Times have changed in so many ways in the twenty five years since I started teaching Introduction to Biblical Studies.
It used to be that at the start of the very first class I would ask students to introduce themselves to the rest of the class by sharing their majors, their extracurricular activities, their perceptions of the Bible, and their faith backgrounds.
I never ask about their faith backgrounds anymore. As times changed, it struck me that the question assumed that they have, and that they
should
have, faith backgrounds. Twenty five years ago this was a matter of course. Students readily volunteered that they were Roman Catholic, or Protestant, or Orthodox, or Jewish. On rare occasions students might volunteer that they were agnostic or atheist, but this was no cause for judgment. It was a respectable answer because it denoted that they were thoughtful and questioning when it came to the large questions.
I asked the question in the first place because, innocuously, I wanted to know whom I was addressing so I could cater my lectures accordingly. If my students were preponderantly Roman Catholic, for example, I would elevate the texts that gave rise to the papacy and the veneration of Mary. But, as I said, the question came, through the years, to seem presumptuous.
Nonetheless, it didn’t stop me from liking to know whom I am addressing. So recently, rather than asking about their faith backgrounds, I decided to ask them instead about the basic convictions from which they operate.
The first student responded blankly that he didn’t know. I have noticed that when one student gives an answer, even though it is a thoughtless one, it gives the next student permission to give the same answer. Down they went like dominoes. All the students answered that they didn’t know. Not one knew the basic convictions from which they operated. Now, this, obviously, is not a good thing. But I don’t bring it up to elicit shock and outrage, so that we can commiserate together that the youth today are going to hell in a handbag.
Because I wonder how many adults when asked about the basic convictions from which they operate would answer that they don’t know. I’d wager a lot. I’d wager most. So the bottom line is that it is likely that most of us don’t know what we believe. And since belief is the precondition for action, most of us don’t know why we act. Socrates stated famously that the unexamined life is not worth living. That might be a bit extreme, but surely the unexamined life is a diminished one.
Because if you don’t know the basic convictions from which you operate, you tend to operate by default from impulses and impressions that are small and selfish.
One is, Is it fair to me?
Your brother is and always has been down on his luck. He just can’t seem to cut it in life. And your parents give him money! You made the wise choices, and he gets rewarded.
Or someone in your department gets a promotion. Admittedly he works hard. Sure, he has good ideas. But you’ve been there longer.
Is it fair to me?
Another is,
What will others think? You have always done what was expected of you. You have always kept up appearances. Conventionality and propriety -- those are your bywords. Therefore, you have always, thank heavens, escaped the judgement of others. Then your son out of the blue informs you that he is dropping out of college to live in a yurt and rescue monkeys in the Amazon Rainforest. A noble decision, but you can only think of the disgrace.
What will others think?
Another is,
Are you on my side against those who have wronged me?
Your husband leaves you after long years of marriage. Marriages are complicated things, but you go to a place of generalities that cast you as the victim --
I gave him the best years of my life!
A few sentences into every conversation, you quickly segue to a rehearsal of your victimization in order to reinforce bonds and test loyalties.
Are you on my side against those who have wronged me?
Yes, absent knowing the basic convictions from which you operate, you tend by default to operate from impulses and impressions that are small and selfish. And who wants to operate from impulses and impressions that are small and selfish? What person of any quality or import ever has?
Think of your exemplars; think of all those you look up to and seek to emulate. Perhaps they are family members. Perhaps they are teachers, coaches, or friends. Or perhaps they are writ larger. Perhaps they are political or spiritual leaders. Perhaps they are war heroes. Can you imagine any of them grousing, Is it fair to me? Or fretting,
What will others think? Or wheedling,
Are you on my side against those who have wronged me? If you could imagine such a thing, they wouldn’t be your exemplars. No doubt they know the basic convictions from which they operate.
At any rate, we are here at church, so let us turn our thoughts to our ultimate exemplar, Jesus Christ. What are the basic convictions from which he operated? To state that he knew them would be to state the obvious. He loved the Lord with all his heart and his soul and his mind. This means that he held fast to God’s truth, to God’s justice, and to God’s love. This means that he extolled mercy and forgiveness. This means that he forswore hypocrisy and hardness of heart. This means that he sought unity and peace across all divides.This means he looked confidently to God’s triumph.
And above all, this means he accepted that by the definite plan and foreknowledge of God he must bear a cross.
Yes, Jesus Christ, our ultimate exemplar, knew the basic convictions from which he operated. But it is not enough to state just this. Because Jesus Christ is more than our ultimate exemplar. We must think of him as such, but we must think of him as more. Jesus Christ was too the Son of God. So the cross he bore by the definite plan and foreknowledge of God was not merely an example of his faith and obedience. It actually changed something. It actually accomplished something.
Because Jesus Christ was the Son of God, it was within his power to carry
our
sin to
his
grave; it was within his power to rise triumphant from that grave; it was within his power to bestow his Holy Spirit into our lives. And this means that his Holy Spirit is with us here and now. So when
he
is the basic conviction from which we operate, he is indeed, fully and literally, the basic conviction from which we operate.
Because we are Christians, the basic convictions from which we operate are the very core of our lives. What’s more, we can carry them to our graves. Amen.
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