As implausible as Father Christmas?

Ranald Macaulay  |  Features
Date posted:  1 Dec 2006
Share Add       

The Bible emphasises that its truth is never readily accepted by the human heart.

It therefore prepares us not just for physical opposition but also for varying degrees of intellectual misunderstanding and even incredulity. When Paul addresses the Athenians, they object that he is bringing them ‘strange ideas’. The same would doubtless have been true had he been preaching in India or China, America or Egypt. Having said that, it is at least arguable that a new type of incomprehension has taken hold in Europe since the 18th century and that this new mindset is almost unique in history.

Principally through the Enlightenment’s misrepresentation of science, the entire framework of revealed truth, indeed of all religion, is treated as fanciful and without substance. The resultant mindset, particularly when viewed alongside radical changes in lifestyle, most of them technologically induced, creates an unprecedented challenge for Christian ministry. Put simply, the gospel seems as implausible as Father Christmas.

Share
< Previous article| Features| Next article >
Read more articles on:   christmas
Read more articles by Ranald Macaulay >>
Reviews
Science and us

Science and us

The subject couldn’t be more important. This book deals with the leading intellectual question of the day: how does humanity …

Letter

Evangelical crisis

Date posted: 1 Aug 2018

Dear Sir, Kenneth J. Stewart is right to point out in his July letter that I should have been more …

About en

Our vision, values and history.

Read more

Give a subscription

🎁 Get 20% off a subscription for a friend this Christmas!

Tell me more