April 9, 2007 issue -- Rick Warren is as big as a bear, with a booming
voice and easygoing charm. Sam Harris is compact, reserved and,
despite the polemical tone of his books, friendly and mild. Warren,
one of the best-known pastors in the world, started Saddleback in
1980; now 25,000 people attend the church each Sunday. Harris is
softer-spoken; paragraphs pour out of him, complex and fact-filled.as
befits a Ph.D. student in neuroscience. At NEWSWEEK's invitation, they
met in Warren's office recently and chatted, mostly amiably, for four
hours. Jon Meacham moderated. Excerpts follow.
Jon Meacham: |
Rick, since you're the home team, we'll start
with Sam. Sam, is there a God in the sense that most Americans think
of him?
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Sam Harris: |
There's no evidence for such a God, and it's instructive
to notice that we're all atheists with respect to Zeus and the
thousands of other dead gods whom now nobody worships.
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Jon Meacham: |
Rick, what is the evidence of the existence of the God of
Abraham?
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Rick Warren: |
I see the fingerprints of God everywhere. I see them in
culture. I see them in law. I see them in literature. I see them in
nature. I see them in my own life. Trying to understand where God came
from is like an ant trying to understand the Internet. Even the most
brilliant scientist would agree that we only know a fraction of a
percent of the knowledge of the universe.
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Sam Harris: |
Any scientist must concede that we don't fully understand
the universe. But neither the Bible nor the Qur'an represents our best
understanding of the universe. That is exquisitely clear.
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Rick Warren: |
To you.
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Sam Harris: |
There is so much about us that is not in the Bible. Every
specific science from cosmology to psychology to economics has
surpassed and superseded what the Bible tells us is true about our
world.
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Jon Meacham: |
Sam, does the Christian you address in your books have to
believe that God wrote the Bible and that it is literally true?
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Sam Harris: |
Well, there's clearly a spectrum of confidence in the
text. I mean, there's the "This is literally true, nothing even gets
figuratively interpreted," and then there's the "This is just the best
book we have, written by the smartest people who have ever lived, and
it's still legitimate to organize our lives around it to the exclusion
of other books." Anywhere on that spectrum I have a problem, because
in my mind the Bible and the Qur'an are just books, written by human
beings. There are sections of the Bible that I think are absolutely
brilliant and poetically unrivaled, and there are sections of the
Bible which are the sheerest barbarism, yet profess to prescribe a
divinely mandated morality.where do I start? Books like Leviticus and
Deuteronomy and Exodus and First and Second Kings and Second
Samuel.half of the kings and prophets of Israel would be taken to The
Hague and prosecuted for crimes against humanity if these events took
place in our own time.
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Jon Meacham: |
[To Warren] Is the Bible inerrant?
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Rick Warren: |
I believe it's inerrant in what it claims to be. The
Bible does not claim to be a scientific book in many areas.
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Jon Meacham: |
Do you believe Creation happened in the way Genesis
describes it?
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Rick Warren: |
If you're asking me do I believe in evolution, the answer
is no, I don't. I believe that God, at a moment, created man. I do
believe Genesis is literal, but I do also know metaphorical terms are
used. Did God come down and blow in man's nose? If you believe in God,
you don't have a problem accepting miracles. So if God wants to do it
that way, it's fine with me.
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Sam Harris: |
I'm doing my Ph.D. in neuroscience; I'm very close to the
literature on evolutionary biology. And the basic point is that
evolution by natural selection is random genetic mutation over
millions of years in the context of environmental pressure that
selects for fitness.
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Rick Warren: |
Who's doing the selecting?
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Sam Harris: |
The environment. You don't have to invoke an intelligent
designer to explain the complexity we see.
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Rick Warren: |
Sam makes all kinds of assertions based on his
presuppositions. I'm willing to admit my presuppositions-- there are
clues to God. I talk to God every day. He talks to me.
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Sam Harris: |
What does that actually mean?
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Rick Warren: |
One of the great evidences of God is answered prayer. I
have a friend, a Canadian friend, who has an immigration issue. He's
an intern at this church, and so I said, "God, I need you to help me
with this," as I went out for my evening walk. As I was walking I met
a woman. She said, "I'm an immigration attorney; I'd be happy to take
this case." Now, if that happened once in my life I'd say, "That is a
coincidence." If it happened tens of thousands of times, that is not a
coincidence.
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Jon Meacham: |
There must have been times in your ministry when you've
prayed for someone to be delivered from disease who is not… say, a
little girl with cancer.
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Rick Warren: |
Oh, absolutely.
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Jon Meacham: |
So, parse that. God gave you an immigration attorney, but
God killed a little girl.
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Rick Warren: |
Well, I do believe in the goodness of God, and I do
believe that he knows better than I do. God sometimes says yes, God
sometimes says no and God sometimes says wait. I've had to learn the
difference between no and not yet. The issue here really does come
down to surrender. A lot of atheists hide behind rationalism; when you
start probing, you find their reactions are quite emotional. In fact,
I've never met an atheist who wasn't angry.
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Sam Harris: |
Let me be the first.
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Rick Warren: |
I think your books are quite angry.
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Sam Harris: |
I would put it at impatient rather than angry. Let me
respond to this notion of answered prayer, because this is a classic
sampling error, to use a statistical phrase. We know that human beings
have a terrible sense of probability. There are many things we believe
that confirm our prejudices about the world, and we believe this only
by noticing the confirmations, and not keeping track of the
disconfirmations. You could prove to the satisfaction of every
scientist that intercessory prayer works if you set up a simple
experiment. Get a billion Christians to pray for a single amputee. Get
them to pray that God regrow that missing limb. This happens to
salamanders every day, presumably without prayer; this is within the
capacity of God. [Warren is laughing.] I find it interesting that
people of faith only tend to pray for conditions that are
self-limiting.
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Rick Warren: |
That's a misstatement there.
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Sam Harris: |
Let's go back to the Bible. The reason you believe that
Jesus is the son of God is because you believe that the Gospel is a
valid account of the miracles of Jesus.
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Rick Warren: |
It's one of the reasons.
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Sam Harris: |
Yeah. It's one of the reasons. Now, there are many
testimonials about miracles, every bit as amazing as the miracles of
Jesus, in other literature of the world's religions. Even contemporary
miracles. There are millions of people who believe that Sathya Sai
Baba, the south Indian guru, was born of a virgin, has raised the dead
and materializes objects. I mean, you can watch some of his miracles
on YouTube. Prepare to be underwhelmed. He's a stage magician. As a
Christian, you can say Sathya Sai Baba's miracle stories are not
interesting, let's not pay attention to them, but if you set them
within the prescientific religious milieu of the first-century Roman
Empire, suddenly miracle stories become especially compelling.
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Jon Meacham: |
Sam, what are the secular sources of an acceptable moral code?
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Sam Harris: |
Well, I don't think that the religious books are the
source. We go to the Bible and we are the judge of what is good. We
see the golden rule as the great distillation of ethical impulses, but
the golden rule is not unique to the Bible or to Jesus; you see it in
many, many cultures.and you see some form of it among nonhuman
primates. I'm not at all a moral relativist. I think it's quite common
among religious people to believe that atheism entails moral
relativism. I think there is an absolute right and wrong. I think
honor killing, for example, is unambiguously wrong.you can use the
word evil. A society that kills women and girls for sexual
indiscretion, even the indiscretion of being raped, is a society that
has killed compassion, that has failed to teach men to value women and
has eradicated empathy. Empathy and compassion are our most basic
moral impulses, and we can even teach the golden rule without lying to
ourselves or our children about the origin of certain books or the
virgin birth of certain people.
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Jon Meacham: |
Rick, Christianity has conducted itself in an abjectly
evil manner from time to time. How do you square that with the
Christian Gospel of love?
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Rick Warren: |
I don't feel duty-bound to defend stuff that's done in
the name of God which I don't think God approved or advocated. Have
things been done wrong in the name of Christianity? Yes. Sam makes the
statement in his book that religion is bad for the world, but far more
people have been killed through atheists than through all the
religious wars put together. Thousands died in the Inquisition;
millions died under Mao, and under Stalin and Pol Pot. There is a home
for atheists in the world today.it's called North Korea. I don't know
any atheists who want to go there. I'd much rather live under Tony
Blair, or even George Bush. The bottom line is that atheists, who
accuse Christians of being intolerant, are as intolerant.
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Sam Harris: |
How am I being intolerant? I'm not advocating that we lock
people up for their religious beliefs. You can get locked up in
Western Europe for denying the Holocaust. I think that's a terrible
way of addressing the problem. This really is one of the great canards
of religious discourse, the idea that the greatest crimes of the 20th
century were perpetrated because of atheism. The core problem for me
is divisive dogmatism. There are many kinds of dogmatism. There's
nationalism, there's tribalism, there's racism, there's
chauvinism. And there's religion. Religion is the only sphere of
discourse where dogma is actually a good word, where it is considered
ennobling to believe something strongly based on faith.
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Rick Warren: |
You don't feel atheists are dogmatic?
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Sam Harris: |
No, I don't.
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Rick Warren: |
I'm sorry, I disagree with you. You're quite dogmatic.
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Sam Harris: |
OK, well, I'm happy to have you point out my dogmas, but
first let me deal with Stalin. The killing fields and the gulag were
not the product of people being too reluctant to believe things on
insufficient evidence. They were not the product of people requiring
too much evidence and too much argument in favor of their beliefs. We
have people flying planes in our buildings because they have
theological grievances against the West. I'm noticing Christians doing
terrible things explicitly for religious reasons.for instance, not
fund-ing [embryonic] stem-cell research. The motive is always
paramount for me. No society in human history has ever suffered
because it has become too reasonable.
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Rick Warren: |
We're in exact agreement on that. I just happen to
believe that Christianity saved reason. We would not have the Bill of
Rights without Christianity.
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Sam Harris: |
That's certainly a disputable claim. The idea that somehow
we are getting our morality out of the Judeo-Christian tradition is
bad history and bad science.
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Rick Warren: |
Where do you get your morality? If there is no God, if I
am simply complicated ooze, then the truth is, your life doesn't
matter, my life doesn't matter.
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Sam Harris: |
That is a total caricature of.
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Rick Warren: |
No, let me finish. I let you caricature Christianity. If
life is just random chance, then nothing really does matter and there
is no morality.it's survival of the fittest. If survival of the
fittest means me killing you to survive, so be it. For years, atheists
have said there is no God, but they want to live like God exists. They
want to live like their lives have meaning.††Perhaps finding a meaning for one's life without the need for God is more fulfilling? See my thoughts on this subject.
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Sam Harris: |
Our morality, the meaning we find in life, is a lived
experience that I believe has, to use a loaded term, a spiritual
component. I believe it is possible to radically transform our
experience of the world for the better, very much the way someone like
Jesus, or someone like Buddha, witnessed. There is wisdom in our
spiritual, contemplative literature, and I am quite interested in
understanding it. I think that meditation and prayer affect us for
the better. The question is, what is reasonable to believe on the
basis of those transformations?
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Rick Warren: |
You will not admit that it is your experience that makes
you an atheist, not rationality.
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Sam Harris: |
What in your experience is making you someone who is not a
Muslim? I presume that you are not losing sleep every night wondering
whether to convert to Islam. And if you're not, it is because when the
Muslims say, "We have a book that's the perfect word of the creator of
the universe, it's the Qur'an, it was dictated to Muhammad in his cave
by the archangel Gabriel," you see a variety of claims there that
aren't backed up by sufficient evidence. If the evidence were
sufficient, you would be compelled to be Muslim.
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Rick Warren: |
That's exactly right.
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Sam Harris: |
So you and I both stand in a relationship of atheism to Islam.
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Rick Warren: |
We both stand in a relationship of faith. You have faith
that there is no God. In 1974, I spent the better part of a year
living in Japan, and I studied all the world religions. All of the
religions basically point toward truth. Buddha made this famous
statement at the end of his life, "I'm still searching for the truth."
Muhammad said, "I am a prophet of the truth." The Veda says, "Truth is
elusive, it's like a butterfly, you've got to search for it." Then
Jesus Christ comes along and says, "I am the truth." All of a sudden,
that forces a decision.
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Sam Harris: |
Many, many other prophets and gurus have said that.
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Rick Warren: |
Here's the difference. Jesus says, "I am the only way to
God. I am the way to the Father." He is either lying or he's not.
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Jon Meacham: |
Sam, is Rick intellectually dishonest?
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Sam Harris: |
I wouldn't put it in such an invidious way, but.
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Jon Meacham: |
Let's say Rick's not here and we're just hanging out in his office.
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Sam Harris: |
It is intellectually dishonest, frankly, to say that you
are sure that Jesus was born of a virgin.
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Rick Warren: |
I say I accept that by faith. And I think it's
intellectually dishonest for you to say you have proof that it didn't
happen. Here's the difference between you and me. I am open to the
possibility that I am wrong in certain areas, and you are not.
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Sam Harris: |
Oh, I am absolutely open to that.
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Rick Warren: |
So you are open to the possibility that you might be wrong about Jesus?
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Sam Harris: |
And Zeus. Absolutely.
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Rick Warren: |
And what are you doing to study that?
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Sam Harris: |
I consider it such a low-probability event that I…
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Rick Warren: |
A low probability? When there are 96 percent believers in
the world? So is everybody else an idiot?
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Sam Harris: |
It is quite possible for most people to be wrong-- as are most
Americans who think that evolution didn't occur.
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Rick Warren: |
That's an arrogant statement.
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Sam Harris: |
It's an honest statement.
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Jon Meacham: |
Rick, if you had been born in India or in Iran, would you
have different religious beliefs?
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Rick Warren: |
There's no doubt where you're born influences your
initial beliefs. Regardless of where you were born, there are some
things you can know about God, even without the Bible. For instance, I
look at the world and I say, "God likes variety." I say, "God likes
beauty." I say, "God likes order," and the more we understand ecology,
the more we understand how sensitive that order is.
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Sam Harris: |
Then God also likes smallpox and tuberculosis.
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Rick Warren: |
I would attribute a lot of the sins in the world to myself.
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Sam Harris: |
Are you responsible for smallpox?
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Rick Warren: |
I am responsible to do something about it. No doubt about
it. I am responsible to do something about the 500 million who get
malaria every year and the 40 million who have AIDS, because I will be
held accountable for my life. And when I say, "God, why don't you do
something about this?" God says, "Well, why don't you? You were the
answer to your own prayer."
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Sam Harris: |
I totally agree with Rick-- it is our responsibility to
help bridge these inequities, but I think you become even more
motivated, potentially, to help people when you realize there is no
good reason, certainly not a supernatural good reason, for the fact
that I have so much and my neighbor has so little.
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Jon Meacham: |
Do you think that religiously motivated good works are actually harmful?
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Sam Harris: |
The thing that bothers me about faith-based altruism is
that it is contaminated with religious ideas that have nothing to do
with the relief of human suffering.‡‡See my thoughts on this idea. So you have a Christian minister
in Africa who's doing really good work, helping those who are hungry,
healing the sick. And yet, as part of his job description, he feels he
needs to preach the divinity of Jesus in communities where literally
millions of people have been killed because of interreligious conflict
between Christians and Muslims. It seems to me that that added piece
causes unnecessary suffering. I would much rather have someone over
there who simply wanted to feed the hungry and heal the sick.
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Rick Warren: |
You'd much rather have somebody--an atheist--feeding the
hungry than a person who believes in God? All of the great movements
forward in Western civilization were by believers. It was pastors who
led the abolition of slavery. It was pastors who led the woman's right
to vote. It was pastors who led the civil-rights movement. Not
atheists.
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Sam Harris: |
You bring up slavery-- I think it's quite ironic. Slavery,
on balance, is supported by the Bible, not condemned by it. It's
supported with exquisite precision in the Old Testament, as you know,
and Paul in First Timothy and Ephesians and Colossians supports it,
and Peter.
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Rick Warren: |
No, he doesn't. He allows it. He doesn't support it.††Wait a minute, isn't that the argument that most Christians give for teaching abstinence and other programs that are known not to work… in order to show that our society won't allow it?
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Sam Harris: |
OK, he allows it. I would argue that we got rid of slavery
not because we read the Bible more closely. We got rid of slavery
despite the profound inadequacies of the Bible. We got rid of slavery
because we realized it was manifestly evil to treat human beings as
farm equipment. As it is.
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Jon Meacham: |
Rick, what is your role as a pastor in encouraging reformation of other faiths?
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Rick Warren: |
All of the great questions of the 21st century will be
religious questions. Will Islam modernize peacefully? What's going to
happen to the influx of Muslims into secular Europe, which has lost
its faith in Christianity and has nothing to counteract this loss in
religious terms? What will replace Marxism in China? In all likelihood
it's going to be Christianity. Will America return to its historic
roots.will there be a Third Great Awakening, or will America go the
way of Europe?
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Sam Harris: |
I think the answers, in spiritual and ethical terms, are
going to be nondenominational. We are suffering the collision of
denominations, specifically the collision with Islam. Whatever is true
about us isn't Christian. And it isn't Muslim. Physics isn't
Christian, though it was invented by Christians. Algebra isn't Muslim,
even though it was invented by Muslims. Whenever we get at the truth,
we transcend culture, we transcend our upbringing. The discourse of
science is a good example of where we should hold out hope for
transcending our tribalism.
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Rick Warren: |
Why isn't atheism more appealing if it's supposedly the
most intellectually honest?
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Sam Harris: |
Frankly, it has a terrible PR campaign.
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Rick Warren: |
[Laughs] It's not a matter of PR.
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Sam Harris: |
It is right next to child molester as something you don't
want to be. But that is a product, I would argue, of what religious
people tell one another about atheism.
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Jon Meacham: |
Sam, the one thing that I find really troubling in your
arguments is that I am guilty, to quote "The End of Faith," of a
"ludicrous obscenity" when I take my children to church. That is
strong language, and it doesn't exactly encourage dialogue.
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Sam Harris: |
To some degree the stridence of my writing is an effort to
get people's attention. But I can honestly defend the stridence
because I think our situation is that urgent. I am terrified of what
seems to me to be a bottleneck that civilization is passing
through. On the one hand we have 21st-century disruptive technology
proliferating, and on the other we have first-century superstition. A
civilization is going to either pass through this bottleneck more or
less intact or it won't. And perhaps that fear sounds grandiose, but
civilizations end. On any number of occasions, some generation has
witnessed the ruination of everything they and their ancestors had
built. What especially terrifies me about religious thinking is the
expectation on the part of many that civilization is bound to end
based on prophecy and its ending is going to be glorious.
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Rick Warren: |
I believe that history split into A.D. and B.C. because
of the Resurrection. And the Resurrection is not only the resurrection
of Jesus Christ, it is the hope of the world-- it says there's more to
this life than just here and now. That doesn't mean that I do less, it
means that this life is a test, it's a trust and it's a temporary
assignment. If death is the end, shoot, I'm not going to waste another
minute being altruistic.
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Sam Harris: |
How do you account for my altruism?
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Rick Warren: |
You have common grace. Even in people who don't believe
in God, there is a spark God has put in you that says, "There's got to
be more to life than just make money and die." I think that that spark
does not come from evolution.
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Jon Meacham: |
Sam wrote that without death, the influence of
faith-based religion would be unthinkable.
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Rick Warren: |
Because we were made in God's image, we were made to last
forever. That means I'm going to spend more time on that side of
eternity than on this side. If I did not believe that there is a
Judgment, if I believed Hitler would actually get away with everything
he did, that would be a reason for great despair. The fact is, I do
believe there will be a Judgment Day. God is not just a God of
love. He is a God of justice. So death is a factor. On the other hand,
even if there were no such thing as heaven, I would put my trust in
Christ because I have found it a meaningful, satisfactory, significant
way to live.
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Sam Harris: |
How is it fair for God to have designed a world which
gives such ambiguous testimony to his existence? How is it fair to
have created a system where belief is the crucial piece, rather than
being a good person? How is it fair to have created a world in which
by mere accident of birth, someone who grew up Muslim can be
confounded by the wrong religion? I don't see how the future of
humanity is in good care with those competing orthodoxies.
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Jon Meacham: |
Rick, let's be blunt. Is Sam's soul in jeopardy, in your
view, because he has rejected Jesus?
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Rick Warren: |
The politically incorrect answer is yes.
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Sam Harris: |
Is that the honest answer?
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Rick Warren: |
The truth is, religion is mutually exclusive. The person
who says, "Oh, I just believe them all," is an idiot because the
religions flat-out contradict each other. You cannot believe in
reincarnation and heaven at the same time.
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Jon Meacham: |
Sam, let's be blunt as well. Has Rick, in your view,
wasted much of his life on behalf of a Gospel that you think is a
first-century superstition?
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Sam Harris: |
I wouldn't put it in those stark terms, because I don't
have a rigid view how someone should spend their life so as not to
waste it.
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Rick Warren: |
What's your politically incorrect answer?
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Sam Harris: |
I think you could use your time and attention better than
organizing your life around a belief that the Bible is the inerrant
word of God and the best book we're ever going to have on every
relevant subject.
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Jon Meacham: |
How would the ideal world work, in the Sam Harris view?
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Sam Harris: |
Right now, we have to change the rules to talk about God and
spiritual experience and ethics. And I'm denying that that is so. You
can have your spirituality. You can go into a cave and practice
meditation and transform yourself, and then we can talk about why that
happened and how it could be replicated. We may even want, for
perfectly rational reasons, to say we want a Sabbath in this country,
a genuine Sabbath. Let's realize that there's a power in contemplating
the mystery of the universe, and in reminding yourself how much you
love the people closest to you, and how much more you could love the
people you haven't met yet. There is nothing you have to believe on
insufficient evidence in order to talk about that possibility.
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Rick Warren: |
Sam, do you believe human beings have a spirit?
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Sam Harris: |
There are many reasons not to believe in a naive conception of
a soul that kind of floats off the brain at death and goes somewhere
else. But I do not know.
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Rick Warren: |
Can you have spirituality without a spirit?
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Sam Harris: |
You can feel yourself to be one with the universe.
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Rick Warren: |
OK, then why can't you just take the next step? Because right
now you're talking in extremely nonrational terms.
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Sam Harris: |
There's nothing irrational about it. You can close your eyes
in meditation and lose the sense of your physical body, totally. Many
people draw from that the metaphysical conclusion that "I'm just
spirit, and I can transcend the body." That's not the only conclusion
you have to draw from that experience, and I don't think it's the best
conclusion.
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Rick Warren: |
You're more spiritual than you think. You just don't want a
boss. You don't want a God who tells you what to do.
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Sam Harris: |
I don't want to pretend to be certain about anything I'm not
certain about.
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Jon Meacham: |
Rick, last thoughts?
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Rick Warren: |
I believe in both faith and reason. The more we learn about
God, the more we understand how magnificent this universe is. There is
no contradiction to it. When I look at history, I would disagree with
Sam-- Christianity has done far more good than bad. Altruism comes out
of knowing there is more than this life, that there is a sovereign
God, that I am not God. We're both betting. He's betting his life that
he's right. I'm betting my life that Jesus was not a liar. When we
die, if he's right, I've lost nothing. If I'm right, he's lost
everything. I'm not willing to make that gamble.‡‡Classic bowing to Pascal's Wager
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