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Some Thoughts About Knowing

Friday, September 25th, 2009 | Author:

But How Do I Know?

Recently many readers have asked questions about knowing. The questions come in different forms, but they are all basically about the same thing. “Now that I see the Hebraic basis of Scripture, how do I know what to do? How can I be sure?” In other words, we can read the words of the text but we aren’t sure exactly what they mean. We want to know so we can apply them correctly.

This is an epistemological issue. Epistemology is the Greek term for the way we know things. For centuries, Western thinkers attempted to base their method of knowing on a mathematical structure. The reason they chose mathematical models is simple: mathematics provides certainty. 2+2 is always 4. Parallel lines never meet (in Euclidian geometry). There is no “interpretation” here. It is either True or False. And it’s all very logical. Men were looking for a way to have certainty about the world and mathematically based models seemed to be the answer. But over the course of hundreds of years, it became obvious that this doesn’t work. While there is certainty within the mathematical system (like number theory and geometry), as soon as we try to apply the same kind of logic to the world, things get very messy. Interpretation comes back into the picture and answers don’t always seem to be either True or False. Eventually, thinkers gave up on the hope of finding a way of knowing that was intuitively obvious, logically necessary and certain. They were forced to move to a different kind of certainty; a certainty based on psychological experience.

We have discussed this a bit in the last months. This kind of certainty is quite popular in religious circles. It is knowledge based on my personal experience. The strength of this way of knowing is that I can’t really doubt what I experience. If my shoulder hurts (and it does), then it hurts even if the doctor tells me that there is no reason for it to hurt. The pain is immediately obvious to me regardless of his evaluation. It is my truth. I am certain of it. You find this kind of epistemology when people claim “This is what God revealed to me,” or “I just know this is true in my heart.” In other words, they just can’t doubt what they have experienced. But there’s a big problem. The doctor who can’t find anything wrong to explain my pain can admit that I feel it, but that doesn’t mean it is real. It’s real for me, but I might be delusional or a psychosomatic. In other words, personal experience does not provide public, testable truth. We have the same problem with religious experience. God might have told you that this is what He means, but unless there is some way for me to have exactly the same psychologically certain experience, all you can really say is, “This is true for me,” and that amounts to not very much since being “true for me” can lead to all kinds of ridiculous claims. For example, I could argue that God told me the end of the world will be in 2012. I can be certain about it. But you won’t believe me unless you have something more than my word on the subject. You want outside evidence, not just my personal experience.

This problem forced philosophy to move toward inference as the way of knowing. We all use this epistemological model every day. We gather evidence, evaluate claims, look for patterns and draw conclusions. This is the popularized “scientific method.” It is knowing by experimenting. It seems to work pretty well. Everyone wants a reason to believe a claim and this method seems to be based entirely on reasoned conclusions. Just go get the facts. For most of us, this is about as far as we go. But deep thinkers about science recognized that often, far too often, what we consider evidence is already determined by prior commitments; commitments for which there is no evidence. For example, prior to the explosion of the first atomic bomb, many world-famous physicists believed that the atom was the smallest building block of matter and therefore, could not be split. The atomic bomb disproved that belief in one incredible moment, but a large number of physicists simply refused to accept the evidence because it didn’t fit the theory. They went right on teaching that the atom couldn’t be split. They denied the existence of the atomic bomb until they died. History shows that this entrenched resistance is often the case. Galileo, Copernicus, Crick and other pioneers in science faced entrenched positions that refused to accept any “new” evidence. The current political environment is a prefect example of prior commitments providing what is “evidence.” Is the economy getting better or worse? Just look at the evidence. But, of course, the “evidence” is determined by my prior political viewpoint. What we discovered is that “evidence” itself depends on prior assumptions. It doesn’t come to us “clean.” It is always part of an interpretive scheme.

This is a very big problem in religion. So many times we find theologians claiming that the “evidence” conclusively shows such-and-such. But these same theologians refuse to see anything except what fits their prior interpretive schemes. For example, if you believe in “sinful nature,” you will find all kinds of evidence for it in Scripture. But you have to come to the text with a prior commitment to total depravity in order to fit all the verses together. There are no verses that say, “Men have a sinful nature and are totally depraved.” That is a conclusion drawn for seeing the text in a certain way. The same is true for the doctrine of the Trinity. You get the idea. The reason we spend time discussing the underlying interpretive schemes (the prior commitments like “replacement theology”) is simple: these prior commitments shape Scripture to fit what we already believe. Often we translate verses based on these prior commitments, not on the actual words themselves. Translations that follow this kind of thinking disguise the prior commitment within the text. You never even know that the translation depends on an unsubstantiated belief. You become the victim of someone’s theological bias.

There are a lot of additional problems with this “evidence gathering” epistemology that would require much deeper discussion. It is sufficient now to simply realize that the hope of finding interpretive-neutral evidence has been abandoned. Everyone comes to the evidence with his or her own filter. The world isn’t a blank slate. It is already populated with “how I see things.” So, philosophers moved to another way of knowing. They were forced to concede that all knowing is theory dependent. In other words, truth depends on my interpretive scheme. I can only know what is “true” from inside my way of looking at the world.

This claim might seem harmless, but it isn’t. This model really amounts to everyone having their own view of what is true. And that, of course, means that there is no such thing as final, real truth. You will notice that this claim is logically contradictory since it claims that all interpretive schemes are like this and that itself is a final claim about truth. You can see the problem. Once we arrive at the “this is true for me” way of knowing, argument, discussion, apologetics and persuasion become impossible. The popularized version of this now dominates the culture. “It’s just my belief.” “You believe what you want to believe and I believe what I want to believe.” “You can’t force your beliefs on anyone else. All beliefs are equal.” This is “all paths lead to God” kind of thinking. Just live your own life. Do what you can. But don’t try to convert anyone else. We are all just prisoners of our own way of thinking.

After 2500 years of Western philosophy, the project of finding the truth is bankrupt. Western thought can’t think its way out of this box. It is finished. Everyone just lives in their own worldview with nothing much to say to anyone else.

Contemporary education in the West preaches this model. Most of your children are being taught that this is the only way to view truth. This is epistemological tolerance. Presenting the Bible to people who have this view of epistemology is almost a waste of time. They are happy that you have found something that works for you, but it isn’t true for them and since there is no final truth, there are no final “proofs” that you are right and they are wrong.

I hope you can appreciate the difficulty this presents for understanding the Bible. Religious people seem to be trapped in two camps. They either base their arguments on a claim about personal certainty or on claims about evidence. Now you can see why both of these models don’t work. For example, arguments about creationism are flawed because they depend on the evidence model. The same is true for the popular apologetics of “proving” Jesus is God. On the other hand, most attempts to acquaint people with a loving God follow the experience model. This approach is filled with personal testimonies and religious feelings. Christians can’t embrace the “no final truth” interpretive scheme model because they want to claim that there really is absolute truth, but when it comes to demonstrating that claim, all kinds of deeper issues emerge. In my opinion, this entire road (from mathematical certainty to private interpretive schemes) is a dead-end. There is no way out of here. We have to find another road.

That’s where the Eastern, Hebraic view seems to fit. It doesn’t begin with the idea of human reason finding the right path. It begins with divine revelation outside of human reason. That doesn’t mean that divine revelation isn’t reasonable. It just means that we can’t start with ourselves and get to truth. Our minds are not enough for this task.

So, how can we avoid the bankruptcy of reason and, at the same time, enter into a rational relationship with a reasoning God?

Let me offer some suggestions. These are only suggestions since working out a full epistemology is a very difficult task, perhaps as difficult as trying to shift from a predominately Greek-based Western view to this Hebraic, Eastern model.

First, knowledge begins with revelation. This is an a priori (assumed) commitment. There is no apology here. This seems to be the position of the entire Bible. There is no effort to prove God exists, no effort to show His truth is the truth, no attempt to justify His claims against competing philosophical positions. The Bible simply begins with God.

Of course, the implications of this beginning are powerful. God knows. We don’t. God sees the whole picture. We only see a tiny, tiny part. God is doing something we can barely understand. And, most importantly, what we do know, He must tell us. That doesn’t mean we can’t discover all sorts of things. We can discover His universe, how it works, how to do all kinds of things in it. The Bible actually shows very little interest in all this. It is about bigger questions. Not bigger science questions like the Big Bang, but bigger life-transforming questions like God’s relationship to me. In this regard, the Bible is fundamentally a relationship story, not a textbook on science or a Boy Scout manual of rule behavior. The Bible is a story about God hunting us down through a means that only He really understands. It isn’t a universal storybook. It’s a book about God’s deliberate interaction with a particular people, Israel, and God’s plan for this particular people to become an instrument to reach others. If we forget this specificity and particularity, we distort the Book.

Second, all Biblical texts depend on human situations. They come culturally loaded. Yeshua is a Jew. Abraham comes from Ur. David deals with 10th century BC politics. The Bible is clothed in human form. That means God decided to reveal Himself within the context of time, place, culture, ethnicity and language. We can’t understand who we are and what He is doing if we ignore this particularity. So, since God chose to do it this way, we need to work at seeing Him through the eyes of those who wrote His story – not through the eyes of contemporary readers of His story. The Bible is not a contemporary book. It is ancient literature and must be understood from an ancient perspective. How we get to this ancient point of view is the process of exegesis (see Walter Kaiser’s work). When we convert biblical passages into universal principles or theology, we necessarily distort the meaning. Sometimes the text itself warrants this (“for God so loved the cosmos”) but often Christians are influenced by Greek-based epistemology to look for universal applications that simply do not exist within the text itself. God is the God of Israel, not the God of Athens.

Third, there is a reason why Judaism does not have a history of systematic theology but Christianity does. The whole project of systematic theology is based in the Greek epistemology of reasoning my way to the truth. Systematic theology is an attempt to fit the biblical story into pre-conceived, compartmentalized boxes. In other words, it’s an attempt to push an Eastern, Hebraic, culturally and temporally located community into Western, rationally conceived pigeon-holes. It just doesn’t fit. But that doesn’t stop Western Christianity from making it fit. On the other hand, Jews have recognized that the Bible is about a way of life, not about a way of thinking. So, the Jews concentrate on understanding how they are to live according to God’s instructions rather than how we are to conceive of God. Systematic theology is too often a subtle reflection of arrogance. Do we really think that we can categorize God? The Jewish approach is based in awe, reverence and an admission of incomprehensibility. The Westerner wants to know! The Easterner wants to live correctly.

Fourth, finally the Bible is about community, not about individual apprehension of God. It is not a private experience of God. It is a public, communal obedience, open to others, jointly acknowledged with consequences for all. It is not about gathering external evidence to prove “scientifically” something about God. It is the external involvement of followers in each other’s lives that becomes the witness of His purposes. Biblical apologetics is very rarely arguing for the truth. Think about how infrequently you find any persuasive arguments in the text. Biblical apologetics is based in Deuteronomy 28. Live like God asks and He will insure the results. Do what He says and others will come calling on Him. Of course, in the Greek world, it’s all about “proving” our rational beliefs. What do you think would happen if Christians actually lived according to God’s instructions and stopped trying to recruit people to the Church? What do you think would occur if every Christian was a walking, talking example of the fruit of the Spirit? Would we really need arguments?

The reason we examine Jewish exegetical principles, look at rabbinic literature and devour the etymologies is not to categorize, compartmentalize and convince. It is to live according to His instructions. Without that, everything is lost. There are two roads. One is the road toward rational, cognitive certainty. The West has followed this road for 2500 years. It’s a dead end. The West is hopelessly lost in cognitive insanity. The other road leads most of us into foreign geography. It is the road of revelation and obedience before understanding. It follows the story of God and His people, not His “church.” It has a lot of stop signs that seem quite strange. But it follows the King.

Which road are you on?

Dead Ends

Friday, July 10th, 2009 | Author:

We don’t really believe in a God of hope. If we did, we would rejoice in dead ends. No, my observation is that we really believe in the God of stoic perseverance. We believe in that inner resolve of the human spirit that shouts at the dark, “I will not go quietly. I will fight. I will prevail. I will never give up.” Of course, all that emotional rhetoric is very inspirational, until you come to a complete dead end.

We are prisoners of the Greek view of life. Human achievement. Victory against impossible odds. The Greek mythic heroes who fought the Fates. When we approach dead ends, we do everything possible to find our own way out. Denial is the usual beginning. “Oh, it’s not really that bad. We’ll make it.” Followed by anger. “Why did this happen to me?” Followed by remorse. “I must have done something to deserve this.” Followed by resignation. “It’s too late for me now.” Everything but rejoicing. Anything but contentment.

Why are we like this? Why do we struggle and strive and squirm and squeal to change the circumstances of our lives? Why don’t we see what dead ends really are – carefully crafted but disguised blessing of confrontation with the divine.

Don’t get me wrong. I am not suggesting a passive, compliant posture toward living, sitting quietly on the side waiting for life to take care of me. Life is work. Work is sacred. God intended it that way. If I chose to do nothing, I will receive the reward of nothing. Dead ends that come as a result of my own laziness or disobedience are not God’s intention, although the results of my foolishness can certainly be woven into His plans. No, I’m talking about the real dead ends. The blindside hits. The disasters of life that seem to have no reasonable explanation.

My close friend was healthy, vibrant, joyful and a fine example of a Christian. I stood by her bedside as the cancer overcame her body. She left behind so many who were transformed by her smile. No one saw it coming at all. One day, wonderful. The next day (or so it seemed), passing through the door marked “No re-entry”.

My wife is driving home. She stops at the intersection. There are no other cars. As she pulls out to cross, two tons of flying metal obliterates the passenger side of her car. The van ran the stop sign at 45 miles an hour. She is instantly covered in glass and shrapnel. She never saw it coming. She’s alive but the agonizing recovery has just begun.

The children chase a can along the side of the road. Kicks and shouts and laughter. It is a brief respite in the war-torn village. They reach the end of the street just in time for the car bomb to explode in front of the police station. Parents sifting the dirt looking for anything for comfort, hoping not to find it.

Death is the final dead end. But there are plenty of others in this fallen world. Our Twelve Step friends call it “hitting bottom”. It doesn’t matter what the addiction. They all push us toward the dead end. I suspect that no one really understands life until the journey reaches a large yellow sign saying “Dead End”. It’s not that life is morbid. It’s rather that life cannot be clearly seen for what it is if we can only look at it through Miller Genuine Draft commercials.

The biggest problem is not that life’s aim is to put us in the pit with Joseph. The biggest problem is that we do everything possible to pretend it won’t happen. I suspect that we feed this delusion because if we faced the pit, we would discover how powerless we are. So we drive ourselves toward the clutter of the busy in order not to hear the silence of the damned.

But what if we’re wrong? What if it is God’s intention to bring us to the dead end? What if the dead end is the place where we can encounter blessing and God is interested in blessing us so He just keeps trying to get us to see where we really are? What if all the hype and the activity and the success images and the power games only serve to keep us from really finding God? What if God is standing in the wilderness, waiting at the dead end, while we run to the concrete cities for protection from ourselves?

The wilderness is a very important piece of geography in the Bible. We think of it as the place of the temptations. That makes it Jesus’ problem; one which he, being God, overcame. But if we think of the wilderness only in mythical terms as some battleground between Satan and the Christ, we have robbed ourselves of a great truth. The wilderness is not the territory of Satan’s evil empire. The wilderness is God’s home.

The Spirit drove Jesus into the wilderness. The Spirit took Jesus to the place where God could be found to offer all the sustenance Jesus needed before Satan arrived at God’s doorstep. The wilderness is the place of refuge, not of battle. Why? Because the wilderness is the place where I must confront my powerlessness.

When Israel left Egypt, God kept them in the wilderness for forty years. They could have marched to Canaan in a few weeks. There were much shorter routes. But they were not ready to possess the Promised Land. They had slave mentalities. God needed to reconstruct their thinking. And He did that by showing them what it is like to live in His house.

Daily bread from the hand of God. No planting. No harvesting. No storage barns. Living water from rocks. No wells. No cisterns. No canteens. Victory over enemies. But no fortresses, no shock troops, no military prowess. What was it like living in God’s house? It was complete powerlessness under the authority and reign of the Lord of Hosts. It was learning the truth of “Be anxious for nothing”. For forty years God provided what life needed. Food, shelter and security. An entire generation’s worth of daily lessons. It still wasn’t enough.

Some of them understood. Most didn’t. They were unable to be completely dependent on God. Any attempt to make do for themselves on their own power just brought them back to reality – face to face with the wilderness, the place where only God is in charge. The story has been the same from the beginning. Adam, a dependent steward of the garden. Abraham, a dependent traveler. Jacob, dependence learned in brokenness. Joseph, dependence forged in prison. Elijah, David, Daniel. Over and over, God engineers wilderness encounters in order to bring us to the reality of dependence.

We buy Hummers. And life insurance (just what are we insuring, have you ever asked?) Portfolio management. Retirement accounts. Security systems. We don’t want to live in the wilderness.

No wonder we can’t find God.

As Good as It Gets: The Balanced Life?

Sunday, February 01st, 2009 | Author:

We are probably familiar with the often-mentioned human resources axiom:

 

The response you are getting from employees is exactly what your current message is motivating and rewarding.

 

We recognize this law of human performance when it comes to addressing questions of product promotion, compensation or market mix.  But many times we fail to see that this truth applies to everyone in relationship to us.

 

Are your sales people missing their goals?  The truth is that they are doing exactly what you are motivating them to do.  Are your customers wavering or resisting?  Your message is motivating this behavior.  Are your vendors giving you problems?  Your behavior supports these actions.  And it’s not just about business.  The same adage applies at home, at church and in your neighborhood.

 

The life you have right now is exactly what your current thinking is motivating and rewarding.

 

If you want to improve your life, something must change in the way you think.  It won’t work to adopt a new behavior technique because the new behaviors will still be based on the old motivators and rewards.  Sooner rather than later, the behaviors will return to the old patterns because the underlying thought process didn’t change.

 

We experience examples of this all the time.  Want to lose weight?  You will never succeed until you change the way you THINK, not just the way you eat.  Want to stop smoking?  Unless you change your MIND, you won’t make it.  Want to make more profits, gain greater market share?  Business progresses at the speed of THOUGHT, not manufacturing or sales or advertising. 

 

So, look at your life right now.  Is this what you want?  Is this what completely satisfies you?  If you can say, “Yes, this is as good as it gets”, then STOP right here.  You don’t need to do anything more.  Have a nice day.

 

But if you aren’t able to stand up as shout, “This is everything I ever wanted”, then I am suggesting that the next great step forward will be with your MIND, not with your feet.  Let’s take a deeper look at the mental path ahead.

 

There are two competing paradigms in business today.  The first is the effort-perfection model.  The second is the vision-available model.

 

The first looks and feels like this:

 

  1. If it’s going to be, it’s up to me
  2. If you want to do something right, you have to do it yourself
  3. I am the captain of my own fate
  4. The goal of life is accumulation
  5. Problem-solving skills are essential for success
  6. Knowledge is power
  7. Power is control
  8. Life is a zero-sum game
  9. What matters most is self-fulfillment

 

The second looks and feels like this:

 

  1. I am part of something bigger than me
  2. I am not alone
  3. I do not fully control my own destiny
  4. The goal of life is giving myself away
  5. My problem-solving skills will never be enough to solve all the problems
  6. Power is imprisoning
  7. Obedience is freedom
  8. Life is possibility unfolded
  9. What matters most is significant purpose

 

The behaviors fostered and rewarded by these two competing models differ dramatically.  Unfortunately, many of us attempt to live with one foot in each camp.  We have discovered the uncomfortable, frustrating struggle of trying to reconcile these models.  Our usual compromise is compartmentalization.  We break up our lives into “watertight” boxes, adopting the behaviors of accumulation, competition and individual self-fulfillment in work while we try to act from obedience at church and cooperation at home.  We are constantly re-drawing the lines and shoring up the bulkheads as the water from one set of behaviors threatens to flood another set of behaviors.  We are leaking at the core. 

 

Most of us recognize this inconsistent behavior but we seem to be powerless to do anything about it in the long term.  Our lives are spent adjusting.  In order to get off this treadmill, we need to do some seriously deep thinking.  We need to answer the question:

 

Why am I having so much trouble living a balanced life?

 

What this question shows us is so obvious we have overlooked it.  We have forgotten to think backwards.  We have accepted the question as the legitimate goal of living.  But this question already contains a paradigm.  That paradigm is:

 

The best life is a perfectly balanced life.

 

Our question really begs the question.  Is life about balance?  Once we have accepted this standard, all the rest follows.  We are ushered down the aisle of personal performance, individual responsibility, compartmentalization, accumulation and self-determination in an effort to capture that elusive trophy – the balanced life.

 

But thinking backwards jars my assumptions.  Why do I think life is supposed to be balanced?  Where did I get this idea?  How come it dominates my experience?

 

The balanced life is a cultural ideal presented to the Western mind by the Greeks.  Because the Greeks did not believe in a personal God, they viewed life as the constant conflict between the forces that acted on Man and Man’s effort to counteract those forces.  They lived in an impersonal, random and chaotic universe where the only method of successful survival was to keep things under control.  Since life could upset the apple cart at any moment, the best solution for living was to balance the good and the bad so that no one event would cause disastrous results.  When life was in balance, Man could control his destiny for the moment. 

 

This ideal has a powerful effect on us today.  What we fear becomes the focus of our efforts to prepare for.  We buy insurance, use hedge funds and create retirement funds because we want protection against uncontrollable forces.  We live in a universe of risk and control is our balancing tool.  Unfortunately, we often discover that in spite of all our efforts, control evades us.  Life tips us over and we fall off the teeter-totter. 

 

Have you ever noticed that just when you got control over one part of your life, another part seemed to slip into chaos?  Why didn’t that constant theme ever make you question whether balance was the right objective?  You probably didn’t question it because you just assumed that was the way life should be.  The cultural pattern blinded you to reality.  But God has a way of pushing reality through our best-laid plans.  He wants us to see that there is another way to look at life – a way that He put in place long before the Greeks arrived on the scene.

 

The balanced life is immensely complicated.  How do you determine how much effort is needed to keep work, home, family, church and social relationship all functioning perfectly?  If you have the formula, let me know and we’ll write a book.  For most people, balance is a trial and error process – and it turns out to be mostly error.  Others constantly remind us, “you don’t take enough time for me”.  No day is long enough to meet all the expectations.  Behaviorally, the balanced life is a myth!  It just can’t be done because human living is far too demanding for real balance.  Add time with God to the equation and we all come up inadequate.

 

But God already knew this.  That’s why He doesn’t expect or demand balance.  In fact, God’s answer is the simplifying principle of living.  God doesn’t want your balanced life.  He wants your totally committed, absolutely focused, myopic concentration of Him.  “Seek ye first”.  “Love God with all”.  The theme is the same over and over.  There is only one relationship that I am to manage completely – my relationship to Him.  God’s view of living is not the teeter-totter.  It’s the bull’s-eye.  In the very center is my perfect score – a relationship in perfect harmony with Him.  Every concentric ring expending out from the center is a relationship with less of my control.  That design is intentional.  God wants me to see that I cannot control all the aspects of living.  God wants me to see that dependence is the answer to life.  I will never achieve balance because balance is based on the false theology of independent living.  In God’s world, I need Him because I cannot control any relationship except my direct relationship with Him.  He, on the other hand, is perfectly able to take care of every one of my other relationships on my behalf as long as I give Him complete authority to do so.  In other words, when I stop trying to manage the consequences of life and put all of my energy into managing my vertical relationship with the Father, He will order my steps so that I will accomplish His will.  And that is real living.

 

Which paradigm determines your picture of living?  Are you caught in the false theology of independence, trying unsuccessfully to bring control to all of your relationships in order to achieve balance?  Or have you sold out to God, yielding the consequences of your life to Him while you put all your eggs in the Father’s basket?  Which paradigm presents the greater risk?  The one that says “do it on your own” or the one that says, “give it all to Me”?  Don’t let your past cultural mythology dictate your emotional reaction.  Unless you want to play god, you better seriously consider if balance is as good as it gets.

 

Skip Moen, D. Phil.

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