no spiritual connectivity between people (such as Holy Spirit). It also means that words like 'love' have to be subject to the same critical analysis. What is 'love' when observed, subjected to experiment and analysed? If we're to believe Richard Dawkins, and the like, then the human being really has no capacity for genuine love, because the selfish gene ultimately overrides altruism.
The God of the Bible presents a very different outlook on life. Firstly, creation is not accidental. It's an act of love. Secondly, the Spirit of the Creator is present in His creation, in life itself. Love, instead of being an aspect of selfish desire, becomes a gift from God. Faith, instead of being a superstition, becomes the evidence of God's reality, and a response to love.
In Romans 10:4 Paul says, 'For Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to every one that believeth'. In other words, faith in Christ is not man trying to be good, but man receiving the goodness of God's Spirit by faith. To receive God's righteousness according to the Bible one must be humble, contrite, and not self-righteous. How different this is from the Humanist whose whole philosophy is telling him to be strong minded and of 'critical intelligence'. The Humanist is naturally opposed to faith, and this makes unconditional love both meaningless, and impossible to realise!