In his chapter “Appropriating Postmodernism,” Westphal says some good things. The devil, as we shall see, is in his applications, but in isolation he says some really good things where I believe we can all agree.
“But he thought the goal of theological rigor was to think about God as humans should think about God rather than to think about God as God thinks about God” (p. 80).
“But this does not entail that the Truth has no access to us . . .” (p. 87).
When God told Adam to stay away from a particular tree, He had a particular tree in mind, and He expected Adam to have that same tree in mind. He did not expect Adam to have a divine view of the tree, or to look at it from nowhere, or to peer over God’s shoulder, and say, “Ah, yes, that tree. How many atoms make it up again? I find this omniscience tiring. Can I take a nap now?” God and Adam are talking about the same tree. They are not talking about the same tree in the same way. How could they? But if there is no intersection of knowledge at all, then (in the name of a “high” view of God) we have said that God is unable to talk to us at all. God’s Scripture is no longer divine relevation but rather a divine grunting and pointing in an attempt to get through to hopelessly stupid creatures. We have gotten into this jumble because we have not understood the importance of adverbs here. God knows that my keyboard is black. Turns out that I know that too. But He knows it everlastingly, exhaustively, and I know it kinda. And I have been known, particularly by my wife, to confuse navy and black. But I am pretty sure about the keyboard.
Westphal wants to appropriate some of the suspicions that postmodernists have about modernity, and he wants to do it without swallowing the secularism of the postmodernists whole and entire. “I wish to propose, one that seeks a middle way between the total rejection of the refusenik and the equally uncritical jumping on the bandwagon of this month’s politically correct fad” (p. 76). I appreciate the intent, but there is a real trap in this kind of “split the difference” approach.
Speaking of the faith in Enlightenment reason that pomos have lost, Westphal says this:
“It should be obvious, but needs to be noted, that their loss of faith represents a threat to moral and religious values just and only to the degree that those values have been wedded to modern or Enlightenment conceptions of reason” (p. 78).
But there is another option, another possibility. The pomo loss of faith could also represent a threat to genuine moral and religious values to the extent that modernity made false and idolatrous claims about the basis for certainty. Certainty existed in the world before the Enlightenment tried to give it autonomous grounding. If moral and religious values got their grounding from an illegitimate wedding with Enlightenment thought, then Westphal is right. But if Enlightenment thought stole certainty from the Christian faith and gave it a false foundation, then Westphal has missed something important. Is certainty the baby or is it the bathwater?
As indicated earlier, the real problem Westphal has with absolutists is at the point of application.
Westphal explains the postmodernists’ wariness about Truth. “The key to understanding the claim ‘The truth is that there is no Truth’ is found in the second appearance of the key term, the one where ‘Truth’ appears with a capital T” (p. 81). He does not agree with this, but is sympathetic to it — we will discuss his formulation of it in a minute. “Postmodernists give a variety of reasons (yes, they give reasons, like a good philosopher should) for denying that we ever simply get it right, that we ever have Truth in this sense” (p. 82). In other words, they are rejecting a certain metaphysical notion that we can apprehend the Truth. They are not saying that we have no truth in the ordinary earth-bound sense.
“So postmodernists can debate what theories we should adopt, while denying that any of them simply and finally gets it right” (p. 86).
Does truth have a different relationship to Truth than falsehood does? If so, what is the nature of the difference? What is the basis for the difference between true and false down here? Is one man’s true another man’s false? Or is there something to which we may compare them both? What is that?
When God stoops and reveals truth to us (not Truth), does He expect us to act boldly with these truths, or in a diffident manner because, after all, it is not the Truth? Does God expect us to do very important things in the world on the basis of these truths? Things like declaring war, signing execution papers or papers of pardon, issuing eviction notices, or teaching a classroom full of children? Does the rejection of Truth for humans lead us to wholeheartedly embrace truths for humans, leading them to speak the way Christians do in D.A. Carson’s infamous list of verses? Or do we now look sideways at truth, like a nervous skater, as though the truth were a half inch of ice on the pond of hubris?
So, we don’t have access to the Truth? What do we have access to then? Why do we have to “make do” with truths? Why can’t we preach them, embrace them, love them, declare them dogmatically to an unbelieving world, excommunicate on the basis of them, comfort the afflicted with them? Why the downgrade to “make do?”
We all know why Truth would never be tentative. But where is the argument that creaturely truth must be tentative, otherwise it betrays itself as a surreptitious claim to have the Truth? Where does the Bible say that the righteous (bold as a lion) have given way to epistemic arrogance?
When Daniel went to the lions, did he think he was God? When Stephen’s face shone, was it with the light of uncertainty? When Antipas gave his life as a faithful witness, was it on the basis of some preliminary epistemic sketches? When Paul was flogged, was it because of his dogged refusal to make absolute assertions? When we confess that Jesus is Lord, are we so foolish as to think we are simply getting it right?