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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. Richard Dawson Avatar

    All life is faith… faith that the sun will rise, faith that the road won’t give way, faith that the lights will work. Faith in God simply looks a little further.

  2. John W Avatar
    John W

    Again Philip, thanks for your eloquent and engaging honesty. Your trademark.

  3. Barbara Avatar

    Dear Fred, I’m sure Philip can answer you much better than i but I came from that skeptical place that you describe. After a Luis Palau rally, I decided, quite consciously, to take the step of faith and to follow Jesus’ teachings. It was radically transforming. My values and priorities were turned upside down and I learned the joy of finding the truth about how to live on this earth, even amid the ongoing noise and pain. With trust in God, I can go on. Trying to live out His teachings by actively loving those around me gives meaning and purpose to life. I have an anchor that does not stop bad things happening but prevents me from being blown over by the storm. I am now a lay preacher and, by the way, Jesus was the corpse who rose from the dead. May God bless you.

  4. Ann O'Malley Avatar

    In response to Chris Spurlock: You’re absolutely right to say that God does not live in a relationless vacuum. After being a Christian for many years, I had one of those aha moments when reading a book about God. (I don’t remember the title or author, but have to wonder if it might have been Philip Yancey!) The writer pointed out that God is a trinity. Therefore, for all eternity, the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit have lived in perfect intimate relationship with each other. We weren’t created out of God’s need for relationship, but out of His joy in creating and relating to His creatures.

    A few months after being saved, I went through a period of intense doubt. Then I stumbled across Psalm 22 and I had to ask, how could David, writing many centuries before Jesus was born, describe in one Psalm so many aspects of the day we call Good Friday? It’s not humanly possible. (If anyone wants to read more details of my experience, you can find it in my blog at https://thosewhoweep.blogspot.com/2019/04/the-crucifixion.html.)

    Philip, I love the way you describe your reasons for believing. American culture places so much emphasis on the left-brain, logical reasons for belief (my dominant side), that many of us resort to a form of apologetics that bows to this demand. But it seems to me that that approach leaves out some important factors that you include here. Thank you.

  5. Bob Rubin Avatar

    This speaks to my soul. I have been a Jewish believer for 34 years. I love apologetics.

    This piece somehow has found the point where the visible and the invisible meet in beautiful unity. It is rational as well as instinctual. If it touches one non-believers heart it is worth the effort it took to compose, I believe, filled to the brim with the Holy Spirit.

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26 thoughts on “Why I Believe”

  1. Dear Fred, I’m sure Philip can answer you much better than i but I came from that skeptical place that you describe. After a Luis Palau rally, I decided, quite consciously, to take the step of faith and to follow Jesus’ teachings. It was radically transforming. My values and priorities were turned upside down and I learned the joy of finding the truth about how to live on this earth, even amid the ongoing noise and pain. With trust in God, I can go on. Trying to live out His teachings by actively loving those around me gives meaning and purpose to life. I have an anchor that does not stop bad things happening but prevents me from being blown over by the storm. I am now a lay preacher and, by the way, Jesus was the corpse who rose from the dead. May God bless you.

    Reply
  2. In response to Chris Spurlock: You’re absolutely right to say that God does not live in a relationless vacuum. After being a Christian for many years, I had one of those aha moments when reading a book about God. (I don’t remember the title or author, but have to wonder if it might have been Philip Yancey!) The writer pointed out that God is a trinity. Therefore, for all eternity, the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit have lived in perfect intimate relationship with each other. We weren’t created out of God’s need for relationship, but out of His joy in creating and relating to His creatures.

    A few months after being saved, I went through a period of intense doubt. Then I stumbled across Psalm 22 and I had to ask, how could David, writing many centuries before Jesus was born, describe in one Psalm so many aspects of the day we call Good Friday? It’s not humanly possible. (If anyone wants to read more details of my experience, you can find it in my blog at https://thosewhoweep.blogspot.com/2019/04/the-crucifixion.html.)

    Philip, I love the way you describe your reasons for believing. American culture places so much emphasis on the left-brain, logical reasons for belief (my dominant side), that many of us resort to a form of apologetics that bows to this demand. But it seems to me that that approach leaves out some important factors that you include here. Thank you.

    Reply
  3. This speaks to my soul. I have been a Jewish believer for 34 years. I love apologetics.

    This piece somehow has found the point where the visible and the invisible meet in beautiful unity. It is rational as well as instinctual. If it touches one non-believers heart it is worth the effort it took to compose, I believe, filled to the brim with the Holy Spirit.

    Reply

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