Chaplain Daily Touchpoint #302: Sagan’s Folly

Introduction: I was reading a book of theology and cosmology recently. In it the author quoted atheist Carl Sagan. I’m old enough to remember Sagan’s melodramatic program Cosmos. Here’s what Sagan wrote: “In our obscurity, in all this vastness, there is no hint that help will come from elsewhere to save us from ourselves.” That’s from Sagan’s Pale Blue Dot book. You get the idea straightaway: We humans are flying solo out here on this globe known as earth. No pilot. No architect. Just material in motion. Cosmic dust. As John Lennon sang,

Imagine there’s no Heaven

It’s easy if you try

No Hell below us

Above us only sky

If the materialists are right, it’s pretty soul-crushing. You’re not special. I’m not special. We’re all just molecules in motion. Flotsam and jetsam afloat on a pillow of meaninglessness.

Isn’t it ironic, however, that Sagan aimed to convince others of his view? Why work so hard in life if you really believe, deep down, that you’re nothing, and I’m nothing, and we’re all nothing? Seems paradoxical at best.

Why would John Lennon ask us to try and imagine that we’re cosmic dust but then ask us to love one another instead of blowing one another up? Seems like a fair question, right?

Consider the Christian Alternative in Psalm 8:

When I look at your heavens, the work of your fingers,

     The moon and the stars, which you have set in place,

What is man that you are mindful of him,

     And the son of man that you care for him?

But v. 6 of the poem teaches us that we’re not cosmic dust, but that God has created each of us imago Dei, and has given us dominion and stewardship of His creation. That’s a far cry from Sagan’s depressing materialism.

Encouragement: “What’s down in the well comes up in the bucket,” is some country wisdom I grew up hearing. That’s very good theology. Why? Because as a man thinks, so is he. Let us labor to learn from the wise and eschew the foolish. You’re not a cosmic accident. You’re the creation of the good and sovereign God. Our duty is to know Him and His revealed will, and Scripture is where you’ll discover both. Sagan’s a believer now, too, by the way.