How to Choose Right From Wrong
After four years at Harvard University
as an undergraduate, one student
proclaimed in his graduation oration
that there was one central idea,
one sentiment which they all acquired
in their Harvard careers; and that
is, in one word, confusion.
That same year, Harvard's graduate-student
orator said, "They tell us
that it is heresy to suggest the
superiority of some value, fantasy
to believe in moral argument, slavery
to submit to a judgment sounder
than your own. The freedom of our
day is the freedom to devote ourselves
to any values we please, on the
mere condition that we do not believe
them to be true."
Our universities are teaching students
that there are no solid guidelines
to life. Since everything is relative,
they are totally free to create
anything they want out of their
lives. Students are told that no
one has a right to tell them how
they ought to live. Decisions about
right and wrong are strictly up
to them. It makes no difference
what they choose to make of their
lives. Students are not encouraged
to ask the traditional questions
about the usefulness of life or
the value of an exemplary life.
As the above graduate student pointed
out, they don't even want you to
take your own conclusions about
life seriously. It is a philosophy
of ambiguity. It is the philosophy
of humanistic existentialism. Many
today are striving to break away
from traditional values and embrace
a sense of futility. Today we see
it in the lives of teenagers who
have "tried everything"
and found life to be wanting. We
see it in the life style of the
"survivalists" who have
given up hope in God and the future,
holing up in defense of a coming
catastrophe.
According to Jean-Paul Sartre, one
of the fathers of humanistic existentialism,
the world is absurd, lacking any
concept of ultimate justification.
Sartre declares we have no ultimate
purpose or plan to our lives. We
are nothing and are therefore free
to make ourselves into anything
we want to be. It doesn't even matter
if you believe in your own proclamations
because there is no more reason
for you to exist there for you to
not exist. Both are the same. The
existentialist says you can just
pick and choose your values. It
makes no difference. There is no
transcendent truth or power beyond
man himself. Sartre doesn't believe
in any God, nor does he believe
that there is any preconceived design.
There is no principle of authority
to determine action. He says one
must invent an original solution
for each situation. Therefore, in
the sovereignty of his freedom,
man creates his own values. Morality
is rooted in human choice. Man alone
gives his life its importance. Mankind
must somehow transcend a life of
absurdity and despair.
Is this humanly created reality
true or are those who believe it
trying to live in a dream world?
Is the existentialist trying desperately
to deflect the true absurdity and
despair of his position? Is this
the view of life that we expect
our college students to be learning?
The Foundation of Existentialism
Prior to World Wars I & II,
modern man believed that through
science and human engineering an
ever better world was evolving.
They believed that mankind was getting
better, that peace and prosperity
would rein. They were convinced
that we had finally figured out
how to live together in harmony
and to build a better world.
Then came the rude awakening of
two world wars and the hideous crimes
against human beings perpetuated
by Hitler's Third Reich. Out of
the continuing frustration and destruction
of World War II came a new philosophy
of life. It was a philosophy conceived
by those who had lost hope, who
could only see the chaos. They lost
their hope in any ultimate meaning
for life. They were unable to see
beyond the carnage of war-torn Europe.
Their view of life was called humanistic
existentialism.
Men like Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert
Camus sought to establish a new
view of life, a "new humanism"
with a whole new set of values.
Prior to these men, the need for
a transcendent force, a higher authority
beyond man himself, helped set limits
and gave guidance to our lives.
An example of this transcendence
would be the Ten Commandments, given
to man by God. These new philosophers
defined transcendence in an entirely
different way. They saw transcendence
only in their own aims and goals.
For the existentialists, transcendence
was a way to escape what they saw
as the meaninglessness of life by
establishing aims and goals to make
whatever they wanted out of themselves,
to create their own reality. For
them there were no norms or standards,
other than what they might choose
to agree upon among themselves.
You have to realize that for these
existentialist thinkers, all human
activities were equivalent in value.
Human activity amounted to the same
thing "whether one gets drunk
alone or is a leader of nations."
However, without God, there can
be no transcendent view of human
nature because there is no God to
have a conception of it. Man is
merely an evolved animal. Today
we see many young people caught
up in this attitude of cynicism
and despair. They just don't care
anymore. Life has become jaded.
Many young people pass their time
in a fantasy world of drugs, music
and sex.
Man's nothingness forms the foundation
of existential thinking. Man is
an empty bubble floating on a sea
of nothingness.
Trying to build an ethic for life
based on the philosophy of existentialism
is quite a challenge. Not only do
the existentialists have to create
a set of values to live by, but
first of all, they have to create
optimism out of a view of absurdity
and despair. It is called an ethic
of ambiguity because each person
has no one to answer to but himself.
There is no one else to blame, each
individual is without excuse. Life
is merely a game to be won or lost,
to seek to become one's own hero.
The existentialist wills himself
to be free and in so doing wills
himself to be moral.
Existentialism Collides
with a Biblical World View
We live in a world that has been
characterized as "plastic",
without value and sterile. Many
have forgotten what it means to
live, to be fully human. Hours are
spent in front of the TV, in a world
of fantasy and escapism. Many people
are becoming devoid of human warmth
and significant human interaction.
In this essay I have examined the
ethics of humanistic existentialism.To
fully understand ethics one must
have considerable clarity about
what it is to be human. Is man an
evolved animal required to create
his own essence, as the existentialist
would say? Though there is freedom
to choose our own actions, there
is no significance in our actions.
Choices are made in the face of
meaninglessness. The values of existentialism
are anchored in the world of ordinary
experiences. Their values come from
what is. And for the existentialist
what is, is man's absurd condition.
How does existentialism compare
to a God-centered, theistic view
of ethics? For the Christian, ethical
values are revealed to man by God.
Perfect freedom lies only in service
to God. The existentialist defines
God as "self-caused" and
then says there is no God because
it is impossible to be self-caused.
The Christian says that God is "uncaused",
not self-caused. If you want absolute
freedom, it is all too easy to deem
God nonexistent. Even Sartre admits
that "since we ignore the commandments
of God [concerning] all value prescribed
as eternal, nothing remains but
what is strictly voluntary."
Throwing off all limitations and
declaring his atheism, Sartre explains
the process in his autobiography:
I had been playing with matches
and burned a small rug. I was in
the process of covering up my crime
when suddenly God saw me. I felt
His gaze inside my head and on my
hands....I flew into a rage against
so crude an indiscretion, I blasphemed....He
never looked at me again....I had
the more difficulty getting rid
of Him [the Holy Ghost] in that
He had installed Himself at the
back of my head....I collared the
Holy Ghost in the cellar and threw
Him out.
Aldous Huxley, another famous existentialist,
said:
For myself, no doubt for most
of my contemporaries, the philosophy
of meaninglessness was essentially
an instrument of liberation. The
liberation we desired was ... from
a certain system of morality. We
objected to the morality because
it interfered with our sexual freedom.
The truth of Huxley's words ring
out loud and clear. All around us
we find individuals rejecting the
truth of God's word and embracing
false doctrines that allow them
to vent their passions and immorality.
Satan loves to get us discouraged
and despairing, then he shows us
a false way out that caters to our
old fleshly nature, a way that allows
us to do as we please.
The Bible says that we are in bondage
either to sin or to God. We will
serve one or the other. Our only
choice is to decide who or what
we will serve, the God of the Spirit,
or the god of the flesh. The choice
is ours.
Rejecting Biblical Truth
Ultimately Leads to Despair
How did modern philosophy arrive
at such a seemingly absurd state?
In the late nineteenth century certain
scholars assaulted the Bible and
Christian beliefs. This "higher
criticism" was promoted by
men dedicated to the destruction
of orthodox Christianity. In their
minds the Bible was no more than
a novel, a book of fiction with
some good moral lessons. This movement
was the spiritual legacy of the
Enlightenment which put the claims
of religion outside the realm of
reason. Natural law, based on human
reason alone, was slowly substituted
for biblical law. Christian faith
was separated from historic reality.
The focus of all studies was shifting
from God to man.
The real motive of higher criticism
of the Bible was purely ethical.
Men and women don't like the idea
of having to be obedient to God.
Therefore, they denied the historic
validity of the Bible. This denial
was based on an evolutionary model
of human morality and human history.
They sought to separate ethics from
faith in order to free themselves
from God's final judgment.
Kierkegaard, a 19th century philosopher,
is considered the father of existentialism.
He took this idea of the separation
of faith and reason and said that
we could not know God rationally.
Therefore, he tried to reach God
by what he called an irrational
leap of faith.Since it was not rational
to believe in God, but it was necessary,
you must believe irrationally.Sartre
and Camus simply took the next step
when they said belief in God was
not only irrational, but unnecessary.
Therefore, modern man started the
path to a meaningless life when
he questioned whether man could
know God. Indeed, when man questioned
even God's ability to communicate
with man, this led the existentialist
to ask, "If God is dead, isn't
man dead also?" This existential
death of man has lead to apathy,
absurdity and ambiguity.The philosopher
Bertrand Russell said it best when
he said:
What else is there to make life
tolerable? We stand on the shore
of an ocean, crying to the night
and to emptiness. Sometimes a voice
of one drowning, and in a moment
the silence returns. The world seems
to me quite dreadful, the unhappiness
of many people is very great, and
I often wonder how they all endure
it. It is usually the central thing
around which their lives are built,
and I suppose if they did not live
most of their lives in the things
of the moment, they would not be
able to go on.
Rejection of God's grace creates
a world of hopeless despair. Existentialism
leaves man without hope. In contrast,
the Christian has the hope of eternal
life based on faith in a living,
personal God whom we can personally
experience with all our mind, body
and spirit.
Can Human Beings Live the Existential
Life?
How many of your acquaintances are
demonstrating by their lives that
they believe there are significant
ethical implications in the decisions
they make and the activities they
are involved in? Do you know people
who live life caught up in self-preoccupation,
doing only that which gives immediate
pleasure? Are they filling their
lives with movies, TV, sports and
other preoccupations which shield
them from dealing with the ethical
reality of their lifestyle?
In this essay I have been discussing
the ethics of humanistic existentialism,
an ethic of freedom in ambiguity.
It is an ethic that says man is
nothing except what he or she decides
to create of themselves and whatever
choice they make really doesn't
matter.
It sounds absurd, and it is, but
sadly it is the ethic often being
taught on the college campuses.
One philosophy professor at a major
university in Texas proudly informs
his classes that he is an atheist
and that his goal is to show the
class that they can develop a system
of ethics without a belief in a
god. Of course he is right. One
can design a set of relativistic
ethical standards, but it is an
ethic built on sand. An ethic of
ambiguity will never give the support
these students need in the hard
world of reality. Did Jean-Paul
Sartre and Albert Camus, the leading
writers in existentialist theory,
hold to their position till the
end?
There is evidence that they did
not. From a dialogue recorded in
1980 when nearing his death, Sartre
came very close to belief in God,
perhaps even more than very close.
He made a statement that may show
his acceptance of the grace of God.
He said,
I do not feel that I am the
product of chance, a speck of dust
in the universe, but someone who
was expected, prepared, prefigured.
In short, a being whom only a Creator
could put here; and this idea of
a creating hand refers to God.
In this one sentence Sartre seems
to disavow his entire system of
belief, his whole life of dedication
to existentialism. If this is true,
it is a condemnation of humanistic
existentialism by Sartre himself.
What about Albert Camus? According
to Rev. John Warwick Montgomery,
an internationally respected Lutheran
minister and author, there was a
retired pastor of the American Church
in Paris who told him that Albert
Camus was to have been baptized
within the month of his tragic death
and that Camus had seen the bankruptcy
of humanistic existentialism.
All this is second hand information,
but it does cast a shadow upon the
ethics of existential humanism.
Either we live a life of hope or
of despair. Regardless of the claims
made, existential humanism does
not leave room for hope. Simone
de Beauvoir, the mistress of Sartre
and also an existentialist writer,
came the closest of any of these
writers to the real truth when she
said it was reasonable to sacrifice
one innocent man that others may
live. This is the foundation of
the whole gospel message of Christianity:
Jesus Christ, the innocent Son of
God, died that all men might be
saved. Meanwhile the existentialist
stands alone with hope only in one's
self. He is alone in a world without
Christ, instead of being secure
in the knowledge of Christ's love
and redemption. Praise God that
He is there and He is not silent!
© 1996 Probe Ministries
Notes
1. Robert N. Bellah, et al., The
Good Society (New York: Alfred
A. Knopf, Inc., 1991), 43, 44.
2. C. Stephen Evans, The Philosophy
of Despair: Existentialism and the
Quest for Hope (Dallas: Probe
Books, 1984), 17, 71-72.
3. Jean-Paul Sartre, "Existentialism
and Ethics." Moral Education.
Barry I. Chazan and Jonasa F. Soltis,
Eds. (New York: Teachers College
Press, Columbia University, 1973,
reprinted from Existentialism, New
York: The Philosophical Library,
1947), 11-61.
4. Simone de Beauvoir, The Ethics
of Ambiguity, Trans. Bernard
Frechtman (New York: Carol Publishing
Group, 1991), 142.
5. Jean-Paul Sartre, Being and
Nothingness: An Essay on Phenomenological
Ontology, Trans. Hazel E. Barnes
(New York: Washington Square, 1965),
627.
6. Jean-Paul Sartre, Existentialism
and Humanism, Trans. Philip
Mairet (London: Methuen, 1948),
28.
7. Evans, 72.
8. Norman L. Geisler, Is Man
the Measure? An Evaluation of Contemporary
Humanism (Grand Rapids, MI:
Baker Book House, 1983), 40-41.
9. De Beauvoir, 24-25.
10. Evans, 74.
11. Linda A.Bell, Sartre's Ethics
of Authenticity (Tuscaloosa:
The University of Alabama Press,
1989), 28.
12. Otto Bollnow, "Existentialism's
Basic Ethical Position,"
Contemporary European Ethics, Joseph
J. Kockelmans, Ed. (Garden City,
NY: Anchor Books, 1972), 332.
13. Philip Thody, Sartre: A
Biographical Introduction (New
York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1971),
72.
14. Sartre, Existentialism and
Humanism, 23-24.
15. Jean-Paul Sartre, The Words
(New York: George Braziller, 1964),
102, 252-253.
16. Quoted by Stanley L. Jaki, Cosmos
and Creator (Edinburgh: Scottish
Academic Press, 1980), 116.
17. Gary North, The Hoax of
Higher Criticism (Tyler, TX:
Institute for Christian Economics,
1989), 9-48.
18. Geisler, 46-47.
19. John Warwick Montgomery, "Letter
from England," "On the
Reliability of the Four Gospels,"
New Oxford Review (May
1994), 22-24.
20. De Beauvoir, 150.
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