Channel Button

There are 19 articles on this title. You are reading the article ranked and rated #4 by Helium's members.

Religion & Spirituality   >

Atheism & Agnosticism

Get a Widget for this title

Good without God: Secular humanism and morality

At church recently, the priest talked to us about virtue. He acknowledged that even the pagan philosophers promoted virtue as the path to happiness in this life. But he also maintained that Christianity adds something more. In Christianity, he argued, virtue leads to happiness that is eternal, not just temporal. Plus, Christians doing a good deed for God is better than non-believers doing it just because they think it's a good idea.

I've often heard non-believers say, "What makes Christians so special? I know a lot of non-Christians who do good things. Apparently, Christianity is not necessary for a moral life."

On some level, that argument annoys me. "Yeah, non-believers do good things," I think to myself. "They do them so they can pat themselves on the back." And, if this is true, then I can identify with what the priest is saying: doing a good deed for God is better than doing it out of self-righteousness.

But I don't think that all non-believers do their good deeds out of self-righteousness, or that self-righteousness is the sole motivation for non-Christian charity. Many non-Christians who do good deeds desperately want to make the world a better place. They recognize that injustice and poverty are real, and that many people suffer and die in the process. Atheists and agnostics who work for social change don't look to a deity to solve the world's problems, for they don't really believe that a beneficent deity exists. They conclude that they are the ones who will have to bring change to the world.

That must be an unbearable burden. I'd go crazy if I had to stress out about every single problem in the world. I don't have the talents or the resources to tackle everything.

But that is why I believe in God. My goal is not to dump the job into his lap, but to join him in what he is doing. I trust that God is at work in the world, and that he is using people to help others and bring glory to himself. And I am a piece in the larger puzzle of God's activity. I shouldn't aim to solve all of the world's problems, but I should do what I can to help the people with whom I come into contact. And I should carry out my calling, using the talents and the resources that God has given me.

116038_m Learn more about this author, James Pate.
Contact this writer Click here to send this author comments or questions.


Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:

Good without God: Secular humanism and morality

  • 1 of 19

    by Alan Perlman

    Don't look now, but your neighbor, uncle, cousin, coworker - or even the person next to you in church or synagogue - might

    read more

  • 2 of 19

    by Farrell Jacobs

    As cynical and disillusioned as I am regarding what I've grown to understand about this ineffable experience that is existence,

    read more

  • 3 of 19

    by Jon Eccles

    Arguments about religion as a guide to moral behaviour often go like this.

    Against: Religious people do bad things. They persecute

    read more

  • 4 of 19

    by James Pate

    At church recently, the priest talked to us about virtue. He acknowledged that even the pagan philosophers promoted virtue

    read more

  • 5 of 19

    by Karla Perry

    We all live in the real world. When Christians speak of God as the anchor for all morality this does not mean that atheists

    read more

View All Articles on:
Good without God: Secular humanism and morality

Add your voice

Know something about Good without God: Secular humanism and morality?
We want to hear your view. Write_penWrite now!

Helium Debate

Cast your vote!

Is Humanism a religion?

Click for your side.

91818

Featured Partner

Foundation for Research on Economics and the Environment (FREE)

FREE advances conservation and environmental values by applying modern science and America's founding ideals to polic...more

What is Helium? | Buy Web Content | Contact Us | Privacy | User agreement | DMCA | User Tools | Help | Community | Helium’s Official Blog | Link to Helium

Helium, Inc.
200 Brickstone Square Andover, MA 01810 USA