I’ll
comment on this post:
As
usual, Ed spends a lot of time repeating his oft-refuted contentions, so I’ll
skip over that.
Steve
Hays writes, “Of course, I never said the only effective method of opposing
“something” is political activism. Rather we were dealing with the specific
case of public school indoctrination. And I said that “if you reject Christian
political activism, then you have no effective means of opposing the secular
education establishment.”
This
represents the crux of Steve’s argument. It is firmly utilitarian, firmly
pragmatic, and in my opinion, it fails to focus on loving the right behavior
for the right reason.
Actually,
I’m just responding to Ed on his own terms. This is how he chose to frame the
issue:
The
educational institutions play a strategic role in the liberal indoctrination of
our children and in my view...
He
himself flagged that example as a serious problem. So what’s the solution, if any?
The
source of the problem is political. The excuse that public schools use to
indoctrinate students in secular ideology consists of Supreme Court rulings
which claim that it’s unconstitutional for the state to promote the Christian
faith.
Since
the source of the problem is political, the only direct solution is political.
Moreover,
there is no sound exegetical support for Steve’s argument. In rebuttal after
rebuttal, rather than appeal to specific Scriptures rightly interpreted, Steve
has been very dismissive about my charge.
i)
Needless to say, there’s no specific Scripture that says “The educational
institutions play a strategic role in the liberal indoctrination of our
children.”
Why does
Ed demand a specifically Scriptural solution to a problem that’s not a
specifically Scriptural problem? He’s the one who highlighted this problem.
ii)
Moreover, what’s wrong with direct solutions? If I have a persistent toothache,
I go to the dentist. Do I need specific Scriptural justification for that
solution?
Is it
“firmly utilitarian, firmly pragmatic,” for me to visit the dentist if I have a
persistent toothache? And even if it were, so what?
If I
need to drive across a stream everyday, is it okay for me to build a bridge? Or
is that too “utilitarian,” too “pragmatic”? Should I just pray for a bridge to miraculously materialize?
iii)
Ed’s theological method is flawed. It’s a parody of sola Scriptura. But we
don’t need specific Scriptural warrant for everything we do. For instance, if
Scripture lays down a general principle with various logical implications and
applications, that will suffice. The specificity is logically implicit rather
than verbally explicit.
Christians
preaching the gospel out of love for obeying God, not because they think they
can change the world.
Passing
good laws or repealing bad laws isn’t intended to “change the world,” but to
making discrete changes that improve a particular situation.
They
know that if the world is going to change, that is the business of God.
That
sounds fatalistic. But God often employs the instrumentality of human beings to
work his will.
Their hope is that all men would come to
Christ, not that their culture would be morally good.
Does Ed
think we even need to have good laws? Why not repeal all laws against theft,
mugging, murder, &c.
Pay
attention to Steve’s use of the phrase “no effective means.” Apparently, Steve
thinks that Christians cannot effectively oppose secular philosophies in the
universities unless they are politically active.
Actually,
my statement didn’t single out universities.
In other words, indoctrinating your
children in the truth of God’s word is an ineffective way to counter the
effects of the secular university. Selecting a godly Church where the creeds
are soundly biblical, the sermons expositional, the music Christ-centered, and
the youth program seriously aimed at firming up the faith of the young is
ineffective apparently by Steve’s way of thinking.
i) I
already responded to that alternative. Ed presumes the freedom to practice your
faith. Yet Ed doesn’t think Christians have a right or duty to defend their
religious rights and liberties. In which case,
Christians will lose the freedom to select a godly church with good youth
programs.
ii)
Moreover, Ed exhibits a callous attitude towards the fate of kids who don’t
have Christian parents. Should we just abandon them to atheism?
Steve
criticizes my position that one can oppose the secular university with its
godless philosophies by publically condemning them and speaking out against
them. We can oppose them by arming our children with the truth and with good
critical thinking skills. We can oppose them by preaching the gospel and
carrying on with the mission of the Church.
i) Ed
keeps repeating the same equivocal usage. The question is not whether you can
“oppose” it, but whether your methods are “effective.” Merely “condemning” or
“speaking out” against liberal indoctrination in public education does nothing
to prevent or lessen liberal indoctrination in public education. It’s like
shouting at a bulldozer or a freight train. You can shout until you’re hoarse,
but that won’t keep the train or bulldozer from running right over you.
ii) And,
once again, he takes for granted the civil right of Christian parents to raise
their kids in the faith; the civil right of pastors to preach the gospel. Yet
he mocks the notion that Christians should defend their religious rights. The
man is schizophrenic.
Steve
says, So what, if anything, does he propose to do about it? To merely “speak
out” against public school indoctrination is not an “effective” means of
opposing it. To merely be “against” something is not an “effective” means of
opposing it. Rather, Ed’s alternative is an ineffectual means of opposing it.
It doesn’t change anything.
Steve
further exposes his pragmatism by asserting that my action “doesn’t change
anything.”
How have
his actions solved the problem that he himself complained about?
Would
Steve argue that preaching the gospel is ineffectual and hence it should be
abandoned in cases where it produces few to no converts?
How is
that comparison relevant to the issue at hand?
Moreover, where is Steve’s exegetical
evidence supporting his view?
He’s
asking a question I already answered.
If I understand Steve correctly, he is
asserting that Christians have a duty, a divine mandate to be politically
active. This makes it a sin for Christians to be otherwise. Indeed, this is a
serious accusation. Christians must take absolute care anytime their view leads
them to this sort of behavior. If I accuse someone of sin when they in fact are
not sinning, I have sinned. I would hope Steve would ease up a bit where it
involves introducing the idea that we sin when we are not doing what he thinks
we should do in the political arena.
That’s
not a counterargument to my argument. That’s just a complaint about the
consequences of my argument. But if my argument is sound, so what?