“The Naturalist and the Theist Worldviews”
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CENTURION EDUCATION FOUNDATION
A Theological Article
by
Dr. Andrew T. Knight
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What is a Theistic Worldview?
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Andrew Thomas Knight
DMIN Luther Rice Seminary, 2014
MABA Clarke Summit University, 2018
MRE West Coast Baptist College, 2010
MBS Emmanuel Baptist Theological Seminary, 2004
BB Pensacola Christian College, 1994
April 21, 2014
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OUTLINE
I. INTRODUCTION
II. CREATION POINTS TO A MORAL GOD
III. THE SOURCE OF TRUTH LEADS TO ETHIC
IV. THE SOURCE OF EVIL AND SUFFERING
V. FREE WILL MAKES MAN RESPONSIBLE
VI. ETHIC AND MORALITY HAVE PURPOSE
VII. CONCLUSION
VIII. INITIAL SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
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INTRODUCTION
The Naturalist worldview believes there is no God in part because there is evil
and suffering in the world. The Naturalist may believe in a moral worldview, but that
those morals come from someone other than a Divine Being. The Naturalist also may
argue that because the world does have evil in it, and that suffering does occur then that
would prove that God does not exist. And if God does not exist than that would further
prove that the Naturalist cannot and should not be held accountable to a God that does not
exist. Where the theist and the Naturalist disagree is one’s responsibility for their actions.
The Theist worldview believes that God is moral and just, and is the Source of all
good in the world. The battle lines are therefore drawn along these subtopics. This list is
not a complete of areas of worldviews but would be considered the major points of
conflict between the naturalist and the theist. The Theist maintains that there is a Creator
of the universe and that man is accountable to the moral God and Creator. The Theist
believes that there must be a Source of truth and that that truth is found in Jesus Christ.
Truth then defined dictates that there is a right and wrong and thus there are Christian
ethics to be adhered too. Once again the naturalist and the Theist partially agree that in
fact that there is evil and suffering in the world. The Theist believes the source of evil and
suffering is Satan, and that God is not the Author of evil. The theist believes that man has
free will, and that man is accountable to God for his actions. Finally the theist believes
that because there are ethics there is a moral purpose in life.
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CREATION POINTS TO A MORAL GOD
All of Creation points to a moral God. All of nature demonstrates that there is a
morality and without a moral God and Creator this morality can make no sense. Ralph
Cudworth stated, “Moral Good and Evil, Just and Unjust, Honest and Dishonest cannot
be Arbitrary things, made by Will without nature; because it is Universally true, That
things are what they are, not by Will but by Nature.”1 Cudworth reasoned that in fact
nature does exhibit right and wrong and a moral law. And this moral law points to the
Creator of the Universe. Samuel Clarke and John Balguy came to the same conclusions
when they argued, “That in matters of natural Reason and morality, that which is Holy
and Good is not therefore Holy and Good because ‘tis commanded to be done, but is
therefore commanded of God, because ‘tis Holy and Good.”2 These men have argued that
nature has purpose and has an origin, and that that origin is the Creator God the Father
and God the Son, Jesus Christ. Genesis 1:1-2:3.
The pluralities of the Godheads are seen in vv. 1:26 “And God said, Let us make
man in our image, after our likeness: and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea,
and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every
creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.” The Creation account records that Christ
1 Ralph Cudworth, A Treatise Concerning Eternal and Immutable Morality (British Moralist: Being Selections from Writers Principally of the eighteenth Century Vol. 2 (L.A. Selby-Bigge; New York: Bobbs-Merrill, 1964), 247.
2 Samuel Clarke and John Balguy, A Discourse concerning the Unchangeable Obligations of National Religion, (British Moralist: Being Selections from Writers Principally of the eighteenth Century Vol. 2 (L.A. Selby-Bigge; New York: Bobbs-Merrill, 1705), 32.
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was also the Creator of the entire universe. This would include all of nature. Nature
demonstrates morality and thus demonstrates that Jesus Christ is the Author of morality.
God demonstrated His holiness by way of His declaration to the world, Gen.1:1
“In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth.” God had decelerated to the
world that the world began with Himself. John wrote as he equated Jesus to the Word of
God, and that God made everything. John 1:1-3 “In the beginning was the Word, and the
Word was with God, and the Word was God. The same was in the beginning with God.
All things were made by him; and without him was not any thing made that was made.”
The argument is advanced further to show that God’s moral character was
demonstrated by His being the Creator of the universe and everything in it. That is to say
that there was no one before or after Him that has the moral authority to lay down
foundations of mankind nor guidance to be followed other than God. The Lord had a
conversation with Job that showed the Lord’s moral authority as He tied His authority to
the Creation. Job 38:4 “Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth?
declare, if thou hast understanding.” As Job was the student and the Lord was the Divine
Examiner so is the naturalist that questions the moral authority of God.
As one continues to look closer at the character of God and the event of Creation
it becomes less and less plausible to deny the moral authority of God. Walter Schultz
discussed Jonathan Edwards understanding of the Creator this way, “Edwards proceeds
carefully to argue that only God’s own self-awareness, love, and happiness meet all the
conditions for being God’s ultimate end in creation. Through inexhaustible in God, such
self-awareness, love, and joy can be viewed as constituting an end to be achieved and
sustained in this sense: by there being creatures ex nihilo who experience such things 3
given.”3 Edwards first expressed that God exemplified love, and then that God
exemplified the ultimate moral authority when He created the universe out of nothing. He
demonstrated His power over matter, matter makes up nature, and nature to moral laws.
Jonathan Edwards described God’s moral character this way,
God communicated Himself to the understanding of the creature, in giving him the knowledge of His glory; and to the will of the creature, in giving him holiness, consisting primarily in the love of God; and in giving the creature happiness, chiefly consisting in joy in God. These are the sum of that emanation of divine fullness called in Scripture, the glory of God.4
The Naturalist and the theist have both the general revelation, that is to say, the entire
physical world and universe around them and those pointed to a Creator. And that
Creator exemplifies moral authority. That is moral authority over the Creation, moral
authority over the universe, and moral authority over life and eternity.
1. If nature point to a moral law there must be purpose.
2. If there is purpose there must be a Divine plan.
3. If there a Divine plan there must be a Creator.
3 Walter Schultz, Jonathan Edwards’s End of Creation: An Exposition and Defense (Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society, June 2006), 258-9.
4 Ibid. Schaltz, 259.4
THE SOURCE OF TRUTH LEADS TO ETHIC
C. B. Eavey while discussing education explained how education was directly
connected to morality as he explained,
“Jewish education trained servants of God who knew how to be obedient to His
Law. The chief end of their education was to make the boy a good son, one who
feared the Lord. God was high and exalted, yet very near to His people. The
comprehensive aim of education was righteousness, which consisted of three
subsidiary overlapping aims: happiness, good character, and fellowship with
God.”5
The roots of education were in fact the Hebrew fathers teaching their sons. And
the education that was taught was all intertwined with the morality in the Law. King
Solomon understood that education came directly from knowing the Lord when he
penned, Proverbs 1:7 “The fear of the LORD is the beginning of knowledge: but fools
despise wisdom and instruction.” He also explained that it was the Bible that led young
men to being morally upright when he penned, Psalm 119:9 “Wherewithal shall a young
man cleanse his way? by taking heed thereto according to thy word.” King David
continued to make his case and the connection between the source of truth and morality
when he penned, Psalm 119:11 “Thy word have I hid in mine heart, that I might not sin
against thee.” It is more than plausible, it is trustworthy that the Bible is the source of
truth and that it has the authoritative power to state morality and persuade its readers to
5 C. B. Eavey, History of Christian Education (Chicago: Moody Press, 1964), 49.
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live morally. The early Jewish parents and religious leaders taught the children the
connection between the Law of Moses, that is to say the first five books of the Old
Testament, and morality. Better said, the source of truth directly connects to ethics in
which to live by. Eavey also addressed this connection between truth and ethic on a
national level this way,
“They taught the Law of God gave them in order to preserve their nation and give
it a high position among the nations of the world, and in order to make this Law
known to other peoples. While the people of Israel developed their education,
God was educating them to bring them and all mankind to realization of the total
insufficiency of man and abundant sufficiency of God through grace.”6
Eavey wrote in such terms that morality was so critical to the reputation and even
the survival of a nation. The Law did something that nothing else could it showed the
inability of mankind to be right with his God and fellow man. The Law then pointed
mankind to God in order that man might be morally right in relationship to God and all
human relationships.
Daniel Heimbach discussed how Norman Geisler formatted biblical truth in terms
of Christian ethics. He stated, “While Geisler draws heavily from the Bible and moral
theology, he does not structure Christian ethics in biblical terms. Instead Geisler orders
6 Ibid. C. B. Eavey, History of Christian Education, 69.
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content from the Bible in philosophical terms.”7 What Heimbach was restating from
Geisler was that he was taking biblical truth framing it in terms of reason.
Heimbach then addressed the biblical moral theology perspective of truth and
ethics. He explained like this, “The second position evangelicals hold that mixes biblical
content with philosophical ethics consists of those who not only employ biblical moral
content but also rely on the Bible and moral theology to structure the way Christians
understand ethics.”8 This second position of truth and ethics Heimbach was saying moved
the source of truth from a philosophy to the source of truth being in theology.
Heimbach then gave his final interpretation of the source of truth and where ethics
are derived from. He stated it like this, “But he warns that while doing this we should not
forget that ‘Christian ethics begins with revelation while philosophically ethics starts with
reason,’ and that Christian ethics ‘possesses the truth’ while philosophical ethics only
‘pursues the truth.”9 He summed it up between possessing verses pursuing the truth.
1. The Law teaches truth.
2. Truth reveals ethics.
3. Ethics leads to God.
7 Daniel R. Heimbach, “Toward Defining Christian Ethics: An Evaluation of Contrasting Views,” Global Journal of Classical Theology (January 2011): 3.
8 Ibid. “Toward Defining Christian Ethics:, 3.
9 Ibid. 3.7
THE SOURCE OF EVIL AND SUFFERING
The debate with evil and the existence of God is that the Naturalist takes a default
position that God must not exist if evil exists. The thought is that if evil exists God exist,
as if the two would have to take up all the space in the universe for either one to exist.
The first approach to the problem with evil as stated in the text is referred to as the “The
Logical Problem of Evil.”10 This approach looks logically at evil and the existence of God
an reveals why the Theist believes this way and why the Naturalist may consider it.
Alvin Plantinga explained it differently,
If God creates human beings with true, morally significant free will (where human beings can freely decide to act in ways that really do advance goodness in the world, or really cause evil in the world against self, others or world), and if God wants a world in which there are significant amounts of (angels- or human-oriented) moral goodness, it’s possible that God cannot get that kind of world without significant amounts of moral badness as well. After all, if people are left free will by God, then the morally significant states of the world will in large part be up to the decisions of humans (and angels), not up to God.11
Plantinga argued this way, or maybe one might say to the naturalist, let’s just
pretend for a moment that God does exist. Though the Naturalist would most certainly
agree with the Theist that mankind should be moral and there should be order in society.
Well, this may be a place of common ground. Let’s just agree for a moment that God also
wants people to be moral and for goodness to increase in the world. What Plantinga was
explaining was that all people have free will to decide to do right or wrong. Therefore, if
10 Ergun Caner and Ed Hindson, The Popular Encyclopedia of Apologetics (Eugene, Or: Harvest House Publishers, 2001), 211.
11 Alvin Plantinga, God, Freedom and Evil (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1977), 212.
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there were any good in the world and there is it was a choice to do good in the world. On
the contrary, he explained, that because man has free will badness will happen in the
world. The answer to the Naturalist was that God is not the author of evil nor does He
give Divine order for evil to happen in the world. The real question that might be asked
of the Naturalist is, why one would blame God for evil and not Satan?
The second approach to the problem of evil was referred to as, “The Evidential
Argument from Evil.”12 Stephen Wykstra argued for a purposeful God that has a plan
when He allows suffering to happen. Here the consideration is not based on logic but
rather evidence when evil and suffering has happened. Wykstra explained the existence
of evil this way,
It is possible that God, in creating a world suitable for humans to achieve moral growth of their own making (and not God’s), must create a world where evils sometimes happen that are never directly ‘redeemed.’ A soul-making world must be one in which our actions could sometimes help others—necessarily entailing our actions could also really harm others as well. That is, gratuitous evils are a necessary by-product of God’s greater good of creating a world with human free will and potentialities of soul making.13
What Wykstra had argued for was that man are free moral agents. That is to say
that people, even Christian, are not robots. God has made man in such a way that they
have free will to make good or bad decisions. They can choose to do good or to do evil in
this world. And what should be noted, from Wykstra’s argument, was that evil does
happen in this world while also affirming that God is not the Author of evil.
12 Ibid. Ergun Caner and Ed Hindson, The Popular Encyclopedia of Apologetics, 212.
13 Ibid. 213.9
The problem of evil was discussed by Edward John Carnell. He specifically dealt
with the sovereignty of God. Carnell explained, “One preserves the freedom of God at all
points or he loses it at every point, for a God that is not absolutely sovereign over history
is not sovereign in Himself.”14 The challenge of the problem of evil, particularly from the
unbelieving world, was that if holes could be poked in one area of God’s sovereignty then
God Himself would be relegated to a weak and powerless God that does not have much
influence in the affairs of men. This is no new challenge to God when Jehoshaphat had
questioned God this way, “And said, O LORD God of our fathers, art not thou God in
heaven? and rulest not thou over all the kingdoms of the heathen? and in thine hand is
there not power and might, so that none is able to withstand thee?” II Chronicles 20:6
One might say, it is not so much where the dialog begins with regard to God’s
sovereignty but what one believes after inspecting the character of God.
God answered this line of questioning with Job in Job 38:4-6 “Where wast thou
when I laid the foundations of the earth? declare, if thou hast understanding. Who hath
laid the measures thereof, if thou knowest? or who hath stretched the line upon it?
Whereupon are the foundations thereof fastened? or who laid the corner stone thereof;”
From one level God addressed and challenged the skeptic in Job’s account. The response
to Job from God as Creator was a rebuke to Job as Creation is a rebuke to the Naturalist
that has no idea how the universe came into existence but somehow the Naturalist knows
more than God.
14 Edward John Carnell, An Introduction to Christian Apologetics (Grand Rapids: William Eerdmans Publishing Company,1948), 276.
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Another argument that the Naturalist may bring up is that God must not be
omnipotent if bad things happen in the world. Likewise the Theist are troubled sometimes
by the Naturalist that never pay for living a life apart form God. This is an age old
problem which King David addressed in,
Psalms 73:3-19 “For I was envious at the foolish, when I saw the prosperity of the wicked. For there are no bands in their death: but their strength is firm. They are not in trouble as other men; neither are they plagued like other men. Therefore pride compasseth them about as a chain; violence covereth them as a garment. Their eyes stand out with fatness: they have more than heart could wish. They are corrupt, and speak wickedly concerning oppression: they speak loftily. They set their mouth against the heavens, and their tongue walketh through the earth. Therefore his people return hither: and waters of a full cup are wrung out to them. And they say, How doth God know? and is there knowledge in the most High? Behold, these are the ungodly, who prosper in the world; they increase in riches. Verily I have cleansed my heart in vain, and washed my hands in innocency. For all the day long have I been plagued, and chastened every morning. If I say, I will speak thus; behold, I should offend against the generation of thy children. When I thought to know this, it was too painful for me; Until I went into the sanctuary of God; then understood I their end. Surely thou didst set them in slippery places: thou castedst them down into destruction. How are they brought into desolation, as in a moment! they are utterly consumed with terrors.”
One might consider that the opposite of evil is believing there may be no
accountability for evil or evil doers. But according to Kind David that is not the case.
There is evil in the world. All commit varying amounts of evil. And there is
accountability for all evil. The problem of evil is a logical one at that Carnell has
addressed the sovereignty of God logically like this,
Is it logical to believe that God is sovereign both in goodness and in might, when the universe is of such a character that the righteous suffer while the wicked prosper? When the lightening, which is sent by God, seems deliberately to miss the sinner, but strikes upon the saint in prayer? But what shall we say? If we teach that God is not good, we render Him
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indistinguishable from the devil; and if we say that He is not omnipotent, it may be that He is no longer God.15
It may be that Carnell was writing this passage in a logical way that life appears in
the natural sense, as opposed to looking at life circumstances from a spiritual perspective.
Isaiah spoke to this issue in this way, “For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are
your ways my ways, saith the LORD. For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are
my ways higher than your ways, and my thoughts than your thoughts.” Isaiah 55:8-9
Thus what may appear to be an injustice by the Judge of the universe is invariably do to
the limits of man’s finite minds, whereas the Lord has a much longer horizon on life as
seen in, Isaiah 46:9-10 “Remember the former things of old: for I am God, and there is
none else; I am God, and there is none like me, Declaring the end from the beginning,
and from ancient times the things that are not yet done, saying, My counsel shall stand,
and I will do all my pleasure:” Humanly speaking, one may look at evil and think that
this or that is not fair, but one might also consider the judgment of the One that does
know the end from the beginning and trust the Judge to do right.
The existence of suffering is a difficult thing to understand for Christians as well
as unbelievers. Why is suffering part of the human experience? Why do good people
suffer? Why does a good God allow suffering? Are there any benefits that come from
suffering? Matthew Brubaker discussed evil and suffering this way, “Regarding evil
being used as a teaching aid, Swinburne claims that God desires humans not only obtain
happiness, but also to learn how to make morally good choices.”16 There may very well
15 Ibid. Edward John Carnell, An Introduction to Christian Apologetics, 277-278.
16 Matthew Brubaker, “Gratuitous Evil Revisited: Is the ‘Greater-Good’ Theodicy the Best Theist’s Defense?,” Faith and Missions Journal (Summer 2004): 68.
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be biblical president for Divine teaching through suffering. II Corinthians 13:9 “For we
are glad, when we are weak, and ye are strong: and this also we wish, even your
perfection.” That is to say, that through suffering spiritual maturity may be brought about.
Brubaker when on to further explain suffering in the context of parenting like this, “To
prove that pain and suffering are logically necessary for moral growth, Hick notes that
while most parents seek pleasure for their children, they do not desire for them pleasure
at the expense of their character development.”17 It is when one puts suffering in the
context of parenting that suffering begins to make some sense. Not that any parent wants
to see their child suffer but every parent wants to see their child mature.
1. If God is the Author of sin the naturalist must accept that God exists.
2. Since God wants moral goodness He cannot be the Author of evil.
3. For good to happen man must have free will.
4. Because man has free will evil will happen.
5. God may allow evil to happen that maturity may be the end result.
FREE WILL MAKES MAN RESPONSIBLE
17 Ibid., Brubaker, “Gratuitous Evil Revisited:,” 68.13
The Naturalist may very well be in denial with regard to personal responsibility of
evil. The Naturalist need not necessarily commit himself to Romans 3:10 “As it is
written, There is none righteous, no, not one:” Or Romans 3:23 “For all have sinned, and
come short of the glory of God;” to understand that there is right and wrong decisions
that have consequences. Even the Naturalist has experienced a disobedient child. He my
blame the misbehavior on the child’s environment but none the less a child will disobey
even with the best of parenting skills and disposition of the child. This can only point to
the free will of man. Scott Henderson discussed the free will of man like this,
The first of these is his insistence on the gift of free will possessed by all human persons. Although free will is a good gift from God and is the means by which we can do good things and affirm our place in the eternal order, it is also the means by which we can bring sin into the world. So while free will is a good thing given by God, it can also be used in perverse ways.18
Henderson’s argument was that free will is a gift from God, and one does what he
will with that gift. What can be inferred from this statement is that by no means is God
the Author of evil. This is where the Naturalist misses the accountability for evil. The
Naturalist and Theist could find common ground in the fact that someone is and should
be held accountable for evil. The divergence in the matter is who is culpable for the evil
in this world? The Theist, and Henderson by inference, is making that the human being
that commits evil or omits good is culpable for their own action or inaction. The
Naturalist is blame someone he does not believe in instead of the one he does believe in,
himself, for the evil in the world.
18 D. Scott Henderson, “Atheism, Theism, and the Problem of Evil,” Journal of Biblical Ministry (Spring 2011): 11.
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Henderson then referenced Augustine on this matter of free will like this,
Augustine recognizes that there is an order of creation reflective of the goodness of God and that all things that exist are inherently good. One of these goods is free will, which carries with it the possibility of its use to bring about evil. Moral evils, therefore, find their cause in the willing of persons. While God is the cause of human freedom, human persons are the cause of their free acts, some of which are good and some of which are evil.19
The logical way that Henderson laid out the sovereignty of God to give the gift of
free will and the responsibility of man to use that gift for good or evil in such a way that
the Naturalist must conclude that every human being is responsible for their own actions
or inactions. Every human being is a free moral agent and should be treated as such.
Furthermore the Naturalist must begin to take responsibility for his own actions or
inactions and stop blaming a God that he does not even believe in for the present of evil
in the life of the Naturalist.
The theist believes that God is good and that He is the source of good in the
world. The Naturalist however skip over Satan and man, as previously mentioned, and
blame the source of good in the world, God, for all the evil in the world. But consider,
Psalm 100:5 “For the LORD is good; his mercy is everlasting; and his truth endureth to
all generations.” And, Psalm 34:8 “O taste and see that the LORD is good: blessed is the
man that trusteth in him.” And, Nahum 1:7 “The LORD is good, a strong hold in the day
of trouble; and he knoweth them that trust in him.” And, Psalm 136:1 “O give thanks
unto the LORD; for he is good: for his mercy endureth for ever.”
19 Ibid. Henderson, “Atheism, Theism, and the Problem of Evil,”11.
15
God is a good God and wants only good for mankind. Millard J. Erickson put it
this way, “We have spoken of the nature of God’s providence and have noted that it is
universal: God is in control of all that occurs. He has a plan for the entire universe and all
of time, and is at work bringing about that good plan.”20 God’s character is not where the
indictment should rest but rather in God’s accusers. Another promise of God’s goodness
and good intent is found in Jeremiah 29:11 “For I know the thoughts that I think toward
you, saith the LORD, thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you an expected end.”
Thus the goodness of God can be understood by the plan He has for people’s lives.
The Naturalist may be conflicted with regard to man’s free will, God’s
sovereignty and evil in the world because of a lack of understanding of the character and
nature of God. Erickson explained the Naturalist’ conflict this way, “The problem of evil
then may be thought of as a conflict involving three concepts: God’s power, God’s
goodness, and the presence of evil in the world.”21 Anyone void of an understanding of
God’s power and goodness would not be able to reconcile these three. The Naturalist, as
was previously addressed, does not need to accept the power and goodness of God in
order to see the flowed character of man.
The Theist would take the position that God is all powerful and that He did create
everything as Erickson explained,
20 Millard J. Erickson, Christian Theology 2nd ed. (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1999), 437.
21 Ibid. Erickson, 437.16
We have noted that creation and providence are implementations of this omnipotence, meaning respectively that God has by His own free decision and action brought into being everything that is and that He has chosen. Further, we have observed the goodness of God—His attributes of love, mercy, patience.22
That might explain why man has free will when one sees that God is autonomous
in His decision making. One should not infer from that statement that God’s actions are
not bound by His own moral character and divine attributes. The biblical evidence that
expresses the likeness of man to God is seen in, Genesis 1:26a “And God said, Let us
make man in our image, after our likeness:,” and in Genesis 1:27 “So God created man in
his own image, in the image of God created he him; male and female created he them.”
Thus man was created to be free-moral agents, able to do what is good or to do evil. The
Naturalist may do well to concede this aspect if they are to be intellectually honest, as the
Naturalist and the Theist both enjoy the freedom to make one’s own decisions.
1. All enjoy free will.
2. Therefore God is sovereign.
3. God then is the source of good.
4. Evil action or inaction leads to culpability.
5. Only a moral, just God can punish evil.
ETHIC AND MORALITY HAVE PURPOSE
Ethic and morality are matters of the heart, and the Old Testament message to
22 Ibid. Erickson, 437.17
Samuel revealed this in I Samuel 16:7 “But the LORD said unto Samuel, Look not on his
countenance, or on the height of his stature; because I have refused him: for the LORD
seeth not as man seeth; for man looketh on the outward appearance, but the LORD
looketh on the heart.” Thus the point of being morally right is not an academic exercise
but rather is the heart of man conforming to the heart of God. Ethic and morality are both
vertical, that is toward God, and horizontal, toward man. Mark referenced this as the
greatest commandment, Mark 12:30-31 “And thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all
thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy strength: this is the
first commandment. And the second is like, namely this, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as
thyself. There is none other commandment greater than these.”
Harry Bunting discussed the moral significance of ethics like this,
An emphasis on the moral significance of inner character is of importance to our present purposes for two inter-related reasons. First, a stress on inner character as opposed to outward action is a prominent feature of contemporary philosophical ethics where the emphasis has given rise, in recent decades, to the emergence of the school which is called ‘virtue ethics’; and thereby has been reasonable, if confident voices are to be believed, for the most significant restructuring of the general contours of ethical theory in the modern period.23
That is to say that if one only conforms outwardly to biblical ethics then there has
really not been any real change. On the other hand if one has a heart change on ethical
matters then there has been more than an outward conformity there has been a real heart
change. The Naturalist may look at ethics in terms of what the Law may require, and so
the Naturalist may not grasp the significance of the Theist holding to ethics based upon
23 Harry Bunting, “Ethics And the Perfect Moral Law,” Tyndale Bulletin (NA 2000): 237.
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biblical convictions. The Naturalist has rejected the indwelling Spirit, the Savior, and
God the Father and Judge. Bunting explained the theological conviction and virtue of
ethics this way,
Stated informally, it is claimed that there are biblical and theological foundations for the claim that character is the primary focus in Christian ethics. The moral perfection of Jesus and His role for believers as master and guide, the centrality of the doctrine of sanctification, the stress on the communal nature of the moral development of the believer: the existence of these and other themes has convinced some recent writers that Christian ethics is a virtue ethic.24
The ethic of the Theist demonstrates what the Theist believes in his heart, and
thus the heart is the object of what the conformity to ethic reveals. The Theist according
to the Christian doctrine of sanctification is to hold to an ethic that is continuing to
become more and more like that of the Savior. As indicated in I Corinthians 1:30 “But of
him are ye in Christ Jesus, who of God is made unto us wisdom, and righteousness, and
sanctification, and redemption:”
David Baggett and Jerry Walls placed a relationship with the Lord over personal virtue when they stated,
Christianity thus argues for a powerful personal understanding of reality, and this necessarily results in a shift when understanding ethics away from a list of rules and toward a personal relationship with other persons, and
24 Ibid. Bunting, Ethics and the Moral Perfect Law, 238.
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ultimately, God Himself. This makes sense of why virtue would ultimately take primacy over moral lists and rules, since virtues and traits of persons, and we have argued that a personal God resides at the foundation of ethics.25
Baggett and Walls reiterated from the Theist perspective that moral virtue must be
based upon a personal relationship with the Divine. They summed it up simply that a
relationship supersedes a set of rules in the pathway to practicing a life of ethics. The
Naturalist on the other hand is at a loss on two fronts. The Naturalist has no concept of a
personal relationship with the Devine, or the concept of sanctification (becoming more
like Christ). The Naturalist, if he is to be an ethical person is limited by the strength of his
own character, and limited by his lack of understanding of the character and essence of
God. Only the Theist has a moral purpose to hold to moral ethics.
1. Moral ethics must reside outside of man.
2. The moral God is the foundation of all ethics.
3. Therefore ethics are based on a relationship with God.
4. Moral ethics are adhered to by a changed heart.
5. The purpose of moral ethics is to become more like Jesus Christ.
CONCLUSION
25 David Baggett, and Jerry L. Wells, Good God: The Theistic Foundations of Morality (New York: Oxford University Press, 2011), 185.
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The research has shown the Creation, nature, biblical references, and purposeful
plan all point to God being a moral and just. Genesis passages reveal the likeness of the
image of God seen in man. This would indicate the purpose that God has for man in the
world. The determination of purpose is seen in God declaring the Creation of the heaven
and earth. The moral authority of God is seen as He created everything seen out of
noting. God’s moral authority was demonstrated through His purpose. His purpose
showed that He had a plan for the world and mankind. His purpose authenticated that He
was the Creator.
The search for ethic and its origin went back to the Jewish Old Testament era. The
research revealed that parents and religious leaders taught from the Law of Moses. Thus
while teaching truth it was always connected to a moral principle. Biblical research also
found that knowledge began with a relationship with the Lord. Christian ethics was
clarified as possessing the truth. The truth revealed ethics and ethics leads to the Lord.
This research led to discover the source of evil and suffering. This research
looked at the problem with evil from a logical and an evidential perspective. The study
revealed that God wants goodness to happen. It was also revealed that man has a free will
to do good or evil. The broad view is that the Lord is good. He is not the Author of evil.
In His sovereignty He does allow suffering with the purpose of maturing His people.
The research on the free will of man revealed that the evil man commits is
responsible for it. All enjoy free will and it is a gift from God. Man may make right or
wrong decisions but is culpable for evil actions or inactions. Man is a free moral agent. 21
God is the source of all good and He is sovereign. The Lord is a moral and just God, and
because of His moral judgment He can and does punish evil.
Finally this research found that moral ethics must originate outside of man. God
alone has the moral virtue and is the foundation for all ethics. All ethics then coming
from God requires a personal relationship with God. These moral ethics were shown to
be possible by a changed heart. The final significant truths revealed of the purpose of
moral ethics were to be sanctified through a maturing relationship Jesus Christ.
INITIAL SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
22
Allison, Michael and Jude Kaye. Strategic Planning for Nonprofit Organizations: A Practical Guide and Workbook. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2005.
Caner, Ergun and Ed Hindson, The Popular Encyclopedia of Apologetics (Eugene, Or: Harvest House Publishers, 2001.
Carnell, Edward John. An Introduction to Christian Apologetics (Grand Rapids: William Eerdmans Publishing Company,1948.
Clarke, Samuel, and John. Balguy, A Discourse concerning the Unchangeable Obligations of National Religion, (British Moralist: Being Selections from Writers Principally of the eighteenth Century Vol. 2 (L.A. Selby-Bigge; New York: Bobbs-Merrill, 1705.
Cudworth, Ralph. A Treatise Concerning Eternal and Immutable Morality (British Moralist: Being Selections from Writers Principally of the eighteenth Century, New York: Bobbs-Merrill, 1964.
Baggett, David, and Jerry L. Wells, Good God: The Theistic Foundations of Morality. New York: Oxford University Press, 2011.
Eavey, C. B. History of Christian Education. Chicago: Moody Press, 1964.
Erickson, Millard J. Christian Theology 2nd ed. (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1999.
Journal Articles
Brubaker, Matthew. “Gratuitous Evil Revisited: Is the ‘Greater-Good’ Theodicy the Best Theist’s Defense?,” Faith and Missions Journal (Summer 2004): 68.
Bunting, Harry “Ethics And the Perfect Moral Law,” Tyndale Bulletin (NA 2000): 237.
Heimbach, Daniel R. “Toward Defining Christian Ethics: An Evaluation of Contrasting Views,” Global Journal of Classical Theology (January 2011): 3.
Henderson, D. Scott. “Atheism, Theism, and the Problem of Evil,” Journal of Biblical Ministry (Spring 2011): 11.
Schultz, Walter. Jonathan Edwards’s End of Creation: An Exposition and Defense (Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society, June 2006), 258-9.
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