Welcome to the online home of Tim Challies, blogger, author and web designer. My first book, "The Discipline of Spiritual Discernment," is now available everywhere.

Read about the blog or about the author.

Tuesday July 29, 2008

Book Review - Atheism Remix

Atheism Remix by Al MohlerAs of January 1, 2008, Al Mohler was the author of one book, and it was an edited volume to which he contributed only a single chapter. By the time January 1, 2009 rolls around, Mohler will be the author of five books. The first, Culture Shift (my review), was published by Multnomah and offered biblical perspectives on cultural issues. The second, published by Crossway, is Atheism Remix: A Christian Confronts the New Atheists. In September will come He Is Not Silent: Preaching in a Postmodern World (by Moody) and Desire and Deceit: The Real Cost of the New Sexual Tolerance (by Multnomah).

Like Culture Shift, Atheism Remix is a small hardcover volume geared to a general audience. Where the genesis of Culture Shift was a series of blog posts, Atheism Remix is based on the W.H. Griffith Thomas Lectures Mohler delivered at Dallas Theological Seminary early in 2008. This series, like the book that has come from it, is geared to a general audience.

The book follows a simple format. In the first chapter, Dr. Mohler introduces the new atheism by discussing the history behind this new brand of atheism—one that has gained widespread credibility and popularity. He sets it in its historic context as the endgame of secularism—a necessary consequence of philosophies that have shaped our postmodern world. In the second chapter he introduces the “Four Horsemen of the New Atheist Apocalypse”—Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett, Sam Harris and Christopher Hitchens. He provides brief biographical information about each of them and describes that man’s unique contribution to the rise of the new atheism. Here he also offers eight characteristics that set apart the new atheism from older forms of atheism. The third chapter is given to a defense of theism by way of a biblical response to atheism. “At the worldview level,” writes Mohler, “the New Atheism presents Christian theology with the need for a sustained and credible defense of theism—and of Christian theism in particular. … Atheism is not a new challenge, but the New Atheists are perceived as presenting a new and powerful refutation of theism. Their challenge deserves and demands a cogent Christian response.” This is exactly what this chapter offers. In the final chapter Mohler, taking it as a given that the New Atheism will continue to present a challenge to twenty-first century Christianity, he suggests that Christians must frame their thinking about the future of Christianity with this reality in mind.

Dr. Mohler’s book is only one of many to respond to the challenge of the new atheism and it is a welcome contribution. A reader who wishes to acquaint himself with the leading proponents of atheism, the arguments they use, and the most effective ways of thinking biblically about those arguments, will want to read this book. It is an ideal addition to any church or public library. I benefited from Mohler’s wisdom and am convinced you will also.

Comments (9) »


1. Bryan DeWire
July 29, 2008
10:30 AM

Thanks Tim- I’m looking forward to the book. I only saw 4 books listed (not 5). Am I missing something? Thanks!


2. Tim Challies
July 29, 2008
11:17 AM

The fifth is the one that existed already (Feed My Sheep).


3. Bryan DeWire
July 29, 2008
11:20 AM

Thanks Tim. There’s Preaching the Cross too, right? That’s the one I thought you were referring to. :)


4. Tim Challies
July 29, 2008
11:25 AM

Preaching the Cross

He contributed to that, but didn’t edit it. I believe he was editor for Feed My Sheep.


5. Bryan DeWire
July 29, 2008
12:04 PM

Ah, I understand. Thanks for the help!


6. Samuel Skinner
July 29, 2008
4:06 PM

I only have one comment to make here “Endgame of Secularism”? Does that mean he is predicting that the world’s governments will switch to mixing religion and politics?

From what I have seen that doesn’t work when a country has more than one religion. So unless the rulers of all the worlds countries are complete idiots, secularism will remain in place for most of them. China seems to be dumping it though- they have decided that they get to be in charge of religious matters. Of course, that is only because Tibet was a theocracy and they want to undermine it.


7. Scott Cochran
July 30, 2008
5:25 PM

Tim, does Mohler address the web-based book that seems to be gaining popularity among the “new atheists,” http://whywontgodhealamputees.com/god5.htm? This web book and its central “argument” (Why doesn’t God heal amputees) has thrown one of my friends into a spiral of doubt, and since my friend and I have essentially reached a stalemate, I’m looking for a coherent counterargument to that specific book/argument. I have searched somewhat extensively and have not found a response by any of the typical high-profile apologists (e.g., Mohler, Zacharias, Plantiga, Craig, etc.).


8. gary v
July 31, 2008
10:10 AM

Here are a couple of sites dealing with Why God Won’t Heal Amputees:

http://www.tektonics.org/lp/nobrains.html

http://brainisignorant.blogspot.com/

I haven’t read all of the blog so I’m not sure what’s all there. J.P. Holding of Tektonics is generally good although some may not like his style.


9. CourtneyMD
July 31, 2008
10:28 PM

Gary, could you summarize the apologist response to the question of why God doesn’t heal amputees? I investigated the sites you named and found that neither came remotely close to offering a credible answer.

For those who are wondering, the gist of the amputee question is this: if there actually exists a God who answers the prayers of those seeking healing, how is that this God has never been able to regenerate a missing limb?