Neirai the Forgiven
Christian Guilds List Manager
Well, I said I was going to do this. It's been a long time coming, and I hope it's well received. I write this with fear and trembling, as I hope I do the issue justice.
This paradox weighs on me quite heavily. I'm a post-modernist Christian, and that makes it hard for me to bite my tongue sometimes, and it also means I get misunderstood a lot. So, I'd like to explain the two, how they interact with Christianity, and why both are Christians. Hopefully I succeed in this task.
This post will be colorful. That's because I'm trying to organize my thoughts into things you can tell apart, instead of one black mess that looks the same. For now, I'm going to set Dark Green -- this color -- apart for the purpose of defending Post-modernism against its detractors. I will use Black for comparing the two and telling you what the difference is, and I will use Sienna -- found above -- for my own thoughts.
Good Post-Modernism vs Bad Post-Modernism
Many of us have an idea in our heads when we hear the phrase "Post-modernism." Along with that phrase comes thoughts like "what's good for you isn't what's good for me" or "everything is relative" or "the Bible is important for you, and that's cool, but it's not for me" or "there is no Truth."
The fact is that while all of these phrases are associated with Post-Modernism, none of them is what I would call "Good Post-Modernism." That is to say, P-M that is intellectually honest. In fact, most of the artists, theologians, or people that you hear use such things aren't Postmodernists. Actually, they are Modernists who have had their viewpoints challenged by Postmodernism and no longer believe that Absolutes exist. A Postmodernist would not say such a thing, as postmodernists do in fact believe that Absolutes exist. They simply believe that Absolutes must be viewed through perspectives.
Why am I blathering about this? Well, I want you to keep in mind what I just said as I talk about Modernism and Postmodernism.
What is Modernism?
To begin, I'd like to talk about Science. In the 1700s, Sir Isaac Newton developed his law of gravity, proving to the world that the essential laws of how the universe worked could be discovered, worked out, and understood. Newton's efforts began an age known as the Modern Age. Hallmarks of the Modern age included the belief that we can figure out the universe.
In the Modern Age, people did just that. Science grew in leaps and bounds. Laws of every scientific thing sprang up in textbooks. We explored the human body. Discovered bacteria, and then antibiotics. Harnessed electricity and then nuclear energy. Broke the sound barrier.
Outside of science, psychologists cracked the puzzle of the human mind. Behaviorism, theories of personality, neurobiology, and many other fantastic concepts sprang into existence. The Modern Age was the time of cures, with diseases that used to paralyze our ancestors being walked all over.
In philosophy and theology, the Modern Era was a great time of figuring it all out. Metaphysics were analyzed; God himself was analyzed.
In short, Modernism is the cultural perspective that says "We can know the complete truth about everything. We can discover the Absolutes."
The Christianity Snag
Modernism hit a snag, however. Two, to be precise. 18th century Christian philosopher Emmanuel Kant, the most influential philosopher since Aristotle, declared that metaphysics were unable to be known by reason, halting much of the religious/philosophical discussions of religion. This declaration placed the idea of religion partially outside of the realm of Modernism, a factor that spawned both the Liberal and Conservative church movements as a reaction to the unknowability of metaphysics.
The second snag is paradox. Because the Modernist mindset believes that we can know the complete truth about everything, and in the church that means we can know the Truth because it's in the Bible, things that are opposed to other things are really problematic.
Okay, I enjoyed that last sentence. What I mean specifically is that if one source of metaphysical "knowing" (let's say God's word) and another (God's word in another place? God's word in another translation? Science? Psychology?) disagree, one of the following MUST be true:
-One must be wrong. Say, the Bible must be right, and Science wrong.
-Both must be agreeing, but they look like they are disagreeing. Say, Paul saying we're saved by grace and James believers must have works to show for their salvation.
-The universe must have no meaning. This is often the result of these kinds of exercises; the exerciser begins to feel that it's all bunk after all.
Remember, in the Modernism perspective, the universe has been disseminated into knowable chunks. And if it's not, it can or should be. When the known chunks disagree with each other, you have a serious problem.
TL;DR: Modernists believe that Absolutes can be, and possibly are, completely known.
This paradox weighs on me quite heavily. I'm a post-modernist Christian, and that makes it hard for me to bite my tongue sometimes, and it also means I get misunderstood a lot. So, I'd like to explain the two, how they interact with Christianity, and why both are Christians. Hopefully I succeed in this task.
This post will be colorful. That's because I'm trying to organize my thoughts into things you can tell apart, instead of one black mess that looks the same. For now, I'm going to set Dark Green -- this color -- apart for the purpose of defending Post-modernism against its detractors. I will use Black for comparing the two and telling you what the difference is, and I will use Sienna -- found above -- for my own thoughts.
Good Post-Modernism vs Bad Post-Modernism
Many of us have an idea in our heads when we hear the phrase "Post-modernism." Along with that phrase comes thoughts like "what's good for you isn't what's good for me" or "everything is relative" or "the Bible is important for you, and that's cool, but it's not for me" or "there is no Truth."
The fact is that while all of these phrases are associated with Post-Modernism, none of them is what I would call "Good Post-Modernism." That is to say, P-M that is intellectually honest. In fact, most of the artists, theologians, or people that you hear use such things aren't Postmodernists. Actually, they are Modernists who have had their viewpoints challenged by Postmodernism and no longer believe that Absolutes exist. A Postmodernist would not say such a thing, as postmodernists do in fact believe that Absolutes exist. They simply believe that Absolutes must be viewed through perspectives.
Why am I blathering about this? Well, I want you to keep in mind what I just said as I talk about Modernism and Postmodernism.
What is Modernism?
To begin, I'd like to talk about Science. In the 1700s, Sir Isaac Newton developed his law of gravity, proving to the world that the essential laws of how the universe worked could be discovered, worked out, and understood. Newton's efforts began an age known as the Modern Age. Hallmarks of the Modern age included the belief that we can figure out the universe.
In the Modern Age, people did just that. Science grew in leaps and bounds. Laws of every scientific thing sprang up in textbooks. We explored the human body. Discovered bacteria, and then antibiotics. Harnessed electricity and then nuclear energy. Broke the sound barrier.
Outside of science, psychologists cracked the puzzle of the human mind. Behaviorism, theories of personality, neurobiology, and many other fantastic concepts sprang into existence. The Modern Age was the time of cures, with diseases that used to paralyze our ancestors being walked all over.
In philosophy and theology, the Modern Era was a great time of figuring it all out. Metaphysics were analyzed; God himself was analyzed.
In short, Modernism is the cultural perspective that says "We can know the complete truth about everything. We can discover the Absolutes."
The Christianity Snag
Modernism hit a snag, however. Two, to be precise. 18th century Christian philosopher Emmanuel Kant, the most influential philosopher since Aristotle, declared that metaphysics were unable to be known by reason, halting much of the religious/philosophical discussions of religion. This declaration placed the idea of religion partially outside of the realm of Modernism, a factor that spawned both the Liberal and Conservative church movements as a reaction to the unknowability of metaphysics.
The second snag is paradox. Because the Modernist mindset believes that we can know the complete truth about everything, and in the church that means we can know the Truth because it's in the Bible, things that are opposed to other things are really problematic.
Okay, I enjoyed that last sentence. What I mean specifically is that if one source of metaphysical "knowing" (let's say God's word) and another (God's word in another place? God's word in another translation? Science? Psychology?) disagree, one of the following MUST be true:
-One must be wrong. Say, the Bible must be right, and Science wrong.
-Both must be agreeing, but they look like they are disagreeing. Say, Paul saying we're saved by grace and James believers must have works to show for their salvation.
-The universe must have no meaning. This is often the result of these kinds of exercises; the exerciser begins to feel that it's all bunk after all.
Remember, in the Modernism perspective, the universe has been disseminated into knowable chunks. And if it's not, it can or should be. When the known chunks disagree with each other, you have a serious problem.
TL;DR: Modernists believe that Absolutes can be, and possibly are, completely known.