I fully agree with this post, but I would also say 100% of the church interprets scripture according to their own experiences. It is for this reason that I choose "very much", because I am very much a sinner. If I claim that my faith is fully in line with scripture, then I feel I assert a claim that I fully understand all scripture and the Godhead. This would be a lie, so I cannot say that even though I want to. To that end, my identity as a totally depraved man is the personal experience that affects my faith the most. So when I say very much, I mean very much a sinner.
Like those in the world, most of us in the Church have been taught from birth that there is an acceptable, logical, and rational way in which we are expected to view situations in life. We evaluate human events based on a sensible horizon. This view of our world is drawn from life experiences and is passed down to each succeeding generation by parents and teachers. We treat knowledge as an emerging social property rather than a shared conditionality with God. Society tells us what must be regarded as useful knowledge. This philosophy has certainly had a measure of influence within the Church. Desiring to retain credibility as Christian members of society we attempt to bring our social and cultural experiences to bear upon scripture to make sense of the world around us. We tend to interpret the text dependent upon our place within society. With such an approach to the text, a farmer, a businessman, a lawyer, a doctor, and a teacher would all have formulated varying interpretations of the text based on their individual experiences. Members of society attempt to understand scripture by mapping what society regards as acceptable knowledge onto the text. We are told that we must always engage the text in such a way that it will not come into conflict with our views of "reality". We are taught that in the face of real life situations we must react to these events in a sensible and rational way because we live in a "real world" where physics and physiology must be confronted. This approach to the text embraces man as the source of causation. We attempt to manipulate a given situation in such a way as to develop all the necessary antecedents to create a solution to the situation. Indeed, man has always attempted to find his own answers to human experiences.
As we examine scripture however, we see that God repeatedly and deliberately places man in the most unfavorable circumstances to show us that resolution never comes out of circumstances, no matter how man may attempt to manipulate the relative conditions of a given situation. The overwhelming lesson of scripture is that resolution always and only comes from the Lord. The promises of God are the source of redemptive causation that He imposes upon the situation. In this way, He causes things in the natural order to come into a state of unity with His will. Resolution always stands outside of and beyond the control of man no matter how he attempts to forge a situation to his favor. We can ill afford to approach our experiences as though any kind of symmetry can exist between our situation and the "sensible" horizon. We must learn to ignore what we understand about physics and physiology and allow the promises of God to determine the outcome of our experiences. These elements, although real, are not determinate. In scripture, these things are never determinate factors when we consider the promises of God. The promises of God will always influence the material stream and bring it into conformity with His will no matter how overwhelming we may think the physical factors may be. It is not an easy assignment to see our place in the world through the eyes of the Almighty, yet this is what He requires of us. God calls this faith.
Like those in the world, most of us in the Church have been taught from birth that there is an acceptable, logical, and rational way in which we are expected to view situations in life. We evaluate human events based on a sensible horizon. This view of our world is drawn from life experiences and is passed down to each succeeding generation by parents and teachers. We treat knowledge as an emerging social property rather than a shared conditionality with God. Society tells us what must be regarded as useful knowledge. This philosophy has certainly had a measure of influence within the Church. Desiring to retain credibility as Christian members of society we attempt to bring our social and cultural experiences to bear upon scripture to make sense of the world around us. We tend to interpret the text dependent upon our place within society. With such an approach to the text, a farmer, a businessman, a lawyer, a doctor, and a teacher would all have formulated varying interpretations of the text based on their individual experiences. Members of society attempt to understand scripture by mapping what society regards as acceptable knowledge onto the text. We are told that we must always engage the text in such a way that it will not come into conflict with our views of "reality". We are taught that in the face of real life situations we must react to these events in a sensible and rational way because we live in a "real world" where physics and physiology must be confronted. This approach to the text embraces man as the source of causation. We attempt to manipulate a given situation in such a way as to develop all the necessary antecedents to create a solution to the situation. Indeed, man has always attempted to find his own answers to human experiences.
As we examine scripture however, we see that God repeatedly and deliberately places man in the most unfavorable circumstances to show us that resolution never comes out of circumstances, no matter how man may attempt to manipulate the relative conditions of a given situation. The overwhelming lesson of scripture is that resolution always and only comes from the Lord. The promises of God are the source of redemptive causation that He imposes upon the situation. In this way, He causes things in the natural order to come into a state of unity with His will. Resolution always stands outside of and beyond the control of man no matter how he attempts to forge a situation to his favor. We can ill afford to approach our experiences as though any kind of symmetry can exist between our situation and the "sensible" horizon. We must learn to ignore what we understand about physics and physiology and allow the promises of God to determine the outcome of our experiences. These elements, although real, are not determinate. In scripture, these things are never determinate factors when we consider the promises of God. The promises of God will always influence the material stream and bring it into conformity with His will no matter how overwhelming we may think the physical factors may be. It is not an easy assignment to see our place in the world through the eyes of the Almighty, yet this is what He requires of us. God calls this faith.