What Love Explain
Christopher Beha did not return to church because someone defeated him in an argument. His path away from Christianity had been intellectually serious and personally costly. A brother’s automobile accident, his own cancer diagnosis, and repeated encounters with mortality contributed to what might be called disenchantment. The Catholicism of his childhood no longer seemed adequate to the world he had experienced. He read Bertrand Russell, Albert Camus, Arthur Schopenhauer, and other critics of religious belief. He stopped attending Mass. A world without God became, if not entirely consoling, at least intelligible. Then he fell in love. Luis Parrales tells Beha’s story in a recent article in The Atlantic, “What Atheism Could Not Explain.” The title is deliberately provocative. Atheists, after all, are perfectly capable of falling in love. Beha’s wife remains an atheist. Nothing in the story suggests that affection, fidelity, or moral seriousness belongs exclusively to believers. The clai...