Rest and Restlessness has moved to a new home.
Go to mattwiebe.com.
If you are a feed subscriber, please update to the new feed.
(The old feed will contine to be updated from the new site for a while)
Comments are closed, but clicking on post titles should bring you to the appropriate post on my new blog.
Thursday, July 27, 2006
Good Thought on Emergent
Some people like to link to good thoughts on other blogs and some people like to subject their readers to the horrors of their own thoughts. I usually choose the latter. However, while reading a book review on Scot McKnight's Jesus Creed blog, I came across a nugget of pure gold in the comments. This paragraph summarizes the difficulties in the emerging church's dance with postmodern thinking:
It seems to me that some in the emergent movement are led astray by those postmodernists who think that a recognition of our finitude and subjectivity means that we must be religious skeptics, bereft of concrete beliefs like those that characterize the Christian story. Since I believe that there can be knowledge with what we might call epistemic humility, I reject the claim that postmodernism entails religious skepticism. It doesn’t. I also know from personal experience that commitment to religious belief, including Christian belief, can coexist (however unhappily) with anxiety, bafflement, sadness, doubt and confusion. I think, however, that some in the emergent movement unwittingly commit themselves to religious skepticism and that, I am convinced, is incompatible with Christian commitment.All I can say to that is "amen."
I don't know why the admission of our finitude and subjectivity is, or needs to be, any different from "epistemic humility".
Admitting our finitude and subjectivity leads some people to think that you can't really get beyond skepticism to any kind of confidence in truth. Our modernist conditioning has led us to the false belief that if you can't know something with 100% rational certainty, then you can't really know it at all.
Postmodernism thus far hasn't really dealt with how to be certain of something while recognizing that you could be wrong. In the end, it's probably just simple humility.
I am most interested by the subjectivity of the post-modern system.
Some would say that it is in large part a necessary reaction against the failed scientific objectivity of modernity.
But perhaps the subjectivity we attach to beliefs (you have your god, I have mine), is only a thinly veiled objectivity.
I.E. I'm willing to hold religion in tension so that we can all "get along" on the surface, but I'm still operating from my root belief system, while at the same time professing my objectivity for the betterment of society!
In other words: Everyone should have freedom of worship, but don't get in the way of the American/Western Way of Life.
Hyper-modernity anyone?
Who is really a postmodernist? The first thing that comes to my mind is someone who doesn't think that science and objective truth can save us - and then proceeds to deconstruct as a game plan.
I think you are right on this point Trav: Doubting as a goal is a pretty lame way to exist, especially as a Christian.
It has its uses though... and it has a place in church too for that matter.
Don't you just love Mark 9:24 - "I do believe; help me overcome my unbelief!" (in context)
Cam: subjectivity can't actually give you any kind of worldview from which to live, so nobody really lives there, they just say the PC platitudes when required to.
Trav: I would not exactly identify myself with postmodernism, but I do listen and agree with some things it has to say. As Cam says, postmodernism is a very plastic word that means very different things depending upon who is using/hearing it.
I also agree that postmodernism largely doesn't stand for anything, it is merely antithesis to modernity. It is much like an adolescent individuating itself from its parents: it rebels against things it sees "wrong" with its' parents' values (rightly and wrongly) so as to emerge as an individual that doesn't merely parrot the parents' worldview. This process is messy, leads to excess, is filled with foolishness and yet often has very poignant insights. That's kind of how I feel about postmodernism and the emergent folks who are treading that path.
So, I have a relationship of listening and wrestling with the postmodern crowd. I am hopeful that there is a more positive, helpful way forward in both theological and philosophical considerations. It may not even happen in my lifetime, but I already see some progress in that direction.
Post a Comment