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Why I Believe

by Philip Yancey

| 26 Comments

Early in his pilgrimage, the literary monk Thomas Merton wrote, “Very soon we get to the point where we simply say, ‘I believe’ or ‘I refuse to believe.’”  Faith runs hot and cold over time, offering up reasons both to believe and disbelieve.

It did not surprise Jesus in the least that some would disbelieve him, regardless of evidence.  He had predicted as much: “they will not be convinced even if someone rises from the dead.”  It does not surprise me either that some disbelieve the reality of an unseen world, especially in an age which excels at mastering the visible world.  For many, God cannot possibly exist unless he makes himself visible or tangible—and God does not perform on our terms.

Why do I believe? I ask myself.  Why do I, like Merton, continue to make that defiant leap of faith?

I could point to a conversion experience during college days, a transforming moment that bisected my life into two parts, an age of unbelief and an age of belief.  Yet I know that a skeptic, hearing that story, could propose alternate explanations.

I could point to shafts of light that have (rarely, I admit) pierced the veil between the visible and invisible worlds.  These, too, the skeptic would dismiss, forcing me to fall back on what the philosopher William James called “the convincingness of unreasoned experience.”

In my own days of skepticism, I wanted a dramatic interruption from above.  I wanted proof of an unseen reality, one that could somehow be verified.  In my days of faith, such supernatural irruptions seem far less important, in part because I find the materialistic explanations of life inadequate to explain reality.  I have learned to attend to fainter contacts between the seen and unseen worlds.  I sense in romantic love something insufficiently explained by mere biochemical attraction.  I sense in beauty and in nature the marks of a genius creator for which the appropriate response is worship.  Like Jacob, I have at times awoken from a dream to realize, “Surely the Lord is in this place, and I was not aware of it.”

I sense in desire, including sexual desire, marks of a holy yearning for connection.  I sense in pain and suffering a terrible disruption that omnipotent love surely cannot abide forever.  I sense in compassion, generosity, justice, and forgiveness a quality of grace that speaks to me of another world, especially when I visit places marred by their absence.  I sense in Jesus a person who lived those qualities so consistently that the world could not tolerate him, and so silenced and disposed of him.

I believe not so much because the invisible world impinges on this one, but because the visible world hints, in the ways that move me most, at a lack of completion.

I once heard a woman give a remarkable account of achievement.  An early feminist, she gained renown in the male-dominated field of endocrinology.  She brushes shoulders with Nobel laureates and world leaders, and has lived as full and rich a life as any I have known.  At the end of her story she said simply, “As I look back, this is what matters.  I have loved and been loved, and all the rest is just background music.”

Love, too, is why I believe.  At the end of life, what else matters?  “Love never fails,” Paul wrote.  “It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.”  He could only be describing God’s love, for no human love meets that standard of perfection.  What I have tasted of love on this earth convinces me that a perfect love will not be satisfied with the sad tale of this planet, will not rest until evil is conquered and good reigns, will not allow its objects to pass from existence.  Perfect love perseveres until it perfects.

Jesus’ disciple John brought the two worlds together, in a unity forged through love: “For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son… For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him.”  Love deems this world worth rescuing.

(Adapted from A Skeptic’s Guide to Faith)

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Discussion

  1. Lorry Avatar
    Lorry

    Having been a believer for more than 80 years, there were many years when there was absolutely no question that God existed. I still don’t– I can’t. Like you I live near the Colorado mountains and am reminded every day that God loves me enough to create such beauty for me to enjoy.
    Now a widow for more than ten years, I sometimes find myself longing so much for my sweetheart whom I met back in Wheaton College, that I wonder if that surpasses my longing for God.? But then I realize that very love was God’s way of showing me that in Him there is an even greater lo, and He will one day satisfy all my longings.

  2. Joyce J Avatar
    Joyce J

    You have just described my own experience. Ultimately, I simply chose to believe, because ‘no belief’ is a frightening place to be. That choice has been followed by so many experiences in my life, of a loving, compassionate, guiding power bringing blessings to myself and others, that it is no longer possible to disbelieve. For many years I have loved your books.

  3. Cindy Rush Avatar
    Cindy Rush

    Every day is a Mark 9:24 day for me. Every day. Maybe it’s because I believed too casually well into my adulthood.
    Catastrophe can rearrange your way of thinking. Several years ago, in the midst of gutting angst, I screamed, “You’d better be real, God!”
    And the reality is, if it turns out there is nothing after this earthly life, I will still have had a better existence believing that there was a “love that sought me, a blood that bought me, and a Grace that brought me to the fold of God.”
    As always, Philip, thank you for helping me listen for God’s voice through your writing.

  4. Chris Spurlock Avatar
    Chris Spurlock

    I believe that God must have someone to hope and trust in. God does not live in a relationless vacuum. That is why He created you and me. I do not believe God is self-sufficient anymore than any of us are self-sufficient. Is this theological anthropomorphism? If so, so be it. We were, after all, created in God’s image. Who does God hope and trust in, if it is not us, who he created, suffered for and reconciled to himself. This is expressly why God still suffers. In the case of those who reject God or fail him, His love, suffering, hope and trust, go painfully unrequited . Therefore God’s suffering is multiplied and continues. When we feel that we, as humans, are alone in our suffering, then we need to remember that God suffers, horribly, still, as he longs and hopes for all we humans to come home. If you want to see a photograph of God all you need do is gaze upon the one hanging on the cross 2000 years ago. The resurrection of Christ did not erase God’s suffering, It erased sin and death. God suffers, also, because he must stand by and watch us suffer physically, spiritually and in every other way, like Christ did after he received the news that his friend Lazarus was mortally ill. God has always been faced with an unavoidable and bitter choice. He can either become our vending machine, stopping our pain and suffering instantly upon request or he can become our father. We can have a fellowship with our father but we cannot have a fellowship with a vending machine. Having a relationship and fellowship with others, of necessity, incorporates pain and suffering, whether it be pain for God or for us. Without the ability to experience relationship, fellowship, and love, God would cease to exist , just like we would. Life without love is impossible and life without pain would be life without love. Christ said he came to give us life and life to the full. In that fullness of life, which Christ himself experienced, comes both love and pain.

  5. Fred Avatar
    Fred

    You say, ” I find the materialistic explanations of life inadequate to explain reality. ” It is my experience that the opposite is true. I find the religious explanations of life inadequate to explain reality. Also, there seems to be an assumption that people connect with the idea of life revealing love; for many, life experiences demonstrate, not love, but a wonton, wreckless, indifferent world. And I dare say, if a corpse were to rise, I would surely believe. In my experience, corpses do not, so the Biblical accusation is…convenient. I mention these observations in an attempt to better understand, beyond narrated responses about just having enough faith. I did read What’s So Amazing About Grace. Interesting, but not convinced. I hope your fans don’t attack. I desire to resolve some ongoing questions, and you seem, at least based on your book, somewhat open to questioning.

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26 thoughts on “Why I Believe”

  1. Having been a believer for more than 80 years, there were many years when there was absolutely no question that God existed. I still don’t– I can’t. Like you I live near the Colorado mountains and am reminded every day that God loves me enough to create such beauty for me to enjoy.
    Now a widow for more than ten years, I sometimes find myself longing so much for my sweetheart whom I met back in Wheaton College, that I wonder if that surpasses my longing for God.? But then I realize that very love was God’s way of showing me that in Him there is an even greater lo, and He will one day satisfy all my longings.

    Reply
  2. You have just described my own experience. Ultimately, I simply chose to believe, because ‘no belief’ is a frightening place to be. That choice has been followed by so many experiences in my life, of a loving, compassionate, guiding power bringing blessings to myself and others, that it is no longer possible to disbelieve. For many years I have loved your books.

    Reply
  3. Every day is a Mark 9:24 day for me. Every day. Maybe it’s because I believed too casually well into my adulthood.
    Catastrophe can rearrange your way of thinking. Several years ago, in the midst of gutting angst, I screamed, “You’d better be real, God!”
    And the reality is, if it turns out there is nothing after this earthly life, I will still have had a better existence believing that there was a “love that sought me, a blood that bought me, and a Grace that brought me to the fold of God.”
    As always, Philip, thank you for helping me listen for God’s voice through your writing.

    Reply
  4. I believe that God must have someone to hope and trust in. God does not live in a relationless vacuum. That is why He created you and me. I do not believe God is self-sufficient anymore than any of us are self-sufficient. Is this theological anthropomorphism? If so, so be it. We were, after all, created in God’s image. Who does God hope and trust in, if it is not us, who he created, suffered for and reconciled to himself. This is expressly why God still suffers. In the case of those who reject God or fail him, His love, suffering, hope and trust, go painfully unrequited . Therefore God’s suffering is multiplied and continues. When we feel that we, as humans, are alone in our suffering, then we need to remember that God suffers, horribly, still, as he longs and hopes for all we humans to come home. If you want to see a photograph of God all you need do is gaze upon the one hanging on the cross 2000 years ago. The resurrection of Christ did not erase God’s suffering, It erased sin and death. God suffers, also, because he must stand by and watch us suffer physically, spiritually and in every other way, like Christ did after he received the news that his friend Lazarus was mortally ill. God has always been faced with an unavoidable and bitter choice. He can either become our vending machine, stopping our pain and suffering instantly upon request or he can become our father. We can have a fellowship with our father but we cannot have a fellowship with a vending machine. Having a relationship and fellowship with others, of necessity, incorporates pain and suffering, whether it be pain for God or for us. Without the ability to experience relationship, fellowship, and love, God would cease to exist , just like we would. Life without love is impossible and life without pain would be life without love. Christ said he came to give us life and life to the full. In that fullness of life, which Christ himself experienced, comes both love and pain.

    Reply
  5. You say, ” I find the materialistic explanations of life inadequate to explain reality. ” It is my experience that the opposite is true. I find the religious explanations of life inadequate to explain reality. Also, there seems to be an assumption that people connect with the idea of life revealing love; for many, life experiences demonstrate, not love, but a wonton, wreckless, indifferent world. And I dare say, if a corpse were to rise, I would surely believe. In my experience, corpses do not, so the Biblical accusation is…convenient. I mention these observations in an attempt to better understand, beyond narrated responses about just having enough faith. I did read What’s So Amazing About Grace. Interesting, but not convinced. I hope your fans don’t attack. I desire to resolve some ongoing questions, and you seem, at least based on your book, somewhat open to questioning.

    Reply

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