There are plenty of people in this world who would have you believe that it’s crazy to be a Christian. With atheists, agnostics, and “nones” (those who don’t affiliate with any religion or belief system) on the rise in America, open mockery of the Bible is something that is becoming more common by the day. Many of them identify themselves that way because they’ve bought into the belief that it is simply ridiculous to accept the Bible’s claims, arguing that some of the Bible’s accounts are far too absurd for them to accept the Bible’s bigger claims (such as those on morality or sin and justification). To paraphrase, the argument that comes up so often looks something like this:
“We’re supposed to listen to your rules about sex or abortion or the afterlife when you believe in a talking snake, a talking donkey, the Red Sea parting to create a path of dry ground, and people coming back from the dead? Haha, sure.”
The implication, of course, is that Christians operate on blind faith and that we’ve accepted absurd beliefs in order to maintain our trust in biblical inerrancy. Admittedly, no one in today’s world has ever seen a talking snake, or a talking donkey, or any of the other miraculous occurrences the Bible describes. But what isn’t being considered is the truth claims that are implicit in the popular beliefs held by most today. Are Christians the only ones accepting difficult to explain beliefs? Of course not.
Consider the implications that underly the very foundations of the beliefs held by many of those who mock Christianity.

  • There was nothing… and then, for no good reason, nothing became something.
  • That something (small amounts of matter) randomly exploded.
  • That explosion set the entire universe in motion.
  • Life on earth either started as chemicals in a pond that turned into amino acids and somehow came to life OR it was planted here by ancient aliens (whose origin we can’t even begin to explain).
  • Macroevolution turned single celled organisms into every life form we see today.
  • Apes and humans shared a common ancestor, despite our inability to find the missing link that proves this claim and despite the fact that the proponents of this belief have so little to go on that they’ve repeatedly been caught fabricating evidence for it.
  • The complexity in every created thing we see – the complexity that dwarfs man’s greatest supercomputers and spaceships – was a total accident.
  • Mankind developed our own code of morality that is subject to change depending on culture and time period. And yet it’s still rigid and enforceable.

Now you tell me – who’s operating on blind faith? Who’s accepting absurd claims at face value? What’s harder to believe, a talking snake or a random explosion creating everything? We’re all accepting certain things in our belief systems on faith. The key is to examine the core foundations of a belief system and then weigh the harder to explain details from there. And that’s where disbelief loses. It is the very pillars of evolutionary belief that discredit it as impossible. The Bible, on the other hand, acknowledges the absolute necessity of a supernatural being (spoiler alert: God) for its claims. If there is a God, the Genesis account (and all of the other biblical accounts) make sense. If there isn’t a God, no set of beliefs makes sense.
So, no… it’s not crazy to be a Christian.
By Jack Wilkie