Orthodox Outlet for Dogmatic Enquiries | About God - Atheism |
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“God of the Gaps” : whose “god” is he?
Does the augmentation of knowledge strengthen or weaken the
faith
of those who believe in God?
Source: The interview with
Neil de Grasse Tyson:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ytaf30wuLbQ |
Below is a commentary on the video interview, in
response to the atheist absolutizing of the “gaps”
phenomenon.
One of the favourite atheistic arguments opposing
the faithful who believe in God is the argument labelled
“god of the gaps” – that is, an imaginary “god”, who
fills the knowledge gaps of those who believe in God,
and who gradually retreats as scientific knowledge
advances.
However, “gaps” are also located, in the atheistic
rationale.
(The immense, mysterious “Boötes void" found in the
universe)
1. The arguments
regarding the “god of the gaps”
Certain atheists philosophize that the faith of
God-believers is attributed to their attempts to fill
the voids of their knowledge regarding the workings of
the cosmos.
They assert that when a person is unable to
explain certain phenomena in the cosmos, those phenomena
are ascribed to the existence of an imaginary god, of
whom they can say: “I don’t know why or how this
phenomenon exists, so it MUST be God’s doing”.
“Perhaps God steps in and makes it right, every
now and then,” Newton had said, when he had reached the
limits of what his equations could calculate.
But, as Science advances and gives explanations
to the functions of the cosmos, and man’s knowledge
regarding the workings of the universe increases, then
the need of believers to ascribe certain phenomena to
God is no longer a need.
Invoking “a god” as an explanation of phenomena
also diminishes, hence, the One God “retreats” from
their thoughts, as He is no longer considered necessary
for explanations.
“God is an ever-receding pocket of scientific
ignorance” – to quote Mr. De Grasse Tyson’s words in the
video – which is why, as human knowledge advances, the
faith in a divine entity recedes as an unnecessary
factor.
But,
just
how
valid
are
all
these
assertions?
2. To whom is the
“god of the gaps” a valid belief?
As strange as this admission may sound to
non-believers, the argument “god of the gaps” is, in
fact, a valid one – but NOT to the degree that is
asserted, and NOT to everyone! It
is
not
even
limited
to
believers
only!
Saint Basil the Great said: “You should direct
your admiration to God’s Wisdom, which arranged
everything thus; so that our surprise for wondrous
things is not diminished when the manner is discovered,
by which one of the paradoxes is solved.”
(Basil of Caesaria, Works,
Homily A - “On the Hexaemeron” E.P.E. Vol.4, pp.
55-63; and PG 29, 25A).
These words by Saint Basil show that he was aware
of the risk of a believer forsaking his faith after
learning how certain mysteries of Creation function.
In parallel however, he was aware that what
applies for some people, does NOT apply for true
believers, who do NOT link God with whatever they can
understand; they know that God is EVER-PRESENT,
EVERYWHERE, and behind EVERYTHING in Creation –
regardless if they know how everything functions, or
not.
For the genuine believer, God is “ever-constant”
and “ever-proliferative”, and NOT “ever-receding”!
In reality, faithful Christians differentiate
between the Uncreated God and the functions of created
nature – which He created.
Their faith in the existence of God is not
dependent on their knowledge of how things function;
they know that God is ever-present, and literally
“behind” every single thing, as the Creator and the
Maintainer of Creation.
That which is “ever-receding” with advanced
knowledge is NOT God, for a true believer; it is his
own ignorance about God’s Creation.
It is the difference between created nature and
the Uncreated God that atheists and superficial
“believers” do not take into account.
By not discerning between created and uncreated -
between Creation and God – they see God as an
“accessory” of the world, who merely “explains” the
unexplained. And as a consequence, yes, when the
unexplained phenomena become fewer, the “god of gaps” in
their sphere of knowledge becomes less prominent.
A true Christian who knows his faith knows that
God is literally “behind” everything, “....upholding
all things by the word of his power...”
(Hebr.1: 3).
As Christ had also said, “Are not two
sparrows sold for a farthing? and yet, not even one of
them shall fall on the ground without the will of your
Father. In fact, even the very hairs of your head are
all numbered.”
(Matth.10:29-30)
The Christian Church’s position regarding God is
clear and specific, and is unchanging – irrespective of
scientific “breakthroughs” pertaining to Creation.
What DOES change does NOT pertain to God, but to
HOW He fashioned Creation.
We do NOT confuse the unchanging God with
changeable Nature, nor do we exchange our steadfast
positions regarding God, for the sake of our
ever-changing scientific perceptions pertaining to His
Creation.
Everything that we know about God has been through
revelation; everything we know about Creation has been
through research.
Saint Basil the Great doesn’t
expect all the answers to be in the Holy Bible, but he
DOES regard scientific research both necessary and
already foreseen by God:
“...many things have been
withheld (by the Bible) to exercise our mind
towards research, by providing out of few things an
opportunity to surmise...”
(EPE 4:72/4).
In other words, God’s intention was for mankind
to discover how He fashioned the cosmos, through their
own scientific research – which Basil considers to be
a God-given “exercising of our mind”!
Both the God of Christians –and Christians
themselves– are anything BUT afraid of scientific
discoveries!
What
atheists are in reality criticizing is a specific
group of believers:
the superficial ones, who,
when initially
arguing that something is God’s doing and later learn
that the “something” was a result of Natural Laws, lose
their faith in God.
This stance however does not apply to Christians
who know their faith.
Faithful Christians who know their faith are
fully aware that God does NOT INTERVENE IN NATURE IN
ORDER TO CORRECT SOMETHING, as if He had made a mistake
to begin with and then had to backtrack to correct it!
We are fully conscious that
our Omniscient God has set everything in motion from the
very beginning of Creation’s existence, on a constantly
progressing course towards eternity, through the natural
laws of His design, without any additional
interventions. Everything that we (temporal creations)
perceive as interventions, have been set in place by the
Creator from the commencement of (created) Time, as
foreseen and predesigned “laws of nature”.
Our perception of “Time” in motion is something
“motionless” for our Time-less God, and is but one more
dimension of His Creation; in His eternal glance,
overall Time is an eternal Present.
This is why the superficially faithful’s logic is
mistaken, when they want God to “intervene every now and
then to make things right”, resulting in the receding of
their faith in God when they realize that things were
thus tuned by God’s natural laws.
And this reality (of the natural progression and
course of Natural Laws without any interim
“mending” by God) we Christians did not expect Science
to teach it to us.
We already “knew” it, from the beginning of the
Church’s existence!
Saint Gregory of Nyssa made it clear, that
everything was created as is, from the very commencement
of Creation, without any “corrections” along the way:
“All things regarding nature were within the
first momentum by God - as if a certain seminal power
was exerted for the genesis of all things - without any
subsequent action (exerted) upon each one.”
(ÑG 44, 77D).
Basil the Great acknowledges a developmental
course in Creation, by presenting the “first
beginning” as “having birth pangs until the
genesis of everything, because of its being placed there
by the power of the Creator”, in anticipation of
“the obligatory moments when, by the divine calling, it
would bring forth each one’s movements”.
(ÑG 29.36Â)
This is because according to Saint Gregory, «of
all existing things - the causes, the reasons and the
powers – God had deposited them as a whole».
(ÑG 44, 72Â).
The universe, according to Basil the Great,
develops and takes form within Time, after having
previously received all of the necessary powers that
will form it completely, in a developmental sequence
according to the will of the Creator:
«The sequence of
nature, having received its beginning from the initial
command, will thereafter go through Time, until it
reaches the common completion of all things»
(ÑG
29,1164).
And as Saint Gregory also says, «Nature
causes the ascent of the characteristics of life by
degrees, from the smallest to the largest thing, until
their perfection». (ÑG 44, 148C)
It is with a
gradated movement that the universe advances towards
perfection according to God’s will; however all things
have an initial and non-repeated impetus by God, without
any corrections along the way.
It is well-known by Christians that literally in
everything created, God has installed His “raisons
d'être”, which lead every single thing – from the
beginning of Creation – to the end purpose of His
Creation and the final outcome of the divine will.
As such, when the faithless present their
arguments regarding the “god of the gaps” and those who
believe that “the god of the gaps recedes”, they
should not generalize by claiming that it applies to the
faithful in general, as it applies only to the religiose
types. The
truly
faithful
have
no
such
worries!
Furthermore, for the truly faithful, God is NOT a
“figment of their imagination”; He is real and living,
and they have become acquainted with Him personally and
converse with Him, throughout all the ages.
We do not become acquainted with God, because we
have imagined Him as something that covers the gaps in
our area of knowledge, but because He reveals Himself to
those who seek Him with faith and love, who then cleanse
their hearts so that He may dwell inside them and
“visit” them.
We could ask the atheists who theorize that
science can nowadays “record” the workings of the brain
during religious experiences - and that “god” is found
only in the mind – that is, in the imagination of people
who “hear voices inside their head”:
how do they KNOW that such recordings are of an
“unreal god” and that they are not the recordings of an
ACTUAL COMMUNICATION of the brain with the Uncreated, or
with created beings?
And how do they know that this applies in all
cases? Could
it be that it is atheistic dogmatism striving to fill
its own gaps, with unsupported theories?
3. The idea of “gap
filling” also applies to the non-faithful!
We need to make it clear, finally, that the
practice of filling the gaps in our knowledge with
“something” is NOT a characteristic of faithful people,
but also of the non-faithful! Even
if
they
happen to be
Scientists!
Isn’t it a fact, that scientists also fill the
gaps in mankind’s knowledge with incomplete scientific
theories – throughout History?
Where a simple faithful person “sees” an act of
God, a scientist will “see” an initially unsupported
theory, to which he will then apply himself, in order to
prove it correct.
And not infrequently, he will be forced to revise
or to announce that his initial theory was wrong!
So, essentially, he too is filling the “gap” of
his knowledge with an imagined theory, for which he
has no evidence to confirm it; but because he
BELIEVES it, he strives to prove it!
Does that mean that science per se is wrong?
Similarly, for a simple faithful person, his need
to revise his initial perception about how the created
cosmos functions is in no way evidence (not even an
indication) that the god he imagined to have acted is
only a figment of his imagination. It is not God that
he was imagining: he was only imagining THE WAY THAT GOD
PROBABLY ACTED.
There is a huge difference between the two
aspects.
Now that we know about DNA (the genetic code
which was given by God to all biological beings),
today’s faithful do not imagine God as a potter merely
fashioning creations, but as a “programmer”, Who had
designed and installed the genetic code of all
biological beings that produce the life that we are so
familiar with in our time.
Again, it is not God per se who is troubling our
thoughts; only THE WAY we imagine God to be creating.
God remains the same, unaffected by our increment in
knowledge.
As a matter of fact, we could say that it is amazing how
our contemporary perception of God as a “programmer” is
even closer to the original, Patristic formulation
regarding God’s “how”:
«The sequence of
nature, having received its beginning from the initial
command, will thereafter go through Time, until it
reaches the common completion of all things»
(ÑG 29,1164). In actual fact, this is
not a “receding of the god of gaps” in view of something
new, but on the contrary, a return to the initial – to
the original – basic definition of “the beginning”:
of how God
created everything.
Most certainly, there have been people throughout
History who have misconstrued certain expressions in the
Holy Bible – for example the term “days” mentioned in
Genesis, which they believed comprised of 24 hours.
But that does not mean the God-inspired
expression in the Bible was “wrong”, simply because they
had misinterpreted the term with their limited
knowledge.
Perhaps few are those who know that long before we were
informed by Science that those “days” were “symbolic
periods of Time”, holy Fathers such as Saint Basil the
Great had already interpreted accurately that those
“days” were “symbolic periods”:
“So that regardless whether you call it
“day” or “age”, you are expressing the same meaning.
Even if that state was called “day”, it was one, and not
many; and even if it was called “age”, it must have been
unique, and not multiple.
Thus, in order to lead the (term’s) meaning towards the life to
come, he gave the name “one” to
the image of the
age, the commencement of days, the same age as the
light, and
the blessed Sunday, which was honoured by the
Resurrection of the Lord”. (EPE
Vol.4.
pp.
55-63,
last
section)
As anyone can see, our sacred texts already
contained the information that would lead the
well-meaning student to the correct conclusion, given
that even in the very ancient text of Genesis, the word
“day” was given a variable duration and not only as
one of the six “days of Creation”, given that the
overall “six days of Creation” are also mentioned as
“day”:
“4 This is the genesis
of the heavens and the earth when they were created,
on the
day that the Lord God created the earth and the heavens, 5 before any plant of the field was in the earth and
before any herb of the field had grown. “ (Genesis 2: 4-5).
For a person to readjust his interpretations of
Creation around him not only doesn’t comprise proof that
God is “imaginary” and a “god of the gaps”; it is merely
his readjustment regarding Creation –NOT GOD– which
is characteristic of EVERY PERSON’S progress in
knowledge, be they faithful or non-faithful.
Atheists should therefore refrain from ascribing this
characteristic SPECIFICALLY TO THE FAITHFUL, and also
refrain from assuming that people are confusing God per
se with the perception they have about God’s creations:
“You should direct your admiration to God’s
Wisdom, which arranged everything thus; so that our
surprise for wondrous things is not diminished when the
manner is discovered, by which one of the paradoxes is
solved.” (Basil of
Caesaria, Works, Homily A - “On the Hexaemeron” E.P.E.
Vol.4, pp.
55-63; and PG 29, 25A).
Translation by A. N. |
Article published in English on: 20-08-2019.
Last update: 20-08-2019..