Lessons In Faith And Knowledge
Abstract
The aim of this paper is to consider how well equipped philosophy is to meet the logical and epistemologicaldemands of religious belief. That this belief is a response to questions both practical and urgent – the nature ofone’s existence, the reality of salvation – frequently seems quite unimportant in a field dominated by rationalismand theistical realism. To properly understand both the response and the questions that give rise to it, I want toreturn to the foundations of religious thought. These foundations, I suggest, are not found in pure intuitions ofdivine reality, or in objective perceptions of divine handiwork. Religious thought begins with religiouseducation. That is where we will find the conceptual tools to make sense of talk about God. More importantly,perhaps, that is where we will find a criterion of knowledge.Education embodies the creative involvement of one mind in the development of another. The philosophicalimport of this is two-fold. First, it provides a model for conceiving Creation and the Agent of Creation. Thisresolves the conflict between classical and neo-classical ontologies, offers instead a chastened transcendence:otherness without isolation, involvement without equiprimordiality. Second, it instantiates providence in action,God at work in the believer’s life. Our criterion of knowledge, then, is a matter of impact: the ‘experiencabledifference’ providence makes to the believer’s life. Together, model and instance underpin a realignment ofpraxis and theoria. Religious praxis stands upon its claim to truth; without praxis embodied by the connection ofdeveloping minds, truth cannot be ascertained