Baseball season is over and Boston swept the World’s Series (and my wife is quite sure that the Pirates will do the same next year!). My softball team nonetheless continues practicing and playing indoors. So batter up!
Dijon University Club indoor tournament
Coach Klaw (left) at the Besançon tournament chilledly awaiting our next game
For this softball game we will of course need an umpire. And before the game starts we will have the luxury of choosing an umpire from one of three schools of interpreting balls and strikes.
The IDEALIST umpire says: “I call it the way it IS. If it IS a strike I call it a strike. If it IS a ball I call it a ball.”
The PRAGMATIST umpire: “I call it the way I see it. The rules are not right or wrong. We agreed on them; they facilitate the game. Cut the chatter and play ball!”
The CRITICAL-REALIST umpire says: “I call it the way I see it. There is a real pitch and an objective standard against which I must judge it, but I can be shown to be right or wrong.”
Well, maybe we aren’t going to play softball. These three “umpires” reflect differing philosophical approaches to the relationship between truth and understanding. And the issue before us is, if one accepts by faith that God and the Bible are absolute Truth, to what extent can one understand it?
One of my French interns once reacted rather strongly to a Bible discussion on eschatology that I facilitated with our university group. He had heard so much bellicose, deductive dogmatism in his ecclesiastic tradition (his father was a theology professor with a conservative denomination) that he said, “You know, I break out in hives whenever someone brings up the subject.” He preferred to take a wait-and-see position.
So let's take the rapture for example. Based upon Jesus' words, “You… must be ready, because the Son of man will come at an hour when you do not expect him” (Mt. 24:44), are the following assertions Truth or an understanding of Truth?
a) Jesus will return suddenly.
b) Jesus will return before the Great Tribulation.
TO WHAT EXTENT CAN ONE UNDERSTAND TRUTH: ABSOLUTELY?
The IDEALIST umpire was prevalent under modernism. Many scientists and theologians alike saw virtually no distinction between objective truth and their understanding of that truth. So the “idealist” (a philosophical school of thought) theologian tacitly asserts, “Scripture is perfect and my understanding of Scripture is perfect.”
Returning to the tribulational discussion, idealist pastors might confidently claim, “The Bible says Jesus will return for His Church (fill in the blank: before, during, after) the Great Tribulation. But as Paul Hiebert (Anthropological Reflections on Missiologial Issues, 26) wryly points out, this claim to a one-to-one correlation between Truth and understanding of Truth “raises problems when disagreements arise”!
Two limitations that hinder even regenerate, godly theologians from arriving at a perfect understanding of Truth are that the human intellect is finite and tainted by sin.
Jay Adams refers to “the noetic effects of sin” that causes people to “distort” messages. (Theology of Christian Counseling, 165, 172). And sin does not only affect the understanding of unregenerate people.* If sin influences regenerate people in the physical realm — materialism, sensuality… (Eph.5:3) — why might we imagine that it does not affect our intellect and understanding of Truth?
David Wells says, “There has long been a Christian argument that reason… is not neutral but it is tainted by sinful bias of various kinds” (Above All Earthly Powers: Christ in a Postmodern World, 83-84).
D.A. Carson states, “Our sin ensures that even a system closely aligned with Scripture will be in some measure distorted.” (Becoming Conversant with the Emerging Church, 68)
So I contend that our understanding is subject to distortion and bias and that this applies to our interpretation of the Truth. A contemporary, almost universally recognized example of sin-tainted reasoning was the theological justification of racism by some Dutch Reformed theologians that supported the Affricaans superiority over the majority autochthons — apartheid.
Rez Band first brought apartheid to public awareness with the blistering song, "Afrikaans" (1979)
And we are finite beings, not omniscient. As Carson says, “Human beings can know some true things, even if nothing exhaustively” (Becoming Conversant, 104-110).
So Truth is objective and universal, but our understanding of Truth is local and subjective. Due to the effects of sin and finiteness it is critical to distinguish between the Truth of Scripture and one's understanding of Truth. Scripture must retain its rightful place, far above human understanding (Is.55:8**).
TO WHAT EXTENT CAN ONE UNDERSTAND TRUTH: NOT AT ALL?
A consequence of not recognizing this distinction leads to a PRAGMATIC postmodern allergic reaction to conflicts resulting from contradictory “perfect” understandings of truth*** like that of my intern above, pragmatic avoidance.
A postmodern person could easily say, “We don’t even know if truth exists and we certainly will not have the same interpretation of it, so just play ball!"
But there is a position that accepts the absolute Truth of God and His Word while recognizing man’s provincial, sin-tainted, biased understanding.
TO WHAT EXTENT CAN ONE UNDERSTAND TRUTH: SOMEWHAT?
CRITICAL REALISTS hold that meaning can be adequately determined, but that understanding must be “constantly probed, critiqued, improved, revised, replaced, and evaluated (hence the adjective ‘critical’)” (Becoming Conversant, 104-110).
In the above example, a critical realist would contend that response a) “Jesus will return suddenly” qualifies as Truth, while b) “Jesus will return before the Great Tribulation” is a particular understanding of Truth.
Now it is very appropriate to hold the latter as a personal and even as a collective conviction. But it is not proper to claim, “The Bible says that the rapture will occur prior to the Great Tribulation.” Because the pre-trib view is a theological construct involving significant amounts of human interpretation, both deductive and inductive reasoning, it is preferable to say humbly, “I believe the Bible teaches… Here’s why…”
"Foot Washing" by Wanda Teel. The artist says, “The foot washing picture is about my g-g-grandparents’ church. This was about being humble.” http://www.marciaweberartobjects.com/teel.html
As Tom Julien wrote in “Identity Shock-A Plea for Consensus” (1980s), it is “alarming... to assign certainty to logical inference. When inerrancy is assigned to interpretive systems… this represents a new creedalism…” which historically, my tradition, the Grace Brethren, has staunchly opposed.
Dr. Manahan, president of Grace College and Seminary, wrote, “A significant part of what Grace is comes from the pietistic heritage … Pietists are very pessimistic about the capacity of reason to fathom the mysteries of God.” (“The Pietistic Spirit”)
Paul Hiebert comments, “The Anabaptists … were critical realists. They affirmed that there is objective reality and objective truth (reality as God sees it—as it really is). They recognized, however, that all truth as perceived by humans is partial and has a subjective element within it… This awareness led the Anabaptists to make a sharp distinction between God’s revelation as recorded in Scripture and human understandings expressed in theology.”
The critical realist “view led Anabaptists to take a humble view of theology. They held strongly to their theological convictions; many died for them. But they readily admitted that their understanding of truth was partial, biased, and possibly wrong. They were, therefore, willing to test their convictions by returning to the Scriptures.” (Missiological Issues, 98, 100)
A biblically tenable position, therefore, that I believe will serve the local church well in an increasingly postmodern climate is that of the critical realist, distinguishing between the absolute, objective Truth of the Word of God and our partial, subjective, sin-tainted and biased understanding of that Truth, a humble position that Scripture is perfect, but our understanding of Scripture is imperfect.
NOTES
* Millard Erickson (Christian Theology, vol2, 617-618) points out that some the effects of sin are self-deceit (Jer.17:9), insensitivity (1 Ti. 4.2), coveting (James 4:1-2), inability to empathize (Phil. 2:3-5)…..
** “My thoughts are completely different from yours,” says the Lord. “And my ways are far beyond anything you could imagine. For just as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts higher than your thoughts.”
*** “I have observed one thing among true Christians in their differences in many countries: what divides and severs true Christian groups and Christians—what leaves a bitterness that can last for twenty, thirty or forty years (or for fifty or sixty years in a son’s memory)—is not the issue of doctrine or belief which caused the differences in the first place. Invariably it is lack of love—and the bitter things that are said by true Christians in the midst of differences. These stick in the mind like glue.” (Francis Schaeffer, The Mark of the Christian, 195, italics mine)