Francis A. Schaeffer on a Placebo God
The God Who Is There, (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1968), p115.
A man like Sir Julian Huxley has clarified the dilemma by
acknowledging, though he is an atheist, that somehow or other, against
all that one might expect, man functions better if he acts as though
God is there. This sounds like a feasible solution for a moment, the
kind of answer a computer might give if you fed the sociological data
into it. God is dead, but act as if he were alive. However, a moment's
reflection will show what a terrible solution this is. Ibsen, the
Norwegian, put it like this: if you take away a man's lie, you take
away his hope. These thinkers are saying in effect that man can
function as man for an extended period of time only if he acts on the
assumption that a lie (that the personal God of Christianity is there)
is true. You cannot find any deeper despair than this for a sensitive
person. This is not an optimistic, happy, reasonable or brilliant
answer. It is darkness and death.
Faith and/or Reason + Religion Under the Lens

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