Why does it seem like the smartest people are the ones who reject Christianity?
Why does it seem like the smartest people are the ones who reject Christianity? Dr. Michael Kruger explains the factors that influence our beliefs and decisions, arguing that Christianity is the truth, even if those around us reject it. When it comes to intellectual challenges to the Christian faith, one of the most common questions I get from people, and this is true for college students and just about anybody who's a Christian in our modern world, is they say, "Why does it seem like the smartest people are precisely the ones who don't believe Christianity?" That's a very common question I get. This is particularly acute on the college campus because the average Christian student on a college campus will be taking their classes over time and realize, "Wait a second. My professors are really smart. They know a lot more than I do. In fact, they know much more than the average person in the world does. These are some of the brightest people on the planet with multiple degrees and all these credentials, and they seem to be precisely the ones who don't think that Christianity is true. They are exactly the ones who seem that Christianity doesn't make any sense to them." So why does it always seem, one might wonder, that the intellectual elites are the very ones that end up rejecting the faith? That can haunt you after a while. It's like a little sliver in your mind. If you don't eventually have an answer to that question, it can begin to make you think, "Well, hold on, maybe Christianity is just for people who don't think very much," or that Christianity is for people who aren't very smart or whatever. I know that becomes a problem in our mind.