Very Radical Centrist analysis of “how to pursue true wisdom.”


Wisdom and Folly in Christian Responses to Coronavirus
https://alastairadversaria.com/2020/05/02/wisdom-and-folly-in-christian-responses-to-coronavirus/
(via Instapaper)



In observing Christian responses to the coronavirus, perhaps nothing has stood 
out to me so much as the way that it reveals fundamental habits of mind, either 
characteristic of wisdom or of folly.

The wisdom literature is often rather neglected in our churches. Its sapiential 
character does not fit well within the narrow constraints of our information 
and doctrine-focused teaching. Its more open-ended and less definitive forms of 
knowledge unsettle the security of our dogmatisms. Its empirical and pragmatic 
focus discomforts our ideological abstractions and our personal detachment. Its 
positing of a common and knowable world shared by all human beings resists our 
desire to assert a Christian monopoly on truth and insight.

Even in some Christian circles that make confident appeal to ‘wisdom’, the true 
character of wisdom can easily become distorted, often out of a desire to 
subdue wisdom to ideology and its modes of belief. ‘Wisdom’ can be presented to 
people as if it were a complete pre-packaged system of what to think, rather 
than as a lifelong formation in disciplined and responsible thought and the art 
of living well. A certain ideological position can be identified with ‘wisdom’, 
while actually functioning to do people’s thinking for them. We can be trained 
in a complete system that is to be brought to reality, without obliging us to 
assume the responsibility of the sapiential task of relating deep and 
principled reflection with empirical attention to the world. For many, wisdom, 
it seems, is also largely the possession of one party—the party to which they 
so happen to belong—absolving them from the task of listening and engaging 
receptively and humbly with people of a great many different backgrounds, 
beliefs, and vantage points.

All of these grave deficiencies in people’s training in, understanding and 
practice of wisdom have become amply and painfully evident in many Christian’s 
responses to the coronavirus.

Much of the wisdom literature is addressed to the simpleton, giving the person 
who lacks wisdom and expertise a nose for wisdom and the character to receive 
it. It is about gaining an instinct for the shape of wisdom, even before you 
have developed knowledge or been formed in wisdom yourself. It is how the 
non-expert conforms himself to wisdom despite his lack of expertise. It is 
often less about the specifics of what one believes than it is about how you 
come to and continue to believe it.

But the wisdom literature is also the literature for kings. There might seem to 
be something of a paradox here, but on closer examination it should make sense. 
In many ways, the king is called to be the consummate non-expert simpleton. 
Likewise, wisdom is largely built upon the virtues of the righteous simpleton 
and never leaves those virtues behind, actually resting more and more weight 
upon them as wisdom grows.

The wise king is not the universal expert. Rather, he is to be someone with 
mastery of the task of judgment. And he exercises such judgment well through 
his gifts in the discerning, taking, and weighing of expert counsel. Ruling 
with expert counsellors is a rather different thing from rule by experts. 
Domain-specific expertise and knowledge factors into the wise king’s judgment, 
but in exercising such judgment he considers and weighs a great many voices of 
expertise and wisdom before determining upon a specific course of action.

As the wise king is not the universal expert, he must arrive at his wise 
judgment by some other means, which is a tricky business. And the means by 
which he does so are largely the same means as those by which the simpleton 
arrives at any sort of wisdom in the first place, yet developed to a high 
degree. Because of the vast scope of his responsibilities, the king’s exposure 
to his non-expertise rapidly grows along with the extent of the obligations for 
which his wise judgment equips him.

As Scott Alexander observes, the people who were the best at anticipating and 
preparing for the coronavirus were largely not domain experts, but were people 
who were attentive to domain experts, while being gifted in the synthesizing of 
insight from diverse experts and the exercise of prudent judgment in uncertain 
situations with great risks. This is an important species of wisdom.

In what follows, I would like briefly to outline a number of fundamental 
principles of a Christian account of wisdom that should guide us in how we 
respond to coronavirus and other such crises.

The wise find security in a multitude of counsellors
The wise surround themselves with a multitude of counsellors. By contrast, 
fools merely appeal to whatever ‘expert’ will confirm them in their ways, 
dismiss the experts as agents of a conspiracy or blind servants of an 
ideological agenda, or absolve themselves from the task of discernment by 
appeal to the fact that ‘experts disagree’. Fools generally appeal to experts 
to validate them in their positions, rather than genuinely familiarizing 
themselves with the scope and shape of the conversation between experts of 
varying perspectives and insights.

The solitary counsellor is a dangerous thing, as is the clique of unanimous 
counsellors—whether ‘orthodox’ or contrarian (those who are temperamentally 
contrarian can often mistake their criticisms of mainstream opinions for 
genuine stress-testing, while not being alert to the ways that their own 
positions are open to serious criticisms). True wisdom is to be found in 
attention to a multitude of counsellors, where the viewpoints of many informed 
and wise persons are constantly cross-examined, stress-tested, revised, honed, 
and proven through searching conversation with each other, a conversation often 
directed by the judicious ruler.

One of the typical hallmarks of cranks is that they simply dismiss peers in the 
mainstream guild as agents of a conspiracy, as malicious, or as stupid, rather 
than engaging in sharpening good faith dialogue with them or allowing their 
work to be cross-examined by them. They will speak of the stupidity of the 
mainstream experts, without ever closely engaging with them face to face, or 
truly understanding their viewpoints or arguments. Most actual experts tend to 
treat other experts who disagree with them with rather more respect.

The wise closely examine matters
Fools will readily believe a case without closely seeking out and attending to 
the criticisms of it (Proverbs 18:17). They routinely judge before hearing. 
They also attend to and spread rumours, inaccurate reports, and unreliable 
tales, while failing diligently to pursue the truth of a matter. The wise, by 
contrast, examine things carefully before moving to judgment or passing on a 
report.

In following responses to the coronavirus, I have been struck by how often 
people spread information that they clearly have not read or understood, simply 
because—at a superficial glance—it seems to validate their beliefs. They do not 
follow up closely on viewpoints that they have advanced, seeking criticism and 
cross-examination to ascertain their truth or falsity. And when anything is 
proven wrong, they do not return to correct it.

The wise know the limitations of knowledge
Fools are credulous, jumping to belief or disbelief. They are also opinionated, 
loving the proud confidence of a false certainty. They lack the capacity to 
weigh up many different and contrasting witnesses and viewpoints to arrive at a 
clearer sense of a matter, neither trusting any party wholly and 
unquestioningly nor lightly dismissing them when tensions appear. The wise, by 
contrast, know the limitations and uncertainties of their knowledge and have 
grown in the humility that accompanies such awareness. The wise resist the urge 
prematurely to jump to the security of firm yet false conviction, but 
faithfully endure the struggle of limited knowledge or lack of knowledge in 
order to search out matters diligently and thoroughly.

The coronavirus is a challenge attended by a multitude of ‘known unknowns’ and 
‘unknown unknowns’. Responding to such extreme uncertainties requires both 
decisive and swift precautionary efforts to minimize some of the extreme risks 
to which we might be opening ourselves up and intense open-ended enquiry into 
the exact shape of the threat that we are facing. Uncertainty doesn’t feature 
much in the thinking of the fool (save when he appeals to the supposed 
indeterminacy of opinion among experts as an excuse for confidently insisting 
upon whatever he wants). The fool tends to gamble overconfidently on his 
expectations and gives little thought to the many contingencies that are at 
play.

The fool scoffed at the supposed panic and fear of people who, while not 
necessarily expecting coronavirus to hit back in January, nevertheless took 
precautionary measures to ensure that they were prepared for such an 
eventuality. He scoffs in the same way now at people who are taking 
precautionary measures against other real but lower-risk scenarios. He is not 
really invested in the urgent task of breaking the risks we are assuming down 
to size through the pursuit of knowledge, because he has never not already had 
his mind made up on the matter.

The wise are on guard against the flatterer
The wise recognize that the danger of the flatterer is encountered not merely 
in the form of such things as obsequiousness directed towards us personally. 
Flattery also expresses itself in the study or the expert that confirms us in 
the complacency or pride of our own way, bolstering our sense of intellectual 
and moral superiority, while undermining our opponents. The fool is chronically 
susceptible to the flatterer, because the flatterer tickles the fool’s 
characteristic pride and resistance to correction and growth.

The fool will pounce upon studies or experts that confirm him in his preferred 
beliefs and practices, while resisting attentive and receptive engagement with 
views that challenge him (or even closely examining those he presumes support 
him, as such examination might unsettle his convictions). The fool’s lack of 
humility and desire for flattery make him highly resistant or even impervious 
to rebuke, correction, or challenge. You have to flatter a fool to gain any 
sort of a hearing with him.

Ideology is the friend of the fool. Ideology can assure people that, if only 
they buy into the belief system, they have all of the answers in advance and 
will not have to accept correction from any of their opponents, significantly 
to revise their beliefs in light of experience and reality, or acknowledge the 
limitations of their knowledge.

By contrast, the wise know that the wounds of a friend are faithful and seek 
correction. They surround themselves with wise and correctable people who are 
prepared to correct them. They are wary of ideology.

The wise love reproof and the wisdom that arises from it
The fool will not carefully consider opposing positions to discover what 
element of wisdom might lie within them, but will leap at whatever excuse he 
can find—the tone, the political alignment, or the personality of the speaker, 
etc., etc.—to dismiss and ignore them. Ultimately, whether he realizes it or 
not, he hates wisdom, as the task of wisdom is discomforting for him and he 
will avoid it at all costs. By contrast, the wise will endure considerable 
discomfort to seek wisdom wherever it is to be found. He will willingly expose 
himself to scathing rebuke, to embarrassing correction, to social alienation, 
or to the loss of pride entailed in learning from his sharpest critics or 
opponents or climbing down from former stances, if only he can grow in wisdom.

The wise constantly tries to increase his sensitivity to truth through the 
practice of close attention, whereas much of the intellectual effort of fools 
is expended in explaining away unwelcome truth or rationalizing error (for 
instance, the wise reader of Scripture tries to read the text on its own terms, 
whereas the foolish reader tries to avoid the force of the text either by 
introducing ambiguity wherever he can, or imposing his own sense upon it). The 
wise diligently and desirously seek out wisdom, whereas wisdom has to be 
force-fed to the fool.

Fools take refuge in scorn and scoffing
When a fool is faced with an unwelcome viewpoint, his characteristic response 
is scoffing, ridicule, or dismissal, rather than careful and thoughtful 
engagement. Levity and scorn are a refuge against correction and Scripture 
frequently highlights the way that fools’ first recourse when challenged is to 
such a response. The fool will also slander the wise as an excuse not to listen 
to them.

Fools are typically threatened by the proximity of opposing viewpoints and 
require defence mechanisms against them. This is the case even among fools who 
hold genuine truths. For too many Christians ridicule of others functions 
primarily to address the fool’s psychological need to inure himself against all 
other viewpoints, of ensuring that he does not feel any pull of truth in other 
positions that might dent his unearned self-confidence. Indeed, even evangelism 
itself can be perverted from a loving sharing of truth with others to a 
self-defensive assertion of truth against others in order to resist genuine 
encounter with different viewpoints.

Those with a genuine confidence in their knowledge and a real commitment to 
truth are much less likely instinctively to employ ridicule. The wise can use 
ridicule, but it is one of the less employed tools in their toolbox and isn’t 
deployed without care.

Truth is marked by consistent witness
The wise are concerned to demonstrate consistency in their viewpoints, as 
agreement between witnesses and viewpoints are evidence of the truth of a 
matter or case. However, the beliefs of a fool are generally marked by great 
inconsistency. They lack the hallmarks of truth because they are adopted for 
their usefulness in confirming the fool in his ways, rather than for their 
truth. The fool will jump between inconsistent positions as a matter of 
convenience. The consistency of the positions and beliefs of fools are found, 
not in the agreement of their substance, but in the fact that they all, in some 
way or another, further entrench the fools in their prior ways and beliefs. 
Also, the intellectual laziness of fools means that they will not diligently 
seek to grow in a true consistency (although some might develop a consistency 
in falsehoods designed merely to inure them against challenge, rather than as a 
pursuit of truth itself).

The fool is all mouth
The fool has a love for expressing his opinion, but much less pleasure in the 
hard work of earning the right to one. The fool would know everything even if 
he studied nothing. The fool broadcasts his folly and will not hold his peace 
in the presence of those wiser than himself. To submit to the wise in holding 
his tongue is too much of an affront to the pride of the fool, who hates 
correction and the indignity of having to honour the greater wisdom of others. 
The fool’s incessant speech is a defence against listening and a way to avoid 
admitting the limitations of his knowledge, all while constantly exposing their 
limited knowledge.

The wise learn from experience and are revealed through crisis
The wise closely reflect upon and draw lessons from their experience and 
practice. Wisdom in Scripture is commonly seen in the outcome of things and our 
own wisdom and folly are most clear in retrospect, where sufficient interval of 
time and distance of ego intermediates between us and our past wisdom or folly. 
Faced with a crisis like coronavirus, it is important honestly to reflect upon 
how our past actions and habits prepared or left us unprepared for this moment. 
The wise commit themselves to this often painful task of self-examination and 
reformation and seek to silence the flatterer in themselves first of all, 
speaking truth to themselves about their failures. The wise try to internalize 
the voice of wise rebuke.

Coronavirus is a time of testing and a time of humbling. It is a time when the 
strength or weakness, the truth or falsity, the faithfulness or unfaithfulness 
of things and of persons is being revealed. The wise will be deeply attentive 
at a time like this, (re)considering the people with whom they keep company, 
the voices to which they listen, the beliefs that they hold, the practices that 
they observe, the beliefs that they hold, etc. In a time of humbling, the 
limitations of foresight, providence, and strength are revealed. However, in 
such moments of humbling, when the pride of many is dashed, the wisdom of the 
humble, the cautious, and the modest, who reckoned with those limitations in 
time of plenty, can be made manifest.

The fool is characteristically reckless and careless, lacking rational fear and 
caution
The fool is marked by his dismissal of rational concern about the dangers of 
his way and by his reckless overconfidence (Proverbs 14:16). The fool is a 
gambler and a compulsive risk-taker. He rejects warnings about future dangers, 
blithely convinced that all will continue as it has to this point, that his 
careless actions will yield no harvest of consequences.

On those occasions when he escapes disaster he acts as the gambler who bets his 
entire fortune on the horse with the best odds then praises himself on his 
foresight when it wins. He does not consider the many ways in which he has 
suffered on account of his recklessness and failure to consider the 
uncertainties of the future (and when such risks are being taken with people’s 
lives, the fool is breaking the sixth commandment, even if his gamble ‘pays 
off’). The fool is a creature confined to the immediate present, a person for 
whom the future is merely the continuation of the present. He neither considers 
his past mistakes nor reflects on the risks to which he is exposing himself and 
others in the future.

The wise, by contrast, considers and makes preparation for the uncertainties of 
the future. He is practiced in anticipating and securing himself for various 
possible eventualities and does not merely gamble on his preferred outcomes.

The fool is unprepared
One of the chief characteristics of fools in the teaching of Jesus—the fool who 
built on the sand, the fool who sought to build bigger barns, the foolish 
virgins—is the fact that they are unprepared. Their fixation on the present and 
the continuation of its conditions, their resistance to correction, their 
laziness and lack of appetite for the pursuit of wisdom, and their stubborn 
delight in their own way leads to their being taken by surprise by foreseeable 
disaster. Their folly can be made openly manifest by their unreadiness for the 
disasters that hit them. The fool, however, will often mock the wise in their 
calm preparations—“Why panic!?” Yet, when disaster strikes, they are generally 
the ones flailing and not knowing what to do.

The present-oriented fool finds it difficult to recognize danger creeping up on 
him. On the 29th February, he would point out that it is ridiculous to consider 
taking measures against coronavirus as only one person in the US is known to 
have died from it. A month later that number was 4,066 and he would point out 
that there were only a couple of deaths in his city. Now, a month after that, 
the deaths have passed 62,000 and he is still finding ways to ignore the many 
ways in which that number could rise much, much further, unless significant 
measures are adopted. Future threats simply do not register to those focused 
narrowly upon the immediate present.

The people and nations who were best prepared for the coronavirus crisis were 
those that took decisive action before developing circumstances forced action 
upon them. Those that delayed action and dragged their feet, wanting to avoid 
any sense of ‘panic’ or overreaction are now generally the ones that find 
themselves in the most constrained situations, where return to anything 
resembling ‘normal’ will prove most difficult, or where the greatest gambles 
must be made (even if such gambles pay off, they shouldn’t have needed to be 
made). They are the nations that are frantically scrambling to acquire medical 
supplies and equipment and protective gear and to put testing, tracking, and 
other measures in place in an extremely short period of time. Being prepared 
gives us a lot more latitude for action and a much lower risk of actual panic 
in the future.

When faced with risks such as those posed by a novel coronavirus, about which 
we know extremely little, some have argued that we don’t know enough to justify 
extreme action and it is quite likely that the threat presented by it is 
actually fairly minimal. They will accuse those advocating for more extreme 
measures of claiming a false certainty. Yet this is quite misguided, for 
anything resembling good policy must always factor what we do not know—both the 
known and the unknown unknowns—into its deliberations. Much as it is possible, 
or even likely, that they are accurate—and much as we all hope that they are—in 
a situation of uncertainty, it is dangerous folly to gamble on the most 
optimistic models. The wise person can be and often is quite optimistic, while 
taking necessary precautions against what he believes to be less likely, yet 
potentially devastating, eventualities. The extreme measures that have been 
instituted in most countries are not merely a response to known threats, but 
also to the realistic unknown ones, which need to be broken down through 
scientific research.

The threat of a novel coronavirus was never merely its final absolute death 
toll (whether mitigated or unmitigated), but about the far-reaching and costly 
burdens and limitations that societies typically must assume when faced with 
threats of such exceedingly uncertain proportions, especially when they have 
allowed those threats to creep up on them and only have more drastic or risky 
courses of action remaining open to them.

Why have Western societies devoted such costly and extensive resources to 
tackling terrorism, compared to the threat of falling furniture, which kills 
more people in a typical year? While the threat of falling furniture is a 
clearly bounded one and never going to rise to that great a scale, the threat 
of terrorism has much more flexible upper bounds. The same is also true of a 
novel coronavirus. While the severity of flu seasons can fluctuate year by 
year, they generally do so within clear bounds (and people should take flu 
statistics with much greater caution, especially when comparing them to the 
much more solid data that we have for coronavirus deaths). A novel coronavirus 
like COVID-19, which is so much more deadly than the flu, poses a threat that 
is much less bounded to our scientific awareness. We really do not know how 
effective and long-lasting any immunity will be. We do not know whether to 
expect worse waves in the future. We do not know whether and how it will mutate 
into something more or less deadly. We do not know how effective any vaccine 
will be, or how long it will take to find one. We do not yet know what the 
long-term health effects of it might be for people who have had the illness.

Fatalism can be an attractive proposition for the fool, as it absolves him of 
the imperative of responsible agency. Many of the factors determining future 
outcomes in all sorts of areas currently rest in our hands. The fool, however, 
not considering the future, regards the future as a matter of inevitability, 
for which his agency is irrelevant. It has been worrying to observe how many 
people cannot tell the difference between conditional projections and 
predictions or expectations. The various projections that presented worst case 
scenario deaths came with radically different projected death tolls—and never 
certain predictions—for scenarios in which people responded effectively and 
situations in which they did not. The failure to consider the way in which the 
difference between drastically different future outcomes lies in our present 
action is not apparent to the fool, who can be much more likely simply to think 
in terms of a single prediction that will or will not come to pass, 
inconsiderate of the pronounced differentiating effect that his present action 
can have and the fact that prompt and effective responses to recognized threats 
can avert crises, ensuring that they do not fully materialize.

The wise exhibit self-mastery
In Proverbs, the wise are particularly identified with their hearts, while 
fools with their mouths. The heart is a realm of meditation, reflection, and 
deliberation. It is the place where things are weighed and tested before they 
are expressed in words or actions. The fool, by contrast, is someone who lacks 
the self-mastery of a heart and is defined by ungoverned impulses, particularly 
in speech and temper. The quarrelsomeness of the fool arises in part from this. 
Lacking a self-mastered heart, he is threatened by the proximity of differing 
opinion and lacks the humility to learn or be corrected, so he must fight it.

The fool, by his characteristic failure to consider and make preparation for 
the uncertainties of the future, also puts himself in a position where reaction 
to events is often the only option remaining to him. The wise, by recognizing 
the uncertainty of the future, and readying himself for various eventualities, 
allows himself a lot more latitude and flexibility for response when improbable 
crises hit.

The wise internalizes the voices of many wise counsellors in his heart, 
enabling him to give the sort of counsel to himself that considers many vantage 
points. The fool, by contrast, only has an internal monologue and has not 
learned to address wisdom to himself.

The self-mastery of wisdom recognizes the many ways in which our thinking tends 
to function as self-rationalization when not carefully managed. Our thinking is 
all too frequently driven by our passions. One of the most troubling things to 
witness has been the hijacking of the discourse concerning coronavirus by the 
passions of political partisanship, something that has been especially apparent 
in the American context. Rather than even-handedly pursuing truth with level 
heads, everything has become snarled up in the culture wars. Issues are then 
framed by the foil of the stupid or evil people on the other side, dominated by 
the need to resist granting any ground to people we dislike, or maintaining the 
correctness and prescience of our camp or ideology. All worthwhile thought will 
swiftly be asphyxiated in such a context.

Perhaps the greater part of wise thought is self-mastery. Upton Sinclair—at 
least the quotation is typically attributed to him—famously remarked: “It is 
difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends upon 
his not understanding it!” Motivated reasoning is an immense problem in a 
situation where, for instance, becoming persuaded of the legitimacy of radical 
measures to combat the virus would endanger your livelihood, unsettle your 
political ideology, or go against your instincts or the tendencies of your 
personality. Right thinking requires that we take close inventory of our 
motivations and guard against their unhelpful swaying of our opinion.

Self-mastery is especially important in fraught and antagonistic contexts, 
where our thinking can get sucked into reactive antagonisms. Where this occurs, 
we will swiftly lose the ability to hear and properly weigh the criticisms of 
others. We must keep a very close watch upon ourselves: the moment that we find 
ourselves engaging with issues out of the urge to prove some other party wrong, 
for instance, we are in real danger of starting to prioritize the service of 
our party or the defeat of some other party for the pursuit of truth. It is 
important that we seek and/or create contexts—whether solitude, away from the 
passions of socially and emotionally charged media and settings, or in good 
faith discourse between persons of differing viewpoints—where true 
stress-testing of our thought can occur, where we can genuinely weigh and 
consider positions on various sides and calmly arrive at measured opinions. The 
hold that the passions of partisanship have upon the thinking of most people 
today have made true thought nigh impossible.

If you find that a context you are in is driven by ideological and political 
antagonisms and their attendant passions, in a way that resists close, 
sustained, and critical self-reflection, I would highly advise you to step 
away. You will find it difficult to think clearly in such a context, as your 
own instinctive antagonistic tendencies will kick in and self-rationalization 
will swiftly replace the quest for self-critical understanding and 
self-knowledge. It is very difficult to think well when you are fixated on 
people who are wrong on the Internet. Wean yourself off the drug of catharsis 
through attacking opposing positions. Put on your own mask first: slow yourself 
down, level your head, master your emotions, give yourself space, and practice 
attention, seeking to discover the strengths and weaknesses in various 
viewpoints in a much less charged atmosphere.

Of course, achieving this requires the development of a strong ‘heart’ within 
which to meditate, reflect, and deliberate, away from the intrusive passions of 
your environment and society. It requires the internalization of a multitude of 
voices that test your viewpoints. It requires developing the equanimity 
necessary to be around people of strongly opposing opinions, without feeling 
threatened by them. Where people lack such a ‘heart’ and the self-mastery it 
manifests, thought won’t escape the tyranny of the passions.

The fool is a creature of the herd
The fool seeks company and will try to find or create a confirming social 
buffer against unwelcome viewpoints when challenged. The scoffing and the scorn 
I have already mentioned are often sought in such company. The fool surrounds 
himself with people who confirm him in his beliefs and will routinely try to 
squeeze out people who disagree with him from his social groups. The fool’s 
beliefs, values, and viewpoints seldom diverge much of those of his group, 
which is typically an ideological tribe designed to protect him from genuine 
thoughtful exposure to intelligent difference of opinion or from the sort of 
solitude in which he might form his own mind. He has never gone to the 
sustained effort of developing a pronounced interiority in solitary reflection 
and meditation, of attendance to and internalization of the voices of the wise, 
or of self-examination, so generally lacks the resources to respond rather than 
merely reacting. When the herd stampedes, the fool will stampede with them, 
finding it difficult to stand apart from the contagious passions of those who 
surround him.

The wise recognize the cosmopolitanism of truth
One of the important features of wisdom is its cosmopolitanism. The wisdom 
literature of Scripture is related to a wider ancient sapiential project and 
Scripture includes non-Israelite voices as voices of wisdom, both inspired and 
uninspired. The wisdom literature is not direct revelation unique and exclusive 
to Israel, but is for the most part inspired reflection upon realities common 
to all mankind—the world and the events, persons, and realities within it. The 
Egyptians, the Babylonians, the Greeks, the Romans, and many other shrewd 
pagans were also engaged in the task of wisdom and Israelites could learn 
things from them, even if their wisdom literatures did not have the same 
inspired character as that of Israel. Solomon’s wisdom is compared favourably 
to the wisdom of other men of the east and attracted people of other nations to 
hear him, as they recognized Solomon’s insight and perception into reality. But 
the people of God never had proprietary rights upon the practical wisdom gained 
through thoughtful engagement with reality, which was the common possession of 
humanity, albeit enjoyed in varying degrees.

One of the dismaying features of too many Christian contexts is their narrow 
fortress mentality, their failure to interact receptively with and learn from 
insightful non-Christians, and the way that their thinking is so driven by 
political and ideological antagonism and entrenchment (see Alan Jacobs’ 
comments on this).

I know hardly any Christians who were ahead of and deeply informed about the 
coronavirus crisis from early on. I was alerted to its seriousness back in 
January—I bought masks on January 24th—because I closely follow a wide array of 
voices outside of the ideological echo chambers that can dominate the 
discourses both of Christians and of our societies (discourses that are 
extensively entangled), discourses that are far too often playing to the 
impulses of folly. By virtue of the way in which they are structured and 
pursued, such discourses function more to lock people into partisan ideologies 
that relieve their discomfort of reckoning with the limitations of their 
knowledge and the contestability of their beliefs and behaviours than they do 
to expose people to the difficult challenge of truth.

A great many of the voices I have benefited and learned from, far more than I 
have from the great majority of Christians that I follow, come from a variety 
of sharply contrasting viewpoints with which I have quite profound 
differences—rationalists, techno-futurists, neoliberals, atheists, evolutionary 
psychologists, alt-right types, liberal Christians, Jews, heretics of different 
flavours, feminists of various stripes, Marxists, postmodernists, progressives, 
race theorists, neo-reactionaries, etc. However, to the extent that many of 
them are rigorously engaging with specific aspects of the common reality of the 
world in ways that few Christians are, it is worthwhile to listen to and learn 
from them. Christians who are driven by a fortress mentality can be so 
concerned to establish how the positions of such persons are wrong and why they 
should be dismissed that they seldom pause to consider whether they might be 
seeing anything that we are not.

A greatly disproportionate number of these interlocutors are what have been 
called ‘high decouplers’, people who are able to bracket—without necessarily 
neglecting or dismissing—the unpleasant emotional, ideological, moral, social, 
and political connotations of ideas in order rigorously to ascertain their 
truth value. Many of these voices have been squeezed out of our public and 
institutional discourses, as they are more committed to rigorous engagement 
with reality than they are with ideological allegiance or alignment, or with 
avoiding creating discomfort or offence. This is one of the reasons why people 
caught up in the dominant cultural discourses were oblivious to the coronavirus 
for so long. It does not fit into any of the partisan issues of fixation—it is 
not really about social justice, about Trump, about Brexit, about feminism, 
about transgenderism, etc., etc. It requires an attentive and humble posture to 
a reality that exceeds our narratives, categories, and concerns. The 
opinionated ideological postures that are so attractive to the foolish simply 
are not equipped to grasp it.

And it is interesting to see how a sense of common reality can bring such a 
diverse group together despite huge differences. While there are genuine and 
considerable dangers in abandoning concern for the connotations of ideas—as 
thinking about ideas is never merely detached reflection upon reality, but 
always already invested in the task of acting within reality—such decoupling 
does have the effect of pushing back against many of the instinctive impulses 
of folly, for which the connotations and associations of ideas are routinely 
used to dismiss all unwelcome challenge.

When dealing with such voices, we must recognize that the task of wisdom is by 
no means a safe one. We will often be learning wisdom from serpents, while 
having to resist adopting their character. Our interlocutors may hold 
profoundly volatile or dangerous ideas and shrewdness is needed to discern 
their errors and handle more volatile—yet potentially true—beliefs and ideas 
with appropriate care. We will need to determine whether we are indeed mature 
enough to interact with them more directly. Nevertheless, a sober caution in 
the dangerous venture of wisdom is much to be preferred over the approach of 
those who, despite remaining locked into an ideological echo chamber, without 
genuine engagement with challenge, mistakenly think themselves to be engaged in 
the task of wisdom.

One problem Christians face in the coronavirus crisis is the fact their 
‘subaltern counterpublics’—separate schools, universities, and other 
institutions—cocoon them from the broader world of academics, politicians, 
etc., greatly limiting their trust and information networks. And the detachment 
of ministerial education from the broader world of the university—an 
institutional embodiment of the cosmopolitanism and unity of wisdom—doesn’t 
help here either. For many lay people, their pastor will be their natural guide 
in how to relate to various academic and political positions. If pastors are 
educated in an ideological cocoon, with little extended exposure to people 
outside, it can encourage kneejerk distrust of authorities and experts, and 
stunted information networks in their congregants.

The wise honour and submit to authorities
As Oliver O’Donovan observes, ‘An authority is someone I depend upon to show me 
the reasons for acting’ [The Ways of Judgment (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 
2005), 131]. He elaborates:

Where authority is, freedom is; and where authority is lost, freedom is lost. 
This holds good for all kinds of authority. Without adults who demand mature 
behavior, the child is not free to grow up; without teachers to set standards 
of excellence, the scholar is not free to excel; without prophets to uphold 
ideals of virtue, society is not free to realize its common good. To be under 
authority is to be freer than to be independent. [132]

Wisdom begins with the fear of the Lord and the honouring of father and mother, 
with the recognition of and a proper humble and submissive posture towards 
authority. The simple person does not yet know how best to act, yet submission 
to parents and other authorities enables him to act in terms of wisdom, even 
without an internal grasp of the rationale for doing so.

If we lacked such authorities, our capacity to act in terms of wisdom would be 
greatly curtailed. When each man does what is right in his own eyes, he can 
only act with any degree of wisdom within the horizons of his own sight. 
However, in a society with good authorities, it is much easier to order 
people’s actions towards wise and good ends. And everyone can be freer as a 
result. Reliable food safety laws, for instance, free me to eat my meal with a 
measure of confidence that would not be possible in a society without effective 
and wise authorities supervising such matters for their citizens.

The wise recognize the limits of their own vision and the importance of 
submission to authorities that can extend the scope of reality to which their 
actions are well-ordered. Fools, by contrast, hate to submit to authorities 
over them. They are proud and insubordinate and only appreciate authorities 
when they support them in their ways. They will leap to disobedience, 
resistance, and opposition to authorities, as they instinctively reject that 
the authorities might know a great deal better than them.

Submission to authorities need not be blind. Authorities can be proven through 
their manifest character. The virtuoso musician who has developed in herself 
the skills that she claims to teach to others has a manifest authority that 
someone who did not display those skills would lack. Submission to authorities 
can be further encouraged by the recognition that they are invested in and 
concerned for our good. The wise child sees in the love of their parent a 
warrant for their trusting submission.

Healthy authorities will also frequently provide rationales for the obligations 
that they lay upon people. An authority does not depend for its legitimacy upon 
the provision of a rationale to the subordinate (and the defiant ‘why!?’ can be 
a characteristic response of the disobedient), nor upon the subordinate’s 
understanding of it. Yet good authority is concerned to be scrutable, 
reasonable, and, where possible, to encourage willing and mature compliance 
through the practice of persuasion with those able to receive it. Finally, good 
authorities can prove themselves through their track records, through the 
demonstration of the outcomes of wisdom over time.

Nevertheless, even when faced with deeply imperfect authorities, the wise 
recognize the importance of submission. Such submission need not require 
agreement or unquestioning compliance. There are submissive ways to raise 
questions and concerns, to appeal to authorities, or to negotiate with them. 
Such submissive interaction with authorities will also tend to bring the true 
character of the authorities into clearer focus. The wise desire to understand 
the reasons for the obligations laid upon them by authority, but they are 
humble enough not to require such reasons for recognizing the legitimacy of the 
authority and their need to submit to it. The loss of authority over us, and 
the rise of a situation where everyone does what is right in their own eyes, is 
ripe for folly.

Of course, the foolish, being inclined to rebellion and insubordination, are 
poor judges of authority. The fool presumes that authorities do not have a 
concern for their own or the common good, resists recognizing wise character in 
others, loves to dismiss the competence of any over him, and brings the most 
jaundiced eye to the assessment of any authority’s track record. By contrast, 
the wise operate in terms of a presumption in favour of authority that is 
displayed throughout Scripture. The wise delight in good authority, so seek out 
authority, endeavour to submit to authority in the very best way that they can, 
and desire to see and encourage the good in authority where they can.

Where great distrust of or even paranoia concerning authorities prevails or 
where a radical valorization of individual or familial autonomy leads to a 
resistance to higher authorities, the degree to which wisdom is attainable—or 
the degree to which persons can live in terms of it—can be quite curtailed. One 
problem here is that many people do not have meaningful personal connections 
with persons in government, academia, and various forms of expertise. And many 
feel a partly justifiable sense that people in those contexts are not 
trustworthy, that they do not have their best interests at heart. The loss of 
mediating institutions really has an impact here, as mediating institutions 
serve to foster trust in the governed and demand greater trustworthiness from 
those that govern.

Networks of authority are related to networks of trust and information. The 
coronavirus crisis has served to reveal how narrow, shallow, homogeneous, and 
binary many Christian’s networks of authority, trust, and information are. In 
such networks, the weight of trust seems to rest very heavily upon a very few 
key dominant authorities, who can offer security through their projection of 
extreme confidence and certainty. However, a healthy trust network is more like 
a tree’s root system, which supports the vast bulk of a tree through the wide 
yet varying distribution of its weight through a root network, none of whose 
individual roots would be at all sufficient to bear the weight of the whole. 
Such a wide distribution means that we are not placing too much weight on any 
one part. It means that some parts can fail without everything coming crashing 
down.

A characteristic problem of evangelicalism in some circles is its oscillation 
between paranoid distrust and extreme levels of credulity (a credulity that is 
fertile soil for all sorts of conspiracy theories, health fads, and the like), 
a dynamic often resulting from social alienation and isolation. Whether it is 
the government and politicians, the schools, the scientific or medical 
establishment, the ‘liberal elite’, or something else, the levels of distrust 
can be extreme, driving people to place excessive weight upon the opinions and 
expertise of people in their own narrow circles, many of who simply do not know 
what they are talking about and very few of whom have enough counterbalancing 
or supporting voices to give their opinions real weight.

Returning to the point with which I began, it is essential to extend our 
circles of counsellors, so that we are not placing too much weight on any 
specific expert or party. We must devote ourselves to developing the 
cosmopolitanism of wisdom. We must really listen to voices outside of our camps 
and do so charitably, not merely intending to find some reason to reject them. 
In the multitude of counsellors we will be weaned off our desire for infallible 
gurus. We will be able to draw a great deal more insight from many flawed sages 
in honest conversation than from one much less flawed sage in isolation.

I believe Christians also need to think very carefully about some of the ways 
in which our capacity for wisdom has been curtailed by our over-dependence upon 
the institutions of our own Christian party and the detachment of those 
institutions from a wider society where we are routinely exposed to challenge. 
Perhaps one of the greatest truths of wisdom is that our capacity for wisdom 
lies, much less in individual brain power and capacity, than it does in a 
well-mastered spirit and an extensive and carefully managed root system of 
trust, authority, and information, where we can draw upon and rest upon 
insights from a wide scope of different quarters. We must extend our networks 
of trust, authority, and information and distribute their weight much more 
broadly. We must master our spirits—keeping calm in ourselves, seeking where 
possible to be at peace with others, devoting ourselves to the pursuit of truth 
over conflict.

In forgetting these things, many Christians have ended up taking the path of 
the foolish.



Sent from my iPhone

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