DiaBlogue<A>: My "Standard Model" of Christianity
Or -- as I suspect Alan is thinking but is too
polite to say -- "What the Hell Does Ernie
Believe?"I concur with Alan's opinion
in The
Weight of Justice that "our meta-discussion ... seems to be making
some progress", rather than merely going Round
and Round. However, while he appreciates the relevance of my
questions, he basically answered "no" to all them, implying we haven't quite
reached a meeting of the minds.
:-)That said, I think his final
comments take us in the right
direction:... the
justification of Christianity that I require will be rather high, similar to
what is expected for scientific theories or well-established historical events.
The comparison to personal relationships [4] fails for me. Perhaps I am missing
Ernie's point, but as I see it, belief in Christianity depends on the veracity
of various historical assertions and I fail to see how that compares to the
knowledge we have about our personal
relationships.Ah, therein lies the
rub. The embarrassing truth is that the reasons I (and I think most people) have
for believing in Christianity are completely different than the ones Alan has
been critiquing. And somehow this fact hasn't really surfaced until now.
Doh!Fortunately, I think Alan is now
asking the right
question:Ernie, how would
you answer (4)? How would you state your fundamental reasons for belief? (I
think I have an idea from what has gone before, but repeating or verifying would
be helpful at this point.)[Read
more] for my attempt to explain both
what
I believe, and
why.
Let me start by saying that I think the
underlying problem is that Alan and I have fundamentally
different
understandings about both what Christianity is, as well as what would constitute
justifiable reasons for believing in it. Worse, I'm not sure we even agree what
"justified belief" looks like, despite the enormous time previously spent on
epistemology.Still,
now that we've finally recognized the problem, we have a chance at actually
solving it. So, let me do my best to communicate -- in very rough terms -- what
it is that I mean by Christianity. I deliberately chose the term Standard Model from particle physics because
that theory -- while wildly successful and universally believed -- is
nonetheless a wonderful example of the uncertainty and incompleteness
characteristic of "real" scientific theories. Thus, I feel it provides a useful
benchmark for what constitutes "valid" scientific proof, rather than abstract
notions of "rigor."To start, the first
point I want to make is that Christianity is a
complex belief
system. That is, it is overly simplistic to
say Christianity is "only" about the resurrection; that would be like saying
General Relativity is "only" about the precession of Mercury's perihelion. While that
may be a seminal event providing the impetus to believe, the system itself
encompasses so much more. In fact, models of Christianity typically
include:
a. assumptions about ontology
b. a theory of divinity
c. assertions about past historical
events
d. a system of ethics
e. psychological insights about happiness and
evil
f. an understanding of scriptural
authority
g. practical disciplines for ascertaining God's
will
i. expectations of post-life
eventsI say "typically" because every
faith tradition within Christianity is in a sense its own Model, and not all
such Models have all the above features. For this discussion, though, it seems
best to focus on my personal Model of Christianity, which for simplicity I will
label Transformationalism (while I'm not the only one
to use that term, I helped define it, so it provides a useful
handle).Note that this is my first,
off-the-cuff attempt to summarize my beliefs in this manner, so I hope Alan will
forgive any discrepancies that may later be discovered between what I actually
believe, and the words I may have inaccurately chosen. For that matter, I
reserve the right to change my beliefs based on additional evidence and
reasoning (since that is Alan's goal, after all
:-).Using the above dimensions (with
those disclaimers), my Standard Model of Christianity
asserts:
a.
ontologically: that senses, reason, and
emotions all reflect underlying objective reality
b.
theologically: those realities are all
contingent on a single divine (non-contingent) principle, experienced in three
"persons" classically labeled
Father,
Son,
and
Holy
Spirit.
c.
historically: that the character of that
divine principle was manifest in a unique human being known as Jesus Christ, who
was crucified on a Roman cross around 33 AD, and whose bodily resurrection was
the primary inspiration for the Christian movement that erupted shortly
thereafter
d.
ethically, that the values of love,
forgiveness, and self-sacrifice espoused by Jesus (and practiced, albeit
imperfectly, by his followers) represent the ultimate standard of
morality
e.
psychologically: that obedience to those
precepts is the optimal route to both individual and social happiness, yet that
some will nonetheless willfully deny those precepts
f.
scripturally: that the Bible, Old and New
Testament, ultimately derives from genuine encounters with the divine as
transcribed by fallible yet inspired human authors and editors, and thus
provides authoritative information about God's character and
purpose
g.
practically: that Scripture reading, Christian
fellowship, prayer and fasting in Jesus name, worship of the Father, tithing,
and other disciplines of sanctification -- when done properly -- provide
emotional, physical, spiritual, and tangible results.
h.
eschatologically: that human and natural
history will eventually terminate, or more properly undergo a "phase transition"
to a different state of being
i.
ultimately: that how we choose to respond to
divinity will have eternal, post-life consequences in proportion to what we did
relative to what we knewI realize this
is insanely concise, but I trust Alan appreciates the magnitude of the problem I
am undertaking! Further, I suspect Alan may be willing to concede some but not
others, so we can focus our efforts on those that are most
relevant.Plus, all of
that
is merely a prelude to his question: why do I believe [this version of]
Christianity?The long answer is that
it is an emergent belief based on both the internal coherency and explanatory
power of the entire system of ideas (similar to why I believe the Standard Model of physics, or methodological
naturalism). The interrelatedness of the parts means that those aspects which
are historically testable and/or empirically verifiable lend credence to those
that are less so, and ultimately to the whole. While alternate theories may
seem to provide viable alternatives for one or two points, none of them comes
even close to matching the theoretical richness, practical applicability, or
widespread support of Christianity.The
short answer, though, is that I believe in
Love.I believe that Christ showed me
love, and taught me to love, when I found myself beyond all human love and
teaching. Not just once, but multiple times. Moreover, I have seen an
encounter with Christ transform people from selfish to loving in a manner -- and
on a scale -- that nothing else has ever been able to reproduce. Further, the
most loving, courageous, and wise people I have ever known have ascribed all
their virtue to Christ, and none to
themselves.Which is why the decision
to follow Christ is more like the decision to marry someone than anything else.
It is a belief in character, virtue, faithfulness, and hope. But most of all,
it is a belief in love: that self-giving love is the most real and the most
powerful thing in the universe, and that ultimately everything else is
contingent on that.For if love is
"really" false, then the only alternative is nihilism, and the only way to justify that is to
willfully deny everything that is good and beautiful in the universe. Which
would be wrong.
Posted: Wed - May 17, 2006 at 07:08 PM