A Center for Christian Study Partner Feature

released 8/6/2024

In September 2013, Dr. Ralph Wood gave a lecture at the Center for Christian Study in Charlottesville, Virginia. The title of the lecture, “Christopher Hitchens & G. K. Chesterton: New Atheist versus Old Convert,” underscores Dr. Wood’s assertion that the two writers had completely different narratives about the nature of reality and the cosmos. Beginning with an explanation of Christopher Hitchens’s “program,” which was to promote his belief in a closed, self-referential, and purely material cosmos, Wood argues that the atheist failed on two key points. First, he was unable to support his argument that most human misery derived from religion; and second, he was unable to account for the dignity and worth of human life. By contrast, Chesterton’s writing was — and continues to be — persuasive in its argument for “final” causes in the cosmos, viewing life as a gift, and the worth of the human person.

This lecture is provided courtesy of the Center for Christian Study.

44 minutes

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What makes Christian belief so implausible to non-believers? In this Archive Feature, we revisit two conversations from Volume 98 of the Journal. First, Roger Lundin, author of Believing Again: Doubt and Faith in a Secular Age, explains how the disenchantment of the world led to new forms of doubt and self-expression. Then David Bentley Hart discusses his book Atheist Delusions: The Christian Revolution and Its Fashionable Enemies. Hart describes these delusions as a sense that the human race has been emancipated by agents of reason and tolerance. This is popularized atheism’s founding myth, he says, and it’s captivating and easy to follow. Hart’s book exposes the falseness of this revisionist and self-serving modern myth in vivid detail.

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