Maybe you thought you’d be able to bridge the great divide between the natural and the supernatural worlds and get to God through faith? The evidence for God isn’t compelling, and there are lots of things that suggest there isn’t one. But if you just have faith that he’s there, then you can believe and be confident that he’s real. Maybe you thought having faith gives you a special kind of knowledge even.
In their paradigm cases, we use the term faith to describe a case where a person’s epistemic situation doesn’t fully warrant believing on the basis of evidence. There are some counter indications or some lack of evidence that leave the conclusion unresolved. When a person’s favorite sports team is down in the last few minutes but has a slim chance to come back, he has faith in them. A wife has faith in her husband when he’s away on a business trip with an attractive coworker. Worried family members, in the emergency room waiting room, have faith that their critically ill loved one will make it through the night. And so on. We only invoke faith when there are some reasons to doubt or the result we desire seems unlikely. Where there is evidential justification, there is no room for faith.
That’s why faith is so frequently the response that believers give when they are pressed hard on the grounds for believing in God.
But here’s the problem. Reason is the set of cognitive capacities that make it possible for us to seek out evidence, sift through it, and draw conclusions. (Evidence here should be broadly understood to include empirical as well as conceptual or a priori considerations.) Our reasoning capacities are the only tools we have for separating reality from fantasy, fact from fiction, justified belief from nonsense. Once you abandon it, then you’ve opened the floodgates. Once we let it go, there are no principled, coherent, or meaningful grounds on which to prefer one God over another. As long as you were just thinking about the one God that you’re familiar with, the one that everyone around you seems to believe in, then making the leap of faith sans reason, doesn’t seem so problematic.
But here’s a question: How many supernatural hypotheses are out there for your consideration? How many gods are vying for your faith? Is the only game in town the God that the people in your church have been telling you about? Obviously not. There is a very long list of other beings lurking over there, waiting to get in.
Before, when you still had reason at your disposal, at least you had some means of singling the right one out of this mess. But if we write off the role of reason in making decisions on the basis of evidence, we have a dilemma. On what basis will you decide to opt for one of these gods and not the others? Since you’re allowing that it’s ok to abandon reason and just believe what you like without regard for the evidence, then why no Baal, Acchupta, Ryangombe, Pu’gu, Pen Annwen, Orcus, Orunmila, Nintinugga, Ningirama, Montu, Mahamanasika, Kamrusepa, Haumiatiketike, or Hatdastsisi. Faith in one is just as good as faith in another, right?
You’ve opened the floodgates to any and all gods, and left yourself without the means to choose or hold any of them back. Reason and the evidence were the only things you had to hold back countless mistakes.
That is, there’s not a sufficient case to be made in favor of believing any of one of these and rejecting the others on the basis of evidence, so what’s to keep one of the devout followers of Hatdastsisi from pulling the same move. “The only way to true belief in Hatdastsisi is through faith,” after all, “and those of you who don’t will suffer with eternal torment.”
You’ve given up the one tool you had for making a choice here on the basis of any rational standard. If the evidence (or lack thereof) doesn’t matter, then all of these supernatural beings are on the same footing. Notice the irony in someone who is willing to abandon good sense and believe against contrary evidence, but who says about all these other gods: “but those other gods just don’t make sense.” Since when was making sense the issue for someone who is opting for faith over what makes sense?
Of course, you’ve got a special place in your heart for the divine being that your parents taught you about, and the one that the other members of your culture or religious sect all believe in. But those aren’t reasons to think that he really exists. That you were born into a Christian household and culture is a historical contingency.
The thing is, you might not think there’s as much to recommend Haumiatiketike as there is to recommend Jesus, or whoever your favored magical being is. But if you try to defend your opting for the same God that you were taught to believe in as a child, and you’re going to play the faith card, then you’ve set yourself up with an irreconcilable problem.
On the one hand, when the evidence and reasoning wouldn’t produce the conclusion that you wanted, you thumbed your nose at them and decided you’d belief what you wanted anyway. But on the other hand, now you’re trying to argue or reason that there are some grounds for thinking that God is real and the others are not. You just can’t have it both ways without being flagrantly irrational. Gerrymandering some defense of believing in your God by faith while rejecting all of the others is a flagrant example of special pleading or the ad hoc fallacy.
Maybe you think that having faith in Jesus is more fulfilling or somehow more enriching for human life than all of those others. But notice again that you invoking a reasoned principle that is something like “People should adopt those religious doctrines that are most fulfilling in X, Y, and Z fashion. Having faith in Jesus is most fulfilling in X, Y, and Z fashion. Therefore, people should have faith in Jesus.” There are two things that are seriously messed up here. First, this believer is making use of some logical inferences only as long as it suits him, but rejecting them when they give him any conclusion that is contrary to the Jesus conclusion he wants. And second, notice that we’ve left the discussion about truth entirely. It might be that there are some pragmatic benefits to certain kinds of cognitive practices, but those never entitle a person to claim that some claim is true. It gives me a thrill to believe that a billion dollars has mistakenly been deposited to my bank account too, but I’m not entitled on the basis of those positive personal feelings to conclude that it is really in there. Personal fulfillment never gives us epistemic justification.
What the faith move does, in effect, is throw out the rules. It shows that you’re just going to believe it regardless of what the real indicators point to. And by throwing out the rules, you mire yourself in nonsense, and you disqualify yourself from any serious consideration. You also undermine your own efforts to try to make sense of anyone else’s view. Suppose the atheist pulls the same move.
Atheist: I know that there are no gods whatsoever.
Believer: But how can you ever know something like that for sure?
Atheist: I have faith that there are no gods.
Believer: That doesn’t make sense. How can you have faith in something that isn’t real? You can only have faith that there is a God.
Atheist: I don’t have to be concerned with what makes sense—I’m off in faithland now. And in faithland, reason, evidence, and good sense are disregarded so that I can help myself to any conclusion we want without worries about being coherent or making sense. Those are petty evidential and rational concerns that are all left behind by faith. My faith in the vast godlessness of the universe is beyond human comprehension--it transcends our puny understanding.
Actually I find it all surprisingly comforting. As soon as I let faith into my heart, all my worries and cognitive needs about figuring out the truth and being reasonable dissolved. Faith brings great peace of mind. It deadens the acuteness of the persistent need I felt before to gather as much reliable information I could and draw the most reasonable conclusion I could on the basis of it. Now I don’t have to worry about any of that. Now I’ve realized that I can just believe anything I like without any responsibility for justifying it. If I want it, I can just help myself to it. As long as I'm at it, I'm going to have faith that global warming isn't real, there are no religious conflicts in the middle east, and that there's a million dollars in my bank account.
Believer: But that's all insane. What about your responsibilities as a citizen and a moral agent in a society with the rest of us? How can you think that the evidence is irrelevant to what you believe, or that you can just dismiss the importance of rationality?
Atheist: You know, I don't like your tone. You’re angry and strident. You're being intolerant and critical of my faith. I'm exercising my religious freedom by opting out of being rational, and you have to respect that or you're not respecting my personal religious choices.
Many believers retreat to the “F” word as their last ditch effort to defend believing in God. Faith has a number of features, but principle among them is that it describes cases where we believe that something is true even though the evidence on the whole does not support it. If there were sufficient evidence, after all, there would be no need for faith. Many people also view this sort of fudging as harmless. But what we have seen is that it creates a crisis. If the evidence doesn’t matter in our justifications for what we believe, then floodgates are open for any sort of insanity to rush in. Taking the evidence seriously was the only way we had to sift the claims that are plausible from the ones that are delusional, dangerous, or absurd.