Wednesday, December 21, 2016

Responding to A Friend Backsliding to Abolitionism


First of all, I consider My friend to be a good friend. I consider My friend to be a solid brother in Christ. And I hope after this article, that My friend will still feel the same about me as I do about him. But, make no mistake about it, My friend is in need at the moment and I hope I can say something that might be useful. I will say this before I launch into the post: it is my imagination or is there a growing number of men who can’t seem to walk from here to there without embracing over painfully flawed logic, shameful cultural practices, and utterly bankrupt exegesis. And yes, I think my friend is guilty of all three of these errors. So here goes nothing.

Recently My friend announced that he had changed his mind, yet again, on the issue of abolish human abortion. I am beginning to lose count of how often My friend has vacillated regarding this group. He puts up the posts the AHA symbol and along with it, their “mission verse” for lack of a better term. That mission verse is a verse lifted out of context from Isaiah 1:16–17. The verse reads, Wash yourselves; make yourselves clean; remove the evil of your deeds from before my eyes; cease to do evil, learn to do good; seek justice, correct oppression; bring justice to the fatherless, plead the widow’s cause. There is no sense whatsoever in which this verse actually speaks to the matter of Christians opposing abortion in 2016. None! Isaiah prophesied during the reigns of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah. He witnessed the fall of the northern Kingdom into the hands of the Assyrians and the siege of Jerusalem by Sennacherib.

It is not entirely clear to whom the AHA folks are directing their rebuke. America is not ancient theocratic Israel. But I fear that AHA sees this verse as just as applicable to the Church as it does to America. Why would I say that? I say that because I have had My friend and the AHA leaders on more than one occasion claim that the Church that does not engage in this intense effort to make abortion illegal is not really loving her neighbors and doing justice as she ought. It is only good hermeneutics and sound exegesis to place Isaiah’s words within their ANE context and to interpret them in that setting. ANE religions were primarily concerned with sacrifice, ritual, ritual purity, prayer, and offerings, etc. This mindset had surely influenced Israel. In contradistinction to pagan ANE religious practice, Yahweh had issued a remarkably unique set of ethical principles around which the Israelite religion. The Hebrews are told that the ways in which they treat their parents, their neighbors, their children, and the strangers among them are matters of intense religious concern. [John Oswalt. The Bible Among the Myths.]

For starters, if one if going to defend AHA, as My friend’s article surely does, then it should begin with a defense of how they employ Scripture to make the case for their existence. My friend does not begin with Scripture in justifying his return to his old position. What My friend does is begin with what I think is dishonest rhetoric. My friend says that “AHA” is not a group. But AHA has chapters, leaders, facebook pages, etc. And My friend admits this. What is AHA? My friend says it is a platform to spread the abolitionist ideology. So, I wonder if that means that the SBC is just a platform to spread the gospel. There is even an “International Coalition of Abolitionist Societies.” To be sure, AHA is clearly a group, an organization, a movement of people who share a very narrow philosophy where abortion is concerned. My friend knows this to be absolutely the case. Whitewashing and dishonest rhetoric will not change the fact that AHA is exactly what My friend claims it is not. And I have a serious problem with the ethics being employed in his attempt to make his return to this movement and its philosophy more palatable.

The second step My friend employs is to defend the notion of shared ideologies. He makes the point that ideologies are not inherently bad. I agree. So what is My friend getting at? What is his real goal in writing this article? Here is the next significant point My friend makes:

It’s all quite simple, really. I want legalized child killing to be outlawed. I want you to want it outlawed. I want us all to realize it will take more to outlaw abortion than checking the Prolife box, writing checks to crisis pregnancy centers, casting a vote, or tending to abortion mill sidewalks. I want us all to realize it won’t be outlawed while so many Christians are fighting against each other. I want us to realize that until we – who know mercy best, who know justice best, who know righteousness best, who know love best, namely Christians – unite to seek abortion’s immediate abolition, it won’t be abolished. I want us to realize that seeking the abolition of abortion is not putting justice before the Gospel, but it is an expression of love from a heart changed by the Gospel.

My friend and I agree, as do all genuine believers who have been in Christ long enough to understand the evil of abortion, that abortion is murder and should not be permitted. It is My friend’s next point that takes one off course. My friend not only argues that Christians have to oppose abortion, but he shifts gears and tells us that we must oppose it his way. And this is the problem with AHA at its core. It is a legalistic ideology regarding how Christians ought to oppose abortion and for that reason, it violates the clear teachings of Scripture. And since the ideology of AHA violates the clear teachings of Scripture, it is an inherently bad ideology, top to bottom. When you write a check to ministries involved in helping women who find themselves in this very difficult situation, you are absolutely showing mercy and justice. You are being obedient to the ethical commands of Scripture in this areas. To say it isn’t enough is not for My friend to say. It is not only theological misguided, it is unkind and it is arrogant. John told his community that to support the missionaries was to actually participate in their missionary work with them: Therefore, we ought to support people like these, that we may be fellow workers for the truth. (3 John 8) My friend, along with the rest of the AHA movement is terribly misguided in their understanding of what it means for a Christian to show mercy in the particular circumstances of women and unwanted or difficult pregnancies. The specific actions of Israel in the days of Isaiah, some 1700+ years ago would have been remarkably different for those of us today, especially the Church, operating under a radically new covenant and living in a radically different set of circumstances. Failure to take this into consideration is a complete abandonment of sound exegetical principles. For Israel to repent, they would need to begin to enforce, and stop ignoring the enforcement of their civil codes as just one small example. There was much more that they needed to remedy but this is an example of something Israel would need to do to show repentance that we obviously do not. My friend ignores this fact completely. He has no excuse at this point. He has been exposed to more than enough exegetical reasoning to understand how AHA fails to properly represent Christ in the public square.

My friend implies that Christians are not united against abortion. He says that Christians should not fight against each other but should unite in the goal to make abortion illegal. He says that unless we do this, abortion will not be abolished. This is My friend’s clarion call, an emotional appeal to rally people to the cause. But the call is empty of healthy theology. You see, as a Christian you are not responsible for putting an end to abortion in America. You are not called to engage in activities designed to change unjust laws in whatever culture you are in. The Russian Christian lives in a culture where I am sure there are laws that are inconsistent with justice and mercy, as does every Christian on the planet. That does not mean that you are not showing justice and mercy to people. You see, what My friend and AHA refuses to admit is that Christians are called to show justice and mercy personally toward those who need it. We do that through individual encounters in our life. We do not do it by shaping the laws of secular governments. My friend says Christians ought not to fight with one another which is just his backhanded way of saying shut up and agree with me or I will label you as one who wants to fight with other Christians, unloving, and divisive.

My friend then tells us that seeking the abolition of abortion is an “expression of love from a heart changed by the gospel.” Now, keep in mind that My friend is the one who has decided to once again identify with AHA and to speak to these issues through that grid. So, when we see this kind of language, it is not entirely wrong to interpret My friend’s remarks as being something along the lines of “unless you are seeking the abolition of abortion, you are not expressing the kind of love that indicates your heart has truly been impacted by the gospel.” That is the conclusion we must reach if we read My friend in context. In response to this I want to say that My friend’s idea and AHA’s idea of abolishing abortion and the way in which they go about is not “an expression of love from a heart changed by the gospel.” There are groups who oppose abortion and who also have the very same objective that My friend and AHA have whose hearts have not been changed by the gospel. Second, one does not have to adopt abolitionist ideology in order to oppose abortion or to show justice and mercy. Therefore, if it is true that My friend’s reclaimed ideology on abolition is shared in common with unregenerate people, and if it is true that it is not mandated by sound exegesis of Scripture, then it is absolutely not the case that the expression itself is a necessary consequence of a heart changed by the gospel. Please keep in mind that we are talking about something very specific: The Christian ethic requires that Christians seek to make the practice of abortion illegal within their respective culture. That statement is false. And it is that statement that I am subjecting to criticism in this post.
My friend continues his argument, but he does so with great care. He wants to have his abolitionist cake and eat it to:

Opposing injustices of any kind is merely a fruit of regeneration, and the level to which a Christian opposes injustice is proportionate to their maturity in applying the biblical principles of justice to the injustices around them (and no, I’m not questioning anyone’s salvation in case someone is tempted to twist my words in their blog or podcast). Opposing injustice isn’t the main thing, it’s just a significant thing that characterizes the Christian in one degree or another. In sum, then, Christians love justice and hate injustice of all kinds. Abolitionism, therefore, is the application of opposing injustices out of mercy for the love of God and neighbor. Abolitionists, therefore, are those who desire to consistently apply that principle.

Note that My friend attempts to avoid the criticism that he is questioning other’s salvation unless they lock arms with his cause in opposing abortion in just the way he prescribes. My friend is almost prophetic in his reference to a blog that may twist his words. But this is only a preemptive strike because he knows I am out here in the jungle of blogs, watching. In other words, it is another device employed by My friend to shield himself from criticism. And he knows this is a hot-button issue for me. And he knows me. He knows that there is a good chance that I will respond by way of a blog. And since he will not allow me to refute his post in his comm-box, I am left to doing so on the blog. Now, let’s turn our attention back to My friend’s comments and notice that opposing injustice is a term that My friend continues to employ even though the text in Isaiah commands us to show justice, not oppose injustice, and to correct the oppressor. “This justice was not merely civil righteousness, but right judgment in every sphere of life.” Young points out that this term has a connection with the covenant, so that the practice of seeking judgment is actually the fulfilling of all the duties and responsibilities which a holy God has placed upon His covenant people. If My friend and AHA want to invoke this principle for abortion, they are going to have to invoke it everywhere else as well. And when we wake up after doing that, what we have is nothing less than the theology known as Theonomy.

The Jews had abandoned the faithful execution of God’s covenant. They were in violation of the covenant top to bottom and Isaiah had been sent to warn and to rebuke the nation for their reckless disregard for God’s law and their blatant idolatry. But My friend pushes the envelope once more as he ties abolition to the Christian principle of loving justice and mercy. It is not that. There is no necessary connection between abolition and Christian mercy. There is only a necessary connection between opposition to abortion and Christian ethics. Remember, abolition requires that you focus be legislative in nature; the changing of the law to make abortion illegal. Neither Christian mercy or Christian ethics requires a commitment to focus on shaping the civil codes of any society. I am under no moral obligation to change the laws in my culture or to engage in actions focused on changing those laws. God does not regenerate nations. He has not covenanted with a literal nation. He has covenanted with a chosen race, a holy nation, a royal priesthood. Finally, My friend claims that AHA is the group that consistently applies the principle of loving God and their neighbor. Such a statement smacks of the worse kind of arrogance. It is patently false. This is not to say that AHA does not have some good people involved in its cause. I am sure they do. But that is not the question being discussed. This has nothing to do with whether or not people on different sides of this issue are genuinely saved or not. It is a simple and narrow question: is abolition the necessary outworking of Christian principles or dogma? I answer in the negative. It is not. The fact is that I can say that Christians hate abortion. I can say that Christians think abortion should be illegal. I can say that the Christian ethic condemns abortion on every level as murder. I can say all that and I have said what Scripture says about abortion. I can donate to the local women’s clinic that works with women in these situations from a Christian perspective. And in so doing, I am doing what God has required me to do. If I see a woman in this situation and she is in need of help, my love for God and neighbor would compel me to help her to the best of my ability. In so doing, I have shown love, mercy, and justice to her. That meets the test or criteria of showing mercy and loving justice that people like My friend talk about but so very often confuse, taking it to levels of legalism that is unfortunate, regrettable, and that cannot be tolerated in the Church.

My friend closes his blog by restating that he is not a member of AHA because it isn’t a group. But we now know what My friend is doing with this kind of rhetoric. My friend thinks of AHA as just a platform for spreading the abolitionist ideology. It is as if My friend thinks he can separate the negatives associated with AHA, adopt their ideology, distance himself from AHA, and all is well. This is a very unattractive, ineffective, and I think, disingenuous tactic. The whole problem with AHA is its ideology. You see, its ideology, when embraced consistently informs its tactics. It practices are driven by its ideology. My friend seems to think otherwise. My friend then pulls out the “were all sinners” card that is overplayed these days to excuse Christians of poor behavior. It downplays the seriousness of sin and lowers the level of accountability and creates an imbalance between grace and holiness that has survived for far too long in the Church these days.

What is behind this renewed interest in abolition? I think as we examine the landscape in American politics that we might find a clue. I think it is likely that with a Trump win, the abolitionists are encouraged. I believe they think they have a real chance of making abortion illegal in America. I think My friend may think this way as well.

The basic presupposition that props up abolitionist ideology is the product of a deeply flawed logic, a profound lack of depth in the exegetical process, a poor hermeneutic, and a penchant for a certain brand of legalistic fundamentalism. There is no basis in Scripture to extrapolate from the Christian principles of justice and mercy, the mandate to focus on shaping civil codes and political cultures. Each Christian is to exhibit these traits on a personal level, with their respective neighbors, where they live, in their religious and secular communities, and in so-doing, bring glory to God by their virtuous living, to proclaim the gospel, making disciples, and baptizing converts until Christ returns. That is the expression of love from a heart regenerated by the gospel of Jesus Christ. Let no man add anything to that expression directly or by way of inference and in so doing, risk the danger of the unspeakable judgment of God.

Thursday, December 15, 2016

White-Washing Brown: Is It Black & White?


James White is probably the apologist I listen to the most these days. James Andersen, Scott Oliphint, and John Frame are the ones I probably read the most (outside Bahnsen and Van Til). I like Dr. White’s Dividing Line a lot. I agree with White far, far more than I disagree with him. He is providing a very valuable and much-needed service to the body of Christ today. Keep it up Dr. White! Don’t even quit.

Dr. Michael Brown is an animal of a different sort. Dr. Brown has a book out that is essentially an apologetic for the Brownsville Revival. I know. I have the book and have had it for years. The Brownsville Revival is the laughing revival that made its way to Brownsville, Florida a few years ago. Here is one clip from that event: Brownsville Mercy Seat. And here is another one: Sheer Blasphemy & Mockery. Just scroll through the clips and listen to the absurdity being asserted all in the name of Jesus Christ. And again here: Demonic Demonstrations or Mystical Nonsense.
Dr. Brown has defended Benny Hinn: Benny Hinn Video Game. And here is Benny Hinn’s super coat: Super Coat.

Dr. Brown is on record defending IHOP and Bethel Ministries. In this clip, Dr. Brown is talking about extra-biblical words directly from God by way of the Holy Spirit: A Word from God. Brown thinks we should write it down. What does this say for the doctrine of the sufficiency of Scripture. Brown then equates these words from God with the promises God made to Abraham. He even mentions an arbitrary principle some other man made up saying that the great the promise God makes, the longer it takes to be realized. Is that a fact? I don’t think so. I think it’s the product of mindless drivel that that man made up while in the process of trying to come up with something cool to say. I am sure many in the audience think its profound. It isn’t. Its baseless and mindless nonsense. Michael Brown recently had Bill Johnson from Bethel Church on his radio program. Brown whitewashed Johnson’s heresy repeatedly. The picture is that of a man tossing the limbs sheep over the fence into the jaws of the ravenous wolf. That is the picture. Watch the wolf tear the sheep from limb to limb. It is a sobering image.

Check out Bethel Church’s Tunnel of Fire here: Tunnel of Fire. Bill Johnson teaches that Jesus laid aside his divinity. Johnson teaches that Jesus was born again through the resurrection. Johnson instructs people to ask God to come to them at night in visions and dreams and tells people they should write them down. Here is another demonic practice that goes on at Bethel: Visions, and Dreams, and Words Oh My! Here Johnson, at 1:00 in tells us that he refuses to create a theology that allows for sickness: A Gospel that allows sickness is false. Two minutes into this clip, Johnson tells us that we are preaching a different gospel. We should be accursed! Pay attention folks. And it is Michael Brown who is the most credible apologist these charismatics have at their disposal. The leaven being produced by movements like the Brownsville revival, IHOP, and Bethel Church should never be classified as unimportant issues not worthy of division. When Michael Brown’s own church tells us that the primary evidence that someone has been baptized or filled with the Spirit is speaking in tongues, the only thing to conclude is that Michael Brown does not believe that most of us are filled with the Spirit. There is no middle ground here. Moreover, there is the question as to whether Michael Brown rejects the idea that genuine salvation can truly be lost. Brown had a wonderful opportunity to answer the question directly and clearly in his book concerning hyper grace. But as often is the case with Brown, his answer was couched to the point that it almost comes out as meaningless. I can say firmly and clearly that Brown is a marvelous apologist for charismatic heretics and heresies. He defends the heretics, the false prophets, and the charlatans with great skill. He keeps their money machines cranking out the green stuff wherever and whenever he is afforded the opportunity. And God is watching.

I now turn my attention back to James White. The one thing I find quite puzzling about Dr. White, as do many others, is the wink and the nod he seems to give to Dr. Michael Brown. It is not as though Brown’s behavior is light-hearted error. We are not just disagreeing over the issue of prevenient grace here. This is not Calvinism vs an inconsistent Arminianism. It is not that. What Brown is defending by defending men like Bill Johnson, Benny Hinn, Rick Joyner, and Mike Bickle is a perniciousness, a leaven, a cancer, a scourge that has invaded and infected Christianity. Add to this the band, “The Jesus Culture.” Here is a clip informing you of the theology of this band: Encountering God felt like electricity. This is not biblical Christianity. It does not matter how likeable Brown is. To defend a man who defends these heresies, blasphemies, outright mysticism and carnality is honestly very confusing to me. I love James White’s ministry. But I wonder if he understands that there are many of us who are curious if he realizes how antithetical his relationship with Mike Brown seems to be in terms of the overall thrust of his ministry. If Dr. White can defend Michael Brown, then how will he be able to justify criticizing someone else who might defend someone like Andy Stanley or, Matthew Vines. It seems like a very difficult position to be in because it feels so very counter-intuitive to me.


Is it a black and white issue? Can we say that Michael Brown does not love the Lord? That is a hard question. Can we say that Michael Brown loves the Lord? That is a hard question. And unless you see both of these as hard questions, therein lies the problem. I love the Lord and His word far too much to go out and affirm a man who affirms heretics in the church and enables them to continue to peddle their heresy. On the other hand, I cannot say that Michael Brown does not love the Lord. I simply won’t say that. I will do my best to state what I think is the obvious truth about Brown and let that truth guide and direct other’s and how they relate to Brown. If you are in an apologetic ministry, your endorsement of or friendship with someone who contradicts you at such basic levels can be quite problematic. I honestly thought that when Brown defended Johnson that White would draw a line. He did not. What does this mean? Who knows? I drew a line with Brown back in the Brownsville days. It hasn’t moved.

Wednesday, December 14, 2016

A Christian Theory of Knowledge: Revelational Epistemology



Epistemology, or the theory of knowledge, is that branch of philosophy that is concerned with the nature and scope of knowledge, its presuppositions and basis, and the general reliability of claims to knowledge.[1] What is knowledge? What does it mean to know? Are there different types of knowledge? Is my knowledge of an inanimate object the same as my knowledge of an abstract concept? What about my knowledge of other human beings? From whence does knowledge come? What is the origin and source of knowledge? In the Ptolemaic system, as in the cosmogony of the Bible, man was assigned a central position in the universe, from which position he was ousted by Copernicus.[2] Polanyi is only partly correct. Man has never really occupied the central position of knowledge in the universe. That position has always only been occupied by God. However, in his original condition, man could have a much greater degree of confidence in his knowledge of the universe because his interpretation of the data that he processed was unaffected by sin. As a result of the fall however, man now finds himself in epistemic pandemonium. Man’s interpretation of the data and the manner in which he reasons about human experience is dreadfully prejudiced by a sinful nature that is contrary to God at its very core. Can human knowledge be salvaged? How can man make account for the intelligibility of the human experience we call “knowing?” The purpose of this short article is to provide a very brief overview, a curt introduction if you will, of the subject of epistemology and to assist you, the busy Christian, in recognizing the radical difference that exists between the Christian view of knowledge and the many competing non-Christian views of knowledge. For the sake of space, I will only address the largest of the large stones in this particular stream.

There are two basic kinds of knowledge that philosophers commonly discuss in the literature. Something is said to be known a posteriori if it is known on the basis of human experience. On the other hand, to know something apart from experience, for example, the laws of logic, my knowledge is said to be a priori. For the average person, it seems uncontroversial to say that human beings experience knowledge. But for the philosopher, it is anything but uncontroversial. Any Christian interested in confronting men with the gospel of Jesus Christ will eventually and sooner than later, have to deal with the question, “How does man account for the intelligibility of the phenomenon of human knowledge?” This naturally leads to the challenging question, “How do you know that Christianity is true?” The Christian response to the question of genuine knowledge is fundamentally opposed to its many non-Christian options. The purpose of this article is to provide a constructive summary of a distinctly Christian epistemology. Before moving into that construction, a word should be said about two of the most common epistemologies embraced by most people in our culture.

Rationalism is the belief that human knowledge comes through the mind, or human reason. The underpinning of human knowledge is said to be the human mind. Take for example the idea of Euclidean triangles. All Euclidean triangles have interior angles that total 180 degrees. How do we respond if someone asks us how we know that this is the case? Do we say we know it by observation, like we know that crows are black? By definition a Euclidean triangle has interior angles that total 180 degrees or it is not a Euclidean tringle. Once we understand the nature of the Euclidean triable, our knowledge of it seems innate, immediate. We feel no need to go looking for a Euclidean triangle that may NOT meet the criteria. We know intuitively it seems that one does not exist and we know this with certainty.

On the other hand, empiricism holds that human knowledge is experiential in nature. All knowledge is the product of sensory data. That is to say that knowledge has to be empirical in nature, coming through the senses, in order for it to count as knowledge. For example, I know that all crows are black birds. If it is a crow, I know that it is a bird, and I know that it is black. I know a posteriori that all crows are black. That is to say, I know by observation, the sense of sight, that all crows are black. Someone might say, well, you only know that the crows that you have observed are black but have you observed all crows? That is sort of the point. One theory of non-Christian epistemology is that all knowledge is of this sort; knowledge arises out of experience. Empiricism is the theory of knowledge that underlies modern science. Empiricism not only contradicts Christian teaching, it inevitable collapses when subjected to critical scrutiny. This is not to say that no knowledge comes through the senses. It is only to say that knowledge is not limited to sense experience alone. Moreover, sense perceptions are subject to individual interpretation. It is at the level of worldviews that basic presuppositions for the building blocks of interpretation come into play.

Contrary to rationalism and empiricism, two very common theories that attempt to explain how human knowledge is possible apart from knowledge of God, the Bible informs us that human knowledge is revelational in nature, and as such, is entirely dependent on God. Empiricism and rationalism view man as autonomous and therefore, fully capable of properly interpreting the nature of the world in which he finds himself. The Greek philosopher Protagoras believed that “man is the measure of all things.” This is the sine qua non of unbelieving thought. This is the fundamental difference between a Christian view of knowledge and a non-Christian view of knowledge. Christians must insist from the very beginning that all human knowledge is revelational in nature, and is therefore utterly dependent on God. When God created the world, and placed Adam in the garden, he had to transfer knowledge to Adam. When we think about how knowledge starts, we are left with the impossible task of explaining how knowledge can arise from no knowledge. It is very similar to something extended in space and time arising from nothing. The human mind cannot comprehend it. The idea that a blank slate could ever become a rational being organizing complex input from sensory data, categorizing it correctly is a nonstarter. How could one even know what data is? Where would the categories come from to begin with? Without knowledge, knowledge is impossible. Knowledge is not something that is capable of appearing from nothing. It is impossible for knowledge to have not existed at some point in time. From no knowledge, no knowledge comes!

According to the Christian worldview, God created the world and all things in it. Genesis 1:1, “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” Not only would such an act require a very powerful being, it would require a very knowledgeable one as well. We do not have to look past the metaphysical claims of Genesis 1:1 to understand the source of knowledge. It is God. God, being a being, or better, a person who possesses knowledge, created human beings in His image, like him. Human knowledge then has its source in God. God created human beings with the ability to know, and understand their world as well as their creator. From this we can conclude that all genuine knowledge then is at bottom, revelational in nature. And this is true for a priori and a posteriori knowledge. God has revealed himself and his works of creation to man from the very beginning according to Romans 1:19-21. Romans 2:14-15 even goes so far as to tell us that God has made it impossible for man not to know something about morality along with his knowledge of the created world. This knowledge is referred to in Christian theism as natural revelation, or natural knowledge of God.

But even natural knowledge is revelational in nature. It is given to man, written in man innately. Not only that wired into man is his natural capacities to learn about his environment. Without God, man cannot know anything about his world or about himself. Not only this, there is another kind of knowledge. This is a more accurate knowledge that has as its mechanism the biblical idea of faith. Faith-enabled knowledge is the restoration of man to his prior ability to know himself, his environment, and his Creator more accurately. Redemption applies to the whole person. The Christian’s knowledge is redeemed knowledge. Hebrews 11:3 tells us that our understanding of how the universe came into existence is by faith. We know and understand that the world was created by God through the vehicle of faith. Faith produces genuine knowledge. It is a supernatural gift of God that is, as some might call it, an epistemological game-changer. Christians do not come to know God through rational arguments and empirical evidence as a result of autonomous human inquiries and examination. This is a method of reasoning that is toxic to the Christian faith. It is a product of enlightenment philosophies, not biblical theology. Christians come to true knowledge by the regeneration of the Holy Spirit, Who, in the process, grants to believers the gift of faith. It is a result of God’s amazing grace!

Evangelism and apologetics done correctly acknowledges that Christian converts are not made by clever or sophisticated philosophical arguments using logic and empirical evidence. Christian converts are not made because your message is fashioned in just the right way so as not to offend wicked sinners. Christian converts are made by the Holy Spirit through the power of the Word of Christ preached and proclaimed faithfully by those who have faith in God’s ability to resurrect the dead sinner. Even the most reformed among us very often are tempted to tamper with this process, thinking, in moments of weak faith, that God needs our help. He does not. I close this article on epistemology, as strangely as it might seem to some, with the words of Paul: and my speech and my message were not in plausible words of wisdom, but in demonstration of the Spirit and of power, so that your faith might not rest in the wisdom of men but in the power of God. [3]





[1] Edwards, Paul. The Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Vol. 3 and 4, (MacMillan Publishing Co. Inc. & The Free Press, NY, NY), 8-9.
[2] Michael Polanyi, Personal Knowledge: Towards a Post-Critical Philosophy, corr. ed. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1962), 3.

[3] The Holy Bible: English Standard Version (Wheaton: Standard Bible Society, 2016), 1 Co 2:4–5.

The Myth of Grey Areas

 In this short article, I want to address what has become an uncritically accepted Christian principle. The existence of grey areas. If you ...