Personal Values Replace Truth as the Necessary Standard of Faith & Life
It is now necessary to reach lower in order to share the Christian faith effectively. Cultures and societies around the world continue to devolve,
spiraling through a pluralistic – post-modern reality, and consequently philosophical
tolerance has become an acceptable substitute for truth as a standard for
determining one’s values. Simultaneously tolerance for a wide array of individual
values, regardless of their origin or basis in truth, has become the plum line
for civility and for the most part this lack of standards has become its own
standard. This state of disintegration of standards goes well beyond the
post-modernism of the early to mid-20th century, and has now become
what I am calling post/post-modern. Post/post
could be described as a world where the only civil discourse must be based on
the most extreme definitions of tolerance, where any allusions to absolute
truth are either questionable or plainly dismissed as fiction. The relativism
that infiltrated every subject taught in our primary schools in the 1050’s and
1960’s has come to full bloom. I am suggesting here that this is not just the
case in the secular philosophical academia any longer. Those primary school
students are now our senior citizens and among that generation these attitudes
prevail. It has become the acceptable condition of the workplace, our churches
and on the streets from Calcutta to California.
As a pastor, Christian apologist and street evangelist who
has served in many cross-cultural situations around the world, it is plain to
me that most of us are not just being propelled toward this worldview, but that
we are living in it currently. While Christians holding themselves out as evangelicals
would never embrace this confession openly nor perhaps express it publically as
a way of life, the choices many of us make reveal this “post/post” world is
where we live, where we work and unfortunately, where we are most comfortable.
Lest we think these issues have no real world implications,
consider that recently there was a terrorist attack in San Bernardino,
California. The neighbors to those that carried out the attack said that they
knew something sinister was going on in the house and garage where the
attackers lived, but would not tell anyone, for fear of “someone thinking they
were profiling”. I would simply suggest that when, as a people, we fear telling
what we know could save our own lives because we do not want to be seen as
“intolerant”, it might be concluded that the consequences of speaking the truth
is feared more than the possibility of death by tolerance.
That said, the tools we have used as Christian apologists
for a number of years that presume people believe in truth, that anything is
knowable, or that there is one true reality, may now need to be re-adjusted in
order to once again begin where people now actually live. In 19___ Dr. Norman
Geisler adjusted his now famous10 points that show Christianity to be true to
12 points. He said at the time that this had to be done because the culture had
digressed so far that we could no longer presume that people believed that
truth about reality was knowable. Today (2016) it seems that even the phrases:
“absolute truth”, “one reality” and “knowable truths about realities” are
questioned if not totally dismissed as naïve concepts.
In the 1960’s there was a small sub-culture that said they
believed in “sex, love, and rock & roll.” Everything else in their lives
became subservient to these values. These
self-proclaimed “hippies” were held together from Woodstock and beyond by this
common value system (ie: sex, love
and rock & roll). This movement, based on these values, grew and has had a
major impact on our society and on every modern culture. This is just one
example of how one small group’s values
has replaced the necessity for truth’s existence. Sex, love and rock & roll
were the core value and everything else in life adjusted to fit that paradigm. When
this kind of replacement morality takes hold tolerance is king and any self-
proclaimed value could become the core upon which any individual person can
justify any lifestyle without fear of being chastened or ridiculed in a healthy
tolerant society. One can become a “Jewish/Buddhist”, a “Christian/Anarchist”,
or the “only member of the ‘Mother-God’ Society” without much concern of being
questioned. In fact those that have such singular beliefs are often considered
intellectuals, brilliant or just free thinkers. In a “post/post” world even the
idea of polar positions or antithetical thoughts are primitive, constraining
and un-necessary walls that separate otherwise loving people.
It is with this understanding that we now suggest the
following preamble to the long held 12 points:
1. If truth exists, it has value
2. Not all values are equally valuable
3. Truth exists
4. Values predicated on truth about reality are by
definition more valuable than those rooted in personal preference, tradition or
any presupposition alone
Truth about reality is knowable… (the beginning of the 12 points).
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