DLGP

Doctor of Leadership in Global Perspectives: Crafting Ministry in an Interconnected World

The Soul of Postmodernism

Written by: on January 26, 2018

Dominic Erdozain’s, The Soul of Doubt: The Religious Roots of Unbelief from Luther to Marx was one of the books I was most excited to read when I first saw the reading list for this semester. Anything that helps engage Christians to be more critically minded and to embrace difficulties in faith, is right up my alley. But I became even more excited when I learned he was the same Dominic that was with us in Capetown, and more excited again when I found out he would be joining us for our Chat this coming Monday. (The skeptic in me asks are we reading his book because he is an advisor, or is he an advisor because of this exemplary book?) I immediately notice that the topic of this book is very relevant our cohort and our Leadership with a Global Perspective program. I became worried however when I dove into the subject and tried to grasp all that was being presented. The language from this book, and the videos I found of the author being interviewed, were difficult for me to grasp originally. It is a commentary on a shifting of a worldview that seems to have (possibly) happened hundreds of years ago. I found myself struggling to keep up. However, this author was not speaking on things so far out in left field that made me say, “what is the point of all this?” The claims of the secularism being caused by Christians is provocative and, if true, very important.

The presented division of secularism vs Christianity has given the assumption to generations of non-believers that Christians are superstitious and afraid of progress. Dominic Erdozain shifts the origin of doubt away from scientist and back into the hands and minds of the faith-philosophers. This is a significant work in that it redeems some of the integrity and credibility of Christianity. To lay claim that the doubt and deconstruction we find ourselves surrounded by is not from an onslaught of secular scientists is a paradigm-shifting idea. Our mindset shifts significantly if we can attribute our doubt to actually Christianity’s own desire to find the superior and accurate truths. This also changes the assumption that science is aggressively attacking and tearing down the “superstitions” of Christians. Rather it is the religious who are being critical of themselves. It is actually out of a devotion to God, and to honor him with the must true truth.

I’m reminded of Galileo who was (as popularly believed, although not entirely true) was condemned by the church for promoting that the sun was the center of the universe (solar system more accurately). The story goes, that the church was outraged by this because Galileo was attacking God’s universe and attempting to tear down the authority of the church, and thus he was excommunicated as a heretic. (This again is not completely accurate, there was a lot of other drama going on in Galileo’s life with the church.) But the truth is that Galileo was a devoutly Christian man and was embarrassed by his own church’s inability to accurately report the lunar and solar calendars. This put the church in the awkward position of being wrong on a yearly basis, which Galileo felt hurt the credibility of the church and its salvific claims. And so Galileo out of a heart to find the real truth, and to strengthens Christianity’s authority, sought out to find a superior model of the universe. I see in many ways that this is analogous to what Dominic Erdozain is pointing out that Spinoza did. Spinoza’s deconstruction was not an attempt to deconstruction Christ, but to find superior explanations for the real truth. Many back then in Spinoza’s day might have accused him of heresy against Christianity. Likewise, many Christians today blame this lack of blind following as a secular attack against Christianity. but I believe, as Erdozian persuades, that inquiring actually adds credibility, trust, and strength to the Christian worldview.

Spinoza’s early deconstruction of some of Christianity’s assumptions is just a prelude to the deconstruction that is prevalent in all of postmodernism today. It’s actually quite a surprise to hear so much of postmodern thought from Spinoza who lived hundreds of years before it became prevalent in the world. But perhaps this makes sense, being that Spinoza was of Portuguese/Spanish descent and many have said that Spain has actually been postmodern for centuries. Perhaps Spinoza was a catalyst that moved that region of the world into postmodernism quicker than the rest.

Lastly, what I would have liked to see, although granted the author defined his scope in the Title, From Luther to Marx, more interaction with this “soul of doubt” throughout early Christianity, the early church and perhaps even ancient Judaism. For example, Abelard’s quote seems to fit perfectly with what Erdozain is saying in 1120 A.D., “through doubting we are led to inquire, and by inquiry, we perceive the truth.”

 

Erdozian, Dominic. The Soul of Doubt: The Religious Roots of Unbelief from Luther to Marx. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2016.

 

About the Author

Kyle Chalko

5 responses to “The Soul of Postmodernism”

  1. Dan Kreiss says:

    Kyle,

    Good post. The connection with Galileo is well thought out and underscores the desire many challengers of the Christian faith have had to make the Church be more than it was. Unfortunately, I think we have not learned all we could have from incidents like these and continue to fight tooth and nail over issues that end up harming our credibility. Instead of truly listening to those who have an opposing point of view and risking being incorrect ourselves it seems we would rather plug our ears to opposition and turn up the volume of our own rhetoric. Hopefully, there will be those in the coming generation who will be more willing to live in the paradox that is the faith experience.

  2. Jason Turbeville says:

    Kyle,
    I enjoyed your post, good analysis of not just the book but in bringing Galileo into the same realm helps to transition the idea of Christians seeking God’s truth so that the church may be strengthened in its own beliefs. I have always felt that those who are afraid to look inward miss what God has shown. What do you think?

  3. Trisha Welstad says:

    Your claim that Erdozain shifts the conversation away from Christians being superstitious and afraid of progress is interesting. I wonder if Erdozain is mostly choosing some of the primary doubters who questioned many in the church who were superstitious and afraid of progress? Today I see this being true as well. It seems that status-quo is a ‘safe’ place to be for many in the church and asking questions and trying to push the church toward a place of truth and integrity at times leaves one on the outside. What do you think?

    Also, I am curious what you intend to write about and if it has any relation to post-modernity.

  4. Jean Ollis says:

    Hi Kyle! I loved your statement: “Our mindset shifts significantly if we can attribute our doubt to actually Christianity’s own desire to find the superior and accurate truths.” Kudos for your Galileo example. As Science advances and we begin to question and/or understand genetics and the brain, the faith community will need to find superior and accurate truths – do I dare say regardless of a biblical interpretation? Your thoughts on this? Am I pushing it too far?

  5. Dave Watermulder says:

    Hey Kyle,
    Thanks for this post– I think you did a good job of laying out the premise and underlying ideas of the book and also to push back at the end of your post about what you had hoped to see more of. I think it’s a good point: this is more of a historical/philosophical look at this question, rather than a personal, or necessarily biblical one. I guess, I’m with you in this, where I think a lot of our contemporary Christian folks struggle with doubt in their personal life and experience, but this book is addressing something really different from that. Maybe it’s beyond the scope of what he was doing, but I’m glad that you noticed it and raised it.

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