I’m continuing to blog about the 2014 Christian movie God’s Not Dead. 
 A key sub-plot of the movie is Christian student Josh Wheaton’s 
conflict with his atheist philosophy professor, Jeffrey Radisson.
Here are some thoughts:
1.  The Christian band, The Newsboys, is in the movie.  This is 
pretty ironic, considering that one of the band’s original members not long ago came out as an atheist
 (he was not in the movie, though).  In any case, at the end of the 
movie, the lead singer of the Newsboys says that Josh put a smile on 
God’s face because Josh defended God’s honor.
This scene stood out to me because I was wondering what I would have 
done if I had been Josh.  Back when I was a cocky college freshman, I 
probably would have marched right into the arena and challenged 
Professor Radisson; my arguments for Christianity and God’s existence 
would have been pretty poor, but that would not phase me.  I would keep 
on coming up with things to say.
The me right now, however—-jaded, burnt out, wearied by life, 
conscious about my future, and more unsure about my rhetorical and 
intellectual abilities, yet able to see more sides of an issue, and even
 to understand where atheists are coming from—-would simply decide not 
to take Professor Radisson’s class.  I am enough of a Christian that I 
would feel uncomfortable writing down on a piece of paper that God is 
dead and signing my name to it (as Professor Radisson asked his students
 to do).  But I would be conscious of my grade and my future, so there 
would be pressure on me to conform.  Therefore, I would bypass the 
problem altogether by not taking Professor Radisson’s class.  I can read
 atheists’ books and articles whenever I am interested in what they have
 to say.  I do not have to be bullied or pressured by an atheist 
professor.  (As a side note, I had atheist professors, but they never 
pressured me to be an atheist or to outwardly conform to atheism, as 
Professor Radisson did to his class.)
I have to respect Josh for defending God’s honor, though.  And I 
would say that Josh’s motives were purer than mine were back when I was a
 freshman, defending God’s existence against atheists in online forums. 
 I was more interested in being right, showing people that I am right 
and they are wrong, and validating myself by winning debates (which 
often happened only in my own mind).  In retrospect, I honored God more 
by serving in the nursing home at that time than I did in those online 
debates.  Josh, however, reluctantly went into the arena out of 
conviction and did so to give the students some exposure to Jesus 
Christ, and he did so at cost to himself: he would have to make up a lot
 of schoolwork that he was sacrificing by working on his presentations 
for Professor Radisson’s class, there was a strong possibility that 
Professor Radisson would fail him, and he lost a relationship.  That 
sort of courageous risk for God would put a smile on God’s face!  I 
still would dodge the class, myself, and try to put a smile on God’s 
face in other ways.
2.  My favorite scene in the movie is when Pastor Dave (played by 
David A.R. White) leads Professor Radisson to accept Jesus.  Professor 
Radisson has been hit by a car and is dying on the street.  Pastor Dave 
comes to him and asks him if he believes in God.  Professor Radisson 
replies that he is an atheist.  Pastor Dave says that the God Professor 
Radisson does not believe in is giving Professor Radisson one last 
chance to change his final answer.  Professor Radisson says that he is 
afraid and is not ready to die, and Pastor Dave responds that Jesus, 
too, was afraid: Jesus asked God to take the cup from his lips, but God 
said no.  “He says ‘no’ a lot, doesn’t he?”, Professor Radisson retorts,
 for Professor Radisson has long been angry at God for not saving his 
mother from death back when he was a child.  Pastor Dave responds that 
God gives us the answers we would want if we know what God knows.  
Professor Radisson then to Pastor Dave quotes Isaiah 55:9, which affirms
 that God’s ways are higher than our ways, and God’s thoughts than our 
thoughts.  Pastor Dave smiles, apparently impressed that Professor 
Radisson knows his Bible (Professor Radisson quoted one of Job’s 
speeches to Josh earlier in the movie), and proceeds to lead Professor 
Radisson in the sinner’s prayer.  Pastor Dave then says that, in a few 
minutes, Professor Radisson will know more about God than he or anyone 
else on earth.  Professor Radisson then passes into eternity.
On the one hand, I think that this scene inadvertently presents a 
rather trivial picture of salvation.  God has given Professor Radisson a
 chance to change his final answer?  What is this?  A game show?  On the
 other hand, I loved Pastor Dave’s appeal to how Jesus was afraid (which
 some Christians would actually dispute) and how God said “no” to Jesus.
 
 
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