Endtime Insights: Secular Humanism and Its Place in the Endtime
Scott MacGregor
In today’s multicultural society there is a growing trend toward
what is known as “moral relativism.” This means taking a nonjudgmental
approach to what people believe and do because “everything is
relative.” Even things we might regard as repugnant and wrong might be
acceptable according to the customs of others. It’s certainly Christian
to be understanding and tolerant of others, but to bow to beliefs or
practices that are in direct contradiction to God’s two great
commandments (to love God and others) is to be deceived and led astray.
This moral relativism is a direct result of an atheistic philosophy
called “secular humanism.”
Modern humanism can be traced back to the Renaissance. Famous men of
the Renaissance and the Enlightenment period that followed—Leonardo da
Vinci, Isaac Newton, Desiderius Erasmus, and many others—are now
regarded and did, in fact, regard themselves as humanists. To them
“humanism” meant restoring a human dimension to the arts, science, and
philosophy, whereas for hundreds of years these disciplines had been
subservient to religion, which at the time was also riddled with
superstition. However, all these pioneers of modern humanism each still
proclaimed personal belief in God.
The secular humanism of today is quite different. Secular humanists
maintain that any belief in God or religion is irrational and therefore
has no place in their worldview. They believe that the natural is all
there is—that there is no such thing as the supernatural; therefore man
is his own god.
Humanists are also usually ardent apostles of evolution. The irony of
this is that evolution is being continually proven to be a belief
system and not—as secular humanists maintain—“science.” It is a belief
in the unseen, because the processes of what is more correctly called
“macroevolution”—the evolving of one species into another—and evidence
for it, remain as invisible to the human eye as the spiritual world.
The big difference, though, is that the processes and evidence for
macroevolution are non-existent, whereas the spirit world is real and
vibrant. More and more honest scientists are coming forward to proclaim
that evolution has all the characteristics of a religion, a fact that
makes the secular humanist as irrational in his belief as the religious
person he so likes to ridicule.
Secular humanists believe that humans can solve their own problems.
They also believe that religion has been the cause of much of the
world’s problems. However, if you look at the institutions and people
who are devoted to helping humanity, you will find that many or most
are motivated at least in part by religious beliefs. Secular humanists
are also fond of repeating the argument that religion is the cause of
all wars. Although through the centuries some may have cloaked their
motives for war in religion, the real reasons wars are fought are for
territory and loot.
A belief in God or the divine has been considered an important part of
human knowledge until recent times. In the last few generations atheism
has gained a great following. It would seem that people would learn
from recent history and the horrors that were committed by those who
professed no belief in God. The last hundred years are awash with
blood, much of it spilled by avowed anti-religious regimes—regimes that
placed the belief that man was evolving into perfection at the center
of their ideology.
How does this fit in with the Endtime? The Bible states that “scoffers
will come in the last days, walking according to their own lusts, and
saying, ‘Where is the promise of His coming? For since the fathers fell
asleep, all things continue as they were from the beginning of
creation.’ For this they willfully forget: that by the Word of God the
heavens were of old” (2 Peter 3:3–5), and “that Day [of Jesus’ Second
Coming] will not come unless the falling away comes first. Because they
did not receive the love of the truth … God will send them strong
delusion, that they should believe the lie” (2 Thessalonians 2:3,10–11).
The adherents of secular humanism have had their hands on the controls for many years now, and their record is not good.
At the other extreme there are people who profess religion—even a
belief in Jesus Christ—but whose actions belie their words, their
lifestyle and governance being as different from what Jesus lived and
taught as night is from day. Even the most casual observer could not
help but notice that Jesus’ admonition to “love your enemies, bless
those who curse you, do good to those who hate you” (Matthew 5:44) has
no place in these supposedly Christian leaders’ belief systems.
So where does that leave us? Well, that fulfills another verse about
the Endtime—this time one of Jesus’ own predictions in His famous
discourse on the signs of the End which is recorded in Matthew 24. “And
because lawlessness will abound, the love of many will grow cold”
(Matthew 24:12).
And what are we to do? We are to be God’s witnesses, His agents of
truth and salvation, now and till the very End, so that the verses that
immediately follow can also be fulfilled: “But he who endures to the
end shall be saved. And this Gospel of the kingdom will be preached in
all the world as a witness to all the nations, and then the end will
come” (Matthew 24:13–14).