Thursday, March 05, 2020

Being Alone in the Dark

“There need never be a fear of the impersonal, because the personal-infinite God is really there. 

This is not just a piece of theater. If we live in the light of the doctrine that we say we believe, this very basic form of fear dissolves away. This is what the Christian parent says to the little child who is afraid to be left alone when the mother goes out of the room. There is nothing complex about it. It is as simple and profound as God’s existence. The little child is afraid to be left alone in the dark with the impersonal situation, and we may stay there and comfort him, but eventually the Christian parent has to say ‘But you do not have to be afraid, because God is here.’ This is a profound truth, not just for children. Indeed, it is the glory of the Christian faith that the little things are profound and profound things are overwhelmingly simple. 

So when the mother teaches the little child that God is there with him, and as the child grows and comes to know for himself that there are good and sufficient reasons to know that God is there, this has meaning in a profound sense that will prove sufficient all his life -- through all his philosophical wanderings, as well as in the darkness of the night. On the basis of the existence of the biblical God, and who He is in the total structure of the Christian faith, it is not meaningless for the little child in the dark and it is not meaningless for the most diligent student in philosophy who has ever walked through the darkness of philosophical speculation.” (Francis Schaeffer, Chapter 11, True Spirituality)