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BIBLICAL CHRISTIAN LIVING IN A

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Title: BIBLICAL CHRISTIAN LIVING IN A


1
BIBLICAL CHRISTIAN LIVING IN A POST-MODERN WORLD
2
WHY BOTHER?
  • Romans 121,2 Therefore, I urge you, brothers,
    in view of God's mercy, to offer your bodies as
    living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God--this
    is your spiritual act of worship. Do not conform
    any longer to the pattern of this world, but be
    transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then
    you will be able to test and approve what God's
    will is--his good, pleasing and perfect will.

3
WHY BOTHER?
  • I Peter 315, But sanctify Christ as Lord in
    your hearts, always being ready to make a defense
    to everyone who asks you to give an account for
    the hope that is within you, yet with gentleness
    and reverence.
  •  Every believer has a hope
  • There is a reason for this hope
  • There will be questions re the reason for this
    hope
  • The believer must be ready to defend the
    reason/hope
  • The believer should use the best defense
  • The believer must prepare in order to offer the
    best defense

4
WHY BOTHER?
  • II Corinthians 105, We are destroying
    speculations and every lofty thing raised up
    against the knowledge of God, and we are taking
    every thought captive to the obedience of
    Christ.

5
WHY BOTHER?
  • Matthew 2819,20, Therefore go and make
    disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the
    name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy
    Spirit, 20 and teaching them to obey everything I
    have commanded you. And surely I am with you
    always, to the very end of the age.

6
INTELLECTUAL CONTEXT
  • Pre-Modern World
  • Modern World
  • Post-Modern World

7
PRE-MODERN WORLD
  • Embraced the objectivity of truth
  • The preference was for a Platonist, or
    neo-Platonist notion of reality
  • There is an objective, or external realm that is
    transcendent
  • Reality existed independently of any individual
    apprehension of it
  • For the Christian pre-moderns, this independently
    existing realm of transcendence was the mind of
    God. Erickson, Evangelical Interpretation, 100.

8
PRE-MODERN WORLD
  • There was a belief in the referential
    understanding of language that is, language
    referred to something beyond itself, Erickson,
    EI, 100.

9
PRE-MODERN WORLD
  • There was belief in the Correspondence Theory of
    Truth which asserted that true ideas are those
    that accurately correspond to the state of
    affairs as it is. Erickson, EI, 100

10
PRE-MODERN WORLD
  • In terms of hermeneutics, the pre-modern period
    accepted that the meaning of a text was . . .
    within that text in a rather literal or straight-
    forward fashion. . . . Hermeneutics was in this
    approach virtually equivalent to exegesis.
    Erickson, EI, 101

11
PRE-MODERN WORLD
  • The premodern understanding of reality was
    teleological. There was believed to be a purpose
    or purposes in the universe. Erickson,
    Postmodernizing the Faith, 15

12
MODERN WORLD
  • The Modern Period embraced the objectivity of
    truth, although more nearly Aristotelian.
    Erickson, EI, 100

13
PLATO VS ARISTOTLE
Aristotle
Plato
Ideal
Ideal
14
MODERN WORLD
  • Cartesian rationalism shifted the focus of the
    rational order from the objectively, externally
    true to the thinking subject, thus creating
    (among other things) a subject-object dualism.

15
MODERN WORLD
  • There was belief that creation was orderly and
    certainty of knowledge was a possibility.
    Rational structures existed and were identifiable
    by use of reason and historical investigation.

16
MODERN WORLD
  • The way thinkers built up their knowledge and
    ordered it was commonly foundationalist i.e., it
    was presupposed that one must adopt certain
    foundations for ones knowledge. The foundations
    might be self-evident truths or incontestable
    sense-date, but only on the basis of such
    foundations can one certainly infer entire
    superstructures of thought that are then added to
    the foundations. Carson, The Gagging of God, 61.

17
MODERN WORLD
  • Naturalism (materialism) became the primary mode
    of explanation, from Humes skepticism to
    Darwins evolutionism. Deism is in this sense a
    betrayal of classical theism and an accommodation
    to naturalism.

18
MODERN WORLD
  • Scientific knowledge became the model for all
    knowledge data had to be obtained empirically,
    or they were suspect. Meanwhile religion,
    relegated to the category of mere opinion, was
    necessarily based on faith. Carson, GOG, 63.
    An excellent recent example of this is found in
    E. Wilson, Consilience. Faith is relegated to the
    realm of private opinion, while reason is the
    guide to all true knowledge and basis of public
    discourse.

19
MODERN WORLD
  • Modernity depends on meta-narratives
    (universal narratives or accounts of reality,
    of the way things are) . . . .These
    meta-narratives include Marxism, Hegels theory
    of universal spirit, the post-Enlightenment view
    of progress, and in theology, the view that we
    should accept as rational in the field of
    theology only what is judged rational by any
    reasonable and intelligent person. Carson, GOG,
    63.

20
MODERN WORLD
  • Modernity embraced individualism. Truth being
    objective, individuals can discover it by their
    own efforts. Erickson, Postmodernizing the
    Faith, 17.

21
POST-MODERN WORLD
  • Thomas Oden defines the modern period as the
    period from 1789 to 1989, from the Bastille to
    the Berlin Wall. For Oden, Postmodernism is used
    in a chronological sense, that which comes after
    the modern period. Oden, Requiem, 110,117

22
POST-MODERN WORLD
  • Postmodernism is that which follows modernity
    modernity has run its course and is exhausted,
    intellectually and spiritually bankrupt.

23
POST-MODERN WORLD
  • Oden argues for paleo-orthodoxy, a return to the
    classical orthodoxy of the early undivided
    church.

24
POST-MODERN WORLD
  • David Wells somewhere between the middle of the
    nineteenth century and the middle of the
    twentieth century we moved from a Eurocentric
    world to a world centered on America, a period he
    calls Our Time. Wells, No Place for Truth,
    53-54.

25
POST-MODERN WORLD
  • Our time- based on urbanization and democratic
    tendencies it is dependent upon technology and
    capitalism.
  • For Wells, powerful forces bring about
    sociological modernity, which leads to
    intellectual postmodernism. Wells, NPFT, 61

26
POST-MODERN WORLD
  • Belief in progress, in transcending the past,
    leads those who are sociologically modern to
    become intellectually postmodern. Erickson, PTF,
    27.

27
POST-MODERN WORLD
  • Francis Schaeffer a line of despair bisects
    history, in Europe around 1890 in the U.S. after
    1935. Schaeffer, The God Who is There, CW, I8.
  • This despair began in the discipline of
    philosophy, and spread successively to art,
    music, general culture, and finally, theology.
    Erickson, PTF, 65.

28
POST-MODERN WORLD
  • The roots of despair began with Hegel and his
    dialectic, an attack on the older rational model
  • The meaning of life can no longer be dealt with
    in terms of a rational explanation, but instead
    the real things of life must be dealt with by
    a nonrational leap of faith. Erickson, PTF, 67.

29
POST-MODERNISM SUMMARY
  • Chronologically a development beyond the rational
    worldview fostered by the Enlightenment
  • Represents a dissolving of an orderly, structured
    view of reality
  • Represents the abandonment of a metanarrative
    and the embracing, instead, of many (mini)
    stories (in community)

30
POST-MODERNISM SUMMARY
  • Is thoroughly anti-foundationalist and suspicious
    of the objectivity of knowledge
  • Rejects the secularized notion of progress (a
    Christian heresy) and questions whether knowledge
    is good
  • Embraces ways of knowing, other than by reason
    e.g., intuition, experience, feelings

31
HOW THEN SHOULD WE LIVE?
  • Acknowledge the paradigm shift
  • The Church is no longer part of the
    establishment
  • We are living in a Post-Constantinian era
  • In many ways, the Post-Constantinian era is
    remarkably similar to the Pre- Constantinian era
  • How did the early church live?

32
HOW THEN SHOULD WE LIVE?
  • The early church
  • At the minimum, sought to transform the
    culture, rather than assimilate it
  • At times, stood against the culture
  • Demonstrated the reality of the Christian faith
  • By their love for one another
  • By their consistency of life
  • By their commitment, even unto death
  • By their willingness to share the faith with all

33
HOW THEN SHOULD WE LIVE?
  • Outreach to young people?
  • Remember this is the MTV generation
  • Multi-tasking, non-linear learning
  • Short attention spans
  • Make use of story and personal witness
  • Be willing to dialog- not pontificate
  • Remember that faith comes by hearing the Word of
    God!

34
BIBLICAL CHRISTIAN LIVING IN A POST-MODERN WORLD
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