Saturday, July 03, 2010

Reasons of the heart: the obstinacy of belief and unbelief

In answer to the question, "What if there is so much liberal scholarship simply because it is right?" a reader sent me a link to this article by S. M. Hutchens, "The Durability of the Gift" (Touchstone, July 2, 2010), who begins his article with a quote from Lutheran theologian, Carl Braaten:
The so-called new hermeneutic of Ebeling and Fuchs was a synthesis of recent historical-critical studies of the Bible, the theology of Rudolf Bultmann, and the history of modern hermeneutical reflections, from Schleiermacher to Wilhelm Dilthey, and Martin Heidegger. This new trend was being heralded as a lively new option that overcame the hiatus between the Barthian and Bultmannian schools of theology. I saw it as an inferior alternative to that of Wolfhart Pannenberg, so I gave an address at the American Theological Society in Chicago entitled, “How New is the New Hermeneutic?” I started out by saying that more important than whether the approach of Ebeling and Fuchs is new is whether it is true. Publishers are looking for a profit so they need to market their goods to people with “itching ears,” for whom relevance to the new is more preferable than faithfulness to the old. In fact, in my view the theologies that turn out to be the most relevant are those that intentionally eschew novelty in favor of renewing the faith “once for all delivered to the saints” (Jude 3b).
--Carl E. Braaten, Because of Christ: Memoirs of a Lutheran Pastor-Theologian. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2010, p. 61.
Hutchens writes:
... The conclusion I am reaching is something like this: belief in the truth of the gospel creates in the mind a pre-existing interpretational matrix from which one cannot depart without conscious (conscious, that is, until the mind is intentionally dulled and fogged) knowledge that a departure has taken place, a knowledge that creates an intolerable burden on the conscience until it is “dealt with” in some way. This exculpatory dealing is known to be a sin, in fact, a departure from the faith with all that entails with regard to the apostasy of one’s own soul. For many, the deal is made, the pottage purchased, ambiguity substituted for faith, and the call of the fallen teacher goes out for his Master’s debtors, who accordingly buy their own damnation in his reduction of their accounts.

For others, the conscience cannot bear this, and they reject the temptation for the “faith once for all delivered” which they heard at their Mother’s knee....

The effect of the fundamental gospel’s matrix upon preaching and teaching is seen in evidence of belief that all must depend on a narrative that follows its pattern from ground-principles forward. The preacher may not believe everything that is in the Bible; he may have severe difficulties with certain traditional interpretations. But, believing the maternal creed, there are large tracts of it he believes to be true as surely and profoundly as he hopes for salvation. It is from those places he begins his narrative and attempts to develop it along lines that are true to the gospel, bringing in, as he begins to understand them and connect them to this line of thought, other passages of scripture he may once not have been able to believe, or which traditional interpretations made unpalatable, but now whose part in the whole he is beginning to understand--the whole of which is becoming more evident not as the restrictive canon it once appeared, but the appointed way forward into the unimaginable--the Narrow Way (shall we recognize it as the birth-canal?) of which the Lord spoke.
[Hat tip to J.M.]

3 comments:

Lutheran said...

Is Hutchens struggling more with faith in Christ v personal rationalizations?--Not even reason?

His understanding is NOT what Braaten was arguing about. Braaten appears to have been upset with people just like Hutchens with their modern reflections embedded in historical-critical study intent on understanding profound differences in value in faith and reason concerning the study of theology, who "are looking for a profit so they need to market their goods to people with 'itching ears,' for whom relevance to the new is more preferable than faithfulness to the old. In fact, in my view the theologies that turn out to be the most relevant are those that intentionally eschew novelty in favor of renewing the faith 'once for all delivered to the saints'".

Hutchens, in my humble opinion, needs to get out of the pulpit and the classroom for a time. He needs to become reacquainted with faith and its stabilizing benefits towards reason.

Anonymous said...

Does "Lutheran" have the slightest idea of what I am talking about in this posting? I can see no indication of it. Looking down from the heights of his faith/reason hobbyhorse, he has managed to get just about everything wrong.

The point of departure is that Braaten is far more an advocate of historical-critical methodology than I am, but despite this preaches from the Bible in much the same way I do, and has remarkably similar opinions about those who pervert it.

I need to get out of the pulpit and classroom? Hells bells, I am a public librarian who spends most of his day finding books for people who don't know how to use an online catalog. I have never taught a theology class, and the last time I preached was at my daughter's wedding. (I might be asked to preach somewhere once in five years.) Lutheran's opinion is far more humble than he knows.

Lutheran said...

HA HA HA HA HA!!!

Then is faith so controversial? Or is it the rationalizing of the modern realm that is absolutely immersed in historical-critical method that is controversial in theology? I'm going with the second.

You can keep playing with the hobbyhorse.