"Faith,
Trust, and Evidence"
Posted by
Tom Price - taken from rzim.org
I’ve been
trying to avoid using the word ‘faith’ recently. It just doesn’t get the
message across. ‘Faith’ is a word that’s now misused and twisted. ‘Faith’ today
is what you try to use when the reasons are stacking up against what you think
you ought to believe. Greg Koukl sums up the popular view of faith, “It’s
religious wishful thinking, in which one squeezes out spiritual hope by intense
acts of sheer will. People of ‘faith’ believe the impossible. People of ‘faith’
believe that which is contrary to fact. People of ‘faith’ believe that which is
contrary to evidence. People of ‘faith’ ignore reality.” It shouldn’t therefore
come as a great surprise to us, that people raise their eyebrows when ‘faith’
in Christ is mentioned. Is it strange that they seem to prefer what seems like
reason over insanity?
It’s
interesting that the Bible doesn’t overemphasize the individual elements of the
whole picture of faith, like we so often do. But what does the Bible say about
faith? Is it what Simon Peter demonstrates when he climbs out of the boat and
walks over the water towards Jesus? Or is it what Thomas has after he has put
his hand in Jesus’s side? Interestingly, biblical faith isn’t believing against
the evidence. Instead, faith is a kind of knowing that results in action.
The clearest definition comes from Hebrews 11:1. This verse says, “Faith is the
assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.” In fact,
when the New Testament talks about faith positively it only uses words derived
from the Greek root [pistis], which means ‘to be persuaded.’ In those verses
from Hebrews, we find the words, “hope,” “assurance,” “conviction” that is,
confidence. Now, what gives us this confidence?
Christian
faith is not belief in the absence of evidence. It is the proper response to
the evidence. Koukl explains that, “Christian faith cares about the
evidence…the facts matter. You can’t have assurance for something you don’t
know you’re going to get. You can only hope for it. This is why the
resurrection of Jesus is so important. It gives assurance to the hope. Because
of a Christian view of faith, Paul is able to say in 1 Corinthians 15 that when
it comes to the resurrection, if we have only hope, but no assurance—if Jesus
didn’t indeed rise from the dead in time/space history—then we are of most men
to be pitied. This confidence Paul is talking about is not a confidence in a
mere ‘faith’ resurrection, a mythical resurrection, a story-telling
resurrection. Instead, it’s a belief in a real resurrection. If the real
resurrection didn’t happen, then we’re in trouble. The Bible knows nothing of a
bold leap-in-the-dark faith, a hope-against-hope faith, a faith with no evidence.
Rather, if the evidence doesn’t correspond to the hope, then the faith is in
vain, as even Paul has said.”
So in
conclusion, faith is not a kind of religious hoping that you do in spite of the
facts. In fact, faith is a kind of knowing that results in doing. A knowing
that is so passionately and intelligently faithful to Jesus Christ that it will
not submit to fideism, scientism, nor any other secularist attempt to divert
and cauterize the human soul by hijacking knowledge.
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