THE PROBLEM OF DYADIC REASON AND ITS EXPRESSION IN INTERTEXTUALITY
In employing these two terms to the act of Bible reading, dyadic reasoning needs to be understood as man reasoning toward his natural existence on the basis of human intelligence. Triadic reasoning, on the other hand, is man reasoning toward his material existence based on an inspired intelligence. Idolatry as it turns out, is a degenerate triad. Idolatry is man bringing human intelligence to bear on the will and power of God and reassigning it to a false point of causation. Cosmic evolution would certainly fall within this category of dyadic reasoning.
Historically, men have employed a dyadic structure of reasoning in the exercise of Biblical interpretation. The world uses a hierarchical structure of human intelligence that we call the nine fields of inquiry to compile information about the Biblical text as it is fitted within the framework of these nine fields. All human knowledge is catalogued within these nine fields. This type of textual approach appeals to the respective fields of inquiry to see what each of these have to say about the text of scripture. The world feels that it is somehow important to know what the scientist, the historian, the clergy, the legal apparatus and others have to say about the value and place of scripture within the human community. This form if intertextuality regards scripture as only one of many texts that is subordinate to human analysis based on all other texts. The practice of intertextuality places the Word of God within the dyadic structure of human intelligence. This elevates human intelligence over the inspired intelligence of revelation. The world will never allow the Bible to be regarded as the single hierarchical text that brings all others into subjection to itself. This of course is not a new problem. We see this same human tendency throughout the Bible. The Pharisees regarded the Law only within the context of centuries of rabbinic interpretation. It was because the Jews were so dyadic in their thinking that Jesus constantly had to correct their corrupted understanding of the Law. They had elevated their traditionally imposed interpretation above the language of text and Jesus said that in doing so, they had made the Word of God null and void. When I consider the way we have approached the Biblical text, it becomes increasingly apparent that the Church has done the very same thing that the Jews of the first century had done.
The world will not allow us to say openly that certain socially accepted values are wrong. We are not allowed to pass judgment on the behavior of the world or to impose Biblical standards of moral conduct upon others. We are told that others have things of to offer, that other religions and their texts should also be given equal or even greater consideration. The world would ask "who are you to say your way of thinking is right and everyone else is wrong?" When we refuse to consider other religious or secular points of view that are based in human intelligence we are considered idiosyncratic, arrogant and closed minded. We cannot say that homosexuality is perversion and sinful, after all, one might say, when the Bible was written people were unaware that tendencies toward homosexuality were the result of hormonal deficiencies determined at one's birth, after all, God loves everyone and would not condemn someone who was born this way. These questions make certain assumptions about the origin and authority of scripture. Such thinking will not permit the Bible to be accepted as a uniquely legitimate standard for determining human behavior. This renders God and scripture as context dependent. The world demands that God must only be defined based on the human frame of reference within the material context. Ideas about the personality of God then become subject to anthropomorphism. Rather than desiring to be like the Creator, we create a god in our own image. This is the very root of idolatry.