Michael Spencer in memoriam
I cried yesterday morning. Michael Spencer, the Internet Monk, has passed away.
I've been reading Michael's blog for several years, on and off. Like many, many have said now that he's gone, I never met the guy, but I felt a close connection with him. He was honest, often brutally so, about his faith and his struggles with it. His writing really resonated. He articulated much of what I both loved and hated about the Evangelical church, and he formed my loves and hates too. I felt I was with him in the post-Evangelical wilderness. And it made me hopeful.
The wilderness has just become a much quieter and lonelier place.
One thing that always impressed me about Michael was his love of the Gospel. It must be my sinful nature, but I tend to forget just how sinful I am and the world is. Michael's insights in this regard hit home on a regular basis. He roused a love for Luther in me that none of my theology classes have managed. Today, on internetmonk.com, his friend Michael Bell, Chaplain Mike, writes of his love for the Gospel,
But first and foremost, Michael was about the Gospel, the Good News of Jesus Christ. This was what was closest to his heart, and what drew me to him. His concern was that in all the many things that the church was doing, the gospel was being obscured. This was his greatest concern, and to what he paid the most attention in his writting.
I think his deep insight and understanding of the dialectic of sin and grace is what gave me hope about the Evangelical church. I agreed with his posts about the collapse: Things will change dramatically in the future for the church. They have to, because there are things just desperately wrong with it. But for all that sin there is so much more grace. I want to thank Michael for reminding me of that.
I will miss Michael Spencer's voice in the wilderness sorely. I will miss telling my wife, my dad or my friends about some new thing I learnt about or old thought that was clarified after reading his blog. It makes me especially sad that he never saw his book published. Lord knows, he deserved it. I hope some publishers will mine the archives for material for future books. And I hope his books will sell in droves. He needs to be heard widely.
I'm praying for his family and his friends.
Michael Spencer, internetmonk, on atheism
You see, evangelicals have made such outrageous assumptions and promises about happiness, healing, everything working out, knowing God, answered prayer, loving one another and so on that proving us to be liars isn’t even a real job. It’s just a matter of tuning in to an increasing number of voices who say “It’s OK to not believe. Give yourself a break. Stop tormenting yourself trying to believe. Stop propping up your belief with more and more complex arguments. Just let go of God.”
You can send an army against an army. What do you send against a group saying “None of this has any point. Give it up and go have a coke.”
Don’t think I am avoiding the case the new atheists are making. I take it very seriously. My students learn the Dawkins and Hitchens arguments by heart. They are deserving of the best responses we can put forward and we need to know what they are saying.
But I don’t believe the new atheists are making converts because they have a better argument. I think they are making converts because the fruit is ripe to fall from the tree, and we have little or no idea it’s happening. We’re setting up for the great ideological debate and the kids have found that it’s just more fun to have a drink with the non-religious crew.
Keller is still great. C.S.Lewis is still helpful. Craig is still impressive. But I’m not sure their arguments are on the right channel. Vast numbers of people aren’t asking for philosophy. They are asking what will let them live a life uncomplicated by lies, manipulation and constant calls to prefer ignorance to what seems obvious.
What we’ve said and written is fine. What we’ve lived in our homes, private lives, churches, workplaces and friendships has spoken louder.
We are the ones who appear to not believe in the God we say is real. We are the ones who seem to be forcing ourselves to believe with bigger shows, bigger celebrities and bigger methods of manipulation.
You can’t understand why some people just say atheism has about it the beauty of simplicity? You don’t see why Occam’s Razor is so powerful, even among students who have no idea what it means?
Pay closer attention. The game has changed.




