Seeing Is Believing

“Let this Christ, the King of Israel, now come down from the cross, so that we may see and believe!” Mark 15:32

See – Where do you suppose that cultural aphorism (“seeing is believing”) came from?  I’m guessing that you never thought about it.  In popular Christian circles “seeing is believing” is often opposed to faith.  We think of faith as believing without seeing, sometimes even associating faith with the impossibility of seeing.  But I’ll bet we haven’t given much thought to the cultural influence necessitating this distinction or on the aphorism itself.  Why do we tie seeing with justified true belief?

“The Greeks are a people of the eye, and seeing is important to them.  It has strong significance in their religion, which is a religion of vision.”[1] It is noteworthy that Greek has but one verb for hearing, akouo, but at least ten verbs of seeing.  Boman suggests that this penchant for vision is a result of Greek philosophical stress on the connection between perception and reality. “Seeing is believing” begins with the assumption that observation is the true path for assessing reality. Observation is fundamental to the Greek view of the world.  In fact, theoria (the basis of our idea of “theory”) is directly associated with examination by observation.  The Greek mind is the mind set apart from the object of inquiry.  To see is to see from a distance, to draw a line between subject and object.  Even the Greek gods maintain the aloof position of the spectator.

In this verse, one of the ten Greek verbs for seeing is employed.  The verb is eido.  It is important to know that eido is not simply a verb about perceiving.  It is also a verb about knowing.  In other words, just as Hebrew connects “to hear” and “to respond-obey” with the same verb (shama’), so Greek connects “to see” and “to know” with one verb, eido.  Consider what this means.  Eido is visual, separate perception tied directly to the cognitive process of knowing.  If I want to know something in Greek, I need to see it.  In fact, seeing is knowing.  It is connection between an external, separate reality and my internal cognitive apprehension of that reality.  But Hebrew takes an entirely different approach.  Hebrew connects hearing with responding.  Hearing demands a dynamic relationship.  I must be attuned to listening to another before I can hear in such a way that I respond.  The sound wave assault on my auditory nerves is not hearing.  Hearing is interacting with the sound so that I am affected in my behavior.  While Greek postulates the necessity of a spectator, Hebrew demands the involvement of a participant.  The two worlds couldn’t be more different.

The skeptics at the cross voiced Hellenistic jeers.  “Show us a sign,” they demanded, but their ears were deaf.  They stopped listening to the Word of God and the words of the Son of Man.  Consequently, they removed themselves from involvement.  They became spectators, disconnected from Hebrew reality.  Because their ears were stopped, their eyes were blind.

How much of our contemporary Christian expression is really solidly Greek?  How much do we actually rely on visual confirmation, spectator worship and disconnected cognition?  How different would it be if we became Hebrew listeners instead of Greek observers?  Do you think we would say, “Hearing (responding) is believing?”

Are you listening?

Topical Index:  see, eido, akouo, hear, theoria, Mark 15:32


[1] W. Michaelis, TDNT (abridged), p. 707

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Michael

Hi Skip,

It is difficult for me to separate the Greek and the Hebrew views in this regard.

And I don’t tend to think in terms of “believing” or “seeing is believing” when it comes to spiritual matters.

Rather I tend to think in terms of “seeing and knowing” on the one hand; and “listening and responding” on the other.

Seeing and knowing seems to come from the outside to me, and listening and responding comes from the inside.

Almost like four steps.

Michael

Hello again,

BTW didn’t you say some time ago that “My God, my God why have you deserted me” is not the correct translation?

In any case, isn’t it very difficult to argue that Mark thinks Jesus is God?

Faith Salyer

This is curious to me because not only does God ask/demand that I not only see/hear and respond/obey (participate) in faith, but it seems to me that to operate just in the “seeing” world of observational cognition only is to be potentially subjected to being self-deceived.

I cannot remember who to attribute this quote to but the quote goes like this: “We see things not as they are, but as we are.” In other words, you must be ever cautious of “leaning on your own understanding” because your own understanding may be jaded by “who you are.” So the antidote to the danger of being self-deceived (“there is a way that seems right to man but in the end leads to destruction”) is to “trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. In all your ways, acknowledge Him and He will make your paths straight.”

One example of this danger of being self-deceived based solely on observational cognition (seeing is believing) is pilot spatial disorientation. My senses (ears, eyes etc.) tell me the plane is going up or down but actually because of spatial disorientation, the plane is actually doing the opposite of what I am sensing. Only antidote is to trust the truth of the instruments in the plane – even contrary to what I am feeling or observing – and to respond (obey) in a way that is consistent with being trained to have faith in the instruments and not just my observations.

John Offutt

Jesus answered and said to him, ” Most assuredly, I say to you, unless one is born again, he cannot SEE (know, understand) the kingdom of God.” It is interesting to me how many times we use the word see for understand in our every day conversation. Do you see what I am talking about? Can you see how this is going to work out? Do you see where I am going with this?

Michael

Yesterday morning I experienced a funny coincidence and saw a sign (Greek) or symbol (Hebrew).

I always eat a banana for breakfast and then take my dog Max for a walk to the ball park.

But I was in a hurry yesterday and forgot to eat my banana.

When I got to the ball park, which is normally very clean, there was a ripe banana on the mound.

In the Greek view, this was a coincidence, and we would call the banana a “sign.”

Because it has no inherent meaning.

In the Hebrew view, as I understand it, it is what we would call a “symbol.”

Because it has an inherent meaning.

In my view, technically speaking, the banana was a “symbol” of God’s love.

But we in the West would tend to call it a “sign.”

Robin Jeep

Very interesting, Michael!

ANTOINETTE (Israel)

HaShem takes the time to show us things, if we read the Word with a seeking heart.
seek and you will find. Matt. 7:7

BTW Next week the parashah portion is Balak. This is a perfect example of not seeing and then seeing in stages.
I did a study last year on this parashah and reread it this evening, I now feel that the church through the ages, is represented by Balaam who will gradually be shown all of Israel and the God of Israel. Baruch HaShem.

Michael

“I now feel that the church through the ages, is represented by Balaam who will gradually be shown all of Israel and the God of Israel”

Hi Antoinette,

Thanks for sharing the Parshah!

And very interesting point! So who does Balaam’s donkey represent 🙂

Michael

After doing a little research, it seems that the exemplary moral character of Balaam’s donkey, which looks especially good when compared to Balaam (ie, the Church), is not as uncommon as one might suspect.

According to one early importer of the breed, Robert Green:

“Miniature Donkeys possess the affectionate nature of a Newfoundland, the resignation of a cow, the durability of a mule, the courage of a tiger, and an intellectual capability only slightly inferior to man’s.”

Moreover, the Standard Size species seem to reflect the character of the Good Shepherd himdelf:

“Some standard species are ideal for guarding herds of sheep against predators, since most donkeys have a natural wariness toward coyotes and other canines and will keep them away from the herd.”

Michael

Speaking of donkeys as heroes in literature, they can also be found in modern film masterpieces.

For example, in Robert Bresson’s “Au Hasard Balthazar” the film revolves around a donkey called Balthazar.

The following comment by Robert Bresson, who is considered to be a master of film “form,” reflects some interesting “content:”

“Hide the ideas, but so that people find them. The most important will be the most hidden.”
(quoted in The Hidden God, Film and Faith, p.17)

BTW I found The Hidden God online the day Skip published “Today’s Word” – 12/22/2009 – The Hidden God.

The book on modern film contained the following quotes in the chapter on Bresson:

“What can be seen on earth indicates neither the total absence, nor the manifest presence of divinity; but the presence of a hidden God. Everything bears his stamp.”—Blaise Pascal, Le Pensees, c. 1650s
(quoted in The Hidden God, Film and Faith, p.17)

Michael

Au Hasard Balthazar (1966)
Directed by Robert Bresson
http://www.movierapture.com/auhasardbalthazar.htm

Drew

Shalom,

John: 20:24 But Thomas, one of the twelve, called Didymus, was not with them when Yeshua came. 20:25 The other disciples therefore said unto him, We have seen the Lord. But he said unto them, Except I shall see (εάν μη ίδω) in his hands the print of the nails, and put my finger into the print of the nails, and thrust my hand into his side, I will not believe. 20:26 And after eight days again his disciples were within, and Thomas with them: then came Yeshua, the doors being shut, and stood in the midst, and said, Peace be unto you. 20:27 Then saith he to Thomas, reach hither thy finger, and behold my hands; and reach hither thy hand, and thrust it into my side: and be not faithless, but believing. 20:28 And Thomas answered and said unto him, My Lord and my Elohim. 20:29 Yeshua saith unto him, Thomas, because thou hast seen me, thou hast believed: blessed are they that have not seen, and yet have believed.

Now the question? … Seeing is believing … A thoroughly Greek construct or a do the roots extend back in time beyond the Greeks?

The entire idea of man-made idols is at its very base seeing is believing: “if I can see and touch then it must be real” … even if such reality is simply a delusion!

Faith … belief … by nature is most assuredly a form of submission because it sets the stage for a reality that is beyond my personal sphere of understanding!

In similar fashion how often do we struggle with stories presented to us by other believers that seem “out there”?

I suppose we all could use a little push at times when it comes to making that “leap of faith”!

Drew

Believing … Faith … is indeed a gift and we are comforted in the Spirit of Remembrance! Our problem … (that is the general faith of Christianity) seems to be that we are over run with individuals whose beliefs to not seem to jive with the “events of YHVH”!

It seems the memories placed in many are false memories that do not account for the covenant, Israel … The Kingdom … or in many cases … much of anything of relevance!

Keep the Faith!