Paul Evdokimov on Atheism

2009 May 26
by Moses
The Holy Trinity - Hospitality of Abraham

The Holy Trinity - Hospitality of Abraham

Atheism compels attention and impresses everyone by its massive diffusion. It is no longer the privilege of an enlightened minority, but expresses a norm common to all classes of society. A civilization has been consciously built on a refusal of God, or more precisely, on a negation of all dependence on any power beyond this world. In fact, science no longer has need of God as a hypothesis. Moreover, from the moral point of view, God seems not to be all-powerful since he does not suppress evil, or if he does not wish to do so, then he is not love. Built thus on a negation, atheism has no metaphysical content proper to itself and no constructive philosophy. Explicitly expressed, it still remains rare. Its dominant and widespread form is an atheism of fact, invertebrate but practical. Philosophic considerations intervene only afterward to justify attitudes or to provide an excuse. Its reasons are never truly rational, and they cannot be, for they fall short. Being of an empirical order, they are utilitarian and pragmatic. This explains why the problem at this level simply ceases to interest man. Since he is more concerned with economic and political questions, religious beliefs no longer mean anything to him. His attitude is strengthened by his often justified distrust of philosophers, who have abdicated and betrayed their social function by their own skepticism.

St. Paul knew well what he was doing when he centered his teaching on what immediately aroused a reaction from the men who relied on discursive reason. Indeed the incarnation is always a folly and a scandal for human thought. The latter in its historic criticism demythologizes and distinguishes between the historic Jesus and the Christ rigged out in the dogmas of faith. The archaic state of knowledge in past ages makes every scholar mistrustful and little inclined to take into account a so-called “revelation”. They find no certitude at the outset of the alleged event and, in every way, a truth buried in the centuries is unacceptable to the contemporary spirit that is interested only in the here and now. One must choose between verifiable facts and texts visibly originating in a myth. To the atheist, it is inconceivable, even offensive, that God should enter into time and confide his truth to a handful of obscure disciples and to the precarious transmission of texts, written twenty centuries ago. The life of Jesus shows only anecdotes and miscellaneous facts without any guarantee of objectivity. Can a contingent fact, scarcely remarked by historians, touch the heart of the man in the street in this 20th century? How can an event dated and fixed in time and space lay claim to an eternal value— the authority of God and the universal importance of the salvation of every man? There is here something monstrously out of proportion, even unbearable for critical reason. The man Jesus could very well have lived in Palestine. It is not so much his divinization by his disciples as the humanization of God that is declared impossible. A moral ideal, a philosophic concept could, if need be, receive the title of divine, but the philosopher refuses a God-man, refuses a God speaking as a human being and taking on the face of a man. Thus the authority of the apostolic witnesses crumbles away, and with it, that of the Word. Through lack of hearers, it is more than ever a voice crying in the historic wilderness. Like the wise men of Athens in former times, the man in the street now repulses all discourse with “We will hear thee again on this matter.”

*Taken from The Struggle With God.

3 Responses leave one →
  1. 2009 May 26

    Great post. Paul Evdokimov is underrated.

  2. 2009 May 28
    Sir permalink

    “Explicitly expressed, it still remains rare. Its dominant and widespread form is an atheism of fact, invertebrate but practical.”

    This is very true. The single-most identifying marker of western philosophy is its obsession with phenomenalism, the supposedly static appearance of things, over the conditions which precede contingent appearances and makes them possible. Much of the Western tradition prioritizes a myth of static/materialist existence (an existence in which nothing is static), discarding the possibilities which precede those appearances simply because they elude mechanistic reduction.

    It is not universal to Western philosophy, only its archaic analytic and positivist ranks; so perhaps philosophy and “discursive reason” are not the enemy, for they are always and already occurring. So, may it perhaps be that recursive reason, utilitarian reason without any prior shoring, is the effect of capitalism and politics, and not the cause? Might it be that asking political and economic questions reveals the conditions which precipitate such hyper-reductive attitudes? Couldn’t these questions lead to a renewal of religious perspectives, rather than their cyclical negation?

  3. 2009 May 29

    Some very good points Sir. Indeed, many questions may lead to a renewal of religious perspectives. It is all in the mind of the “thinker”. :)

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