The Narrow Gate
Welcome to the continuation of my blog, post-seminary. Ministry and evangelism have brought me back home to Chattanooga. I welcome your company on my journey.
The original blog, Down In Mississippi, shared stories from 2008 and 2009 of the hope and determination of people in the face of disaster wrought by the hurricanes Rita and Katrina in 2005, of work done primarily by volunteers from churches across America and with financial support of many aid agencies and private donations and the Church. My Mississippi posts really ended with the post of August 16, 2009. Much work, especially for the neediest, remained undone after the denominational church pulled out. Such is the nature of institutions. The world still needs your hands for a hand up. I commend to you my seven stories, Down in Mississippi I -VII, at the bottom of this page and the blog posts. They describe an experience of grace.
Tuesday, August 25, 2015
Day 988 - The Dilemma of Faith
This is a summary of the kickoff session
discussing discuss science and theology at Hope House, University of Tennessee,
Chattanooga campus, August 19, 2015.
This seminary series is led by Henry Paris
but its content and direction are led and chosen by the students who
participate. We have a broad spectrum of people from graduates to underclass
people, and on occasion an external visitor. Our goal in these weekly
discussions is to refine our ideas about how reconcile our sense of God with the world we experience often by scientific inquiry.
In first session of the new academic year, we explored some basic
ideas both connected to theology and science. The first question we considered
was, “What is theology?”
Theology is a uniquely Judeo-Christian idea, its Greek
translation is the “study of God.” That immediately pushes us towards the question,
“What do we believe?” Our ideas about faith
and experience shape the answer.
Faith
What is faith? Another
way to ask the question is to wonder, “ What we believe and why do we believe it?”
This question of faith is often posed only from a theological perspective.
Most people, including
many scientists, consider science to be a rational system based on certainty and
experiential observation with no room for faith. There is some irony to this
opinion.
Scientists are taught
from the beginning of education that the mathematical framework, especially the
geometry of classical Newtonian physics, rests on some subset of axioms, or unprovable statements. Most students promptly ignore or forget the
implication of building a science on axioms. However, if we adopt other axioms
to describe spatial geometry, quite different mathematics evolve.
An axiom in Euclidian
geometry related to the idea of “perpendicular” is the statement “parallel
lines never intersect.” Einstein for example capitalized on this. (Of course any
one who has walked two parallel longitudes on a sphere or hyperbolic saddle
discovers the problem.)
Using Euclidian
geometry is an act of faith in its axioms. Therefore, the question of the faith
pervades both science and theology at the basic level.
Experience
This leads us to think
about the idea of experience. Experience is actually connected to faith.
Genetic and cognitive
science show that a significant part of our behavior is genetically predisposed
or imprinted as a Kantian roadmap. But the issue of who were are “intellectually”
and “mechanistically” is not yet well defined by science. The question “Is
there s special sense of self?’” remains refractory to science.
Much evidence points to
the role of the experiences of our earliest childhood in the
formation of our individual worldview. These are the experiences that shape our
language and thoughts before we attain the level of intentional cognitive
reasoning. I suggest that our logic is already established by the environment
exposed upon us by our parents and culture shapes our logic before we are able
to understand what is happening. (Or perhaps, it defines how we understand what
is happening to us?) Experience
interacts with whatever innate intellectual framework our DNA gives us.
Some examples:
If I release an iron
ball from my grip, what happens?
If I touch a piece of
iron growing peachy orange, what happens?
After the sun sets in
the evening, what happens to it the next morning?
Randy Pausch, the
Computer science faculty member working on virtual reality at Carnegie-Melon
University who was dying of cancer, gave his final lecture or last lecture in 2007. He suggests
everything we know, our attitude and motivation is created in our childhood
experience, our first three to five years, before we even have an independent
sense of what the world is.
We will return to this
idea of faith and experience when we discuss religious denominations and
religious authority. But first, let’s think about ethics and morality.
What are “ethics” and “morality.”
A simple analysis
maintains that ethics is the external, or socially defined system of rules for
good conduct. Ethics derive from a social consensus and depend on what others think.
Morals in the other had are internally derived based on the sense
each person has of “right and wrong.” Morals
are not absolute, if one’s belief about an issue changes, one’s rule of right
and wrong changes with it (or we have to deal with the difficulty problem of
cognitive dissonance.)
The Problem with Ethics and Morals
Though many would say
that ethics is the socially accepted sense of right and wrong and morality is
in our internal sense of right and wrong; we can see from the previous
consideration about how cultural experience shapes our sense of belief about
the world that cultural ethics are in fact shaped by our morality. It is quite
difficult to separate ethics and morality.
Many people who are
uncomfortable with change do not like to acknowledge it, but morality is shaped
by cultural values and as cultural values change, the perception of what is
ethical behavior slowly changes. Morality is certainly shaped by our individual
sense of what is right and wrong (justice?) but ultimately the morality that is
often thought of it as an extra-cultural definition of right and wrong is
determined by cultural values.
What shapes ethics? The
social consensus derived from the individual experience of observing the
beneficial or deleterious effect of acts of human behavior on others.
Reformed Protestantism – Be careful what you ask for
This leads us to an
interesting dilemma about what Christians believe. If our experience, and
therefore cultural environment shapes our sense of reality then we must ask
what is the nature of religious Protestant denominations related to a sense of
theology?
What is the core basis
of Christian theology? Almost every
person who carries the label “Christian” will affirm that the scriptures, or writings
that we call the New and Old Testament, or the Gospels and Epistles and the Hebrew
Bible shape our sense of morality. This collected history is the relationship between Humanity and its
Creator, and are the moral basis of faith.
This body of literature is probably the most
important part of our discussion today because of the way its interpretation
led to the Reformation. If the Bible described the preferred way we should
interact with both God and our neighbors, what does it say? Hebrews have a
codified set of rules called The Law. Though they are often confused as “laws”
the Bible clearly should they are modes of behavior that are intrinsic to a
righteous person. In other words, behavior reflects the “Law,” rather than the
“Law” prescribes behavior. The fundamental “prescriptions” if there are any,
are stated by Jesus in his discussion of compassion for neighbor. Essentially
Jesus says that the two principal “laws” are (in my words) (1) Love the Creator
as the Creator loves you, (2) Love your neighbor the way The Creator loves you.
A corollary is “All of humanity is your
neighbor.” (See Matthew
22:34-40, Mark 12:28, Luke 10: 25-37)
By the way, if you read
these three versions of the same
event, you see that recollection or scripture is accepted as the highest form
of morality, it certainly cannot be considered infallible because there are
different version of the same event.
In the early church,
after the immediacy of the presence of Jesus has past, people turned to
explaining what the “Jesus event” meant. This led to the organized church. I
will not deal with the details because they are long and complex, but what happened
is there was much bloodletting and arguing about what “words” most accurately described Christianity. You can go to these
two books for details, Volume
1 and Volume
2 of Gonzales.
The eventual end was
the establishment of the Catholic Church which claims to be ruled by a Pope who
is in the linear sequence of Apostolic succession.
What this means is that the leader of the Christian Church is directly
connected to the lineage of the earliest Christian disciples and by that
succession carried the authority to be the sole and final arbiter of Christian
Morality and Ethics. Essentially, the Catholic Church is founded on the
principle of absolute authority.
Martin Luther, on the
basis of his experience showing to him that the leadership of the Church in
fact was corrupt and far afield of the core teaching of the Gospel and Hebrew
Bible, declared that there is no sole arbiter of Scripture, the Pope is
fallible. This is the primary basis of the Protestant Reformation, “There is no
human authority with the power to assert something is moral or not. It depends on the discernment of the person
guided by the Scripture and influenced
by the Holy Spirit in quiet contemplation of the problem.
This is a powerful
cut-off from the belief in human infallible authority. We are cast adrift in
the sea of humanity and the world, forced to make life-changing decisions about
what is a moral act or not. This is the
basis of the Reformed credo, “Reformed and always reforming.”
Because our sense of
right and wrong is imprinted on us by our early childhood experience living in
a specific social structure, each cultural unity established its ethical
framework that we call “denominations.” (You can go back to Volume
2 of Gonzales to read about how different cultural interpretation can be.)
Henry Richard Neibhur described
the consequence of the Reformation this way. We are now sailing on a ship in a
stormy sea (of life) forever faced with new ideas and challenges of what just
action consists. We are fated to sail from port to port in an endless journey
seeking stable refuge because life, and especially Science, will always present
us with an ethical dilemma.
The Consequence of Reformed Theology (Summary)
The greatest two
commandments establish a way of living that can only be described as one full
of grace and the absence of judgment.
Christians fall back on
judgment of others, as many of you voiced in our meeting, because of fear, and
the inability to accommodate doubt in their framework of faith. Their fear or
uncertainty is so great they have let go of the two great commandments.
Recall I used the
analogy of the two people given a large farm to contrast those who judge and
those who revel in the grace of an unmerited gift.
Each has been blessed
with the donation of a large piece of adjoining property perhaps 100 acres.
There is a fence around both pieces of property and the owners are told to use
this gift as each will. One owner builds a house, puts all the furniture and
precious belongings in it and builds another fence around the house in fear on the
unknown content of the land and environs leaving a nice front and backyard. The
owner remains on the front porch in the rocking chair comfortable with his safe
home. The other simply walks out into the land and explores all the boundaries
of this property to see how far does it go what is out there in the land that
might be of use.
Why does one person spend all his time
exploring its boundaries and what might be on the other side while the other
sits comfortably on the front porch in a false sense of safety and security not
worrying about what might be beyond the inner fence?
I cannot say one
approach is in error compared to the other.
I can only say that these two approaches to life represent the extreme
ideals of living. One group looks around the world and understands that God is
there and seeks to spread Grace in the form of their own abilities where ever
they can go, the others, probably no less penitent but not having the courage
to deal with the unknown cold and cruel and dangerous world. The only right and
wrong in this situation is when one neighbor becomes a stumbling block to
another. It’s a reality that every institutional denomination faces. The
healthy ones face it and decide how to proceed, the others become superfluous with the
march of time. Ultimately, action falls on you to forgive those for what you see
as error and work according to your faith to keep them in your fellowship.
In that sense, we are
all scientists and theologians.
Grace and Peace.
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