In our reality TV generation there is class
of writers who set out to experience for you that which you can or will not for
yourself. Tim Ferriss tries out life hacks, so you won't have to do
self-improvement the hard way. A. J. Jacobs, the self-declared human guinea
pig, does that which you're either to conventional or lazy to do—like cheating
at poker with Google Glass or reading the entire Enclyclopedia Britanica, respectively. For his bestseller, The Year of Living Biblically, Jacobs
tried to carry out surface meaning of all the rules in the Old Testament.
Blogger Rachel Held Evans rode his coat-tails into The Year of Biblical Womanhood, because it wasn’t fair that women
should be excluded from test-driving Ancient Near Eastern customs in a 21st
century world.
So in some ways it was not a surprise when
a recently resigned Seventh-day Adventist pastor, Ryan Bell, came up on my
Facebook feed, just as 2014 rolled in, announcing that his new project would be A Year Without God (with book at the end). What was surprising to me was the
way Ryan's year-long experiment with atheism was picked up by US and
international media, including an interview on CBC's “Q.”
What's uniquely fascinating about Ryan's
project can be best seen in opposition to what came before. Ferriss, Jacobs,
and Evans become your human guinea pig in order to convert you to their value
system. Whether persuading you to always take the quickest shortcut to
accomplishment or that the Bible is a culturally-conditioned artifact that
needs to be interpreted through the lens of enlightenment humanism to have
modern moral relevance, their experimentation is grounded in fundamental
presuppositions about reality.
By trying on atheism for a year, Ryan is
throwing presuppositions out the window. He avoids the question of ultimate
reality—God—by rejecting identification as athiest, theist, or agnostic. So if
you ever wondered where you'd end up were you to rid of all your preloaded
beliefs and approach reality as a blank slate, Ryan Bell is your guinea pig. He doesn't want to
persuade you about anything. He only wants to live as if God doesn't exist for
a year and see if there's any difference between that and the way he was living
before.
Except it's not really possible to remove
oneself completely from fundamental assumptions. Ryan's assumption is that God,
if God exists, is like an exercise program, in that you can go off and on and
evaluate effectiveness by noting relative differences. But what if instead God
is more like a person, a person like Ryan Bell. If I were to remove myself from
Ryan's influence for a year to see if that makes a difference in my life, I
would likely conclude that he's good to have on my feeds but not essential and
easily replaced with others. And I suspect that the assumptions and methodology
behind Ryan's Year Without God are leading him toward an inevitable conclusion:
God's nice if you want God, but you can do just fine without.
A personal God wouldn't be like Ryan or any
other person in one critical respect: If God is real, you can't take a year
without God, because God is what sustains you. You can only end-up choosing to
ignore God, and thus reality. So if you want to know whether a personal God
exists, you need to reach out for the purpose of getting to know to God, and
let God show you if God is real.
This article was originally submitted for the Clergy Comments column of the Fort McMurray Today (February 28, 2013).
This article was originally submitted for the Clergy Comments column of the Fort McMurray Today (February 28, 2013).