BreakPoint

Chronological Follies

colson2Last month, our bloggers at The Point came across two seemingly unrelated news stories that had one important thing in common. Both were by writers who claimed that a prominent figure from the past would have been on their side of current debates—flying in the face of what those historical figures actually said. The first story was by Professor Mary Zeiss Stange of Skidmore College. In USA Today, she asked, “What would Luther do” about same-sex marriage if he were alive today? Stange brushed off what Luther actually wrote about homosexuality. Based on “the way his theological mind worked,” and the way he revolutionized his era, Stange assured her readers that “a 21st century Luther would surely recognize that the few biblical proscriptions against ‘sodomy’ . . . should not bar the loving union of two gay or lesbian persons.” In other words, the writer deliberately ignored what Luther fervently believed, and assumed that his beliefs were shaped not by the Scripture he revered so highly and risked his life for, but by the times. Such audacity is breathtaking. But Stange isn’t the only one to indulge in it. Writer James Kirchick reacted vehemently to a Boston Globe column asking whether Sir Isaac Newton, a Christian, would be welcome to teach at Cambridge University today. In a blog post at The New Republic, Kirchick snapped, “No disrespect to Sir Isaac, but it’s not a risky venture to posit that the Newtons of today don’t believe in some of the silly things Newton did 400 years ago (like alchemy, and the ‘domination of an intelligent and powerful Being’ over the universe). And, were Newton alive today, I’d like to think he wouldn’t believe those silly things either.” I don’t want to join the revisionist school, but Newton himself would have been appalled at such shoddy reasoning. Is it possible that Newton, had he lived today, would not have been a Christian? Not likely. After all, it was the fundamental presuppositions of the Christian faith that led him to some of the greatest scientific discoveries of all time. Faith did not hinder him, it helped him. Why would it hinder him now? That would only happen if, like James Kirchick, he stubbornly and blindly insisted that faith and science must have nothing whatsoever to do with each other. Instead, I think Newton would have challenged Kirchick to back up his baseless assertions about Christianity. It’s more than a little disturbing to see thinkers with such a shaky grasp on reason and history in positions of influence. They would do well to heed the words of another great historical figure, C. S. Lewis, when he wrote about a logical fallacy that he himself had believed in his younger days: “My ‘chronological snobbery’ [was] the uncritical acceptance of the intellectual climate common to our own age and the assumption that whatever has gone out of date is on that account discredited.” Lewis realized you must find out why that thinking went out of date, if it was refuted or just became unfashionable. He encouraged people to seek, not the fashions, but truth. But sadly, should our best and brightest ever encounter Lewis, they would likely be too busy declaring him on their own side of the argument to listen to a word he said.  
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For Further Reading and Information
Mary Zeiss Stange, “When It Comes to Gays, ‘What Would Luther Do’?USA Today, 9 July 2007.   Albert Mohler, “What Did Luther Do?Christian Post, 21 July 2007.   James Kirchick, “Very Superstitious,” New Republic Online, 7 July 2007.   Mark Tooley, “Martin Luther Comes Out,” American Spectator, 23 July 2007.   “There is Little Evidence that Luther Would Support a Gay Lifestyle,” Reader’s responses to Stange’s column in USA Today.   Gina Dalfonzo, “Because I Said So, That’s Why!The Point, 23 July 2007.   Catherine Claire, “What Would Luther Do?The Point, 26 July 2007.

08/16/07

Chuck Colson

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