Proving Too Much, Explaining Too Little

In this installment, we examine the section of Chapter 5 titled “We Need to Prove More.” Here, Mark Clark tries to flip the burden of proof. Rather than defending why evil exists in a world ruled by a loving, all-powerful God, he argues that atheism and secular worldviews face an even greater challenge: explaining why evil is evil at all.

Let’s follow his logic—and then follow it to where it breaks down.


1. The Moral Absolutism Card

Clark argues that when an atheist points to a school shooting, cancer, genocide, or abuse and says, “This is evil,” they’re making a moral claim that presupposes an objective standard—something atheism supposedly cannot provide.

He writes:

“When someone appeals to evil to argue against God, they’re assuming the very thing they deny.”

This is a familiar apologetic move popularized by C.S. Lewis and many since. The logic goes like this:

  1. If you say something is really evil, not just personally disliked, you’re appealing to a moral law.
  2. A moral law implies a moral lawgiver.
  3. Therefore, your outrage at evil ironically proves God exists.

It’s a clever move. But it’s also a rhetorical sleight of hand.


2. Morality Without God Is Not Moral Relativism

Clark assumes that without God, morality must be subjective, fluctuating with cultural whims or personal preferences. But this is a false dichotomy. There’s a wide spectrum between absolute theistic morality and complete moral relativism.

Secular ethicists have developed powerful frameworks for grounding morality in human well-being, flourishing, reciprocity, and empathy—all without invoking the supernatural.

For example:

  • Sam Harris defends moral realism grounded in human suffering and well-being.
  • Peter Singer builds utilitarian ethics on the capacity to suffer.
  • Michael Shermer and Steven Pinker argue from evolutionary psychology and rational empathy.

These frameworks don’t rely on divine command—they rely on human experience, biological wiring, and the shared consequences of actions in a social world.

In other words, one can object to child abuse not because a deity told them to, but because children suffer, and we have the capacity to care and act accordingly.


3. God’s Existence Doesn’t Make Evil Less Evil—It Makes It More Troubling

Even if we granted that atheists lack a basis for calling anything truly evil (they don’t), that wouldn’t solve Clark’s problem.

Because the Christian worldview doesn’t merely acknowledge evil—it claims that God created a world where evil was possible, knew it would happen, allowed it, and in many cases, uses it for His purposes.

This raises bigger questions than it answers:

  • Why create a world where moral atrocities are part of the plan?
  • Why intervene selectively?
  • Why punish temporary rebellion with eternal torment?

Clark never addresses these contradictions directly. He prefers to highlight the flaws in naturalistic morality while glossing over the moral absurdities within theism itself.

But if God is the source of morality, then everything God does must be moral—even genocide, slavery, or the killing of firstborns. That’s not a solution to evil. That’s a divine endorsement of it.


4. You Can’t Borrow What You Don’t Need

Clark accuses secular thinkers of “borrowing” moral values from theism. But what if they’re not borrowing—what if they’re just using the same evolved moral instincts we all share?

A child doesn’t need a Bible verse to know that hitting someone is wrong. A dog doesn’t need a deity to know when it’s being mistreated. Compassion, fairness, and pain aversion are not the property of any one religion.

In fact, many moral advancements—from the abolition of slavery to women’s rights to LGBTQ+ acceptance—have come despite religious resistance, not because of it.

If anything, secular ethics have often led the way.


Conclusion: Proof That Distracts from the Problem

Clark wants to shift the spotlight. He wants us to stop asking how an all-loving God coexists with suffering and start asking how atheists can justify moral outrage.

It’s a classic apologetic tactic:

Distract, redefine, accuse.

But when we peel back the layers, we see the strategy:

  • Move from the existence of evil to the definition of evil.
  • Shift from God’s inaction to atheism’s inconsistency.
  • Use philosophical judo to avoid confronting divine silence.

But the core question remains:

If God exists, why is the world the way it is?

Not why we feel it’s wrong. Not how we define evil. But why, if there’s a loving and powerful God at the controls, evil persists—on massive scales and in personal tragedies.

Until that is answered, no amount of philosophical finger-pointing can restore faith in the moral credibility of the Christian God.


Rational or Religious? A Response to the “What If I Don’t Want to Believe?” Argument

This post is part of our ongoing series examining Mark Clark’s book, The Problem of God, one section at a time. Each post critically analyzes Clark’s claims through the lens of reason, evidence, and The God Question’s core philosophy: we don’t begin with belief—we begin with curiosity. This installment responds to “What If I Don’t Want to Believe?” (pp. 59–62).


🔍 The Real Problem Isn’t Wanting—It’s Projecting

In this section, Mark Clark suggests that atheists reject God not out of intellectual conviction, but emotional rebellion. He opens by quoting philosopher Thomas Nagel, who once admitted he didn’t want there to be a God—and from that admission, Clark builds a universal theory: unbelief is motivated by desire, not reason.

But Clark’s claim quickly falls apart under scrutiny.


🔹 1. One Philosopher’s Quote ≠ Universal Psychology

Quoting Nagel to prove that atheists in general reject God because they “don’t want Him to exist” is like quoting one Christian who doubts and concluding that all Christians secretly disbelieve. It’s anecdotal, not analytical.

Clark commits the psychologist’s fallacy, projecting inner motives onto others. Even if some atheists are emotionally biased, the same can be said of believers who want God to exist. That desire doesn’t invalidate their belief—but neither does its absence invalidate unbelief.


🔹 2. Motivated Reasoning Cuts Both Ways

Clark warns that nonbelievers may be influenced by motivated reasoning. That’s true. But so are believers.

Many religious people believe in a God who offers:

  • Eternal life
  • Cosmic justice
  • Moral clarity
  • Ultimate meaning
  • Parental love

Each of those ideas fulfills deep psychological needs. If we’re going to talk about biased motivation, we must admit that religious belief is at least as susceptible to emotional influence as disbelief.


🔹 3. Morality Doesn’t Require a God

Clark claims that without God, we lose all basis for morality. But this is a false dichotomy. Moral frameworks like:

  • Humanism
  • Utilitarianism
  • Kantian ethics
  • Virtue ethics

…have nothing to do with divine authority, yet still offer strong arguments for good and ethical behavior. They are taught in philosophy departments worldwide, and taken seriously by thoughtful people—religious and secular alike.

Morality grounded in human well-being is no less binding than morality decreed by a deity. It’s just reasoned, not revealed.


🔹 4. The Conscience Isn’t Divine

Clark invokes C.S. Lewis’s “Law of Human Nature” argument: our inner moral compass is evidence of a divine moral lawgiver.

But we now know, thanks to evolutionary psychology and cognitive science, that humans evolved moral instincts through natural selection. Cooperation, empathy, fairness—these traits help social species survive. There’s no need to invoke a cosmic moral source when the biological one explains the data better.


🔹 5. Honest Doubt Isn’t Rebellion

Clark ends by encouraging nonbelievers to “lay down their weapons” and stop fighting God. But this framing presumes too much. It assumes:

  • A God exists.
  • Atheists know He exists.
  • They’re actively resisting Him.

This is not a description of intellectual honesty. It’s a caricature of rebellion.

Many of us left belief not because we hated God, but because we followed the evidence. We grieved our loss of faith. We wrestled. We studied. And eventually, we found something more real than belief: clarity.


✅ Conclusion

If the only way to defend belief is to psychologize unbelief, then the argument is already lost. We don’t need to fear our doubts. We need to follow them—honestly, carefully, and without presuming the conclusions.

That’s what The God Question is about.