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Martin Luther King, Jr. Day

In honor of Martin Luther King, Jr. day, an excerpt from the “I have a dream” speech:

I have a dream today. I have a dream that one day every valley shall be exalted, every hill and mountain shall be made low, the rough places will be made plain, and the crooked places will be made straight, and the glory of the Lord shall be revealed, and all flesh shall see it together. This is our hope. This is the faith with which I return to the South. With this faith we will be able to hew out of the mountain of despair a stone of hope. With this faith we will be able to transform the jangling discords of our nation into a beautiful symphony of brotherhood. With this faith we will be able to work together, to pray together, to struggle together, to go to jail together, to stand up for freedom together, knowing that we will be free one day.

This will be the day when all of God’s children will be able to sing with a new meaning, “My country, ’tis of thee, sweet land of liberty, of thee I sing. Land where my fathers died, land of the pilgrim’s pride, from every mountainside, let freedom ring.” And if America is to be a great nation, this must become true. So let freedom ring from the prodigious hilltops of New Hampshire. Let freedom ring from the mighty mountains of New York. Let freedom ring from the heightening Alleghenies of Pennsylvania! Let freedom ring from the snowcapped Rockies of Colorado! Let freedom ring from the curvaceous peaks of California! But not only that; let freedom ring from Stone Mountain of Georgia! Let freedom ring from Lookout Mountain of Tennessee! Let freedom ring from every hill and every molehill of Mississippi. From every mountainside, let freedom ring.

When we let freedom ring, when we let it ring from every village and every hamlet, from every state and every city, we will be able to speed up that day when all of God’s children, black men and white men, Jews and Gentiles, Protestants and Catholics, will be able to join hands and sing in the words of the old Negro spiritual, “Free at last! free at last! thank God Almighty, we are free at last!”

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Titan!

This is cool — the first color picture from the surface of Titan, from the Huygens probe:

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General and Special Revelation

MuD and PhuD touched off an interesting, and pleasantly civil (so far) discussion about “theistic evolution.” David Mobley responded with a couple of thoughtful posts (on which I commented) and Randomize followed with his own insightful thoughts.

I’d like to follow up a bit more with some thoughts on the relationship between General Revelation and Special Revelation. Before I do, I’d note that I wouldn’t necessarily define my position as “theistic evolution,” and that although I make some references to young earth creationism, they aren’t intended to reflect the views of any of the bloggers with whom I’m engaging, or to disparage anyone who holds those views.

To me, whatever position you take about how and when God created, a central question and often-ignored question is how information we learn from the world around us impacts our understanding of what we read in scripture.

As summarized in Millard Erickson’s Christian Theology:

There is a possibility of some knowlege of divine truth outside the special revelation. We may understand more about the spcially revealed truth by examining the general revelation. . . . Since both creation and the gospel are intelligible and coherent revelations of God, there is harmony between the two, and mutual reinforcement of one by the other. The biblical revelation is not toally distinct from what is known of the natural realm. Genuine knowledge and genuine morality in unbelieving (as well as believing) humans are not their own accomplishments. Truth arrived at apart from special revelation is still God’s truth.” (Erickson, Systematic Theology, at p. 198.)

I view “science” — a term that actually requires, I think, substantial definition (maybe in a later post) — simply as one way of knowing, not the only or even always the “best” way. Yet, although general revelation does not take precedence over special revelation, neither, I think, should we think of special revelation as “superior” to general revelation. In fact, I believe that “all truth is God’s truth,” and that there is no real conflict between the two sources of revelation, so the question of one taking “precedence” over the other is misplaced. There are only apparent conflicts, because we (a) misunderstand the “text” of general revelation; (b) misundestand the text of special revelation; or (c) misunderstand both.

Some Biblicists accuse those who believe in theistic evolution of elevating “science” over the Bible. I think this sets up a false dichotomy. In fact, it suggests a radical view of both revelation and the capacities of human perception and reason. In essence, it suggests that our perceptions of the world around us, our use of observational and mathematical tools to understand general revelation, are corrupted beyond any reliability whatsoever. I can’t really trust measurements of red shift, parallax, background radiation, and the like, which clearly establish an ancient universe, or my observations of genetics, the fossil record, and geology, which strongly suggest if not establish biological descent with modifications. They are merely fallible human perceptions of nature, so I’m not free to reexamine an interpretation of special revelation that seems to suggest a younger universe.

One critical problem with this view is that it undermines the reliability of special revelation. If my ability to perceive general revelation is so irredeemably corrupt, why should I trust my perception of special revelation? Why is my ability to receive, read and understand the words of the Biblical text (or any commentaries on the Biblical text, including those written by YEC proponents) any more reliable than my ability to understand mathematical calculations that give an old age for the stars and galaxies?

It seems to me that the highly limited view of general revelation taken by some, and by implication its reductionistic view of the faculties of human reason and perception, ultimately would destroy any confidence in the reliability of special revelation and the truthfulness of Christian faith claims. Young earth creationists in particular never seem to be able to grasp this point. In this way, their position reflects an extreme form of postmodernism, or perhaps a form of Eastern Buddhist or Hindu thought, which asserts that nothing can truly be understood through the use of human perception and reason and that what we perceive as reality is only “apparent” and not real.

In contrast, I think a more orthodox view of general revelation affirms that human beings can perceive reality and can use reason to arrive at true statements about reality. This means that, when I observe and study the heavens, I can have some degree of confidence that what I’m observing is real, that the events I’m seeing really happened, that the logical chains of causation leading to and arising from those events correspond to reality, that “reality” isn’t only “apparently” as it appears. I likewise can have confidence that when I read the text of special revelation, it is a real communication that I can use my facilities of reason to understand with some degree of perpiscuity.

Of course, this doesn’t mean human perception and logic are unaffected by the Fall. We are prone to misperception and to errors of reasoning, and thus it is appropriate for us to constantly reevaluate our conclusions. Moreover, our preception and logic have limits; there are some things we can never fully understand, since we are merely human and not God. These limitations, however, apply to our understanding of special revelation as well as to our understanding of general revelation. I’d cite the case of the Earth-centered universe as a textbook example of how we can misinterpret scripture to be making claims it doesn’t make.

What does all this mean for the relationship between general and special revelation with respect to the creation account? It means that if observation and reason from multiple lines of data suggest an ancient age of the universe, and the Bible doesn’t explicity address the matter, we are justified in concluding that an interpretation of the Biblical text that requires a 10,000 or so year old universe is incorrect. This isn’t pitting one form of revelation against the other, or exalting one form over the other; it’s seeking to harmonize them appropriately. Here, I think Wayne Grudem’s perspective in his Systematic Theology, another widely used text from a conservative (inerrantist) evangelical viewpoint, is helpful. Grudem notes that

. . . the lesson of Galileo, who was forced to recant his teachings [about heliocentrism] and who had to live under house arrest for the last few years of his life, should remind us that creful observation of the natural world can cause us to go back to Scripture and reexamine whether Scripture actually teaches what we think it teaches. Sometimes, on closer examination of the text, we may find that our previous interpretations were incorrect.” (Grudem, Systematic Theology, at p. 273.)

I also appreciate Grudem’s Systematic Theology irenic spirit. Although Grudem leans towards a young earth view, his position is well balanced:

Although our conclusions are tentative, at this point in our understanding, Scripture seems to suggest (but not to require) a young earth view, while the observable facts of creation seem increasingly to favor an old earth view. Both views are possible, but neither are certain. And we must say very clearly that the age of the earth is a matter that is not directly taught in Scripture, but is something we can think about only by drawing more or less probably inferences from Scripture. Given this situation, it would seem best (1) to admit that God may not allow us to find a clear solution ot this question before Christ returns, and (2) to encourage evangelical scientists and theologians who fall in both the young earth and old earth camps to begin to work together with much less arrogance, much more humility, and a greater sense of cooperation in a common purpose. . . . [Y]oung earth proponents have too often given the impression that the only true ‘creationists’ are those who believe not only in cretion by God but also in a young earth. The result has been unfortunate divisiveness and lack ofcommunity among scientists who are Christians — to the delight of Satan and the grieving of God’s Holy Spirit.” (Grudem, Systematic Theology, at p. 308.)

I hope at some point, regardless of our particular views on this difficult issue, each of us can find this balance ourselves.

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Epistemology Theology

Proper Confidence

I’ve just finished reading Lesslie Newbigin’s Proper Confidence (Faith, Doubt & Certainty in Christian Discipleship). I reccomend it to anyone interested in how postmodern epistemology and Christian thought can or should interface.

I particularly appreciated Newbigin’s critique of the critical principle in Carteisan rationalism. As Newbigin succinctly defines it, the critical principle is that “[e]very truth claim must be open to criticism.” (Proper Confidence at p. 23.) He notes that this principle is self-refuting because it rests on its own presuppositional faith commitment: that all valid truth claims can ultimately be proven or disproven. The critical principle, in Newbigin’s view, should be secondary: “[t]he capacity to doubt, to question what seems obvious, is a necessary element in our effort toknow reality as it is, but its role is derivative and secondary. Rational doubt depends on faith; rational faith does not depend on doubt.” (Proper Confidence, at p. 25.) I agree with these conclusions, and I think they’re an important part of why we Evangelicals must reevaluate our commitment to rationalist foundationalism. Ultimately, as Newbigin concludes, rationalist foundationalism leads to extreme skepticism and nihlism, because nothing can be “proven” apart from any faith commitments.

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Americanism and Its Enemies

This entry is part of the Evangelical Outpost blog blog symposium. The symposium focuses on an article by David Gelernter in Commentary entitled Americanism and its Enemies.

A very brief summary of Gelernter’s thesis is that “Americanism” — a belief in that Americans are “morally superior, closer to God” — derives from the Puritans’ vision of a people set apart for devotion to God. The Puritan vision, in turn derived from Biblical imagery relating to the nation of Israel as God’s chosen people and of the blessings God would bestow on His people if they remained faithful to Him.

So far, so good. This is hardly a novel observation, although few serious historians, even serious conservative historians, would state the case so simplistically. Certainly the Puritans’ vision carried through to some extent into the founding of the colonies and later of our Republic, and even more certainly our political leaders have often used symbolism drawn from the Puritanical vision for rhetorical purposes. Of course, this is but one thread in an extraordinarily complex weave, and the “Americanist” impulse can hardly be reduced to this one thread. But the thread is there.

From this, Gelernter suggests “anti-Americanism” is a reaction against the underlying religiosity of Americanism. He notes that, “[i]n modern times, anti-Americanism is closely associated with anti-Christianism and anti-Semitism.” (Emphasis in original.) Here I think Gelernter’s thesis goes dangerously awry.

Gelernter’s thesis first goes astray because of its causal reductionism. It may well be true that many anti-Americanists are also anti-Christian and anti-Jewish. For a large segment of this population, however, this has nothing to do with anti-religious sentiments. Rather, it has everything to do with religion — the religion of radical Islamic fundamentalism. This glaring omission alone spins Gelernter’s thesis to a wisp.

For another large segment of the anti-American population, anti-religiosity and anti-Americanism go hand in hand because they are part of the zeitgeist of postmodern nihlism. They are in many ways “anti-Everything,” having given up any universal truths.

Yet, perhaps paradoxicaly, the answer to these anti-Everythings will not likely be found in a reassertion of confident, unquestioning, manly religiosity of the “W” variety. The forefathers of the anti-Everythings — among whom were the Deists who wrote our founding documents — established Reason as the ultimate foundation of Truth. When that foundation crumbled, they were left with nothing but the Cartesian cogito and the materialist assumptions of modern science. Many of them have abandoned Truth for “Preferences.” It is not “religion” per se that these children of the Enlightenment rage against; it is absolutism in any form.

What the anti-Everythings need, then, is not more propositional bravado, but more incarnational Truth. They don’t need to be told America is a “city on a Hill” towards which they must bow; they need to see Americans, particularly American Christians, “shine like stars in the universe as [we] hold out the word of life.” (Phil. 2:15-16.)

If the only problems with Gelernter’s thesis were these reductionistic tendencies, we might simply shrug and accept it for what it’s worth. But there is a mroe serious problem, perhaps the most serious problem possible — a problem of idolatry.

From the perspective of a religious American, it’s tempting to equate anti-American sentiment with “anti-Christ.” In my own dispensational Christian heritage, there were many who did this quite explicitly. I doubt Gelertner is aware of his kinship to the oddity of American Evangelicalism that is old-school dispensationalism. But whether one takes the dispensationalist’s view that anti-American literally equals “anti-Christ,” or follows Gelertner’s more subtle equation of anti-American equals anti-religious, the result is the same. To be anti-American is to be anti-God.

The problem with this way of thinking is that the lines between America and God, and between Church (the people of God) and Nation (all the people under a God-ordained government), lines that should be sharp and clear, become fuzzy. This can be convenient if one wishes to dismiss critics without much analysis, but it is antithetical to the Church’s prophetic mission. Indeed, it can become its own, perhaps more insidious form of “anti-Christ.” We do well to remember that the “beast” depicted in the apocalyptic imagery of Revelation comes not as an anti-religionist, but as one who coopts genuine prophetic faith.

So do we answer anti-Americanism by reasserting a Puritanical Americanism? I think not. We as Americans answer anti-Americanism by practicing, everywhere in the world, the principles of freedom, dignity and justice that we have historically proclaimed. We as American Christians do not so much answer anti-Americanism, but rather we incarnate the prophetic Word of God, representing in our lives and relationships the living Christ, who will judge all nations, including our own. Anything less betrays our heritage both as Americans and Christians.

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God of the Tsunami

I’ve been wrestling for a few days about how to write about the Tsunami. There’ve been some good efforts at gaining theological perspective on this tragedy, including, from the Reformed perspective, posts by A Physicist’s Perspective, John Piper, and from the “emerging” blogsphere, Jason Clark, as well as lots of good practical resources, including the collection on Christianity Today’s website.

There simply are no words or neat theological concepts that make sense of a tragedy like this. I like some of the reminders from my Reformed brothers that God is fully sovereign over even this circumstance. It happened within the scope of His plan, in accordance with His perfect justice, wisdom and love. In this regard, the tragedy is not “senseless” or “meaningless.” Each life lost, each family broken apart, each person whose home and livelihood was ruined, was and is held in God’s hands. This is true, and I cling to it.

Yet, in a way, it isn’t really enough. Though in faith I believe what I just wrote, it sounds sterile, and worse it feels sterile. In many ways it reads like — and perhaps is — something people say to make themselves feel better about a distant tragedy outside their own personal experience. If it had been my children swept away by the sea, these words would be no less true, but probably would offer far less immediate comfort.

Perhaps God’s heart for those of us not directly in the Tsunami’s wake is simply for us to empathize with the victims and survivors. We can intellectualize it, explain it in smart-sounding theological terms, but I wonder if what we most need to do is identify with it, allow its awfulness to sink in, drink up the darkness that sometimes characterizes the human condition. There are no explanations for it that will make sense to us, any more than there are explanations for any unexpected accident or illness. Life is short, and often hard, and ultimately our hope lies in the mystery of the crucified and risen Christ, in reasons beyond our questions, in answers beyond our reason.

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Quote of the day

“The early bird gets the worm, but the early worm gets eaten.”

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The Real Thing

Another entry in my ad hoc series on finding “the real thing”….

The other morning I was in the kitchen when I heard my 3-year-old son, who had just awakened, tromping down the stairs. I grabbed him at the bottom of the stairs in a big bear hug and he burried his face against my neck. There was a moment when I could feel his absolute trust, contentment, and joy in being wrapped up in his dad’s embrace. At that moment I knew I was completely fulfilling my calling in life for that moment. There was nothing else in that moment that I could have or should have been doing other than embracing my son. It struck me that it’s these simple relational things that, more often than not, are “the real thing” we seek so earnestly in our intellectual and spiritual journeys.

It also struck me that this was a picture of how God desires to relate to us. The beauty of that moment came not only from my willingness to embrace my son, but also from his delight and faith in me. He was content in my embrace because nothing in the world meant more to him than to be loved by me. And this is how is is meant to be between us and our heavenly father.

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Epistemology

Is it Wrong to Torture Babies?

The Evangelical Outpost contains a thought provoking post on the emergent conversation and “absolute moral truth.” I believe, as the author does, that certain ethical / moral principles are applicable to everyone and not merely a matter of subjective preferences. However, I think the argument raised in the Evangelical Outpost article sets up a straw man by defining “postmodern” or “emergent” Christians too broadly. I also think it muddies the waters by ignoring the ontological presuppositions that underlie ethical / moral statements.

As to my first point, many Christians who are serious about relating postmodern epistemology to theology would decidedly not accept the premise that the are no universally applicable ethical norms. While it’s true that many who call themselves “emergent” blindly accept the relativism inherent in much postmodern thought, for the most part, such people tend not to be the emergent conversations true theological thought leaders.

Take Nancey Murphy’s book Beyond Liberalism and Fundamentalism, for example. Murphy shows how a foundationalist epistemology is inadequate, and how much language concerning “absolute” truth claims is based on foundationalist epistemology. She discusses the postmodern epistemological metaphor of truth as a “web” rather than a building with a foundation, and how relativism can be avoided in a web-based view of truth. Or look at Leslie Newbigin’s Proper Confidence, and again, you’ll see a very thoughtful effort to place Christian truth claims in a nonfoundationalist context without any hint of relativism.

I think when many Christians who take criticisms of foundationalism and language theory seriously hear “absolute” as a qualifier of “truth,” it raises red flags because it sounds as though the speaker is saying “I am making a statement that completely, perfectly absolutely corresponds to reality” — meaning the speaker is able to completely, perfectly, and absolutely apprehend everything God is and communicate that completely, perfectly, and absolutely in human language — when human perception and language seem manifestly inadequate for such a task.

As to my second point, the Evangelical Outpost article uses the statement “it is wrong to torture babies” as a challeng for those who would argue there is no “absolute moral truth.” However, this is an ethical statement based on several presuppositional ontological beliefs concerning the nature of adult and infant human beings (e.g., all human beings, adult or infant, have intrinsic worth, separate wills, and inalienable rights that would make it unethical for an adult to torture an infant). The ethical statement is only “true” if our ontological presuppositions about adult and infant human beings are true. As I see it, it’s impossible to prove those presuppositions are true. In that sense, then, the statement “it is wrong to torture babies” is not an absolute statement; it is contingent on some presuppositions that ultimately are based on faith.

This isn’t to say, of course, that it might be ok to torture babies. Given this understanding of the ethical statement “it is wrong to torture babies,” I think a post-foundationalist epistemological framework actually provides greater force to the ethical statement. Under a foundationalist epistemology, I cannot demonstrate by reason alone that my ontological presuppositions about human nature are true, and therefore I’m left with little else but subjective preferences. Under a post-foundationalist epistemology, the final arbiter is not necessarily only that which is subject to rationalistic “proof.” The natural sense all people exhibit against torturing infants supports the Christian faith claim that all people are made in the image of God and therefore possess intrinsic worth. The ethical claim is then grounded in revelation as well as reason. The “objective” content of the statement is a faith-based ontological claim, which is a perfectly valid basis for the statement, and which applies universally to all people to the extent the ontological faith claim corresponds to reality.

I’m by no means a committed “emergent” person, whatever that would mean, but I do think some of the post-foundationalist theology that’s being done is quite valuable and that arguments about “absolute moral truth” often aren’t much more than sloganeering. I hope we Evangelicals can be more serious about post-foundationalist epistemology and language theory without the knee-jerk reaction “but what about ‘absolute moral truth.'” I also hope emergent Christians can be more serious about the validity of ethical claims without the knee-jerk “who sez” reaction of the postmodern culture at large.

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RSS Feed Updated / State of the Blog

I’ve updated my RSS feed so it accurately slurps content from this site. Please update your feed reader links: http://www.davidopderbeck.com/indextgd.rdf

If you don’t do RSS yet, I’d encourge you to download a copy of Bottom Feeder, a free open source aggregator. It makes keeping up with your favorite blogs much easier.

As for content here, I’ve been reading voraciously — maybe obsessively — over the past month and have much to say. Partly because of time constraints and partly because I’m still working on what I want this site to be, however, I don’t anticipate a major post every day. I think I’ll shoot for the occasional “chatty” post interspersed maybe once a week or so with someting hopefully more meaty. If you tune in here regularly, please continue to do so, and drop me a line sometime.