I wasn’t actually assuming you (or any atheist) would agree that salvation is necessary. I was more saying that theological faith is necessary for salvation, and reason cannot accomplish that on its own. It was in answer to the question “Why is faith necessary? Or what is it for?” (which I think you asked, but maybe not). You may say that saying such a thing to an unbeliever is totally worthless, but sometimes proclaiming something about the faith (like that) would awaken some supernatural realization in him. But sometimes, and most often not. Worth a try. So, nevermind.
I was raised a Calvinist, so I’m well aware of the “non-rational” dynamics that are supposed to obtain in the view of Christians. On Calvinism, particular the toxic presuppositionalist variety, the believer’s charge is not to bother reasoning with the infidel, but simply to proclaim the gospel and call the unbeliever to account. That is the obedience or unlocking or conjuring the Holy Spirit needs to do its thing on the unbeliever, who, steeped in his noetic difficulties because of the Fall, can’t really reason about anything, anyway…
I’m not casting you as a presuppositionalist Calvinist, here, but I do understand this to be an “outside of reasoning” form of appeal you are making. Fair enough.
I’m not sure what you’re saying here. If you think that reason can save a person, then your objection makes sense.
No. From a reasoning standpoint, the need for, or even coherence of the concept of salvation is very much in question. As a Christian, who began to doubt – seriously disturbed by really delving into William Lane Craig’s apologetics, thinking I was “getting reason” in the Christian manner (whoops!) – it quickly became clear that one of the central questions implicated there is “do I even need to be saved?”
That’s a pivotal question. If the answer is “of course you need to be saved, how else can you be saved!”, that would signal a reasoning failure, as it begs the question. The responses here I note tend to beg that question. I’ll grant that such begging to the question may
not be offered under the guise of an appeal to reason. As you said, it may be a supernatural something-or-other, or maybe just a tug on the guy’s emotions – his guilt, shame, fear being manipulated toward faith-restoring ends.
However, if you don’t even believe in salvation, then why would one object to saying that it can’t save a person?
It’s an unreasonable way to approach the question, that’s all. If one is to reason about Christianity’s truth, or its historical claims, or God’s existence, saying “reasoning can’t save you”, just begs the question at hand. To take heed of that is to commit an error in reasoning. I don’t think that’s some outrageous thing, but it’s worth pointing out that it does represent “turning [one’s] back on reason” to accept such premises up front.
“Bounding reason’s hands behind its back” seems to imply that we are claiming a limitation on reason when if in fact there is no such limitation. It must be proved that reason can save somebody, if in fact we are bounding reason’s hands. Otherwise, for as much as you or anyone knows, we may be treating reason exactly how it should be treated.
There’s no reason, starting into this question, to commit one way or another on the question of whether salvation is needed or meaningful at all. If there is no God, for example, there’s no salvation to be concerned about in the first place. To start with the caution that “reason can’t save you” is to make a reasoning error at the very first step. Maybe one must be saved, and maybe, further, reasoning can’t do the trick on its own. But these would be
conclusions possibly arrived at through reasoning (which is problematic for this claim in its own right, I note), not assumptions taken up as necessary understandings up front.
Now perhaps a more precise explanation of what we mean by “reason not being able to save you.” It is true that reason can play a part in one’s salvation (and perhaps one could argue that it’s an essential ingredient), but our claim is “reason alone cannot save you.” The thing that actually saves one is grace (which includes the theological virtues of faith, hope, and charity … one must have all three to be saved).
Got that. And I admit, I may misunderstand the kinds of doubts being voiced here. If the question is “Do I need reason alone to be saved, or grace (fortified, possibly, by reason) to be saved”, then I think your contributions are quite germane along those lines. I understood the doubts here to be much broader than that – going to the core of the Christian claims about the Bible’s truth and God’s existence (or maybe just God’s availability). In
that case, the legitimacy of the idea that one needs to be saved in the first place is on the table.
However, sometimes one does not accept these things because they have a false conception of them or of truths connected to them (either because they lied to themselves or because they were told something untrue). Correct reason can thus show that these things do not contrad`ict reason, and hence remove intellectual obstacles that stand in the way of a person and his acceptance of grace (including the faith). Even if one has these virtues, one can hesitate from deepening them on account of some intellectual error … but correct reasoning can repair this, and make it possible to continue to progress in them.
See if that makes any sense (maybe it doesn’t).
Yeah, that’s tricky. On Christian theism, reason gets the boot any time it’s a problem. We can say that
any proposition doesn’t contradict reason by simply invoking “mystery” or brute authority. When ‘correct reason’ is subordinated to dogma, it becomes impotent, unable to perform the function whereby it is uniquely valuable to us.
-TS