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Church & Culture

009 Putting Religion in Its Place. Church & Culture.

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Church & Culture

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  1. 009 Putting Religion in Its Place Church & Culture 009 Putting Religion in Its Place

  2. “The ‘secular revolution’ affected every part of American culture-not only higher education but also the public schools, politics, psychology, and the media. In each of these areas, Christianity was privatized as ‘sectarian,’ while secular philosophies like materialism and naturalism were put forth as ‘objective’ and ‘neutral,’ and therefore the only perspectives suitable for the public sphere.” • - Nancy Pearcey 009 Putting Religion in Its Place

  3. Introduction • Compromising with a secular mindset • Many Christians have adopted a mindset of relativism and pragmatism • E.G. Lawyer, a deacon in church, his job was to find a way to break contracts • Is he just doing his job? • Is his work involving him in breaking moral principles? • What would he do if he had a Biblical Worldview? • Many Christians learn to “adapt” – they “compartmentalize” • They do what “is necessary” in their “professional” lives while believing, studying, and professing faith in their private lives 009 Putting Religion in Its Place

  4. Living in a Two Pocket World • Many Christians keep their faith and religious beliefs in one pocket and their jobs in another • Many Believers came to think that to speak about their faith was to show a decidedly Christian bias in the work place • Believers were “pressured to adopt a naturalistic, secularized approach to the subject matter of their field.” • Can you think of how this might apply to your own field? • Are the concepts you practice in your profession “neutral?” • Should you practice them without regard to a biblical worldview? • Do you separate your work and belief into a public / private dualism? 009 Putting Religion in Its Place

  5. Breaking Down the Public/Private Divide • To bring Biblical truth, Christian truth, back to the work place, we must first understand how we reached this point • If we can understand how this public private dualism came to be, we can come to understand how it works in our culture today • If we can learn how it works we can develop ways to counter its effect in our culture 009 Putting Religion in Its Place

  6. Nature/Grace Dualism • Nature means knowledge of worldly things known by reason alone • Grace means the knowledge of God and the “mysteries of faith” • Problem: if it is possible to know the things of this world through man’s reason alone; there is little need for “grace” • Grace, the second story, is increasingly irrelevant for our day to day affairs • Reason, human knowledge, is quite capable of understanding “the state, society, science, economics, philosophy-in fact everything outside of theology” • Even Christians began accept the split between nature where man came to knowledge on his own and controlled the growing first story and grace where God’s influence was confined to the upper story 009 Putting Religion in Its Place

  7. Limits of Religion • Religion seen as a “negative check on what reason was allowed to say” • It had no positive impact on daily life in the first story • The reason/faith dualism grew to a point where grace or faith was understood as being arbitrary, reason was understood as independent source of truth • William Ockham denies that God can be understood by an rational category • God’s plan of salvation is arbitrary, it is based on His discretion and not fixed by any law that man could discern • Religion is not understood from that which is rational but is derived from revelation which is accepted by faith • Reason and faith are now seen as two independent categories • “Why do we need revelation at all?” • Reason holds truths that are known apart from divine revelation • Reason can even be used to judge divine revelation – reason is now the yardstick for judging truth 009 Putting Religion in Its Place

  8. Changing Balance of Power • Reason is now accepted as the rule, the “yardstick” of truth • Many, now begin to accept Reason as truth and see revelation, religion as less than the truth • Moving through 14th Century Europe Reason becomes more and more autonomous from revelation • With flowering of the Renaissance and the period of Enlightenment Reason is accepted as being able to discover truth without the need of revelation • Based on the many new scientific discoveries, Reason/science is coming to be seen as the “sole source of genuine knowledge” • Nature is now the only reality and Reason/science the only way to truth • Welcome to scientific materialism 009 Putting Religion in Its Place

  9. Modern Forms of Dualism • Religion was not the only “casualty of scientific materialism,” • Arts, beauty, creativity, and morals were not subjects for scientific investigation • Those who defended the subject matter of the arts, morality, religion, humanities came to be known as “Romantics” and this movement was call “Romantic Movement” • Romantics rejected materialism and favored idealism instead • Idealism understood that the ultimate reality was the mind, the Spirit, or the Absolute and not materialism • Unfortunately Romantics agreed that the study of nature was the responsibility of science and that Idealism was concerned only with the upper story of arts and humanities 009 Putting Religion in Its Place

  10. Modern Forms of Dualism The Enlightenment is given authority over the rational world, composed of material, objective and scientific knowledge, (the lower story or the public sphere) Romanticism was allowed authority over religion, morality, the arts and humanities, (the upper story or the private sphere) This is a basic diagram of Modern day dualism or secularization 009 Putting Religion in Its Place

  11. Descartes’ Secular Dualism 17th Century Renee Descartes’ sharp distinction between mind and matter – “I think, therefore I am” intended as a positive spiritual affirmation – meant to defend the mind, to “prove the existence of the human spirit “ What survived was Descartes’ concept of a mechanical universe . Mind was placed into the upper story where it was irrelevant to material world known by science. With John Newton and the discovery of gravity, nature, matter came to be seen as a huge machine governed by natural laws 009 Putting Religion in Its Place

  12. The Choice • Nature now seen to be a machine, governed by natural laws • Pictured to be like the gears of a clock • There was no room for “the human soul or spirit” • Crucial for religion but unnecessary for nature • Science/nature seemed to be a better choice • The religious wars of the 1500s saw Christians killing Christians • Led to the conclusion of many that universal truths are not “knowable in religion” • Gives rise to new philosophies like positivism, scientific materialism, that grant science an exclusive on knowledge (lower story) • Everything else is consigned to the upper story which is private beliefs and cultural traditions 009 Putting Religion in Its Place

  13. Immanuel Kant Nature is infallibly determined in accordance with the laws of nature Puts freedom in the upper story to accommodate the “Romantics” Man vs machine Science with its clockwork image becoming the enemy of human values Jean-Jacques Rousseau gives birth to Romanticism – humans are not part of the machine Creation of universal (moral) law was the function of God now it is assumed to be the function of the individual human will 009 Putting Religion in Its Place

  14. The Bridge to Today • Kant puts freedom / autonomy in the upper story • Autos = self, nomos = law • His ideal was to be influenced by nothing but one’s own moral will. • He defines autonomy as being subject to only to laws imposed on oneself by oneself • “The lower story is what we know; the upper story is what we can’t help believing” • The lower story is publicly verifiable facts; the upper story is socially constructed values • This is the modern dichotomy fact/value 009 Putting Religion in Its Place

  15. Today’s Dichotomy Darwinism offers a persuasive explanation for the beginning of life Naturalism is now a complete and comprehensive system The lower story is now without the need for dependence on the upper story The upper story is only that which is human subjectivity; religion and morality are only human ideas Cultural patterns emerge gradually over the course of human evolution, arising by naturalistic causes and lasting only as long as they are expedient for survival 009 Putting Religion in Its Place

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