Stephen Fry and God

stephenfryStephen Fry has caused a bit of a stir with his comments to Gay Byrne on the kind of god he does not believe in. As is his habit, Fry did not hold back:

How dare you? How dare you create a world to which there is such misery that is not our fault. It’s not right, it’s utterly, utterly evil. Why should I respect a capricious, mean-minded, stupid God who creates a world that is so full of injustice and pain. That’s what I would say.

Now, if I died and it was Pluto, Hades, and if it was the 12 Greek gods then I would have more truck with it, because the Greeks didn’t pretend to not be human in their appetites, in their capriciousness, and in their unreasonableness… they didn’t present themselves as being all-seeing, all-wise, all-kind, all-beneficent, because the god that created this universe, if it was created by god, is quite clearly a maniac… utter maniac, totally selfish.

We have to spend our life on our knees thanking him? What kind of god would do that?

It’s worth listening to the clip yourself, if you have not already done so.

Before engaging in the substance, there are a few things worth noting about this as communication. First, it is curious either that Byrne should be surprised by this ‘outburst’ or that Fry should be surprised by the response. Fry’s comments are just what you would expect if you had done your research well (or even watched a couple of episodes of QI) and when you call the god that many people claim to believe in ‘capricious, mean-minded, stupid…an utter maniac, totally selfish’ you would have to be living on another planet to imagine this will not cause a stir of some sort.

But the second thing worth noting is that Fry’s comments are expressed in highly emotive terms. Fry cites Bertrand Russell as one of his rational forebears in this atheist tradition, and a good many atheists have welcomed his comments as some kind of knock-down logical argument to which religion has no response. When I was discussing this on local radio with a humanist, his main comment was ‘I am glad people are asking questions—that’s what I want people to do.’ Curiously, not many are asking questions about Fry’s own comments, for good reason: his style does not invite questioning. In turns out, for example, that the eyeball-burrowing worm he mentions does not in fact exist. Earlier in the programme, Fry had mentioned that he stole a jacket as a teenager and lived the high life off credit cards he had found in the pocket for three months.

“He gave as his answer as to how he got away with it for three months, part of the reason was he is a very big guy, and secondly he said, ‘because I had an aura of authority about it’.” said Gay.

“He had this voice, this very upper class British voice. He said, ‘When I issue a statement it stays issued and you’d be a very brave person to take me on.’”

The popularity of Fry’s approach is that it is emotive and closes questions down, rather than that it is rational and opens questions up, which is somewhat ironic.

Thirdly, we need to remember that scepticism is easy—that’s why so many stand-up comics deal with scepticism and cynicism in their material. Being critical of something is usually quick and easy; offering a reflective defence on any issue requires a lot more work—and usually depends on the kind of patience and trust within the conversation which is hard to establish in any broadcast medium.


In terms of a the substance of Fry’s objection, there are a number of inter-related things to say. First, we have to admit there is no quick and easy philosophical response to the problem of suffering. That applies to Fry’s comments as much as it does to the standard Christians arguments. Fry is not offering a solution to the problem of suffering; when you abolish God, you do not abolish the problem of pain. In effect, he is saying ‘There is no solution, so just get on with it.’ As David Robertson responds:

If you take God out of the equation you still have the suffering, pain and apparent meaninglessness. Evolution still provides you with the worm that burrows through children’s eyes. What’s your answer and solution – apart from suck it up and see?

On the other hand, some of the classic Christian responses don’t cut the mustard either. The popular version of the classic ‘free will defence’ says that a suffering world is a necessary consequence of God giving humanity free will. This does offer one reply to Fry’s comment that God ‘could easily’ have created a world without suffering; it looks about as easy as making a square circle. But an obvious response to the free will defence is: well, was it really worth it? Is my human dignity really worth giving someone the ability to torture another human being and burn them alive, let alone the suffering caused by natural disasters? Besides, when someone is in a place of suffering themselves, the last thing they need is a philosophical defence of God.


This relates to the second main issue: the god that Fry describes is not the God that most Christians believe in. This God does not sit aloof from a suffering world, nor is the world the way God intended it to be. It is not as straightforward as saying that human sin causes tsunamis, but Scripture is clear that human sin does destroy relationships in marriage (Gen 3), in families (Gen 4) and across society (Gen 8–11). It harms the earth (Hosea 4.3), and in some mysterious sense the whole of creation is ‘in bondage to decay’ (Romans 8.21). And God’s response to this is one of both justice and compassion—to the point of stepping into this troubled world. A god who does not share in the suffering of the world is not a god worth believing in.

It is striking that this God allows, even encourages, questioning. Human protestations against God occupy a large part of the Psalms, and the entirety of the book of Job. And contrary to Fry’s assertion, God isn’t interested in people grovelling in gratitude at his unquestioning power. In Ps 95, God’s power evokes celebration, not grovelling, and bowing down in worship is a response to his tender care, not his omnipotence.


Thirdly, if there is no god, where does Fry get his sense of justice and injustice from? On what grounds does he make a judgement about things being ‘evil’, which is a moral, not a rational, category? The evangelist Michael Green’s first experience of university missions was at the London School of Economics—a hotbed of left-wing liberalism—in the 1960s. He leapt onto the stage in front of a group of sceptical atheists and called out ‘Why are you lot revolting?’ He was asking where their sense of right and wrong and injustice came from, if not from God. ‘God has left his footprints in the heart of humanity’ (see Ecc 3.11).

A much more consistent position for an atheist is that expounded by Richard Dawkins:

In a universe of electrons and selfish genes, blind physical forces and genetic replication, some people are going to get hurt, other people are going to get lucky, and you won’t find any rhyme or reason in it, nor any justice. The universe that we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil, no good, nothing but pitiless indifference.

This is a much more coherent position—but I suspect Fry is very well aware that it is not very appealing, and does not look like very good PR. Nor does it actually answer the question he raises; instead, it declares the question itself meaningless. In that sense, the questions that Fry raises are actually close to questions of faith, not questions of unbelief.

This leads on to a related question: Where does Fry find hope for an end to suffering, or for any sense of justice and accountability? Will those who burn alive a Jordanian pilot ever be held to account? Or (more pertinently for an atheist) will those responsible for Stalin’s killing of 20 million people ever face justice? It might be that suggesting there is a god who sees all this and will hold people to account in judgement is an inadequate answer. But it starts to look like the least worse option when the alternative is that there is no-one who sees and justice will never be done.

Atheist-advertising-campa-001The Christian vision for the world is that one day there will be an end to suffering, and there will be an account given of all injustice and oppression—that, through the self-giving suffering of God, evil will in some mysterious way be brought to an end. This can still be dismissed as wishful thinking, and I should make clear that I don’t believe this because it would be nice—I believe it because I think it is true!

There is a real challenge here for atheists to offer a credible, hopeful alternative. It is all very well telling wealthy Londoners to ‘stop worrying and enjoy life’, but that doesn’t cut much ice with the vast majority of humanity who have plenty to worry about and many fewer resources with which to enjoy life.


The final question Fry raises is that of human action. If God were to make a world without suffering, what would it look like? What would God intervene to prevent? Tsunamis and earthquakes are one thing; but what kinds of human action would God prevent? I am sure we would be happy to see an end to war, murder, rape and abuse. But what about rivalry and jealousy, which has so often inhibited scientific development? What about lack of cooperation and sharing of information that could bring real relief to human suffering? What about financial inequality, which is perhaps the greatest threat to global well-being? Stephen Fry’s net worth has been estimated at around £20m, though anyone with a net worth of £500,000 is in the richest 1% of the world who own half the world’s capital assets. Beyond all that, what would this omnipotent God do about the sheer indifference of most humanity to the suffering of others? For many of us, God’s lack of action (for the moment) looks like a mercy—an opportunity to ‘redeem our lives’.

These questions have a connection with the free will defence. But they have sharper resonance with the issue of human responsibility. As John Goldingay once said:

The problem of theodicy is not the justification of a holy God in the face of suffering humanity, but the justification of sinful humanity in the face of a holy God.

Fry claims that ‘the moment you banish [God] life becomes simpler, purer, cleaner’. The testimony of history hardly supports such a claim.

_80751327_20070208_pres_ghana_223_small(4)In the same week that Stephen Fry was railing against worms that caused suffering, it was announced that another similar affliction was coming to an end—that of the guinea worm.

A devastating tropical disease should be eradicated within three years, says the former American president leading the fight against it. There were 3.5 million cases of guinea worm worldwide when Jimmy Carter’s organisation started tackling the disease in 1986. Now there are just 126 cases globally – many of them in South Sudan and Mali.

Former US President Jimmy Carter has been motivated to this work by his evangelical faith—faith in the god that Fry appears to reject. The Carter Foundation’s next goal is to eliminate river blindness. Perhaps his legacy is the best answer to Fry’s complaint.


Much of my work is done on a freelance basis. If you have valued this post, would you consider donating £1.20 a month to support the production of this blog?


DON'T MISS OUT!
Signup to get email updates of new posts
We promise not to spam you. Unsubscribe at any time.
Invalid email address

If you enjoyed this, do share it on social media (Facebook or Twitter) using the buttons on the left. Follow me on Twitter @psephizo. Like my page on Facebook.


Much of my work is done on a freelance basis. If you have valued this post, you can make a single or repeat donation through PayPal:

For other ways to support this ministry, visit my Support page.


Comments policy: Do engage with the subject. Please don't turn this into a private discussion board. Do challenge others in the debate; please don't attack them personally. I no longer allow anonymous comments; if there are very good reasons, you may publish under a pseudonym; otherwise please include your full name, both first and surnames.

18 thoughts on “Stephen Fry and God”

  1. I would imagine that Stephen Fry would agree with your quote from Richard Dawkins.

    Of course, Atheists raging about an evil god, or nasty stuff in general, are really attempting to communicate in our own terms to us.

    So what if Stephen is worth £20m? He may well be generous with it and do much charity work.

    I wonder what Stephen was thinking when he thought taking God out of the equation makes things simpler and purer, any ideas?

    Reply
    • Do you really think that he would agree with Dawkins? It doesn’t sit very well…

      ‘So what if Fry is worth £20m?’ I think it is very pertinent in relation to what it would take to create a perfect world. Fry claims this could ‘easily’ have been done, but a few moments’ reflection suggests otherwise.

      On the last point, I think he is reflecting on his own psychological disposition. Again, there isn’t much evidence to support this notion.

      Reply
      • Thanks Ian

        Well we will have to disagree on whether Fry would agree with Dawkins, I still think he would – that his displeasure is related to when faith folk’s teaching/requirements impinge (negatively) on others.

        Still don’t get the money thing. Both Atheists and believers can be very generous. Perfect worlds would not necessarily require equality of resources or abilities, though the free sharing of them would make for the possibility of better relations. Of course Jubilee theology has a lot to say to this. Atheists may say that we are free to choose what kind of societies we want to develop. Atheists have the same capacity to be kind as believers.

        Yes, I think both Dawkins and Fry are on dodgy ground historically to put human caused suffering down to faith followers alone!

        Reply
  2. Ian, you wrote:
    “… a good many atheists have welcomed his comments as some kind of knock-down logical argument to which religion has no response. ”

    The God who allegedly allows suffering is the same God who allowed his own Son to die on the cross.

    Stephen Fry and a good many atheists don’t really have any response to the Christian position and Stephen Fry, from his comments, expected the Father to save the Son from the cross – what he didn’t expect was a Father who allows his Son to die.

    Reply
  3. A desire for justice is no more divine than any other human emotion. It’s a pragmatic acknowledgment that we live in competition with each other and that all forms of competition require ground rules in order to prevent levels of deprivation that could spark catastrophic social upheaval.

    No God is necessary to feel a desire for justice. All you need is common sense and an understanding that when deprived of everything, men will turn to violence and revolution as a way of reclaiming some part of what they need or want.

    Reply
  4. Poor Mr Fry. Despite being an intelligent man on worldly matters, when it comes to relgion, Christianity in particular, there is real depth to his ignorance and lack of understanding. He doesn’t seem to understand that man suffers not because God likes to inflict pain, but because man prefers to sin and thereby cut himself off from the grace his creator. Mr Frys words are typical of a person who hates God and then complains that he does not see God’s love in the world around him…

    Titus 1:15 To the pure, all things are pure, but to those who are corrupted and do not believe, nothing is pure. In fact, both their minds and consciences are corrupted”

    Reply
    • Nick, thanks for commenting, but I don’t think I agree with your approach. There is no doubt that in addressing this question, Fry is articulating an important felt concern. Suffering is one of the biggest reasons for scepticism in Western culture, and I agree with some atheists who think that the classic Christian answers don’t really address the question properly.

      Reply
    • Titus 1:15 To the pure, all things are pure, but to those who are corrupted and do not believe, nothing is pure. In fact, both their minds and consciences are corrupted” Yes, I was taught this in my christian upbringing as well. Now being also a critical thinker, I have to side with both religion and science (fry) in this case. The bible is correct in the sense that humans have the free will to make their own decisions – good or bad. “God’s will” punishes those who go against what is good. However, why would an innocent child; who has never known the difference in between good or bad (such as a baby if infant)….be punished under “God’s will”?? Makes no sense. No Priest, Pastor, or my kids Rabbi (yes, they’re being raised Jewish by their Mom) has been able to answer that.

      Reply
  5. Stephen Fry,has close friendship to the explorer Bear Grylls who I hasten to add is a committed Christian.
    Sometime last year Stephen Fry filmed a little video clip with him. He seems to have a lot of respect for Bear’s faith in God and creation but Mr Fry is proving that the longer you rebel against God the more bitter you become. I will pray for him to submit to God and have peace everlasting.
    Here is the link to the video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C_3TdQolVRA

    Reply
    • “Mr Fry is proving that the longer you rebel against God the more bitter you become”

      Please. Mr Fry rebels against the conception of God that he has learned ***from Christian(ist)***. He has every right to be bitter about the God he has learned from them.

      It’s up to those of us who truly follow Jesus to teach him the New Testament’s witness of Jesus (which is nothing like the Christianists’ Bully-God), and not blame Fry for “rebellion”.

      Reply
  6. I just came across your comments on Fry in BeThinking and I wish to comment on several points.

    The god that Fry describes is the god that many if not most Christians believe in. The omniscient, omnipotent, omnibenevolent, other omnis to taste, loving creator of the universe who allows evil and suffering in the world. I agree that “free will” does not answer the problems of evil and suffering but I have another objection to that solution. The perpetrator uses free will to commit evil but what about the victim’s free will choice not to be victimized? Regardless, a truly loving, beneficent god, which is what Christians have told me repeatedly their god is, would not allow evil and suffering. Since there is obviously evil and suffering in the world and if your god exists, then obviously he allows that evil and suffering to happen. Which tells me either your god is lacking one or more of the omni-attributes or your god doesn’t exist. Fry is right that the problems of evil and suffering do not apply to the Greek gods, who are described as powerful but not omni-anything.

    Fr (and I) get a sense of justice and injustice from empathy. Humans are social animals, we evolved empathy to help us live together in groups. People lacking empathy are considered to suffer the sociopathy disorder. Other social animals such as chimpanzees, gorillas and wolves also display senses of justice. Gods are not required for empathy to function.

    I agree with Dawkins that our universe doesn’t care about justice. Terry Pratchett has his character Death tell his apprentice: “There is no justice, there is just us.” Even Jesus said “…he causes his sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous.” Matt 5:45 (NIV) Or in simpler terms, “things happen” (I learned a saltier verson of that when I was in the Navy). Stalin died in his bed, having killed millions of people. Many of those people were blameless of any serious wrongdoing. Neither Staling nor his victims got justice. Things happen and the universe doesn’t care. What’s more, according to a certain widely held Christian dogma, one is reprieved of sin if one accepts Jesus into one’s heart. Serial murderer and cannibal Jeffrey Dahmer is supposed to have repented before his execution, so according to that dogma it’s harp lessons in the afterlife for him. So even Christianity doesn’t offer justice.

    Just as a final note, the loa loa or African eyeworm is a nematode transmitted to humans through fly bites. It can burrow into eyeballs and destroy them. Fortunately rarely affects eyes but it is endemic in Western and Central Africa.

    Reply
    • Dear Michael

      Many thanks for coming over and commenting. Sorry for the delay in approval—I wanted to remember to respond.

      I think your comment is very interesting and thought-provoking. But I cannot help feeling you are making something of a category error. Empathy will lead to feeling for other people—but it does not lead to a burning sense of injustice, which is what Stephen Fry is articulating. We can feel sorry for people, but if the pain they feel is the result of random chance, then feeling a sense of burning injustice is not an appropriate response.

      Justice assumes a moral dimension to the universe, which Christians derive from their understanding of God as just. If you are an atheist materialist, why should you have any sense of justice in the random chance of the world?

      Reply

Leave a Reply to Nick Cancel reply