The Postmodern Challenge

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Transcript The Postmodern Challenge

The Postmodern Challenge
Michael Goheen
Trinity Western University
Langley, B.C.
Ephesians 4:14-15
Then we will no longer be infants,
tossed back and forth by the waves
and blown here and there by every
wind of teaching and by the cunning
and craftiness of men in their deceitful
scheming. Instead speaking the truth
in love, we will in all tings grow up into
him who is the Head, that is Christ.
New Winds of Change
A massive intellectual [worldview, cultural]
revolution is taking place that is perhaps as
great as that which marked off the modern
world from the Middle Ages (Diogenes
Allen).
If the world has not approached its end, it
has reached a major watershed in history,
equal in importance to the turn from the
Middle Ages to the Renaissance
(Alexander Solzhenitsyn).
What is postmodernity?
“This word [postmodernism] has no
meaning. Use it as often as
possible.”
New cultural period
Failure of modernity?
New worldview?
How are Christians to respond?
We are not intended to be conformed to the
world but to be transformed by the renewing of
our minds. God uses changes and chances in
history to shake His people from time to time
out of their conformity with the world; but when
that happens our job surely is not just to push
over the tiller and sail before the winds of
change, but to look afresh to our chart and
compass and to ask how we now use the new
winds and the new tides to carry out our
sailing orders. Every new situation is a
summons to bring all our traditions afresh
“under the word of God.”
- Lesslie Newbigin
No longer tossed back and forth
Present: New postmodern winds
blowing
Past: Sailing peacefully before
modern winds
Our task: Not simply push over tiller
and sail before PM winds of change
Our task: Look afresh at our chart,
compass, sailing orders
Our task: Understand changing winds
How are Christians to respond?
The real question is: What is God doing in
these tremendous events of our time?
How are we to understand them and
interpret them to others, so that we and
they may play our part in them as coworkers with God? Nostaligia for the past
and fear for the future are equally out of
place for the Christian. He is required, in
the situation in which God places him, to
understand the signs of the times in the
light of the reality of God’s present and
coming kingdom, and to give witness
faithfully about the purpose of God for all
men.
- Lesslie Newbigin
Response to Changing Times
Enable us to see our conformity with
culture
Not simply conform to postmodern winds
Nostalgia for past, conservatism wrong
Require fresh analysis of cultural situation
Analysis done in the light of God’s word
“What is God doing in these events?”
Understand for the purpose of witness
Postmodern Challenge
Postmodernity is skepticism toward
big cultural stories of progress.
“Simplifying to the extreme, I define
postmodern as incredulity toward
metanarratives” (J-F. Lyotard).
Big Stories of Progress
Humanistic vision
Build better world through science
and technology
20th century forms:
Liberalism
Communism
Failure!
Why don’t we believe these big
stories anymore?
Growing poverty
Declining economy
Depletion of resources
Destruction of the environment
Escalating militarization (nuclear
weapons)
Social and psychological problems
Idols have not delivered on
promises
Material prosperity? Poverty is
growing!
Freedom? Controlled by media,
education, big business, government!
Truth? Bewildering pluralism!
Justice and peace? Oppression, war,
violence, crime abound!
Impotence of Idols
Of what value is an idol, since a man has carved
it? Or an image that teaches lies? For he who
makes it trusts in his own creation; he makes idols
that cannot speak (Habakkuk 2:18).
Their idols are silver and gold, made by the hands
of men. They have mouths but cannot speak,
eyes, but they cannot see; they have ears, but
they cannot hear, noses, but they cannot smell;
they have hands but they cannot feel, feet but they
cannot walk; nor can they utter a sound with their
throats. Those who make them will be like them,
and so will all who trust in them (Ps.115:4-7).
What is God doing in our time?
Judgement!
“...you shall suffer the penalty…
and bear the consquences of
your sinful idolatry…” (Ezekiel
23:49).
O Lord, my strength and my fortress, my
refuge in time of distress, to you the
nations will come from the ends of the
earth and say, “Our fathers possessed
nothing but false gods, worthless idols that
did them no good. Do men make their own
gods? Yes but they are not gods!
Therefore, I will teach them--this time I will
teach them my power and might. Then
they will know that my name is the Lord
(Jeremiah 16:19-21).
Postmodern Challenge
Postmodernity is skepticism toward
big stories of progress
Postmodernity is a challenge toward a
rationalistic view of humankind
Christian view of humanity
Religious centre/direction
Serve God or idols
Many aspects: body, emotional,
rational, imagination, historical,
communal, aesthetic, judicial, ethical,
etc.
Creational harmony
Modernity: reason exalted
Idolatry and Depreciation
Idolatry of some part of creation
Depreciation of other aspects
God’s faithfulness to harmonious
interrelation of diverse creation
Suppressed aspects forces its way
back
Understanding Postmodern Times
God made human beings with numerous
functions and abilities
God made human beings to be unified in
service and knowledge of God
When that religious dimension is denied,
one of the functions is absolutized
Other aspects diminished
Rise of suppressed aspects to new
idolatry
Non-rationalist dimensions of
humanity suppressed by rationalism
Body
Emotions
Senses
Subconscious
Desire, passion
Religious
Imagination
Instinct, intuition
What is God doing in our time?
Human rationality cannot bring
redemption
Invitation to find true unity
Human beings are made to live in
communion with God
Faith, obedience, and love define
humanity not rational activity
Postmodern Challenge
Postmodernity is skepticism toward
big stories of progress
Postmodernity is a challenge toward a
rationalistic view of humankind
Postmodernity is a protest against an
objectivist view of knowledge
Modern worldview . . .
Stories of progress
Rooted in confident rationalistic
humanism
Science tool to enable man to
achieve goal
Objective knowledge of science
Science gives us objective knowledge
Our minds can mirror world
Scientific method gives us a neutral
standpoint outside relativities of
culture and history
Objective and neutral knowledge
enables modern man to shape the
world with technology and social
planning
Subjective factors shaping
knowledge
SOCIAL
Tradition
Community
Language
Culture
History
Faith
PERSONAL
Feelings
Imagination
Subconscious
Gender
Class
Race
Change in knowledge
Certainty to uncertainty
One truth to pluralism
Objectivity to relativism
Need for new epistemology
Incomparably the most urgent missionary
task for the next few decades is the
mission to ‘modernity’ . . . It calls for the
use of sharp intellectual tools, to probe
behind the unquestioned assumptions of
modernity and uncover the hidden credo
which supports them. . . .At the most basic
level there is need for critical examination
from a Christian standpoint of the reigning
assumptions in epistemology . . .
(Newbigin)
Postmodern Challenge
Postmodernity is skepticism toward
big stories of progress
Postmodernity is a challenge toward a
rationalistic view of humankind
Postmodernity is a protest against an
objectivist view of knowledge
Postmodernity is the triumph of
economism and consumerism
Late modernity (Walsh/Middleton)
HEAD of GOLD: ECONOMISM
(Idolatrous faith in economic growth as goal
of human life)
TORSO of SILVER: TECHNICISM
(Idolatrous faith in technology)
LEGS of BRONZE: SCIENTISM
(Idolatrous faith in science)
Growth of Consumer Culture
Industrial Revolution
Technology, rationalization of work
Free market comes to centre
Liberalism and capitalism
20th century: Economism,
consumerism
Global dimensions
Consumerism and postmodernity
“The postmodern is rightly associated
with a society where consumer
lifestyles and mass consumption
dominate the waking lives of its
members.”
-David Lyon
Creeping consumerism
“Once established, such a culture of
consumption is quite undiscriminating
and everything becomes a consumer
item, including meaning, truth, and
knowledge.”
-Philip Sampson
Consumption of experiences
“From rock music to tourism to
television and even education,
advertising imperatives and consumer
demand are no longer for goods, but
for experiences.”
-Stephen Connor
Christian response: 1-5
As a believing community we are entering
into a new missionary situation
We need to understand the postmodern
shift not simply react
We must be committed understanding and
living within the story of the Bible
We must engage in dialogue from within
the story of the Bible
This dialogue with postmodernity will give
us a deepening insight into modernity that
has been shaping our culture for centuries
Christian response: 6-9
In postmodernity we will find dangerous
idols that bring death
In postmodernity we will find new insights
that bring life
We need to struggle with new ways to
understand our relation to postmodern
culture so we can be both faithful and
relevant
This dialogue with postmodernity must not
lead only to understanding but must take
on forms of communal life that embody life
and reject death