by Dinopresley » Thu Mar 02, 2017 5:55 pm
That was very well articulated. I would absolutely agree with what you stated and what I think you were getting at- our faith should be a thinking faith. To not think is to deny a basic aspect of the breath of God inside of us. Obviously, not to put words in your mouth, that just seems to be what you were saying.
That being said, I have two branching lines of thought to build off that. Theologically, and practically.
Theologically:
While I 100% agree that we should have a thinking faith, one outlined by evidence, I think there are two possible issues.
1: The evidence isn't enough.
2: There is no evidence.
1. In the first scenario, I'm going to use a very hard analogy, so bear with me. A child is abused by her father over the course of years. Her mother, finding out, takes him to court for a divorce and physical abuse charges. The judge orders for a psychological analysis and a physical to see if there's emotional and physical scarring. There is evidence for abuse for the psychological analysis, but there is no evidence of physical abuse. Consequentially, the charges are denied on lack of evidence.
In that scenario, the truth of the matter is the the girl suffered abuse. But the lack of evidence, and ruling thereafter, creates a dichotomy of our relative reality. So for any person to believe her, thus believe the truth, they have to make a decision to not only ignore the lack of evidence, but in some cases deny the conclusion of the evidence that is there.
2. In the second scenario, I'm going to use a much different analogy. In the dark Knight, the joker (essentially) steals a literal mountain of cash. Immediately after acquiring the moo-lah, he sets it on fire. The evidence for what was stolen is literally non existent. Likewise, if a stranger steals my toothbrush and burns it to ash, I have no evidence to conclude who stole it, if it was even stolen, or where it is now. That neither changes the fact that this person stole it and it was in his possession.
My conclusion for the theological side is, while we should have a thinking faith, there are situations that must transcend thought.
Practically:
Theologically speaking, I agree with you 99.5%. However, when it comes to seeing how other Christians live out and describe their view of faith (the concept, not religion), I've experienced a divide between the biblical theology and the practice. There seems to either be a vague, abstract understanding of the concept of faith, or a complete avoidance of the term all together.
While I'm bothered by the seemingly general naivete of something so central to the Christian worldview, I would have to admit that I find solidarity in the fact that people find faith in the absence of knowledge.
Largely, I'm speaking to the problem of evil. To paraphrase Dr. William Lane Craig in his defenders series, if I may, there are two ways people look at pain: academically and emotionally. While I think I might be able to argue the evidence of God's goodness, to someone who's son was just in a fatal car accident the evidence may not be enough to soothe their heart.
On the flip side, if there were a sole survivor in a village wiped out by a volcano eruption, the evidence may not come across so much as a good God. Emotionally they certainly wouldn't see it. When pain clouds the vision, what do we call believing if we believe through closed eyes?
But there are other examples. In my opinion, there are multiple kinds of evidence. There is evidence for the mind, but there is also evidence for the heart. For example, there is great amounts of evidence to support evolution. Enough for me, as a Christian, to believe. However, even WITH the large amounts of physical evidence, there is not enough evidence to satisfy my souls desire for meaning. For some it does, but for me it doesn't. For me, no matter how many physical facts you present to me, evolution doesn't witness to my heart.
My conclusion for the practical side is, while we should have a thinking faith, there are seasons where faith must endure in spite of thought.
My question following those conclusions, if you would concede to them, would be: if there are situations and/or seasons that must transcend (and even endure in spite of) thought, how should we view faith in light of that?
My initial answer: We sometimes have a blind faith (I.E., one we believe regardless of evidence).
This has been me thinking in writing, so thank you for the conversation! My logic is evolving as I'm continuing to think it through, so it may not be perfect. I would love to hear your thoughts!
PS. Have you considered making an app version of your website?
That was very well articulated. I would absolutely agree with what you stated and what I think you were getting at- our faith should be a thinking faith. To not think is to deny a basic aspect of the breath of God inside of us. Obviously, not to put words in your mouth, that just seems to be what you were saying.
That being said, I have two branching lines of thought to build off that. Theologically, and practically.
Theologically:
While I 100% agree that we should have a thinking faith, one outlined by evidence, I think there are two possible issues.
1: The evidence isn't enough.
2: There is no evidence.
1. In the first scenario, I'm going to use a very hard analogy, so bear with me. A child is abused by her father over the course of years. Her mother, finding out, takes him to court for a divorce and physical abuse charges. The judge orders for a psychological analysis and a physical to see if there's emotional and physical scarring. There is evidence for abuse for the psychological analysis, but there is no evidence of physical abuse. Consequentially, the charges are denied on lack of evidence.
In that scenario, the truth of the matter is the the girl suffered abuse. But the lack of evidence, and ruling thereafter, creates a dichotomy of our relative reality. So for any person to believe her, thus believe the truth, they have to make a decision to not only ignore the lack of evidence, but in some cases deny the conclusion of the evidence that is there.
2. In the second scenario, I'm going to use a much different analogy. In the dark Knight, the joker (essentially) steals a literal mountain of cash. Immediately after acquiring the moo-lah, he sets it on fire. The evidence for what was stolen is literally non existent. Likewise, if a stranger steals my toothbrush and burns it to ash, I have no evidence to conclude who stole it, if it was even stolen, or where it is now. That neither changes the fact that this person stole it and it was in his possession.
My conclusion for the theological side is, while we should have a thinking faith, there are situations that must transcend thought.
Practically:
Theologically speaking, I agree with you 99.5%. However, when it comes to seeing how other Christians live out and describe their view of faith (the concept, not religion), I've experienced a divide between the biblical theology and the practice. There seems to either be a vague, abstract understanding of the concept of faith, or a complete avoidance of the term all together.
While I'm bothered by the seemingly general naivete of something so central to the Christian worldview, I would have to admit that I find solidarity in the fact that people find faith in the absence of knowledge.
Largely, I'm speaking to the problem of evil. To paraphrase Dr. William Lane Craig in his defenders series, if I may, there are two ways people look at pain: academically and emotionally. While I think I might be able to argue the evidence of God's goodness, to someone who's son was just in a fatal car accident the evidence may not be enough to soothe their heart.
On the flip side, if there were a sole survivor in a village wiped out by a volcano eruption, the evidence may not come across so much as a good God. Emotionally they certainly wouldn't see it. When pain clouds the vision, what do we call believing if we believe through closed eyes?
But there are other examples. In my opinion, there are multiple kinds of evidence. There is evidence for the mind, but there is also evidence for the heart. For example, there is great amounts of evidence to support evolution. Enough for me, as a Christian, to believe. However, even WITH the large amounts of physical evidence, there is not enough evidence to satisfy my souls desire for meaning. For some it does, but for me it doesn't. For me, no matter how many physical facts you present to me, evolution doesn't witness to my heart.
My conclusion for the practical side is, while we should have a thinking faith, there are seasons where faith must endure in spite of thought.
My question following those conclusions, if you would concede to them, would be: if there are situations and/or seasons that must transcend (and even endure in spite of) thought, how should we view faith in light of that?
My initial answer: We sometimes have a blind faith (I.E., one we believe regardless of evidence).
This has been me thinking in writing, so thank you for the conversation! My logic is evolving as I'm continuing to think it through, so it may not be perfect. I would love to hear your thoughts!
PS. Have you considered making an app version of your website?