Academia’s Double Standard, Or Orthodoxy for Me but Not for Thee (Seminarian Visits Theology Professor #5)

Introduction

Today we listen in on the fifth conversation between a recent seminary graduate and one of his former professors. The previous conversation centered on clarifying the critical standard academia uses to test knowledge claims. Taking mathematics and logic as the ideal sciences, academia measures all other endeavors to secure knowledge by the ideal of clear, exhaustive, and absolute knowledge. In sciences other than mathematics, however, this ideal is unattainable and can be only approximated to one degree or another. Not only so, the level of success in approximating the ideal is always a matter of dispute. Because it is unattainable in fields other than pure mathematics, it is open to abuse and selective application. Our professor argues that the dominant academic approach to the Bible and Christian faith displays just this sort of abuse and endless debate.

Setting: The seminarian and the professor agree that friendly conversation is better when you are sharing food and drink or taking a walk together. Warm and sunny, today is a perfect day for a leisurely walk.

Seminarian: Thank you for suggesting that we walk as we talk today.

Professor: Like sharing a meal, walking together is an act of friendship conducive to honest conversation. Where did we leave our last conversation?

Seminarian: As I recall, we were going to examine the ways the academic method creates doubt about the Bible as a reliable source of knowledge of God.

Professor: Yes. I remember. Tell me, then, in the most succinct way you can how academia attempted to diminish your confidence in the Bible as a repository of divine revelation.

Seminarian: I can summarize it in four words. On hundreds of occasions, in scores of different ways, and to every belief I brought with me to seminary, academia repeated the same challenge: “How do you know?” How do you know the Bible is true? How do you know that every book, every sentence, and every word is inspired or God-breathed? How do you know the biblical writings are authentic, that is, written by authors to whom they are ascribed, composed at the times and in places they claim, and preserved uncorrupted? How do you know that the events they recount really happened? How do you know that the authors’ theological interpretations of the events they write about are true? How do you know that the Scribes and Rabbis that selected the Old Testament canon and the churches and bishops and councils that selected the New Testament canon did not make mistakes in the writings they included or excluded?

Professor: Asking “how do you know?” seems more like a rhetorical ploy than an academic argument. You don’t have to know anything about a subject or offer any alternative explanations for the data, to ask this question. Did they make any positive arguments? Do they attempt to demonstrate the Bible’s unreliability or provide an alternative history or theology?

Seminarian: Yes. They did. And they can succeed in creating plausible doubt at some points. In my experience, however, the “how-do-you-know” question is the only way to mount an effective challenge to faith in the Bible’s reliability as the authority for Christian teaching, because most of the Bible’s message is untestable by universally acknowledged criteria. The Bible is the only source of information we have for almost all the history it contains. You have to take it or leave it. True, there are some areas where the Bible’s statements may be tested. The simplest way to test the Bible’s reliability is to examine it for internal coherence or compatibility with external sources. If the Bible seems to assert two contradictory ideas or incompatible facts, this would be a mark against its reliability for those ideas and facts. If the Bible asserts ideas and facts that contradict or are incompatible with ideas and facts sourced from outside the Bible, one must assess which source to trust and to what degree. To take one obvious example, the first eleven chapters of Genesis, taken as history or science in the modern sense, seems to be incompatible with some aspects of modern cosmology, archeology, biology, and the modern understanding of the course of ancient history. And there are many other places where the Bible speaks of historical events, natural phenomena, and moral principles to which some people claim to have independent access.

Professor: Indeed, examples could be multiplied. Hardly a biblical stoned has been left unturned. Biblical scholars have been studying the Bible in this academic way for at least 250 years. Some hoped that academic study would confirm the truth of faith and others seemed to take delight in debunking it. Some were cautious and reserved and others prone to speculation and flights of fancy. They examined it from every angle imaginable and set it within every ideological schema that has been developed: Hegelian, Marxist, postmodern, feminist, and gay. I have read widely in this literature for 50 years, and as I asserted a few conversations back, for all their efforts not much of substance has changed. If you want to know what the ancient Jews believed about God, creation, and other faith topics you still have to read the text of the Old Testament printed in your Bible, which is for all practical purposes the same as that read by Jesus and Paul. If you want to know about the life and teachings of Jesus, you have to read the New Testament Gospels. If you want to know what Jesus’s original disciples and the earliest church believed about Jesus, you have to read Acts, Paul, John, and the rest of the New Testament documents. Don’t get me wrong, biblical scholars have been very helpful in providing insights into the biblical writings. But when scholars use the biblical texts plus their vivid imaginations to reconstruct a picture of Jesus or the early church that is radically different from that given in the New Testament texts, what are we to do? Trust modern scholars and their methods? Which scholars? What methods? Surely, it makes more sense to trust the original sources even if there is no independent way, acceptable to academia, to prove them true. No matter how many scholars you read, you will still have to make a choice to believe the biblical teaching or not.

Seminarian: If I am hearing you correctly you are saying that all attempts to go beyond faith in grasping the truth of the Bible—whether to confirm or deny it—are futile and unreasonable. Am I right?

Professor: Yes. The Bible’s truth value cannot be assessed with mathematical methods. It makes historical and theological claims, and the methods by which historical and theological claims can be assessed cannot produce “clear, exhaustive, and absolute” knowledge. Academics who nevertheless attempt to transform biblical faith into scientific knowledge will inevitably reduce that faith to a few meaningless historical facts and a short list of culturally acceptable moralisms. Their edited Bible turns out to be even less plausible than the uninterpreted text. Ironically, their failed efforts to rationalize faith actually renders a service to faith. For if the Christian faith could be refuted (or proved) by academic means, it seems that 250 years of scholarly work would be enough to accomplish this task. From an academic point of view, however, it is still inconclusive. And it always will be, for that is the nature of academia.

Seminarian: And that brings us back to the “How do you know?” argument!

Professor: Exactly! Because orthodox/biblical faith cannot be defeated by positive academic arguments, unbelieving academics often resort to the “How do you know?” argument! Because it contains an element of truth, it often ensnares unwary students. It is true that we do not know the truth of the orthodox/biblical faith in the same way and to the degree of certainty that we know that 2 + 2 = 4. So what? Skeptical academics argue or imply that we ought not to trust beliefs grounded in faith. This act, they say, is a failure of rational responsibility and a loss of courage. We ought rather to hold such beliefs in suspense until we can know their truth status one way or another, which implies that we should never embrace Christian faith wholeheartedly and apply it to every aspect of our lives. For we cannot know its truth clearly, exhaustively, and absolutely.

Seminarian: If academics applied this standard to every belief they cherish, they would never embrace wholeheartedly and live by any belief or principle…except perhaps mathematical or logical ones. And you won’t have much of a life if you determine to act guided only by those abstractions!

Professor: But as we all know, the dominant culture of academia does not apply this rigorous standard to every belief and value! Can you imagine the furor that would be created on most college campuses if a guest speaker or a professor were to turn the tables and apply these standards to modern academia’s sacred cows in the following ways? “How do you know that the world is divided into wicked oppressors and righteous oppressed people? Can you prove that all black and brown people are victims of systemic racism? Can you give demonstrable evidence that racism is immoral? How can you prove that socialism is morally superior to capitalism? How do you know that diversity is a moral and social good? How do you know that seeking equity (or even equality!) is morally superior to rewarding merit? How do you know that inclusion is right and exclusion is wrong? How do you know that LGBTQ+ rights are human rights? Indeed, how do you know there are such things as human rights? So, you don’t know? You can’t answer? Well then, you should to hold such beliefs in suspense until you can know their truth status one way or another. If you don’t know them clearly, exhaustively, and absolutely you should not risk living by them or imposing them on others!”

Seminarian: I suspect that such a person would be silenced and perhaps attacked by a mob, fired from their jobs, and even arrested by law enforcement.

Professor: Higher education, too, has its dogma, its orthodoxy. To question it is to blaspheme, and you don’t argue with blasphemy. You silence it and persecute the perpetrator.

Professor: I see that we have been walking for about an hour and its nearly lunch time. Next time, let’s address directly why holding tenaciously to the faith proclaimed in the Bible and attested and passed on to us by the church is a very reasonable thing to do.

Seminarian: I look forward to it!

Professor: See you next time.

5 thoughts on “Academia’s Double Standard, Or Orthodoxy for Me but Not for Thee (Seminarian Visits Theology Professor #5)

  1. Person Asking Frequent Qs about Theology

    I’m not an academic and, admittedly, I haven’t read much academic writing about the Bible that isn’t written by a person of faith. But my sense is that the hypocrisy the professor speaks of goes beyond simply demanding an unreasonable standard of proof from believers, to also making claims that are just as, if not more, speculative, implausible, and incomplete, and that also don’t meet their own standard. For example, I imagine many an academic has claimed that Isaiah couldn’t really have prophesied about Cyrus centuries before Cyrus lived, so that Cyrus bit had to have been added later. But by whom? When? For what purpose? Was it known at the time that the forger(s) was/were writing up a fake after-the-fact prophesy? Did people in the know go along with it? Why? What was the point in lying to themselves and fooling future generations? When did people forget that the prophesy was added later and start to believe wrongly that it had been Isaiah’s prophesy all along? Why is the conspiracy theory more likely to be true than the proposition that the prophesy is what it appears and purports to be? I doubt they have the facts/proof to answer any of these questions. They just know that any explanation, no matter how unsatisfactory, is better than believing that God put knowledge of the future into Isaiah’s mind.

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    1. ifaqtheology Post author

      A good example. Because the critic assumes that no one can know what will happen in the far future (perhaps with the exception of God), and that other sources date Cyrus at a later time, the reference to Cyrus must have been added later, during or after the time of Cyrus. Note how the (unprovable) metaphysical assumption denying the possibility of foreknowledge and trust in external sources combine to make this critical judgment. But as you pointed out there may be many other explanations for what the text says other than the “fake news” explanation. Additionally, but not unimportantly, our inability to settle the issue of Cyrus to the satisfaction of critical historians does not mean that we cannot receive the profound message of the prophet Isaiah as it was quoted by Jesus and received joyfully by the New Testament authors and the church. Thanks!

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  2. Charles A Hanson

    A prophesy is one gift the other is the gift of knowledge. I do not claim to be a prophet. Six years ago, the Lord put in my heart that the Roe vs Wade abortion bill would be overturned. I shared this with two bible groups over the years I attended. Nobody thought much of this so-called prediction. I shared with my family members, and I put it on my Facebook. One woman made a comment and said, That would be wonderful. I said thank you. As the years went by I did not one time doubt what the Lord put in my heart and as you know it happened which was wonderful. Isaiah had a word from the Lord, and he wrote it down. I know exactly how he felt.
    Charles

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  3. Dr Jonne Smalhouse

    Hi again Ron (and readers).
    1John 5:7-8
    Here in the New Testament, the author of John’s first letter talks explicitly about “witness” or proof if you like. A sort of appenddix to St John that seems to focus upon difficult qustions.
    But this crucial witnessing herein points inexorably towards the Holy Trinity or the tetragrammaton, which incidentally is to some extent a mathematical symbol or mandala. You can see for yourself, just read around it.
    The extent to which a ‘believing Christian’, who confesses to believing in the Godhead, listening to the Word of God that is Jesus Christ, can therefore understand that their very being (as “imago dei= is made in the form or image of God”) must be a three-fold tripartite form– answers almost all questions and doubts about faith.
    A believer must either believe this scriptural witness, or does not believe this. I must say, that i was going to reply about the valuable and dynamic relationships that exist between the sciences and the arts, regarding what it truly means to worship God as a tripartite entity, but that can wait! Sorry.
    This issue of prophets, the prophetic and witness was mentioned by Jesus in his references to John the Baptizer. We can all hear the noise that a reed makes, blown between the fingers, but is this then the Word of God because we call it a prophet? How do we filter any particular writings, speech, scripture or prophecy as genuine?
    I’ve heard and read many inferences of how mortified and unhappy Jesus was to “hear of John’s death”. None of which is supported in scripture. Jesus wept at Lazarus grave and people think they may know why.
    And yet folks rarely understand what Jesus said about John and why he said it. He told John’s followers to report what they had seen. In our times we can look at a body of evidence, read around scholars like St Jerome and Augustine of Hippo, and form our own opinions, but ultimately we do exactly as Jesus said ‘we must see what we think’.
    If we cannot actually see that what we think is completely tangible, then we doubt ourself internally and we perhaps see a story rather than what we deem historical facts. Ultimately, we need to start to look for God and the Trinity in Jesus Christ, or you’re not really going to understand things like, why Jesus ( talking of prophets– and yeh! “More than prophets”) said “John the Baptizer was less than the least in the kingdom of heaven”.
    Blessings to all.

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