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Welcome Jonathan, I am stunned that anyone would want to
join this waskally bunch of wabbits right now with all the brawling going
on. (You must be one brave man.) On the other hand, this is pretty
typical TruthTalk stuff, so you might as well get used to it. I only have
one question: are you friend or foe??? (Only kidding!) I like your challenge to the group—very
fun. However, I do not feel that this is a safe environment for me to be
candid about what ideas/doctrines have changed over my 30+ years as a Believer,
thanks to a couple of snipers out there, ready to flame me at the drop of a hat
(either directly or indirectly through pretended conversations with other
folks.) But I will tell you that at one time I
actually had it “all together”, was perfect in every doctrine, had
a pat answer with memorized scriptures to back it up for every question, knew
it all, and was perfectly right about everything, just like the Snipers are
today. Then the Lord pulled the proverbial rug out from under my life, and I
realized that all of that prideful “knowledge” I thought I had was
just a house of cards. Today I realize that, compared to my
know-it-all days, I don’t know nuth’in ‘bout nuth’in,
except one thing only: Christ and Him crucified. Many doctrines have changed,
too—but who knows; they might change again. It is all icing on the cake, anyway.
Certainly not worth insulting and hurting people about. And certainly not
worth flaming other Believers with God’s Word for. (What a way to
dishonor His Word.) I think I’ve come up with a new doctrine (just now!)—fighting folks with scripture verses is obscene. Can you give us some examples of your own
changes? Izzy PS Are you from down under? From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Jonathan Hughes Good day all, Greetings to you all. I have been a lurker (one who follows a
list but never posts, not to be confused with a troll: one who posts only to
stir up trouble) on this list for a while now and am finally taking the
plunge. I hope to get to know some of you even better and that we may
continue to edify one another. Years ago when I was in university an acquaintance of mine offered up
an idea that I was originally not in favour of: epistemological humility.
Epistemology is the study of how we know what we know. Adding humility to
it is to illustrate that all of our beliefs should be approached in a humble
way. We may fully believe something only to later on in life as the
Spirit of God moved in our hearts repudiate those beliefs and take up others in
their place. Another definition would be: Recognition of the limits of
your own understanding and with humility be willing and eager to learn from
others. (See the portion marked by *** below for a few more disclaimers
on my using the term ‘epistemological humility. This is a bit
philosophical so feel free to skip it!). Being a fundamentalist at the
time I thought this was a rather wishy-washy way of approaching truth. I
now hold that it is possible to believe in truth while at the same time holding
onto a humble way of knowing. When it comes to doctrines this can get
tricky. I believe that most people once set in their religious beliefs
rarely change them, especially when it comes to Christian doctrine. To
see if my assumption is true my challenge to everyone is as follows: Tell us one doctrine, preferably a major one instead of a minor one,
(for example whether drama should be allowed in the church would be considered
minor; whether Jesus was actually God would be considered major) that you have
changed your mind on. One that you went from fully believing one way to
fully believing another. This doesn’t mean that you fleshed out the
doctrine and now understand it more fully but rather you jumped to another
viewpoint completely. If you have always been right you may safely ignore
this thread. Of course we should all remember that even the great apostles
were wrong on at least one occasion. The purpose of this thread is not to discuss the doctrines we may have
changed our beliefs on but to see if we are actually open to being
‘transformed by the renewing of our minds.’ If you want to
discuss the doctrines that are brought up please do so under a separate
thread. In my time spent lurking on Truthtalk I rarely see openness for
consideration of someone else’s opinion. This purpose of this
thread is to be edifying. Has anyone on Truthtalk actually changed sides?
What I have seen is that those who already agree continue to agree. I
think it would be nice to know that we all have grown since we first accepted
Christ’s offer of adoption. I suspect that we may view some people
on Truthtalk as always thinking they are right and unable to admit they may
possibly have been wrong, or continue to be wrong. Let’s change
that assumption. To start off I shall bring up one of my own experiences with
epistemological humility. I used to believe that God was very angry with
the world (including me). I believed that He couldn’t stand to look
at me because I am so full of sin. I believed that He had to kill his own
Son just so He could finally stand to look upon me without wanting to pour out
His wrath upon me. Basically I believed that ‘sin’ was bigger
than God: something that was stronger than He was since it was able to thwart
Him. I now completely reject this position. I now believe that God
wants nothing more than to accomplish his stated goal (Ephesians 1): Adoption.
By sending His Son to take up our humanity and then to bring that humanity
(cleansed and holy) back into the Godhead does take care of my sin but the
whole purpose is love, not wrath. Resolving my sin is a by-product of
what Christ came to do. In other words it was very important that Christ
dealt with my sin, but not the reason He came, died, rose again, and ascended
to His Father. In this case the major doctrine that I was wrong about was
the doctrine of God (they don’t get much bigger!). Please share a
moment of epistemological humility from your life. *** I believe that Kant was the first one to come up with
‘epistemological humility’ but he used it in a different way.
Kant would say that we can know nothing at all (which lead to puns like ‘we
Kant know anything’ etc.). I believe that God is the ultimate
revelator, i.e. one who gives revelation (Himself). If God reveals
Himself (through scripture, His Son, His Spirit etc) than I believe that He can
truly be known. I do hold that if my ‘thought claims’ on God
become absolutes they are in danger of possessing God which limits His
greatness/freedom and causes me to become condescending to others. *** Peace and Joy, Jonathan |
- Re: [TruthTalk] God in our unconscious Kevin Deegan
- Re: [TruthTalk] God in our unconscious Wm. Taylor
- Re: [TruthTalk] God in our unconscious Kevin Deegan
- Re: [TruthTalk] God in our unconscious Wm. Taylor
- Re: [TruthTalk] God in our unconscious Kevin Deegan
- Re: [TruthTalk] God in our unconsciou... Wm. Taylor
- Re: [TruthTalk] God in our uncon... Kevin Deegan
- [TruthTalk] Epistemological Humility Jonathan Hughes
- Re: [TruthTalk] Epistemological Humil... Chris Barr
- Re: [TruthTalk] Epistemological Humil... Terry Clifton
- Re: [TruthTalk] Epistemological Humil... ShieldsFamily
- Re: [TruthTalk] Epistemological ... Terry Clifton
- [TruthTalk] God in our unconscious Judy Taylor
- Re: [TruthTalk] God in our unconscious Kevin Deegan
- [TruthTalk] Re:The Holy Bible Lance Muir
- Re: [TruthTalk] God in our unconscious Charles Perry Locke
- Re: [TruthTalk] God in our unconscious Blaine Borrowman
- Re: [TruthTalk] God in our unconscious Knpraise
- Re: [TruthTalk] God in our unconscious Kevin Deegan
- Re: [TruthTalk] God in our unconscious Knpraise
- Re: [TruthTalk] God in our unconscious Charles Perry Locke

