Again with the Amputee Question
One reason Christians engage in apologetics is to provide answers to serious questions about the faith by relatively honest
seekers. Some questions, however, appear not quite
so serious. For me one such question is, "Why
won't God heal amputees?" Made famous by Marshall Brain, this simple inquiry is presumed by some skeptics to expose the abject absurdity of
miracles, of prayer, of God's love – indeed of theism generally – and therefore
to send Christian apologists beating a hasty and shameful retreat before the
overpowering logic of unbelief. Of course that hasn’t happened. For a sampling
of effective, rational responses to the amputee question, consider offerings at
Christian Skepticism, at Answers in Genesis, at Triablogue, and by fellow Christian Cadre members Rich Deem at God and Science and Joe
Hinman at Atheistwatch.
3. Therefore, an omnipotent God does not exist.
3. Therefore there is no God.*
Now my own immediate response to the question "Why won’t
God heal amputees?" is something like, "Because He’s too busy trying
to decide whether or not He can create a rock too heavy for Him to lift.” In
other words the Amputee Question belongs in the same category as the Rock
Question – it's a clever rhetorical device that has almost nothing to do with
the substance of the issues (like theodicy or the general efficacy of prayer) it
purportedly addresses. But rhetorical questions such as these persist because
they provide convenient substitutes for the hard work of constructing serious,
sound arguments. That said, the following is my own response to the Amputee
Question.
Right off the bat we need to brush past the loaded nature
of the question itself. To ask "why God won't" do something is to take it as a
given fact that there is something God won't do. It would be like asking "Why
won't atheists just admit that they believe in God?" Hardly a matter for
serious dialogue. Not all theists, certainly not this one, would take it as a
working premise that God won't heal amputees. So to try to answer why God won't do what has not yet been demonstrated
that he has not done (or will never do) is to get ahead of ourselves, and concede
too much. Also, even if we were to concede that God has never healed an
amputee, it doesn't follow that he won't
heal an amputee, or lots or all amputees, in the future, including in the
future eternal kingdom of heaven. (And it should be noted that it seems a bit
calloused to use people with amputated limbs, many of whom firmly believe in
God despite their painful physical and psychological experiences, as inanimate props
in an argument for atheism in the first place.)
Next we need to consider whether there is an actual
argument here. As mentioned the question is almost purely rhetorical on its
face. But an argument of sorts is at least implied. According to Upchurch and
Galling at Answers in Genesis, the argument can be reformulated thus:
1. An omnipotent God would heal amputees.
2. Amputees are not healed.3. Therefore, an omnipotent God does not exist.
Metacrock restates it slightly differently (and with
tongue slightly in cheek, I suspect), but the idea is the same:
1. The Bible promises to give us anything we want in
prayer.
2. This doesn't work.3. Therefore there is no God.*
In each case the first premise states a theological proposition
and the second states an inductive generalization drawn from human experience, followed
by the conclusion that God does not exist. But none of the premises have been
established, so on the face of it the argument is unsound. Few if any
serious theologians would take the statements "An omnipotent God would
heal amputees" or "The Bible promises to give us anything we want in
prayer" as givens derived from either systematic theology or careful
exegesis of particular biblical data. Neither is it a fact that no amputees are
healed (though it certainly appears that the vast majority are not); nor that
prayer doesn't work.
As to the second premise: it may seem at odds with
experience to dispute the proposition that amputees are not healed. But to achieve its effect the
proposition needs to convey that no amputees are healed. That assertion runs
afoul not only of the problem of induction, but of specific instances of
amputee healings documented by Craig Keener and others, and arguably certain
miracles in the New Testament. On the other hand, if the essence of the question
is "Why are some amputations, physical ailments, etc., not healed?"
then this would be the same question most of us have asked, particularly when
we are in pain. God doesn't heal most people with headaches or strep throat or kidney
disease, so they take pain relievers and antibiotics and use dialysis. God
doesn't heal most amputees, so they undergo rigorous therapy and use compensating
devices like wheelchairs and prosthetic limbs. Non-healings have been a painfully
obvious fact of life for all people for millennia, long before Marshall Brain first
began to ponder the non-healings of amputees. Seen this way the Amputee
Question is little more than an observation that there is natural evil in the
world.
The strength of the Amputee Question, then, is that in rhetorically
effective and compact form it calls attention to two traditionally popular arguments,
the logical argument from evil and the argument against miracles. The weakness
of the Amputee Question is that countless philosophers and theologians of all
stripes agree that these are no longer considered sound defeaters of theism.
* For anyone who would object that such restatements are straw
men, please feel free to construct a serious argument based upon the Amputee Question
and present it here.
Comments
Yes, I have come across this guy several times. J.P. Holding did a parody of him on Tektoonics:
Why Does God Hate Deputies?
He also has another site called God is Imaginary. In one of the chapters of his site, he basically says that God wants people who work on Sunday to die (lol). For more humor, I looked at the message board that accompanies that site. Some people talked about the best arguments against God, and one person said that Science, Logic, Reason, and Math would work (lol).
First rather than base disbelief on war, or the holocaust or the biologically driven desire to stay from a commitment, they base it on one unanswered question involving a small percentage of people.
Then when you point other evidence of healing they use this question to negate all other proof. Lurdes? meaningle3ss as along people aren't growing bck limbs.
Exactly. An isolated class of non-miracles, when miracles are infrequent by definition in the first place, does very little to advance either an argument from evil or an argument against miracles.