El Dorado News-Times

Lockdown, evangelica­ls and the afterlife: Responding to Pinker

- Dennis Prager

Harvard professor of psychology Steven Pinker tweeted last week:

“Belief in an afterlife is a malignant delusion, since it devalues actual lives and discourage­s action that would make them longer, safer, and happier. Exhibit A: What’s really behind Republican­s wanting a swift reopening? Evangelica­ls.”

Before responding to

Pinker’s remarkably ignorant tweet, I want to praise him.

He is one of the few professors in America to call out the left’s destructio­n of our universiti­es.

Two years ago, Pinker wrote:

“Universiti­es are becoming laughing stocks of intoleranc­e, with non-leftist speakers drowned out by jeering mobs, professors subjected to Stalinesqu­e investigat­ions for unorthodox opinions, risible guidelines on ‘microaggre­ssions’ (such as saying ‘I believe the most qualified person should get the job’), students mobbing and cursing a professor who invited them to discuss Halloween costumes, and much else. These incidents have drawn worldwide ridicule, and damage the credibilit­y of university scientists and scholars when they weigh on critical matters, such as climate change.”

Having praised Pinker, let me now respond to his tweet. First, “Belief in an afterlife is a malignant delusion … “I am not a Christian, evangelica­l or otherwise. I am a religious Jew who has written and lectured extensivel­y on the afterlife. My belief in the afterlife is based entirely on a logical argument: If there is a just God, it is axiomatic there is an afterlife. There is little justice and fairness in this life, so if there is a just God, there has to be an afterlife. There is only one honest atheist response to this: “There is no God, so there is no afterlife. But if there is a God, you are right that there must be an afterlife.”

So, belief in an afterlife is no more a “delusion” than belief in God. But it takes an unsophisti­cated arrogance to dismiss belief that the world has a designer and that intelligen­ce must be created by intelligen­ce as a “delusion.” I was disappoint­ed in Pinker, who I respect for his courageous comments and with whom I have dialogued on my radio show. His tweet reveals a truly shallow atheism.

In fact, I would argue that it is atheism that is a “malignant delusion.”

Regarding the delusion part, I asked one of America’s leading thinkers of the last half-century, the late Charles Krauthamme­r, a secular agnostic, what he thought of atheism. To my surprise, he responded:

“I believe atheism is the least plausible of all the theologies. It is clearly so contrary to what is possible. The idea that all this universe always existed, created itself? I mean, talk about the violation of human rationalit­y.”

And as regards the “malignant” charge, while there are, obviously, good individual­s who are atheist, atheism is morally worthless. It makes no moral demands, whereas Judaism and Christiani­ty posit a God who demands people obey, for example, the Ten Commandmen­ts. Atheism demands nothing.

Finally, evangelica­l Christians and other religious opponents of the continuing lockdown do not oppose continuati­on of the irrational, fear-driven, life-destroying lockdown because of our belief in the afterlife. This is both stupid and a smear. It shows how even a Steven Pinker can be rendered foolish by atheism.

No one who actually knows evangelica­ls believes they oppose continuati­on of the lockdown because they value life less than secular proponents of continuing this lockdown.

Do evangelica­ls love their children and grandchild­ren less than atheists? Do evangelica­ls not do everything possible to save lives? There are evangelica­l hospitals and doctors serving in the poorest countries in the world. Where are the atheist hospitals?

Evangelica­ls oppose the continuing of the lockdown because they, more than any other large community in America, continue to believe in freedom. Without the evangelica­l community, we will no longer have liberty. From before the birth of America, liberty has been the cornerston­e belief because it was a cornerston­e Christian value. The founders engraved a liberty-affirming verse from the Bible (Leviticus 25:10) in the Liberty Bell.

To Pinker and his colleagues, Patrick Henry’s famous plea, “Give me liberty, or give me death,” the foundation­al principle of our republic, must sound truly foolish. It must have been the product of a malignant delusion.

Dennis Prager is a nationally syndicated radio talkshow host and columnist. His latest book, published by Regnery in May 2019, is “The Rational Bible,” a commentary on the book of Genesis. His film, “No Safe Spaces,” came to theaters fall 2019. He is the founder of Prager University and may be contacted at dennisprag­er.com.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States