Life Driven Purpose: How an Atheist Finds Meaning

Life Driven Purpose: How an Atheist Finds Meaning

Life Driven Purpose: How an Atheist Finds Meaning

Life Driven Purpose: How an Atheist Finds Meaning

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Overview

Every thinking person wants to lead a life of meaning and purpose. For thousands of years, holy books have told us that such a life is available only through obedience and submission to some higher power. Today, the faithful keep popular devotionals and tracts within easy reach on bedside tables and mobile devices, all communicating this common message: "Life is meaningless without God." In this volume, former pastor Dan Barker eloquently, powerfully, and rationally upends this long-held belief. Offering words of enrichment, emancipation, and inspiration, he reminds us how millions of atheists lead happy, loving, moral, and purpose-filled lives. Practicing what he preaches, he also demonstrates through his own personal journey that life is valuable for its own sake—that meaning and purpose come not from above, but from within.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781939578242
Publisher: Pitchstone Publishing
Publication date: 04/01/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 216
Sales rank: 929,658
File size: 974 KB

About the Author

Dan Barker, a former evangelical minister, is copresident of the Freedom from Religion Foundation, cohost of Freethought Radio, and cofounder and board member of the Clergy Project. He is the author of Godless: How an Evangelical Preacher Became One of America's Leading Atheists. A widely sought-after lecturer, debater, and performer, he regularly discusses atheism and life's meaning and purpose in the national media, with appearances on the Oprah Winfrey Show, O'Reilly Factor, Good Morning America, and many others. He lives in Madison, Wisconsin. Daniel C. Dennett is the codirector of the Center for Cognitive Studies and the Austin B. Fletcher Professor of Philosophy at Tufts University. He is the author of several books, including Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon and Darwin's Dangerous Idea: Evolution and the Meanings of Life. He lives in North Andover, Massachusetts.

Read an Excerpt

Life Driven Purpose

How an Atheist Finds Meaning


By Dan Barker

Pitchstone Publishing

Copyright © 2015 Dan Barker
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-939578-24-2



CHAPTER 1

THE GOOD NEWS


It is about you.

Forget what pastor Rick Warren says. When it comes to purpose, it is about you and no one else.

This doesn't mean everything is about you. Morality is how you treat your neighbor and truth is how well your statements match reality. Behavior and opinions can actually be objectively right or wrong, independent of your thoughts.

But purpose is personal. It can't be right or wrong. It can't be true or false. It can't not be about you. It's how you decide to live your own life. If someone else tells you how to live, you are not free. If you don't choose your own purpose, you are a slave.

In a few pages, I am going to tell you the truly good news about purpose, the surprising and perhaps counterintuitive message that atheists offer to the world. I will explain exactly how we nonbelievers find or create meaning, and why the uplifting, edifying, and self-actualized stance of atheism is superior to the irrelevant and impoverished world view of god believers.

When I was a Christian minister, I thought it was the other way around. "The fool hath said in his heart, 'There is no God,'" I believed. I imagined atheism was bankrupt and depressing. I preached the "good news" from John 3:16: "For God so loved the world that he sent his only begotten son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have everlasting life." On its face, that sounds very special — love, belief, escaping death, everlasting life — but what does it actually mean? What is this great evangelical news that we are supposed to be excited about?

Suppose you are walking by my house, and I come out on my front porch and say:


Hey! I've got some good news!

Stop! Listen! This is great news! You've been passing by every day and you have been ignoring me. I love you, and I have so much to offer you. I am special, and I am worthy of admiration. You can't keep walking by as if I don't even exist. So I have some good news for you:

You don't have to go down in my basement!

That's right. This is great news, because since you have been ignoring me all these years, and have not been giving me the proper respect I deserve, you have made me very upset. I become an angry person when I am not honored, when my loving character is not appreciated.

So, I built a torture chamber down in my basement.

It's dark and hot down there, with sharp knives and chains and hooks on the walls, and a furnace with flames, and some smelly vats with caustic Lake-of-Fire chemicals. It's horrible. But the good news is that you don't have to go down there.

I sent my son down there.

It was ugly. It was horrific. My only-begotten son experienced an agony of suffering and shame.

But that satisfied my anger, and I'm not mad any more. It is finished. And that is great news for you! All you have to do is come up here on my porch and thank my bleeding son for what he did for you. Tell him you love him. We'll forgive your arrogance. Give us a big hug, and come into my house, and we'll live up in the attic together, and you can spend an eternity of gratitude telling me How Great I Am, while your ingrate friends and relatives are screaming down in the basement. Won't that be wonderful?

Isn't this just the best news you have ever heard?


So, what would you do? Would you keep walking?

That is Christianity in a nutshell. It is ghastly news. Ignore it. Keep walking and get on with your life.

"What is the purpose of life?" is a slippery question because purpose has more than one meaning. In its primary usage — the one relevant to living beings — purpose is striving for a goal, an intentional aiming at a target. There is no striving without a reason, and the reason always has something to do with surviving or enjoying your life. If you are not enjoying life — or striving to enjoy life — you are not living your life. Enjoyment doesn't exist for its own sake; you exist for your own sake. Enjoyment results from successfully reaching or striving to reach a goal.

The goal can be to get something you want, or to avoid something you don't want. The purpose of your actions might be the need for food, water, or shelter. It might be to find a mate, or repel a threat. It might be physical exercise, to keep fit to meet future challenges. These goals, and others, when achieved by some kind of striving, are pleasurable or positive, because they ultimately relate to survival. Less tangible goals, such as beauty, love, friendship, learning, adventure, and entertainment — and these all have risks as well as rewards — are enjoyable when obtained because they contribute to well-being, which enhances survival. Even indirect goals, such as helping others to survive, are enjoyable. (More about that in chapter 2.) They all affect the brain, which is a physical organ striving to control and protect a natural organism in a natural environment.

That is your life. That is what purpose means. Life is purpose, and purpose is life.

Purpose also has a secondary usage, which is what we mean when we transfer a goal to the method used to achieve that goal. When we ask for the purpose of a hammer, we are not imagining that a tool has any intentions. We are really asking for the purpose in the mind of the person who designed or uses the hammer. The hammer was invented by organisms with opposable thumbs as a way to deliver a large direct force to the head of a nail (not to the opposable thumb), driving it into wood, or to leverage the force to yank it back out. It was designed to help construct things like shelter, bridges, and military defenses, all having something to do with survival. If you didn't know what a hammer was, you might be able to reverse-engineer and guess its primary purpose, but you might also use it for something else, perhaps as a juggling toy, or to strike a musical instrument, or as a weapon. The purpose of a tool does not come from within itself. It comes from within a living mind striving to enhance survival. It is only living things that possess purpose. When we ask, "What is the purpose of a hammer?" we assume that the hammer is lifeless.

So asking, "What is the purpose of life?" assumes that life is dead. The question hinges on an equivocation that comes from confusing two different usages of purpose. Since purpose is life, asking for the purpose of life is like asking, "What is the life of life?" That question is based on a belief that life, like a tool, has no internal purpose of its own. If you don't have the freedom to choose to strive for your own goals, then you are not really alive. You are a hammer. If you think your purpose must come from outside yourself, you are a lifeless implement or a slave to another mind.

And that is exactly what most religions teach. The so-called good news of Christianity, for example, cheats its followers with the sleight of hand of trading purpose for purpose, euthanizing the individual by cutting out the heart of life and implanting it elsewhere. It turns a living creature into a dead shell.

The apostle Paul taught exactly this, that we are empty clay pots: "But we have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellency of the power may be of God, and not of us." He told believers to "Present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God." Those words were written by a man who called himself a "slave" of Christ: "I have been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me." "For to me to live is Christ, and to die is gain." "Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit within you, whom you have from God? You are not your own, for you were bought with a price. So glorify God in your body."

In Christianity, you have to die so that someone else can live through you.


The California pastor Rick Warren, best-selling author of The Purpose Driven Life, agrees with Paul and Jesus. He has sold tens of millions of books worldwide to worshipful believers who have been conned into thinking that life is not life. He has convinced his flock that it is actually good to be a slave. For political reasons, the fame he has achieved as a shepherd preaching sheephood got him invited to offer the opening prayer at President Barack Obama's first inauguration. What an irony that the most important civic ritual belonging to all Americans, the swearing in of our secular president, had to be "solemnized" by a superstitious sermonizer who believes that the authority of our nation stems not from we, the people, in pursuit of happiness, but from the sovereignty of a "Lord" who dictates that we must submit to his will because a talking snake tricked us into eating the fruit of knowledge. I am not going to analyze Warren's entire book; others have already done that. Robert M. Price's book, The Reason Driven Life, neatly exposes the fact that The Purpose Driven Life is nothing more than newly packaged old-fashioned biblical fundamentalism.

More than that, Warren himself has acted no better than other evangelists who pretend to have a higher calling. Before he became wealthy selling sanctimonious self-help (the "self" not being the reader), he was charged with abusing the IRS tax code. In the early 1990s, his church had paid all or a substantial part of his salary as a cash "housing allowance," allowing him to report little or no income, taking advantage of a little-known, unfair provision in the statutes that allows "ministers of the gospel" to exclude their rent or house payments from income, greatly lowering their tax liability. What Warren did was clearly wrong — he was excluding his entire salary as if he were spending it all on housing. He was cheating the rest of us taxpayers. But since the law was ambiguously stated, not setting a limit to the allowance, he did not have to pay penalties or back taxes. Congress mooted the case in 2002, getting Warren off the hook, but clarifying that from now on the housing allowance is limited to the fair rental value of the home. This pastor, like most clergy, apparently feels that preachers are a privileged class. His parishioners might have a purpose-driven life, but their leader has a loophole-driven life.

When Rick Warren talks about purpose, he means it only in its secondary usage. "It's not about you," he preaches. It's all about God. He believes you have no say in your own purpose. "His purpose for your life predates your conception," Warren confidently informs us, speaking about the specific deity depicted in his holy book. "He planned it before you existed, without your input! You may choose your career, your spouse, your hobbies, and many other parts of your life, but you don't get to choose your purpose."

Warren is exactly right, if you think the Christian scriptures are true. The New Testament tells Christians that they have no purpose of their own: "For to me to live is Christ, and to die is gain." Jesus reportedly said: "If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me."

So, what is the purpose of life, according to Rick Warren? Let me save you the trouble of reading his book by summarizing his answer: the purpose of life is to worship God, fellowship with Christians, become like Christ, serve others, and evangelize. That's it! You were born so that you can get others to join you in church. (Don't forget to put some tax-free money in the plate.) "If you want to know why you were placed on this planet," Warren assures us, "you must begin with God. You were born by his purpose and for his purpose."

You are a hammer. A wrench. A pair of pliers.

Warren then insults atheists by insisting that those of us who do not hold his beliefs lead empty lives: "Without God, life has no purpose, and without purpose, life has no meaning. Without meaning, life has no significance or hope." What planet is Reverend Warren living on? It seems he hasn't met many atheists. He doesn't know that hundreds of millions of good people do not "begin with God," do not believe in a god, yet live full meaningful lives. We are not the ones with the problem! We are alive. We think it is sad that so many human beings pretend to have no purpose of their own, that they are so willing to "die to themselves" (as the bible commands), submitting to someone else's plan for their lives.

If you need a purpose-driven life, you are an actor in someone else's play. You are following a script for a B-rated movie — a bible-rated movie. If your existence has meaning only while it is being directed in someone else's film, you have no life of your own. You have been robbed. We nonbelievers think you deserve better. We think you should throw away the script, make your own movie, emancipate yourself, and reclaim your rightful property and place in this world. Get a life!


In my book The Good Atheist, I describe how the postures of prayer are identical to the postures of slavery: knees bent, wrists shackled in humble obedience, eyes closed, head bowed, body prostrate before the master. "For you were bought at a price," said Paul the slave, "therefore glorify God in your body and in your spirit, which are God's." There is indeed a purpose in this, but it is not your own. It is directed from outside your own life. "Whatever you do," Paul also wrote, "do all to the glory of God." Christians are toddlers who simply do what the parent says, "bringing every thought into captivity unto the obedience of Christ." (The next time someone tells you there is freedom in Christ, read that verse to them. Whatever "captivity" is, it is not freedom.) In Christianity, the ultimate purpose is to glorify and worship the master, not to live or enjoy your own life. Even good works — which you would think should be aimed at the recipients of charity — are ultimately focused on the majesty of the heavenly father: "Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works and glorify your Father in heaven." The biblical writers were shameless about this redirection of purpose: "If I was trying to please men," Paul wrote, "I would not be a slave of Christ."

According to slave traders like Rick Warren (all Christian ministers are slave traders), we are not on this plantation called earth for our own sakes. Our existence is all about glory. But what is glory, if not the puffing up of one individual above everybody else? "Thou art worthy, O Lord, to receive glory and honour and power: for thou hast created all things, and for thy pleasure they are and were created." Our own pleasure is irrelevant. If one person is raised above all others, it follows that everyone else is inferior. You are second rate. Christianity is a huge put-down of humanity. It is the glorification of one individual who enjoys being a slave master over the powerless.

What is wrong with this picture? We normally detest a person who claims to own and control other human beings, so why do we think it is admirable when God does it? Because might makes right? Why do we honor that which we naturally despise? If you were a god, would you actually want others to bow down and kiss your feet? And what would the rest of us think of you? If there actually exists a praise-thirsty deity like the bible describes, then why should we worship him? Because he is the big boss and he demands it? Because if you don't put your hands together and tell him how great he is you will be sent down into the basement?

Is that what life is all about?

Would you rather watch a movie about loyal captive subjects in the service of their omnipotent master, or a movie about a slave revolt? Which would be more exciting? What characters would you root for and sympathize with? So, why just a movie? Why not make your own life a slave revolt?

To live freely is to escape the tyranny of a sovereign. It is to start a proud revolutionary war defying the king with a declaration of independence. When human beings are subjugated "under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government."

Asking, "If there is no God, what is the purpose of life?" is like asking, "If there is no Master, whose slave will I be?" If the purpose of life is to become a submissive slave, then your meaning comes from flattering the ego of a person whom you should despise.

Fortunately, all of that is moot. You don't have to fear the basement. There is no basement. There is no master. There is no lord. You can just keep walking, and live your own life.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Life Driven Purpose by Dan Barker. Copyright © 2015 Dan Barker. Excerpted by permission of Pitchstone Publishing.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Foreword by Daniel C. Dennett,
Introduction,
1. The Good News,
2. Mere Morality,
3. Religious Color Blindness,
4. Much Ado About,
5. Life Is Life,
Acknowledgments,
Notes,
Bibliography,
Index,
About the Author,

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