Sunday, November 26, 2017

Five Problems with The Gospel Coalition’s Statement on Truth (Can We Know the Truth? by Richard Phillips)


1. When they affirm, “with the postmoderns we are skeptical that finite, fallible humans are the agents of truth” (p. 12), they deny what is essential to the integrity and evidentiary weight of the apostolic witnesses God has appointed to confirm the truth that Jesus of Nazareth was raised from the dead and is both Lord and Christ (e.g., 1 John 1:1-3). The logic goes like this:

          (1) Humans are not agents of truth.

          (2) The apostles are humans.

          (3) Therefore, the apostles are not agents of truth.

2. When they affirm that there is no “objective epistemological common ground” between a believer and unbeliever (p. 8), they deny what is consistently assumed by the apostles in the way they preached and reasoned with unbelievers in The Acts of the Apostles (e.g.,  Acts 2:14-36). For instance, the apostles spoke to the unbelievers in Jerusalem, as if those unbelievers did know certain things (such as the miracles of Jesus). The apostles built on that knowledge certain things these unbelievers did not know but would know after hearing the apostles preach. If there were no “objective epistemological common ground” between believers and unbelievers, would this not be evident in (1) how the apostles communicated with unbelievers and (2) what the apostles actually said to them? If the apostles had believed (consistent with The Gospel Coalition’s statement on truth) that all facts are relative to the perspective from which they are viewed — that is, that there are no neutral facts — then why did they consistently present the facts of the gospel (1 Corinthians 15:1-8) as if they were neutral?

3. When they affirm, “our theory of knowing presupposes certain truths” (p. 8), they deny what Scripture everywhere assumes, namely, that the truth of the gospel is absolute, objective, and knowable for everyone. (That is, it may produce but does not require Christian presuppositions.) The Gospel Coalition maintains, on the other hand, that unbelievers need, first of all, a Christian perspective, worldview, or way of knowing before they can believe in Jesus as the Messiah. In adopting this approach, they alter the task of evangelism as presented in The Acts of the Apostles from what is absolutely and objectively known and knowable for all to what is relatively and subjectively a way of knowing for some.

4. When they affirm that because of human finitude truth is subjective (p. 14), they cite no Scripture—indeed, they provide no argument, authority, evidence, or reason for such a conclusion. They simply declare it as if it were a self-evident truth. It is not, however. Besides being self-contradictory (if truth is subjective, is that objectively true?), truth as the Bible presents it (and as it is commonly understood) is “conformity to fact” or “what corresponds to reality.” (See Roger Nicole's "The Concept of Truth," in Scripture and Truth, edited by Carson and Woodbridge) That is, truth is (or may be) objective. All the apostles and prophets assume such an understanding of truth. And there is nothing about being finite or limited compared to God that necessarily means that our knowledge of truth is (or can only be) subjective or partial (which is to say: wrong). God would never have established truth by witnesses as he does in Scripture, if that were so.

5. When they affirm that because of the effects of sin on the mind humans cannot know truth truly at all (p. 14), they cite as support for this claim two verses which do not actually serve their purpose: (1) Romans 1:18, which is about unbelievers who because of sin suppress the reality that God exists; and (2) 1 Corinthians 2:14, which is about Christians (not unbelievers) who are in an unspiritual state and  unable, therefore, to understand or receive spiritual things. The Bible nowhere states that the effect of sin on the mind is that the mind cannot know truth, generally speaking. To be sure, sin does darken the mind such that it, for instance, resists the truth of the gospel. However, to resist that truth is different from not understanding it at all. In brief, the effects of sin on the mind are not so much a question of whether the mind can know truth as it is a matter of what the mind does with that truth which it knows.  Much of Western philosophy itself is, for instance, a good example of the effects of sin on the mind. One could even say that philosophy’s skepticism about truth (the belief, for instance, that truth is subjective and relative) is an effect of sin on the mind. What better strategy could our Adversary employ than the notion that all people are shut up to their various perspectives or rationalities on reality and locked out of a common acquaintance or universal and rational capacity for truth? God is a God of truth. God’s Word (the Bible) is the Word of truth. Jesus Christ is the truth. The Gospel is the truth and involves facts about Jesus Christ. Again, what better strategy is there to block the nature of this truth than by denying its objectivity or know-ability or by claiming that facts are entirely conditioned in their possible meaning by the perspective from which they are seen—as if a direct acquaintance with facts can never break through a perspective hostile to them?   




Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Can We Know the Truth? (A Review)

[Below is a review of Richard Phillip's Can We Know the Truth? I offer it here as a more concise statement or summary of the concerns I have raised in the previous posts.]
This is The Gospel Coalition’s (hereafter TGC) booklet on truth which is part of a series dealing with matters foundational to the Christian faith. Regrettably, while addressing “today’s crisis of truth,” TGC is at certain points on the wrong side of that crisis. That is, if the challenge to truth in our time is the belief that truth is subjective, relative, and not objectively accessible to everyone, then TGC in its statement on truth is part of the problem and not the solution. For instance, to the question which serves as title for this book, “Can we know the truth?,” TGC replies: (1) because of human finitude, truth is “subjective,” “partial,” and “selective” (p. 14); (2) because of sin’s effect on the mind, “humans are no longer able to know truth truly at all” (p. 14); and (3) there is no “objective epistemological ground” between believers and unbelievers that “does not require Christians to ignore the lordship of Jesus” (p. 8)—which is to say, truth is relative to the Christian perspective (broader implication: all knowing is relative to one’s perspective).

It is not insignificant that all these conclusions are in conflict with what a number of respected groups and individuals (both Reformed and evangelical) believe about the concept of truth, such as, the International Council on Biblical Inerrancy, the Truth Project with Del Tackett, D. Martyn-Lloyd Jones, C.S. Lewis, Francis Schaeffer, Os Guinness, R.C. Sproul, Art Lindsley, David Wells, Norman Geisler, Ravi Zacharias, Douglas Groothuis, J.P. Moreland, William Lane Craig, R. Scott Smith, and others.

More importantly, these conclusions derive not from Scripture but modern epistemology (particularly the succession of theories of knowledge from Descartes to Kant), which holds that objective truth or reality exists but is unknowable directly or as it is in itself; it is only knowable indirectly and subjectively based on how the mind views things. (That is, human knowledge cannot be verified against external reality itself.) What TGC is doing is a Christian spin on this epistemology. They have exchanged the humanly centered knowledge of modern epistemology for (as they conceive it) the Christ-centered knowledge that comes subjectively by regeneration through the Spirit, which, in turn, enables them to understand God’s Word. Since God knows everything objectively and perfectly, regenerate persons (again, based on Scripture) escape their unknowing. That is, God’s people only know truth insofar as they know Scripture by the Spirit --- a view of truth which is more narrow than the understanding of truth assumed in Scripture.

There is, of course, truth to what they are claiming but it is an unbiblical exaggeration. For instance, when Moses provides a test for identifying a true prophet (Deuteronomy 18:21-22), he says that if what the prophet predicts come to pass, then the prophet is from God. If it doesn’t come to pass, the prophet is not from God. If we think of the prophet as a potential author of Scripture, then consider what God is saying here. In order to confirm such the people had to know the meaning of what the prophet said and know whether or not it came to pass. That is, there is in this case an underlying assumption that the prophetic text had meaning and people could reliably and objectively know it. There is also an assumption that the small sliver of history involved in confirming (or not) that the prophecy was true was also reliably, objectively knowable. Do we understand what this means for knowing? The people were obviously finite and sinful, yet God is commanding them through Moses to use their minds to know the meaning of the prophecy and determine through empirical observation whether or not the prophecy came true. What does God not say? He doesn’t tell them to rely on regeneration or the inner confirmation of the Spirit to determine whether or not the prophecy was from God. (Not that the Holy Spirit doesn’t do this in believers.) He also doesn’t point them to Scripture, since what qualifies truly as Scripture is what is at issue here. So, the point is that due to the latter, the people couldn’t rely on Scripture as a condition for knowing in general that would provide presuppositions necessary to determine whether or not someone was truly a prophet. Apparently, being made in the image of God as knowers and sustained by His providential goodness for knowledge, the people were able—again, finite and sinful though they were—to reliably and objectively know whether or not a prophecy had come to pass and, hence, whether or not a particular person was a prophet from God.

Consequently, TGC has, in my judgment, mistakenly associated human finitude and the effects of sin on the mind with a general errancy or defectiveness for knowing which, again, derives from philosophy but is foreign both to the assumptions of Scripture and our common experience. The difference between God as infinite and humans as finite entails no innate necessity that our knowledge of things like 1+1=2 or at what temperature water boils, etc. is defective or errant. And the effects of sin on the mind does not mean people cannot know truth in any sense. Obviously, we regularly observe unregenerate persons (scientists, doctors, professors, construction workers, etc.) knowing truth at some level. I suggest that sin’s effect on the mind concerns not whether people can know truth but what they do with it.

In general, TGC’s apparently adopting modern epistemology’s problems for knowing for explicating human finitude and sin shifts the Bible’s diagnosis of the problem of humankind from that of sin (which involves, at some level, successful knowing as Romans 1-3 clearly demonstrates) to that of knowledge. Accordingly, the solution to this problem (as TGC presents it) is not, as a matter of priority, a Savior from sin but a way of knowing (the basic tenets of Christian belief) which first makes truth or knowledge possible in general and, second (or afterward), appropriately frames the belief that Jesus is Lord. Hence, when modernists and postmodernists claim that truth is relative, in a sense, TGC agrees with them. Only TGC would say that truth is relative to Christian presuppositions. This also means that when unbelievers reject TGC’s invitation to, “Please try our way of knowing,” they will tend to walk away feeling—precisely because of this approach—justified and confirmed in their own relativism.

The “crisis of truth” in our time, I suggest, is not all that different from what was in the air in the first century due to ancient Greek thinkers like Plato, Protagorus, Pyrrho, and the Sophists. Jesus and the apostles did not respond to such a “crisis” of their age by accepting or integrating some of its problems for knowing (certain skeptical tenets) with what Scripture teaches about human finitude or sin. A bit more bluntly, Jesus and the apostles (including the apostle Paul who was no doubt familiar with such) ignored what the Greek philosophers said about truth. They held, for instance (in contrast to what skeptics have always believed on this), to the important, even foundational, role of the “witness” (what we might call a “knowerness” or “knower in state”) for grounding truth (see what Jesus says in John 5, for example). This contrasts starkly with the view stated in TGC’s booklet on truth: “With the postmoderns we are skeptical that finite, fallible humans are agents of truth” (p. 12). (That is, TGC is saying: “we are skeptical that people can be witnesses for truth.”)

If one does nothing more than study carefully the apostle Peter’s sermon in Acts 2 and notice that there is no indication that the unregenerate persons to whom he is addressing himself are unable to know things generally or reliably—that there is no objective ground for truth between him and them. Peter doesn’t, first, make an indirect appeal for Christianity as a belief system or perspective before presenting his argument for Jesus as the Messiah. He directly builds his case for the latter explicitly noting that the people to whom he is preaching (though unregenerate) knew certain things, such as, that the languages they were seeing (as tongues of fire over heads) and hearing were miraculous; that Jesus had worked miracles among them as a divine attestation to his ministry; that King David died, his body was in the tomb they all knew about, such that the prophecy, “you will not let your holy one see corruption,” must have been intended not for David but for one of David’s sons. Peter then claims that he and the other apostles and disciples were eyewitnesses (yes, as in a court room, “agents for truth”) that Jesus, a descendant of King David, had been raised from the dead. Peter then closes his sermon with: “let all the house of Israel know for certain that God has made this Jesus both Lord and Christ.”

Three thousand people were persuaded by the compelling case Peter made that day for the verdict that Jesus of Nazareth is the Messiah. The presentation of the case demonstrates that Peter, regenerate as he was, nevertheless saw himself as on the same objective ground for truth with these unregenerate people. The established truth that Jesus is Lord became the basis, then, for a change in presuppositions held previously by the people. Importantly, however, their unbelieving presuppositions did not prevent them from intelligibly encountering the truth as Peter presented it. (We can know things that don’t fit our presuppositions.) What happened to those persuaded of this truth, afterward, is that a whole new set of presuppositions began to be developed (that is, the appropriate Christian presuppositions).

Therefore, however, we conceive of regeneration by the Spirit and knowledge gained through Scripture, it must not conflict with apostolic assumptions and practice as found in places like the Book of Acts. Undoubtedly, the unregenerate do not know the truth as it is in Jesus with the life-changing, spiritually enlightening power that the regenerate experience. But there is a sense in which truth—even the truth of the good news of Jesus Christ—is public truth and as such is knowable for everyone. This is what makes people accountable for disobeying that message (2 Thessalonians 1:8), since they would not be so, if for lack of Christian presuppositions they were entirely ignorant or did not understand its truth in any sense.