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The following program is recorded
content created by the Truth Network. It's Matt Slick Live! Matt is
the founder and president of the Christian Apologetics Research
Ministry, found online at karm.org. When you have questions about
Bible doctrines, turn to Matt Slick Live for answers. Taking
your calls and responding to your questions at 877-207-2276.
Here's Matt Slick. Matt Slick Alright, everyone,
welcome to the show, and I hope you want to continue to listen.
No matter what happens. And so may the Lord bless you.
Hey, if you want to give me a call as usual, all I have to do is
dial 877-207-2276. Today's date is, let's see, September
26th, 2024. And hopefully we'll have a good
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we have and what we can do. And that's it. All right. Now,
why don't we just do this, just jump right on the air. Let's
get to Jermaine from California. Jermaine, welcome. You're on
the air. I'm actually signing up for some
of your classes so I can hopefully help support the ministry. I
just want to say it publicly. Everything helps. We appreciate
that. I want to say it publicly so
I'm committed. My question had to do with rebuking
versus resisting. There's a family member of mine
who's really kind of into the charismatic stuff, and he's a
good brother, but he's teaching a youth class, and we're a little
concerned with some of the stuff he's into. He means well, but
he left a message in our little personal group chat about how
we should rebuke the devil. me and some others who lean a
little bit more on what the Bible actually says. I don't see that
in scripture. If anything, I see resist the devil, but I don't
see anything about trying to rebuke and like, quote unquote,
take on Satan. So I just kind of wanted to get
some of your advice on how to best address that situation.
Right. All right. When people rebuke
Satan, what they're doing is talking to him. So they will
address him personally, which means in their prayers, they're
praying to Satan. They're actually praying to him
and talking to him and telling him how things are supposed to
be. Don't do that. That's never the case in the scriptures. Whenever
Satan is addressed, he's there in person. So in Jude 1.9, Michael,
the archangel, rebuked the devil for disputing over the body of
Christ. And when Satan and Jesus were there,
Jesus rebuked him. This is one-to-one, this is in
person. Aside from that, basically, to resist Satan is to, in our
prayer to God, we ask him to work. We ask him to rebuke the
evil one. We ask him to bind the evil one.
and we resist the evil one in our prayers, in our dedication
to Christ, in various ways. But the only time I would ever
address the devil is if somehow, someway, he actually appeared
in front of me. Then it's not a prayer too, it's
an address. So your friend, by rebuking the
devil, is praying to the devil. And he has to be very careful,
okay? Okay, yeah, that actually makes a lot of sense. Yeah. Yeah. And so versus resisting the devil,
um, keeping notes. So there are, you know, within
the charismatic movement, what they'll often do, and I've heard
them do it. They start praying to the devil. Oh, don't lie to
me. I come before you. I rebuke you. And they're praying
to the devil. And I just pointed out, you realize
you're praying to Satan. We're addressing him. That's
what a prayer is. You address God. You're praying
to the devil. You're shocked. I think that's
what you're doing. And you think that's what's biblical?
Where does it say that? Where? Ever in the scriptures.
It's not there. So the charismatic movement is
full of people who, now I'm charismatic, and I'm a continuationist, but
I'm not into this wacko stuff. But a lot of that hyper-charismatic
stuff, that stupidity, they'll talk to Satan. You gotta sleep
with your mouth closed because Satan can get in to your mouth.
I mean, you can be demon-possessed while you're a Christian. And
they can do some really strange, weird stuff as well. So you gotta
watch out for that with your friend or whoever else was saying
all that. So in James, where it mentions submitting yourself
to God and resist the devil, By submitting ourselves to God,
that's through prayer and obedience to what's already written in
the word. That's how I read that. And our hearts. Prayer, our mind,
our hearts, our actions. Yes. And we submit to the Lord
and we do what he wants, which can be difficult sometimes. But that's what it is. So the
devil will resist us. I mean, the devil will flee.
That's what the Bible says, James 4, 7. Yeah. And also 1 Peter 5, 8 through
9, you know, be sober minded and the devil prowls around looking
for something to devour. Resist him. Stand firm in your
faith. So we were to resist him by focusing on Christ. We're
not to rebuke him by focusing on him. Big difference. All right. Okay. And finally,
why did Michael even not rebuke the devil? Well, in, I'll go
there, in Jude 9, let me do this right here, let me get this green
going right there so people can see it. In Jude 9, this is where
we see this, we know it's just Jude 9, there's no second chapter.
But Michael the archangel, when he disputed with the devil and
argued about the body of Moses, did not dare pronounce against
him a railing judgment, but said, the Lord rebuke you. This is
really interesting because in the presence there, he did not
rebuke him of his own accord or authority, but that the Lord
himself would be the one who would rebuke him. So he said,
in the Lord rebuke you. And this, so what he, what Michael
did was give the glory and the power to the, to God. And the
only way he communicated with the devil was because he was
right there. They were, they were one-on-one. Now, I don't know if I answered
your question though, cause I'm not sure I understood what your question
was. Your last one. No, um, actually that, that answers
it perfectly. I just, you pretty much said if it, if, if it's
one-on-one. I was trying to make the point
to my relative that it's, you know, no offense, but he wasn't
that important for, if the devil's not omnipresent, it seems like
he would be after a world leader or someone who has worldwide
influence and not you in your bedroom who's not really, you
know, talking to anybody. So that's the point I was trying
to make. So yeah, you actually answered it well, so thank you.
Okay. Well, praise God, man. God bless.
Good. Got anything else? All right.
No, I think you covered all of it. So talk to you next time.
Thank you very much. Okay, man. God bless All right,
well, we have nobody waiting right now. If you want to give
me a call, we have wide open lines, 877-207-2276. And man, I got a lot of stuff going
on here in emails. So I was thinking about getting
into some of the emails right now and discuss some of the stuff
that was there. Might as well. Let's see if we can do this.
I am a Christian. but really struggle with the thoughts uh...
it's unfair that every human is born into sin uh... when it
was Eve who disobeyed God and brought sin into the world, not
me well let's go through this, there's more in the email so
first of all it was not Eve who brought sin into the world, it
was Adam Eve sinned first but the Bible clearly tells us in
Romans 5.12 that sin entered the world through one man, and
that is Adam. So that's just a theological
correction there. And the Christian says that she
struggles with the thought that it's unfair, so to speak, that
every human is born into sin when it was, you know, now we
have just a question, it was Adam who did this. Okay. Generally,
when people talk about this, there's a couple ways to tackle
it. And one is, what do you think about Jesus dying for our sins? Was that unfair? And yeah, it
was unfair, but we received the benefit from it. So I ask him,
do you think that is wrong because of that unfairness? It was wrong
for Jesus to die for us. Now that gets into some really
interesting questions and thoughts we can get into. to what degree,
what kind of wrong, and some things like that. But I say,
look, if you want to say that you can accept and trust in what
Christ did for us because he represented us, that's what it
says. He took our place, Isaiah 53. He bore our sins, 1 Peter 2.24.
And so if that's the case, then, and he's called the last Adam
in 1 Corinthians 15.45. If he is the last Adam, and you
accept him representing us, why would you reject the first Adam
representing us? This is what the Bible is teaching.
Alright? So, if we were to go, for example, to Romans 5.18,
and it says there very clearly, it says, So then, as through
one transgression there resulted condemnation to all men. So that
means that when Adam sinned, that everybody fell. Everybody
was. And we know that from the next
verse, Romans 5.19. For as through the one man's
disobedience the many were made sinners. and were made sinners
in the Greek. What I'm talking about there
is what's called the aorist passive indicative. The aorist passive
indicative. What that means is the aorist
is past tense. Passive means it happens to them.
They didn't do it themselves. And indicative means it's a fact.
So through the one man's disobedience, the many were made sinners. So
that's just how it was. And it says, even so through
the obedience of the one, the many will be made righteous. So when we look at this, we see
that, there's some really good theology in here. We see that
what Adam did resulted in us being made sinners. That's Romans
5.19, but the previous verse, verse 18, so then that's through
one transgression, there resulted condemnation to all men. Even
so through an act of righteousness, there resulted justification
of life to all men. So what we're seeing here is
that Adam's work resulted in condemnation to everybody, and
Christ's work resulted in justification of life to all men. Now, the
second all can't be every individual who ever lived. So what Paul
does is he uses the word all in verse 18, and the word the
many in verse 19 to refer to two different groups. All is
the first everybody group, and the second all is a limited group. And then in verse 19, the first
the many is everybody, and the second the many is not everybody.
That's right there in scripture. I've shown people this. They
go, that's interesting, never saw that before. So anyway, we get
back to the email, maybe after the break, and we discuss a little
bit further. This is just called Biblical
Theology, and a lot of people don't know about it. And we'll
talk about it a little bit more. If you want, give me a call,
877-207-2276. We'll be right back. It's Matt Slick Live! Taking
your calls at 877-207-2276. Here's Matt Slick. but I like to just get up in
front of a group of people and just start teaching and just
slowly put things together. And what I'm thinking about doing
is working up a PowerPoint slideshow to do all of that, like 50, 70
slides, and then teach it and put it up as a video, among other
things. And boy, that reminds me, we
need a lot of video editing help and some people who are good
at that, who are qualified to do that kind of thing. If you
know what trained me, let me know, or do it yourself. We'd
love to have that help. All right, so back to this email. And so, why is it that we're
born in sin nature? The reason Adam was able to represent
us is because Jesus was able to represent us. Adam is not
the standard of righteousness, but Jesus is. And so in order
for Christ to represent us on the cross, this doctrine of federal
headship had to be in place. Federal headship is a teaching
that the male, not the female, represents a descendant. It's
very simple. And I've taught on it many, many,
many times. And so Adam represented us just
as Jesus represented us. So if people say it's not fair,
I get the sentiment. Well, in a sense, I could say,
well, maybe it's not. But is it? Now, what's really
good in this email is that Jennifer here, she says, I'm not the one
to say what is fair. Only God. Now, that was brilliant. That was very good. Because that
is the standard of righteousness. Is God not ourselves? He's the
standard of fairness. So whatever he does is always
right. Now, about God being fair. He's always fair. more or less. Now, what I mean by that is I
don't want God to be fair to me. I don't want fairness. I want grace. I do not want God
to treat me with fairness, okay? I'm not interested in that. Because
that would mean that I would get treatment, a behavior, based
on what God thinks is fair and right on me. That scares me. Because what's fair and what's
right for me is to be damned. I don't want that. I don't want
that kind of fairness. I want the mercy from God. I
want that grace from God. See, justice, mercy, and grace,
they're interesting. So let's listen to governors. Who, where, what? Oh, that's
on the hurricane, a state of emergency. Which state? Give
me some information. I'll mention it. So here's an illustration
of something. is that fairness can be illustrated
by stealing a bicycle. So let's say a person comes over
and steals your bike. And you catch that person, and
that person goes to jail. That's justice. Mercy is when
the person steals your bike, you catch him, but you don't
punish him. You just let him go. That's mercy.
He does not get what he deserves. Grace. So he steals your bike,
you catch him. You do not punish him. And you
also give him money, let's just say, to help him out. That's
grace, getting what he doesn't deserve. So justice is getting
what you deserve. Mercy is not getting what you
deserve, but grace is getting what you don't deserve in a positive
way. So where's fairness sit in here?
Fairness would be with justice. Well, it's fair that I, or the
person that you, whatever, it's fair that you take that person
to jail, that you call the cops, they go to jail, that's fair,
right? So is mercy fair? Now, this is an interesting question,
because if you want fairness, then can we have mercy at the
same time? Because if we define fairness as that which is a requirement,
as an equal standard among other people, and that everybody gets
what's equal and proper, then it would be proper that such
a person not receive mercy. So if we want God to be fair,
then what we're saying is we don't want Him to show mercy
or grace. And we don't want that. We want
him to be merciful and gracious. That would mean then that there's
a sense in which God is not fair. But we don't mean it in a negative
way that he's not fair because he treats us badly. No, he's
not fair because he treats us well. He treats us favorably. So some people think that when
they accuse God of not being fair, they're accusing him of
being wrong. But they don't understand that if they want God to be fair,
then they will get judgment. So as Jennifer rightly said,
she's not the one to say what is fair. And that's a very good
comment, and it's a very good statement. She is not, and nor
am I, the one who says what is fair or what's right, what's
good, what's bad. This is one of the things I'll ask atheists
when I debate them, discuss things with them. I'll say, because
I'll say God is wrong for doing whatever it is. I'll say, what
standard do you have by which you judge God? What standard
of morality do you have by which you can say what is right and
what is wrong and what God ought to do and what He ought not to
do? If you don't have a universal standard that you can tell me
and convince me or show me or give a rational reason why it
is the right standard, then you just don't have any right to
complain. You just don't like something
and that doesn't mean it's true or false. So this is one of the
basics that we as Christians need to understand that fairness
is not something we want. It's not. I want God's grace. I want His mercy. Alright, if
you want to give me a call, all you have to do is dial 877-207-2276. We have nobody waiting right
now, so let me get to another question. Why does Paul say women
can't speak in the churches when Paul says they can prophesy in
church? That's a good question. So the context of not speaking
in church, what the commentators and researchers that I've read
propose as one of the reasons is in 1 Corinthians, I believe
it's 1 Corinthians 11. Let me get to there. Excuse me. Hold
on to coffee. here we go, and so he says he
does not permit a woman to speak but to remain quiet, this is
1 Corinthians 14, for women are to keep silent in the churches
for they are not permitted to speak but are subject to themselves,
or too subject to themselves, just as the law says. So this
is a tough one, because we don't know exactly what was going on
when this was said. The next verse kind of gives
us a clue, though. If they desire to learn anything,
let them ask their own husbands at home, for it's improper for
a woman to speak in church. Wow, that seems pretty chauvinistic. A woman can't even speak in church.
They think what was going on was in the culture of the time
that when they would have meetings where males and females would
be gathered, that in that culture, women were not to speak up. Because
if they did, it was in a meeting. Let me put this back up. In a
synagogue, church kind of a meeting. In the culture. If a woman were
to raise her voice, she was then speaking without her husband.
And he was not being the mediator or the guard over her, because
that's how it was back then. Women could get away with a lot
of stuff, but they were to be in submission to the family relationship
and the headship of the husband. And to speak overly like that
was to reject that and to challenge that. And so it wasn't proper
for them to speak, and that seems to be the context. Hold on. We'll
be right back after these messages. We have nobody waiting. Give
me a call, 877-207-2276. We'll be right back. Thank you. It's Matt Slick live,
taking your calls at 877-207-2276. Here's Matt Slick. Hi, everybody. Welcome back to
the show. If you want to give me a call, 877-207-2276. We have
nobody waiting. We only had one call today. It's
very unusual. We usually get quite a few. So if you want to
call me, like I said, the number is 877. It's toll free. 877-207-2276. And you can also send me an email
if you have a comment or a question. And if you can do that, you can
just send it to info at karm.org. Info at karm.org. And put a subject line, radio
comment or radio question. Got a little distracted there.
All right. Yeah. It's exciting. Okay, whatever.
Man, I've got so many things going on. This is really interesting.
People email me interesting stuff. What about my novel I just re-released? What do you think about that?
All right. So I hope I answered this sufficiently,
why at 1 Corinthians 14, when it talks about a woman, 1 Corinthians
14, a woman not being allowed to speak in the church, but yet
they can prophesy. So that's how they seem to harmonize,
the commentators I've read, because it is a tough passage. and it
does seem to be like that because of the when the women gained
their so to speak privilege uh... by the arrival of christianity
one of the theories is because women were in the back of the
church and the men were in the front the women would often stand
up and speak and address what was going on and that was very
improper uh... culturally very improper not
to do that And if they want to learn, they need to ask their
husbands, and not be disruptive, and not usurp the teaching and
authority position of their husbands. That was the main idea. That's
what I leaned towards of that, and women can prophesy. Now I
just want to say this though, that back in seminary, I graduated
in 91. We had a whole week, and I've
mentioned this many times before, we had a whole week where the
classes were opened up to the public. And so anybody outside
could just come into the classes if there was room. And they could
take the same classes that we students were taking. It was
fun. I liked it. And one of the deals that they had was they
flew in a woman. who was very knowledgeable about
what women can do in the church. And I remember this very clearly.
I actually was supposed to pick her up at the airport and then
forgot. And I really apologized profusely to her. She was very
gracious, very kind to me. And I apologized so many times.
She says it happens, you know. And so, nevertheless, She had
this class at the seminary during hours when the students were
there, and 95% of the students were male. Some women would be
there taking a master's in theology, and they wanted to learn. That
was fine, no problem. But this class, where it was
for women to be used in the church and what they can do, This class
was packed full of women and I was the only male. I was the
only man in it. And that really upset me. That
taught me something because it taught me that the men aren't
interested in really knowing what women can do. They've got
to be in their place. And I didn't like that because women are undervalued
and underappreciated in the church. They can do anything a man can
do except be in a position of spiritual authority over men,
and that can't happen. That's what it says. This reminds
me of something else. When I was in the Philippines
a few years ago, we met with a bunch of pastors. I did some
teaching here and there, and other pastors I was with did
some preaching and teaching. And pastors from the local areas
of the Philippines drove in, rode their motorcycles, walked
in. And we had a big time of fellowship
and teaching and Q&A, and it was really a blessing. The women
are the ones I noticed the most because the women were the ones
in that culture who made the meeting work well. They were
the ones who were bringing food and arranging things that were
so smooth and so good that everything else worked great. And they cooked,
they gave the food to us, they even cleaned up afterwards. And
I was watching. I had to speak and others had
to speak, but I noticed the women, they just would mingle in and
out of the men, not getting in their way, and they would take
the food away and they would help them. And it made everything great. But
it bothered me that nobody thanked them, and nobody recognized what
they were doing. And so when we were kind of officially
done with the meeting, that's when the women were eating. After
everything was done for the men, I'm like, oh, man. So I walked
back through a door where they were coming in and out of. And
I still remember this. They were all sitting down eating, like, I
don't know, eight or nine or 10 of them, all sitting down.
And one immediately got up and said, in English, because they
speak really good English over there, do you need anything?
I said, no, no, no, no, no, no. I said, I wanted to thank you,
each one of you, for what you did and how you made everything
so great. And I said, you need to be appreciated,
and I appreciate you. And they were so thankful. But
nobody would do that. Nobody else came in to do that.
I guess that's part of their culture. Anyway, it's a concern
and, um, we need to value our women in church. We really do. All right, let's get to Russ
from Detroit, Michigan rush. Russ, excuse me. Welcome. You're on the air. Uh, thank
you. And, uh, I appreciate you giving
me the time here. Um, I was listening to, was with Canadian atheist. I
don't remember. Yeah. It doesn't ring a bell,
but you don't remember. Nah. Okay. Oh, there was some, you,
you in that debate, it was a really good debate, I thought. Um, and
it got to some points that I was always interested in and it didn't
really resolve because you know how debates go, they wander around
and there were a few questions I'd have asked at a certain point
in there. And so, And full disclosure here,
I'm an atheist. I don't know if that's in your
call screen thing. Well, wait, wait, wait. Now you
got me confused. You said the debate was really good and you're
an atheist. So was it good because he won or because I did or you
thought it was good all over? I just thought it was good all
over because of the way you guys let each other talk. When there
was unresolvable things that he couldn't resolve, he just
admitted it. When there were things that you
couldn't resolve, It's not that you couldn't resolve
it. You went right back to, well, that's faith. And I go, well,
that's as honest as you can get. And so it was, yeah, there was
no yelling going on or anything like that. Nobody was trying
to get one up on one another. It was just really refreshing.
Okay, well, that's nice. I'm glad that's the case. Okay.
Yeah. And so I guess my question goes
back to the definition of God. And I believe in a necessary
metaphysical precondition for all dependent facts. I think
that's intuitive. I think there is some kind of
singular thing that all distinctions can come from, you know? But I can't be brought to the
conclusion that it's a mind with a will, as our experience of
minds in like both their abstract and their concrete manifestations
are dependent on preexisting distinctions. And I know this
is probably an argument you've heard before because you've been
around the block a few times. And so it never really got into
resolving that for me because I feel the complex biology of
a brain is the concrete and that's a preexisting, um, distinct bunch
of distinct things coming together. And even the recognition of multiple
distinct stimulus, to form distinct thoughts, one from another, causes
the emergence of a mind. And that's the abstract. I mean,
a single stimulus is merely existence, not thought. So how can a God
have a mind with a will? Well, there's so many things
you've said, and how can a God have a mind with a will? By definition,
he could if he could. And then we get into the issue
of what's necessary preconditions for intelligibility. Is it a
personal or impersonal? And there are problems with your
position. I don't know if I went over in
that debate. Can I show you a problem? If
I'm understanding you properly, what I think is a problem with
your position. Is that okay if I try? Oh yeah, absolutely. I can tell you how you answered
that in the debate to kind of refresh your mind. Alright, go
ahead then, tell me. Would you like me to do that?
Sure. You said something along the lines of mind and not form,
from anything else than a mind, kind of a like-begets-like argument. But for me, the mind you're talking
about is a disembodied mind, it's a pure abstract alone, because
I don't think anybody claims that God has biology except when
he manifested, you know, in Jesus. And so I just think that kind
of like begets like, if I understood your answer, is just a fallacy,
a causal fallacy. It's a hasty generalization and
appeal to probability. Whoa, man. Oh, I like talking
to you. I really don't have much more
to add on to that. So you go. Well, we could have
some good conversations, you know, maybe we should exchange
emails and some stuff like that, because I can tell, you know,
some stuff. Well, so then, OK, are you a materialist or or what? I am kind of a materialist, but
I believe in abstract. I believe the material came together
kind of like molecules, H2O comes together to make lead. Hold on,
we've got a break. I'm sorry to interrupt you, but we've got
a break. I've got to put you on pause here. Sorry. Hold on.
Hey folks, we'll be right back after these messages. Please
stay tuned, and hopefully it'll get interesting, and I'll show
you some stuff, hopefully. We'll be right back. It's Matt Slick live, taking
your calls at 877-207-2276. Here's Matt Slick. All right,
welcome back to the show. Let's get back on with Russ from
Detroit. Russ, you still there? Yes, I am still there. You know,
I only have about five more minutes. I'm doing dinner tonight, but
we can get as far as we can and I can call back later, too. Sure,
no problem. Tomorrow or something. All right,
so if you're a materialist, then the presupposition that you would
have, and I think you've already stated, is that there is a unifying
and originating principle of the universe, but that unifying
and originating principle would have to be impersonal, correct?
That's my belief, yes. Okay. Which then means, or seems
to necessitate, that you affirm materialism or naturalism, that
all things operate under the requirements of physics, chemistry,
all those laws, including the ones we don't know about yet,
right? Not quite. I would say the majority of it,
but I do believe in that thing called emergence, which is very
slippery to physics right now. Emergent properties are things
that are concomitant with essential properties. When you have an
essence that has essential properties, and without it, it can't be that
essence. And emergent properties, accidental properties, they can't. And thus my protest that a mind
seems to be one of those things. Well, it's certainly possible.
It's called an emergent property, but there's a problem. Because
what you're saying, then, is that the physical brain is restricted
to the laws of chemistry. It cannot operate outside of
them. You know, in chemistry, motion,
matter, physics, all that stuff, that combination of stuff, represented
by all this, say, chemistry. Which means, then, that you're...
Kind of. Kind of. Well, it... Well, go ahead. Go
ahead. Unless you want to say that the physical brain operates
on a means that is not restricted to bio neurochemistry if you
say that you have a problem. I believe it gets stimuluses
that are abstract that result in biochemistry, so it's kind
of a feeding mechanism, you know? Well, if you say it is an abstract,
you talk about abstract entities. Abstract entities are conceptual,
because of a transcendental necessity, like a transcendental obscuriness
or chariness. These are abstractions that occur
only in the mind. They're not properties of the physical universe.
That's not the abstraction I'm talking about, though. I'm talking about
the abstraction of thought, in that a thought, which is an abstract,
non-concrete, it can affect the mind. So I believe there is a
connection. Absolutely, and we agree. That
occurs both in the theories called substance dualism and property
dualism. All right, so the issue here is if the principle of the
universe is unifying and immaterial, I don't want to say that, if
it's just impersonal, just leave it there for now. If it's impersonal,
then it's restricted to the natural laws of the physical universe.
And you're saying there's an ultimate, which is a natural ultimate,
whatever that is. But this implies also that the
physical brain can't exceed what that is. The physical brain is
operating under the laws of chemistry, etc. The question and the problem
here is severe with this problem. Because if one chemical state
necessarily leads to another chemical state in the brain,
how does it produce proper logical inference? That's a question.
How does one chemical estate produce this? And if you were
to say, this is my debate with Dilahanti, that he couldn't answer
this question, this challenge, because no matter what he said,
or I'm being very polite with you, and you're a nice guy, I
like you, but I could say, no matter what you say now, I could
just say, your brain chemicals are making you say that. It doesn't
mean it's true. It doesn't mean it's false. Yeah,
I'm fizzing. Yeah, I'm aware of the argument, like from Sai
Tendulkar, I'm brain-phys. I know Sai, he's a good guy.
The thing about it is, I don't see how that follows from the
fact that I believe in an ordered universe, which means that my
brain came together in a certain, it didn't come together in a
chaotic way. It came together in an ordered
way, and it intrinsically has order, and so it will intrinsically
um, uh, project order in the way that it views things. It's
like my projections of my brain came together for kind of a survival. And so I will attract the things
and I will repel things. And that goes right down to that,
the, to the atomic. And so it just seems like it's
a more complex mechanism of attraction and repulsion or survival. It seems intrinsic, not fizz. It seems ordered. Your brain
chemistry made you say all that. It's just chemical reactions.
I know, but my brain chemistry is ordered from that original
thing. You don't know if it's ordered,
because it's just brain chemistry saying it's ordered. You don't
know if it is. The problem with your position... Well, I have
to... We both have to. Nope. I'm sorry. Don't we don't have
both have to from your position from that position. It's self
refuting. And the reason is, is because that position casts
doubt on your own ability to justify reason or to be reasonable,
because it means it's nothing more than ultimately nothing
more than brain chemistry. But you can't. No atheist I've
ever talked to. And there doesn't seem to be
any explanation on how brain chemistry, necessary chemical
reactions, produce proper logical inference, or rationality, or
various things like this. And the only way to verify truth
values is to get into the transcendentals, which are surpassing our minds,
and then cross into categories, which is a really interesting
topic, and get into different people. But you can't justify
that from just mere brain chemistry. Because no matter what you say,
I just say, hey, your brain made you say that. That doesn't mean
it's true or false. You see the problem now? Yeah. I know I do
see your point, but I don't see the problem because it derailed
for me back when you said I don't have justification for the order
that I see or anything like that. I do have justification. You're
the justification. The people I talk to are the
justification and my success in navigating the world is justification. And it's not circular either.
Well, it's circular, but it seems virtuously circular because it's
working. Yeah, but see, that's called,
um, you delved into argument of impopulum and argument of
deconsequence. So if it works, I know it's good
because it works. That's what's good, is what works.
Well, what works, that's what's good. It's circular and it means
nothing. So the problem here is that if you're going to assume
a naturalist worldview and it goes upon your physical brain,
then your physical brain is just making you say things. But it
has no bearing on truth, which means the idea of what you're
arguing from itself is nothing more than chemical process, and
you don't know if it's true. Therefore, that position refutes
itself because it undermines itself, which is why you shouldn't
hold to it. And then to get into the issue
of transcendentals, which you can't justify from your perspective
in a materialistic worldview of the brain. I mean, I agree
that I can't justify it, I don't feel that I need to, but I think
you said something wrong there in that... my brain is making
me say this. It's just not my brain that's
making me do this. It's the stimulus that's coming
into my brain and the way my brain was organized from time
continuum, you know, in the past to recognize for survival. So it's not just brain fizz.
It's very ordered and purposeful brain fizz. It's ordered. It's
right. Your senses cause... Try it again. Your senses cause chemical reactions
in the brain. The chemical reactions are necessary
according to whatever stimulus comes in. It's just mechanics. It's just chemical mechanics.
That's all it is. So it means then that the senses... Because it refutes itself, because
it just, even your senses cause your chemical reactions. I'm
talking about the chemical reactions themselves. Sure, our senses
induce certain chemical necessities and reactions in our brain at
the beginning of the process. But that means then they just
are necessary reactions. Necessary chemical reactions,
do they produce truth? Do they produce universals? Do
they? Um, I don't, I don't, sometimes
maybe, I mean, no, it's a crapshoot what they produce, except that
it's pretty consistent that it produces navigable beings on
the earth. But that's irrelevant to whether
or not it produces truth or the view is correct. Because you
can't say that consequently, therefore verifies the truth.
But the truth and the view then doesn't matter. That's what your
position leads to. Okay, then maybe that's where
it ends. I'm good with that. Well, okay,
and then that's often where it ends, and what you said was interesting,
and I'm enjoying our conversation, but you said that you don't need
to justify why or how it is the case that irrationality can produce
transcendental necessities that are not restricted to mere chemical
reactions. And when I get an atheist to this place where they
say, I don't need to justify it, this happens a lot. And what
I'm doing is showing them that their worldview cannot answer
the difficult questions. And so they said, I don't need
to answer it. Okay, they don't need to answer it. But what they're
doing is admitting their worldview is insufficient. And that as
a Christian, I can go further than you can. And I can discuss
why this isn't necessary. Go ahead. But I think that you're
assuming there's a difficult question to answer. courts are
difficult but why do i need to assume your assumption Well,
we both make assumptions. This is one of the basics of
argument and worldview. You have a worldview, I have
a worldview. And so each worldview proponent, you and me, will presuppose
certain values that we can't prove. For example, the universality
of the laws of logic. You presuppose them, I presuppose
them. We can't use logic to show logic
works without begging the question, which is a ref, you know, it
doesn't work. So we have to beg the question ultimately. There's
gotta be ground axioms, yeah. And what must be the condition
by which axioms can have their actuality and universal application? Because these are abstractions.
Abstractions need minds. If you have a universal truth
principle, they need a mind. Are you familiar with the one
in the many problem, by any chance? I think I have heard of it before. It is a long time. You could
refresh me. But you know what, Matt? I'd love to talk further. I gotta go do some dinner. Go
do dinner. What are you making? What's for
dinner? I'm just curious. Tonight's gonna be easy. It's
gonna be BLTs and everybody's excited about them. Okay. Well, hey, if you're ever out
here in Boise, Idaho, you let me know and we'll grab a cup
of coffee or something. I'll tell you what, I'd love to and
I will call you back on this and I'll remind you who I was
and stuff like this and we can go deeper into it because I really
enjoyed this. Thank you. Okay, bone up on the
one and the many and you'll see why it's a very serious issue
from an atheist perspective. Okay? Alright. I'll do that.
Thank you. Alright man, talk to you later. All right, now that's the kind
of atheists I like talking to. He's not obstreperous. He's not
antagonistic, not accusatory. That's a wonderful conversation.
I love talking to atheists like that. Let's get to Janet from
Raleigh, North Carolina. Janet, welcome. You're on the air. Hey, Matt, I know that was a
great conversation. I was listening to it. It was
above my head, but I still listen to it. Only got like two and
a half minutes. I don't know. How do I ask a
question really quickly? But we have less than a minute now
I love those kind of conversations. I don't get to do that on the
radio very often because I lose people, but these are the kinds
of conversations I really enjoy the most, getting into stuff
like that. Yeah, I thought it was good. I was lost, but I thought
it was good anyway. I still thought it was good,
but I was lost. I'd like to teach a class on it. I'd love to teach
a class little by little and introduce Christians to concepts
that are just out there that people have no idea exist. It's like, what? Oh yeah. And I argue them pretty regularly. Yeah. I'm sorry. You can probably
do that sometimes. Yeah. Um, anyway, I'm gonna catch
you at another time cause I know you gotta go, but um, it's just
more church stuff. You know me, I'm always calling
about stuff about church. So that's right. Call back tomorrow. Okay. Call
back tomorrow. I'm going out of town this weekend,
so I might not be able to call this weekend, but maybe I'll
call next week or something. All right, sounds good. And I
want to tell you two real quickly, the Bible Museum is in Washington,
D.C. It's awesome. If you ever get
a chance to go there, you gotta go. I'll try. All right, there
you go. Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's pretty
good. Okay, God bless. Hey, everybody, we're out of time. There's the
music. I'm out of here. May the Lord bless you by His grace. Back
on air tomorrow. I'll talk to you then. Another program powered by the
Truth Network.
Matt Slick Live
Matt Slick Live (Live Broadcast of 09-26-2024) is a production of the Christian Apologetics Research Ministry (CARM). Matt answers questions on topics such as: The Bible, Apologetics, Theology, World Religions, Atheism, and other issues! You can also email questions to Matt using: [email protected], Put "Radio Show Question" in the Subject line! Answers will be discussed in a future show. Topics Include:
Rebuking versus Resisting the Devil//
Email Reading= Is it Unfair that Sin Descends from Just One Man//
Do We Really Want Fairness from God?// If Women can't Speak in
Church how can They Prophecy?//
An Atheist wants to Start with a Definition of God//
A Quick Word for The Bible Museum in Washington, D.C.//
September 26, 2024
| Sermon ID | 929241527545081 |
| Duration | 48:00 |
| Date | |
| Category | Radio Broadcast |
| Language | English |
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