Faith in foxholes -- farfetched?
A true atheist is one who is willing to face the full consequences of
what it means to say there is no God. For example, if he or she says,
“In the absence of absolute standards, I declare that murder is wrong
in the name of common sense,” then they have made “common sense”
their absolute standard. What is in accord with “common sense” is
“right” and what isn’t is “wrong.” Or, “what is American” is “right”
and what isn’t is “wrong;” or “what is legal” is “right” and “what is
illegal” is “wrong;” or “what works” is “right” and “what is
pointless” is “wrong.”
Those three bring “God” back under different guises:
“nationalism,” “legalism” and “pragmatism.”
As Frederick Buechner says in “Wishful Thinking,” “Many an atheist
is a believer without knowing it, just as many a believer is an
atheist without knowing it. You can sincerely believe there is no God
and live as though there is. You can sincerely believe there is a God
and live as though there isn’t. So it goes.”
It seems to me that what makes it hard to be an atheist are those
feelings human beings get in the pit of our stomachs: sometimes that
there is unimaginable beauty and joy in living; other times that
there is such horror that, wacky as it seems, there must be an
absolute good ... if for no other reason than to denounce absolute
evil. I suspect that the problem of good is a major stumbling block
for atheism, just as the problem of evil is a major stumbling block
for religious faith; both must learn how to live with their doubts.
A true atheist takes humankind’s freedom very seriously. With no
God to point the way, we must find our own ways. With no God to save
the world, we must save it ourselves ... from ourselves, if nothing
else. The laughter of faith in God is like Abraham and Sarah’s
laughter when God promises them that they are in a family way.
The laughter of faith in “no God” is heard in Sartre’s story “The
Wall:” A man is threatened with death if he doesn’t betray the
whereabouts of his friend to the enemy. He refuses to do this and
sends the enemy on a wild goose chase to a place where he believes
his friend can’t possibly be. By chance, it turns out to be the very
place where his friend is. The friend is captured and executed and
the man is given his freedom. Sartre ends the story telling us that
the man laughed till he cried.
VERY REV. CANON
PETER D. HAYNES
St. Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Church
Corona del Mar
I am an a-atheist. I don’t believe they exist. It is possible to
be an agnostic, to say, “I don’t know if there is a God.” But it is
not possible to be an atheist, to say, “I know God does not exist.”
To “know” would require knowledge unavailable to any human. Is it
possible that God exists in a culture other than your own? Is it
possible that God exists in a place other than where you live? Is it
possible that God exists in a time or dimension other than your own,
or in a form unfamiliar to you? Is it possible that you have just not
heard the call of the Divine?
Of course it is possible. So someone cannot say they “know” God
doesn’t exist, only that they can’t be certain. If they are honest,
they will admit they are really agnostics. They can only claim to
“know” there is no God if they claim aspects of deity required to
give definitive answers to these questions.
Atheism then becomes a misplaced belief in self as the center of
the universe or self-theism. To them, everyone else is delusional,
only they know the truth.
As far as them being in foxholes, based on what I have said above,
if they don’t exist, they can’t be in foxholes.
However, there are people who live like there is no God. It
doesn’t take long for that kind of attitude to run out of gas when
confronted by death. That kind of living and attitude is brought into
focus when the potential of judgment is imminent. “What if?”
reverberates through their lives. What if there truly is a God? That
is not a question anyone should enter a death-defying activity
without having resolved.
Many people live accidentally. They are not intentional about
answering that question until it becomes relevant. Moments of tragedy
often wake us up to the need to find an answer.
As I searched the atheist websites, these foxhole conversions are
set aside as trivial and meaningless. They believe people will do or
believe anything to get out of a crisis. It is unfortunate that they
so easily minimize the honest soul searching being done in the
foxholes of life.
Reality is sobering. The 9/11 attacks were the most sobering thing
to happen to this country in a long time. People woke up from their
materialism, if only for a season.
The sobering nature of the foxholes has long been observed in the
military, to the point where “There are no atheists in foxholes”
became a by-word.
Representatives of those calling themselves atheists have forced
the removal of symbols of the historic place faith has had in our
culture (Just recently the symbol of the Hollywood Cross was forced
off the seal of the city of Los Angeles). Now they are doing the same
to our speech.
The chaplain should not be chastised for making a legitimate
observation and using a colloquial phrase to describe the
long-standing observations of so many of our military. Of course,
there can be people who live like there is no God in foxholes. How
long they remain that way is another question.
SENIOR ASSOCIATE
PASTOR RIC OLSEN
Harbor Trinity
Costa Mesa
In life and death situations, in times of extreme hardship and
fear and in the face of cruelty and suffering, people often turn to
God and to their faith for help and support. I suspect this was one
meaning behind the Navy chaplain’s comment that “there are no
atheists in foxholes.”
It might be especially relevant for people who profess a belief in
God, but are not actively engaged in their faith tradition until
moments of crisis. I wonder if this chaplain would also say, “There
are no atheists in hospices, at disaster sites or in intensive care
units?”
In my years as a hospice chaplain, I met many patients who faced
their declining health, increased dependency, pain management issues
and impending death without a belief in God or an afterlife. It is
not necessary for a person to believe in God in order to live with
appreciation and joy, and to face death with peace and equanimity.
This is where atheists or those who belong to nontheistic spiritual
traditions might interpret the chaplain’s remark as incorrect and
even disparaging.
In Zen, the death of self-as-ego is a lifelong practice, one that
prepares us for our death in the more conventional sense. It can be
difficult to see through our false ideas about ourselves and to work
with our fear of nonexistence. An expanded awareness of our true
selves takes time to discover and to mature.
Zen Master Hakuin (1685-1768) wrote, “If you fear death, die now!
Having died once, you won’t die again.”
The Zen tradition is also referred to as the Bodhisattva Way
because meditation inevitably puts us in touch with the suffering of
the world, which we must experience rather than escape. The Buddha
did not allow himself to be drawn into philosophical or speculative
discussions about the existence or nonexistence of a God.
The metaphor about a person who has been shot in the leg by an
arrow is sometimes used: Buddhism addresses removal of the arrow and
relief of the suffering, not discussions about who shot the arrow and
why.
Although Buddhism is often referred to as atheistic, a philosophy
or not a religious tradition, I prefer the term “nontheistic” to
refer to religious and spiritual traditions such as Confucianism,
Taoism and Buddhism. Zen is about “waking up” and it can be practiced
by anyone -- atheist, agnostic, theistic, Christian, Jew and Muslim
-- and in any place -- office, home, monastery, freeway or foxhole.
REV. DR. DEBORAH BARRETT
Zen Center of Orange County
Costa Mesa
Army: “What do you want on your dog tags, soldier: Protestant,
Catholic or Jewish?”
Atheist: “None. I’m an atheist.”
Army: “If you are wounded in battle, who should we call: a
minister, a priest or a rabbi?”
Atheist: “Call a medic!”
Along with “War is hell” and “Don’t fire until you see the whites
of their eyes,” the observation that “There are no atheists in
foxholes” is one of the most famous quotations to come out of
warfare. Rev. Bill Cummings, a Roman Catholic priest, uttered this
statement at a field service on Bataan in 1942, where the Japanese
captured my father.
Rev. Cummings was wrong. The atheism proclaimed by many a soldier
not only survives battle conditions, but also is confirmed by asking
how a loving, compassionate God of mercy could allow such barbarism
or summon men to such carnage. Many an atheist, through the
application of reason, has concluded God does not exist and his
lifelong conviction is not impacted by dangerous circumstances.
Facing unrelenting brutality, butchery and bloodbaths, there are
those in the trenches who rebel against the concept of a merciful and
righteous God. Others, experiencing the first true test of their
faith, find it wanting as their belief wilts before the insanity and
injustices of war.
Just because one is in extremis does not inevitably prompt a
conversion to theism and, conversely, a theist may crawl out of his
foxhole as an atheist.
No doubt many a nonbeliever has made a fervent bargain with a
newfound God, promising to trade faith for protection, only to allow
the commitment to lapse when the crisis passes. Theism may be
manufactured in a foxhole, but is it sustainable when the calm
follows the storm?
The Military Assn. of Atheists and Freethinkers maintains an
online list of actual atheists who are or have been in foxholes. The
Freedom From Religion Foundation erected a monument to “Atheists in
Foxholes” in 1999 at Lake Hypatia, Ala. A website called “Further
Than Atheism” challenges: “As for all those religious folks out there
sitting in their own foxholes, they would do well to reconsider their
prayerful ways. After all, if their nightly prayers to God were
really effective, they would never have ended up sitting in foxholes
in the first place.”
Atheists have manned the battlements as honorably and valorously
as their religious comrades in arms. Theism is not a prerequisite for
courage, heroism or patriotism. Nonbelievers have spilled their blood
in freedom’s cause and sacrificed their lives for their country. The
enemy does not inquire into a soldier’s spiritual beliefs before
taking aim. It is condescending, and factually false, to claim that
the convictions of atheists will not stand up to enemy shelling. If
atheists do call out to God, it is more a manifestation of
desperation than proof of conversion.
RABBI MARK S. MILLER
Temple Bat Yam
Newport Beach
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.