VERITAS
Has Postmodernism Killed Truth?
By Craig Branch
May - June 2008
About
30 years ago a pastor named Frank Barker was sharing
the gospel with me, and he told me it was necessary
that I both accept the gospel of grace and that I needed
to repent (surrender my will and life to the Lord Jesus
Christ). At that second condition, I said no. I was
fiercely independent.
He
responded with a question. He asked, “Isn’t
the issue whether Christianity is true or not—that
Jesus Christ was truly who He says He is?” That
began my apologetics journey and my Christian journey.
God’s
truth is a vital aspect of God’s character, His
plan, and His message to the world. Truth is a vital
part of salvation and God’s calling and purpose
of believers.
Jesus
Himself said, “I am the way, the truth, and the
life. No one comes to the Father, but through me”
(John. 14:6). Jesus connects truth with justification
and sanctification saying, “If you abide in My
word, you shall know the truth and the truth shall set
you free,” and “Father, sanctify them in
the truth, Thy word is truth” (Jn. 8:32, 17:17;
1 Tim. 2:4).
Being
in the truth, understanding the truth, and living out
the truth are standard marks of Christians (2 Cor. 4:2,
13:8; 1 Tim. 3:15; 1 Jn. 3:18-19; 3 Jn. 8).
The
character and function of God the Holy Spirit is about
truth. He is even referred to as “the Spirit of
truth” whose primary function is bearing witness
of the truth to the glory of God (Jn. 16:13).
Rebellion
against God necessarily involves going against the truth.
Meaning and purpose in life are altered to sinful man’s
perspective—leading to death. Each man does what
is right in his own eyes.
Paul
relates sinful rebellion with rejecting truth, “with
all the deception of wickedness for those who perish
because they did not receive the truth so as to be saved.”
God sends a deluding influence so man might believe
instead what is false” (2 Thess. 2:10-12; 2Pet.
2:2).
The
confrontation of man’s sinfulness and rejection
of truth, God, Jesus as Messiah and Savior is dramatically
pictured in the trial of Jesus before Pilate (Jn. 18:33-38).
Pilate
represented the secular power and because of the rejection
of religious Jews, Jesus was on trial. Pilate confronted
the issue of Jesus being King. Jesus acknowledged being
a king which superceded an earthly kingship. He said,
“you say correctly I am a King. For this I have
been born, and for this I have come into the world to
bear witness of the truth. Everyone who is of the truth,
hears my voice” (Jn. 18:36-37). And then Pilate
in his rejection of Christ as Messiah and King (Lord)
sarcastically asks, “What is truth?” indicating
a rejection of the reality of truth revealed as well
as Jesus Christ Himself.
This is precisely why the many attacks on the truthfulness
of the revelation of God in the Scripture are so well
received. This growing rejection of absolute truth is
the centerpiece of a major movement called postmodernism.
In
1984, the late Francis Schaeffer prophetically identified
and warned us of the postmodern turn infecting our society.
He wrote, “But something has happened in the last
sixty years. The freedom that once was founded on a
Biblical consensus and a Christian ethos, has now become
autonomous freedom, cut loose from all constraints.
Here we have the world spirit of our age—autonomous
man setting himself up as God, in defiance of the moral
and spiritual truth which God has given…the world
spirit of our age rolls on and on claiming to be autonomous
and crushing all that we cherish in its path”
(Francis Schaeffer, Great Evangelical Disaster, Crossway
Books: Westchester, IL. 1984, pp 22-23).
Dr.
Al Mohler, president of the Southern Baptist Theological
Seminary agrees, “The most basic contours of American
culture have been radically altered. The millennium
has given way to a postmodern, post-Christian, post-Western
cultural crisis, which threatens the very heart of our
culture” (http://albertmohler.com/blog_print.php?id=1107).
So
what is this thing called postmodernism, and is it measurably
the strong and growing negative force these and others
have witnessed. The articles in this journal will expound
more on the multifaceted definitions, development, and
implications of postmodernism on the culture and church.
As
a brief introduction, postmodernism, as the name implies,
is a cultural belief or perspective that follows (as
a reaction to) modernism with regards to the category
of truth.
Basically,
modernism is a view that whatever is objectively true
can be ascertained through the “scientific method”,
using logic, rationalism, and empirical study. Modernism
began to flourish during and after the Enlightenment
Period of the 17th-19th centuries. The scientific method
was thought to be able to arrive at all truths (the
way things truly are) and then solve the problems of
the world. Modernism said there are universal standards
or truths that can be empirically derived so as to correct
the harms of error.
But
social problems continued to increase. Modernism didn’t
seem to be resolving these, and a new movement began
in the 1960s, rebelling against the cultural institution
and tradition of modernism. This was the advent of postmodernism.
The
crux of postmodernism is that there is no ultimate truth.
Postmodernism claims that beliefs are merely constructs
derived from cultural conditioning and traditions, or
through an insulated evolutionary process. At its heart
are three concepts—relativism, pluralism, and
a suspicion or rejection of any claims to possess ultimate
truth.
Relativism
is the idea that any truth claim is actually relative
to other truth claims. It is subjective. A common expression
is “Well that’s your truth, but this is
my truth,” or “that’s what is true
for you, but it is not true for me.”
Pluralism
says because all truth claims are relative, then all
perspectives must be treated with equal respect Therefore,
one is being a totalitarian, disrespectful and even
bigoted if one claims to have the answer or be right.
So
one can easily see that postmodernism is hostile to
the exclusive truth claims of Christianity. The compatible
belief systems of postmodernism are agnosticism, atheism,
liberal theology, neo-orthodoxy, New Age, or eastern
mysticism, and a controversial new movement called “The
Emerging Church Movement.”
Many
Christian leaders have been writing about the significance
and dangers of the postmodern turn and the responsibility
of the Church in its wake. Christians like Chuck Colson,
Os Guiness, David Wells, Nancy Pearcy, Robert Webber,
Alister McGrath, J. I. Packer, Lael Arrington, James
Boice, Al Mohler, Michael Horton, Gene Veith, John Seil,
William Lane Craig have written book after book on the
subject.
They
frequently use the word “crisis.” A quote
by the late Robert Webber captures the gist of the issue:
“In
the postmodern world, the place of the church in the
world has become a matter of utmost importance due
to the collapse of Christian values that have dominated
Western society. Chuck Colson has called our attention
not only to the collapse of Christian values, but
to the far reaching implications of this cultural
shift” (Robert Webber, Ancient-Future Faith,
1999, p 167).
William Lane Craig
writes,
“If the
situation is not to degenerate further, it is imperative
that we turn the whole intellectual climate of our
culture back to a Christian worldview…our churches
are filled with Christians who are idling in intellectual
neutral. One result of this is an immature, superficial
faith…The results of being in intellectual neutral
extend far beyond oneself. If Christian laymen don’t
become intellectually engaged, then we are in serious
danger of losing our children,” (William Lane
Craig, Reasonable Faith, 1994).
Most of these Christian
leaders began to validate the concerns of Francis Schaeffer
over 10 years ago. So were they exaggerating? According
to Barna research and a massive study just released
by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, the concerns
are very valid.
In 2002, Barna
research revealed that 64% of American adults said,
“moral truth is relative to the circumstances”,
while only 22% said “moral truths are unchanging.”
Among teenagers, 83% said “moral truth is relative”,
and only 6% said “truth is absolute”.
The “frog
in the kettle” phenomenon is reflected in the
growing impact on the younger generations. 60% of those
over 36 embrace moral relativism, and 75% of those 18-35
embrace it.
The implications
are significant. The postmodern atmosphere increases
the receptivity and influence of attacks on the authority
of the Bible. That is why the Gnostic Gospels, The Da
Vinci Code, Oprah’s hall of shame (Rhonda Byrne’s
The Secret, Eckhart Tolle, Marianne Williamson, etc.)
have such an audience and impact.
In a 2007 Barna
study, it was observed that Americans 16-29 were far
more skeptical and resistant to Christianity than the
same age group ten years before. Only 16% have a positive
view of Christianity. The top negative description among
that age group (87%) is that Christians are “judgmental”.
The 2008 Pew Forum
research indicated “Americans are very open. In
terms of various paths to heaven, the majority tell
us that there is not just one way to heaven. 70% of
Americans including 57% of ‘evangelical Protestants’
believe this, while 68% believe there is more than one
true way to interpret the teachings of their religions.”
Another revealing
finding by the Pew Forum reflecting the dramatic postmodern
turn is that 50% of Americans now say homosexuality
should be accepted by society, while only 40% do not
(“Massive Study Finds Most Americans Devout, Tolerant,”
The Boston Globe, June 23, 2008).
The goal of this
issue of Areopagus is to awaken its readers to the seriousness
of this crisis, encourage and equip you to engage people
and the culture with a Christian apologetic. A recent
theme and story in Christianity Today concurs. The article
titled “A New Day for Apologetics”, states
“There has been a resurgence in Christian apologetics
as a direct result of the challenges Christianity has
faced in the storm of militant atheism in college classrooms,
on the Internet, in T.V. documentaries, and best-selling
books…This spate of attacks has also kindled an
unexpected surge of interest in apologetics among youth.
It wasn’t too many years ago that scholars were
writing off apologetics because we live in a postmodern
world where young people (and old) were not supposed
to be interested in things like the historical Jesus.”
The article goes
on to note that apologetics was the most significant
factor in 16-24 year olds surveyed who came to Christ,
and it was apologetics conference that were drawing
overflow crowds of young people across the country (Troy
Andrews, “A New Day for Apologetics”, Christianity
Today, July 2008 Vol. 52, No. 7, pp. 28-29).
In this journal
you can read articles by J.P. Moreland, Gene Edward
Veith, and R. Scott Smith. “Truth and Postmodernism”
by Dr. Moreland examines the concept of truth, the correspondence
theory of truth, surveys the multi-faceted nature of
postmodernism, and briefly responds to a major fallacy
of postmodernism.
Dr. Veith’s
article “Postmodern Culture, Revisited”,
describes the impact of postmodernism in culture with
a special focus on one of the most important, but overlooked
segment of our culture—computer technology, the
virtual reality world, and the music industry (pop culture).
He also surveys the postmodern impact on the church
and religion in general.
A third article
by R. Scott Smith, “That’s Just Your Interpretation:
Truth and the ‘Emergent Christian’”,
provides and excellent description and critique of a
huge, often below the radar, Emerging Church Movement,
and it’s capitulations to faulty postmodern directions.
One thing missing
from those articles is a practical apologetic to the
every day common statements (truth claims) made by postmodernists;
so the following seeks to provide that. I have taken
much of these apologetic dialogues from a practical
book, True for You, but Not True for Me by Paul Copan.
Relativism and
pluralism suffer from a fatal conceptual problem. They
are caught between a need to provide arguments for the
superiority of their own views about values, human nature,
and human destiny over Christianity’s claims,
on the one hand, and a commitment to certain principles
that exclude the legitimacy of their own argument, on
the other. For example, pluralists are exclusivistic,
yet they engage in the same practice and mindset that
they rebuke as wrong. “You are wrong to say yours
is the only right view (therefore my view of pluralism
is always right and your view of exclusivism is always
wrong.)”
- There
are no absolute truths! Nothing is universally true.
Response: You seem to be saying that your view is
right and mine is wrong. Is your statement always
true? You are saying no belief is true for everyone
but you want me and everyone else to believe the same
thing that you do. You are saying relativism is true
and absolute claims are false (irrational fallacy).
- Who
are you to judge others? Response: Could you help
me understand what you are saying by defining what
you mean by judgmentalism? It can’t mean being
in disagreement with someone or considering someone
to be wrong because then you would then be guilty
of the same.
- Jesus
said to “judge not”. Response: Yes, that
verse is often quoted erroneously. Have you ever looked
at the context? Jesus says that one should not make
self-righteous judgments, having a sense of moral
superiority because of another’s moral failures.
He wants us to know that if we acknowledge the standard
of right and wrong, we too will be judged by the same
standard. He then tells us to make proper judgments
(John 7:24).
- You
Christians are intolerant of others and their sincere
viewpoints! Response: I’m not sure of what you
mean by intolerant. The common usage is not putting
up with error. It doesn’t usually mean not being
accepting of any or all views. We don’t tolerate
what we approve of—I don’t tolerate honesty.
We tolerate something with which we disapprove. Are
you defining tolerance as accepting all views to be
true or valid? If so, then by saying my view is wrong,
are you being intolerant? You are saying, “Judging
is wrong, intolerance is wrong, hurting others is
wrong.” What is the basis for determining what
is right and wrong? Personal satisfaction? Sincerity?
Strong convictions? What about the Nazi, the racist
and the masochist? Hindus believe in a class/caste
system of culture. Muslims believe in polygamy and
in a theocracy. Christians believe in a distinction
between Church and State, monogamy, and the right
and responsibility of Christians to influence the
laws to reflect the truth of what they believe. Legislation
(laws, ethics, virtue) are always someone’s
morality. How can the beliefs of all three religions
be true or the law of the land simultaneously?
Legal Tolerance is the recognition that everyone has
the right to believe whatever they determine is true
and right.
Social Tolerance
is the recognition that people ought to be treated
with dignity regardless of their beliefs, as long
as they do not intentionally harm others.
Uncritical Tolerance
is the notion that we must accept any and all views
as true, even if they are self-contradictory. No one
lives like that in the real world.
- Well
that is true for you-your truth, but it’s not
true for me. Response: Are you saying that it doesn’t
matter what one believes as long as it works or seems
good for them? Do you want me to believe what you’re
saying is true? You seem to be saying that it is always
a true statement that no belief is true for everyone.
That is a universal claim that relativism is true
and absolutism is false.
You can’t
say nothing is absolutely or universally true and then
say that your view about that is true. Relativism falsifies
itself. The word “truth” loses its meaning.
Relativism is self-refuting.
I leave you now
with the challenge of a true prophet for our era, Francis
Schaeffer:
“And now
we must ask where we as evangelicals have been in
the battle for truth and morality in our culture.
Have we as evangelicals been on the front lines contending
for the faith and confronting the moral breakdown
over the last forty to sixty years? Have we even been
aware that there is a battle going on…If the
truth of the Christian faith is in fact truth, then
it stands in antithesis to the ideas and immorality
of our age, and it must be practiced both in teaching
and practical action...Here is the great evangelical
disaster—the failure of the evangelical world
to stand for truth as truth. There is only one word
for this—namely accommodation: the evangelical
church has accommodated to the world spirit of the
age. First, there has been accommodation on Scripture,
so that many who call themselves evangelicals hold
a weakened view of the Bible and no longer affirm
the truth of all the Bible teaches—truth not
only in religious matters, but in areas of science
and history and morality.” [Francis Schaeffer,
The Great Evangelical Disaster (Westchester, IL: Crossway
Books, 1984), 36-37].
Craig
Branch is director of the Apologetics Resource Center,
Birmingham, Alabama.
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