Features:
Profile: William Lane Craig
He’s been dubbed the Christian
apologist who puts the fear of God
into leading atheists. So what’s so
scary about William Lane Craig?
Type ‘William Lane Craig’ into
Google and you find some
surprisingly varied views. For
example, you’ll find Rick Warren
tweeting about his ‘friend’ for whom
he has written a recent foreword, and
other Christian leaders praising an
academic who combines intellect with
humility. On the other hand, you may
come across Richard Dawkins
labelling him a ‘ponderous buffoon’
along with other commentators on his
atheist website who describe Craig in
even more colourful terms.
So what is it about one American
philosophy professor that inspires
such divergent views? Craig is
arguably the best known defender of
the intellectual case for Christianity in
the world today. As a philosopher, his
work is published in academic
journals and books. As a popular
apologist for the existence of God, his
high-profile debates with leading
atheists have been viewed by
hundreds of thousands around the
world. His style is polished,
systematic and devastatingly
thorough.
To his fans he is the commanderin-
chief of a resistance movement
against the populist New Atheism –
the man who can floor Goliaths such
as Christopher Hitchens and Sam
Harris. To his detractors, he is a
wordsmith and a showman – a
professional debater who, to quote
Richard Dawkins, ‘brandishes
impressive-sounding syllogisms from
Logic 101 to bamboozle his faithhead
audience’.
To me, he comes across as sincere,
humble and somewhat bemused by
the opinions that are expressed about
him online. Is he affected by the
words that some atheists write about
him? Laughing, he responds: ‘It
doesn’t get to me because I don’t read
it. I am in blissful ignorance of what
these folks are saying about me.’
So why is Richard Dawkins even
bothering to comment on William
Lane Craig? It is because he has
refused multiple invitations to debate
Craig when he comes to the UK this
October. They met once briefly in a
panel debate in Mexico in 2010, an
encounter that led to those online
comments. Craig’s supporters (and
many of his opponents) would like to
see a more substantive one-on-one
debate, but Dawkins has resolutely
refused to face the philosopher again.
To Craig, it is a confirmation that
‘New Atheism’ is more bluster than
substance. ‘I would describe it as a pop
culture movement, rather than a
serious intellectual one. But as pop
culture I do take it very seriously. They
have the momentum, and it’s very
important that we as Christians expose
it for the superficiality that it is.’
Nonetheless, a turn of events seems
to suggest that it’s not just Dawkins
who is unwilling to have his arguments
against God put to the test.
Dawkins has refused to debate
you. So has atheist philosopher
AC Grayling. Now the British
Humanist Association president,
Polly Toynbee, has just pulled out of
debating you, having initially agreed.
Why aren’t these leading atheist
voices in the UK stepping up?
I have a hunch that these folks must be
talking among themselves, and I say
that not simply because of this pattern
of withdrawal and refusal, but from a
remark that Sam Harris made in my
debate with him recently. He opened
his speech saying that I was ‘the one
Christian apologist who seems to have
put the fear of God into many of my
fellow atheists’. My ears pricked up and
I thought, ‘That’s interesting. He’s been
talking to other people about this,
evidently.’ I have a hunch that some of
these folks have come to the conclusion
that it just isn’t profitable for them to
engage in this kind of debate.
You’ll be visiting Oxford on the tour,
the hometown of Richard Dawkins.
Why won’t the world’s best known
atheist debate you there?
I have information from someone who
is in a position to know that the reason
Dawkins doesn’t want to engage in a
debate is really nothing to do with me.
Richard Dawkins was smarting so
badly from the fact that your own UK
apologist John Lennox took him to the
[cleaners] that he simply doesn’t want
to engage in these kinds of encounters
any longer. He was embarrassed by his
performance in the Lennox debates,
and so he doesn’t want to get into that
position again.
How did your faith journey begin?
I’ve always had a God-consciousness.
When I looked out at the universe
and the stars at night as a young boy,
I sensed that there had to be some
sort of a creator that brought all of
this into existence, but God was a
distant blur to me. When I became a
teenager I went through a period of
deep despair, asking questions about
the absurdity of life, and whether we
are doomed to death. Then I met a
girl who was a radiant Christian, and
she told me that God loved me. It
staggered me that the God of the
universe could love me. That lit a fire,
which ultimately led to my making a
personal commitment to Christ.
At that stage you didn’t have the
wealth of knowledge you have
now. What did you need then to
make a considered decision?
I read the New Testament from cover
to cover, and the life and teaching of
Jesus had the ring of truth. There was
a wisdom and authenticity about it,
and I found myself attracted to Jesus
of Nazareth. I never really doubted
him, but the existential question
remained – would I give my life to
this person?
It’s a question many people
are confronted with. If you are
convinced by the arguments, what
brings that step of faith?
Theologically speaking, it is a work of
the Holy Spirit. As I read the
teachings of Jesus, the Holy Spirit of
God was bearing testimony with my
spirit. You either yield to the drawing
of the witness of the Spirit, or you
close your heart on him.
Your Kalam Cosmological
Argument is among a number you
use to show evidence for God.
You say the Big Bang is evidence
that God created the universe. But
if the science changes, does the
evidence for God disappear too?
The way that we know Christianity is
true is through the witness of the
Holy Spirit. So it’s important to say
that these arguments are not the basis
for Christian faith, but are rather
confirmations of what the Holy Spirit
tells us independently.
However, I would say that the
evidence for the fact the universe had
a beginning has historically been
supported by philosophical arguments
going back to the third century. Only
in the late 20th century has scientific
evidence emerged. When I began
working on the Kalam argument at
university, I began looking at
contemporary cosmology for some
confirmation of this conclusion, and I
was stunned to discover how
powerful the empirical evidence is for
the beginning of the universe at the
Big Bang.
But even if the scientific evidence
were to evaporate, you still have the
philosophical arguments.
Recently Stephen Hawking
claimed that God is redundant as
an explanation for the universe.
He’s an eminent scientist and
you’re not, so what right have you
to disagree with him?
I would not presume as a nonphysicist
to criticise Professor
Hawking’s science. When it comes to
physics, he is the teacher and I am the
pupil. But by the same token, when
Professor Hawking begins to draw
philosophical and theological
conclusions as a result of his work,
then he has entered into my area of
specialisation and he needs to be
patient of correction when he makes a
misstep. His own model implies an
absolute beginning of the universe. It
is in the realm of philosophy and
metaphysics that I think he makes his
mistakes when he thinks that it
doesn’t require the existence of a
transcendent cause to bring the
universe into being.
The average Christian does not
have your academic ability. Where
should the ordinary person start
when chatting with their nonbelieving
friend over the garden
fence or in the pub?
It’s important to understand that we
don’t lead with apologetic arguments.
With most people you simply
share with them what Christ
means to you, how he’s
changed your life and the
difference that’s made. You
only recur to arguments and
evidence if the unbeliever has
questions or objections.
Then, if the person asks a
question and you don’t
know the answer, be honest
and say ‘That’s a really good
question – I don’t know, but
I’ll look into it. Then let’s get back
together and talk some more.’
You’ve debated leading atheists
all over the world. What is your
ultimate hope in participating in
these events?
Well, one hope is to help to reshape
Western culture, which has become
deeply secularised, so that
Christianity becomes an intellectual
option again. I hope especially to
reach out to British students seeking
for truth and to show that making a
commitment to Christ is not a
delusion, but perfectly in step with
the dictates of reason.
Is this a biblical approach to
evangelism?
I think so, especially in Acts. Paul
would argue from the scriptures with
his Jewish brethren that Jesus was the
Messiah. When dealing with a Gentile
audience he would present reasons
from nature and conscience, moral
and cosmological arguments, and
appeal to the eyewitness testimony of
Jesus’ resurrection. Paul would do
things like rent the Hall of Tyrannus
and hold daily lectures there to argue
and discuss with anybody who wanted
to come. So I see myself as very much
following the model of Paul.
Your academic debates are
quite rigorous, but you also
debate popular atheists such as
Christopher Hitchens, who tend to
use a lot more rhetoric.
I’m afraid I don’t enjoy those debates
with journalists and New Atheists as
much because they are, frankly, so
unsubstantive. It’s usually just them
making appeals to the audience.
When I did my last UK speaking
and debating tour, in three out of the
four debates my opponents brought
up George Bush as one of
the most potent objections
to the truth of Christianity.
I ask myself, ‘How does
George Bush claiming to be
a Christian show that God
doesn’t exist or Jesus didn’t
rise from the dead?’ It’s just
so obviously an attempt to
push the hot buttons of
those in the audience.
One atheist blog reported
that you ‘Spanked Hitchens like a
foolish child’. The debate format
is adversarial – winners and
losers. Is that a danger?
I don’t think there is a danger from
my point of view because I never
attack the other person. I treated
Christopher Hitchens with utmost
respect in that debate, and I never
use derogatory or personal attacks.
I’m interested in showing that the
case for Christian theism is better
than the case that my opponent is
defending.
How do you prepare for the
debates spiritually? Is much
prayer involved?
Yes, we do pray for those I debate
against, and my wife prays for me,
for which I’m very grateful. I say the
secret of my success that my
opponents don’t understand is that I
have a praying wife. I try to keep my
life clean so that the Holy Spirit can
speak through me. Spiritual
preparation is important too.
The Internet is rife with
discussions between atheists and
Christians that seem to be about
winning an argument.
The commission that Jesus has given
to his followers is that we should
win people, not arguments. Some
people have sincere questions and
objections to be dealt with, but they
are not an end in themselves. They
are a means by which we hope to
reach people.
Are local churches failing young
people by not preparing them for
the tough questions they run into
at university?
I think we are failing them. If we
simply read our children Bible stories
and give them entertainment and
emotional worship experiences, then
we are leaving them unprepared for
the tremendous intellectual challenges
that they will encounter in secondary
school and university. I think it is vital
that from an early age Christian
parents teach their children to think
‘Christianly’ about the world, and to
articulate and defend what we as
Christians believe.
Do you see people becoming
Christians through your ministry?
We really do. It happens when I speak
on a university campus…people will
register commitments through
comment cards at the meetings, and
there are also the wonderful emails
that we receive weekly from people
all around the world saying ‘Thank
you, thank you, thank you, this has
transformed my life.’
Added to that is the effect that this
has had in the lives of people who are
Christian believers. Once they become
confident that this is really the truth,
it has an energising effect on them
that makes them want to share the
gospel. It gives them a zeal for God
and a desire to read his word and
know him.
*
The Reasonable Faith Tour
begins in London on 17th
October with a Does God Exist?
debate with atheist philosopher
Stephen Law. Craig will appear alongside John
Lennox, Gary Habermas and
Peter J Williams for The
Bethinking Apologetics Day
Conference in London on 22nd
October.
Other events and debates take
place in Cambridge, Oxford,
Birmingham, Southampton and
Manchester.
Info
bethinking.org/craig
Tickets
premier.org.uk/craig