Because of its reputation as
an esoteric field thanks to areas within the broader discipline
concerned with matters barely connected with everyday life, many ask,
“Why study philosophy?” when confronted with the subject.
Related to this are concerns and reservations raised by many sincere
Christians regarding this area of study because of luminaries such as
Friedrich Nietzsche and Karl Marx who used their formidable cognitive
abilities to undermine the Judeo-Christian framework of Western
civilization.
But in reality, philosophy
can be a powerful tool capable of helping the Christian to better
comprehend God's universe and to fulfill their Scriptural obligations
as salt of the earth. In “Introduction To Philosophy: A Christian
Perspective”, Norman Geisler provides the reader with a number of
reasons why the study of philosophy is useful beyond the exercise of
mental abilities (20-22).
For starters, philosophy can
aide the individual in understanding human society. Though many fail
to realize it, philosophical issues are found at the base of
civilized life and how a populace approaches these issues will
determine the very quality of life enjoyed throughout society.
For example, does a woman's
right to reproductive choice outweigh the human rights of the tiny
life growing within her? Or, is it just to discriminate against
those who have done no wrong in order to benefit the descendants of
those who have faced historic injustices even though these
descendants currently enjoy a considerable degree of equality?
It has been said that
America is the only nation based on a set of ideas rather than an
accident of geography. Those seeking to solve these complex social
issues had better offer justification beyond the brute power of the
state if delicately balanced liberties are to remain intact.
Professor Geisler also
points out that philosophy with its emphasis on clear thought can
help liberate the individual from provincialism and clarify the
meaning of Scripture. Many times what the Church considers holy writ
are in fact human accretions added on for whatever reason. These
might be legitimate or mere grabs at power whose origins have been
forgotten in the distant past.
Besides assisting the Church
in sifting between what is God's directive and man's opinion,
legitimate philosophical inquiry can elucidate the holy reasoning
behind a number of divine decrees. For example, through the
application of reason and analysis, one can deduce that the Biblical
dictates forbidding adultery are in fact rules set down by a loving
Father rather than by a deity seeking to be a cosmic wet blanket.
It would be an accurate
analogy to compare history's philosophical giants with the great
military leaders of the past. Just as aspiring military officers
study the strategies and tactics of these figures for the purposes of
perfecting their own craft in order to defeat their battlefield
adversaries, Christians must know their own opponents in the arena of
ideas so that they might win souls for Christ and to retake social
territories in the culture war (or at least prevent the loss of
additional intellectual or moral ground).
For those turned off by
military analogies and comparisons, John Warwick Montgomery suggested
that the apologist must soak up the ideology of his day in a fashion
not unlike a missionary learning a foreign language in order to
communicate with those spiraling down the path towards eternal
damnation. Philosophy, rightly applied, can be an immense help in
the accomplishment of this task, especially when so much of
contemporary thought is an eclectic mishmash of Nietzschean,
Darwinian and Marxist ideology. With even a passing familiarity with
philosophy, one is able to realize how many blows are struck at human
liberty simply through poorly defined phrases and concepts.
II Corinthians 10:5 says,
“We demolish arguments and every pretension that sets itself up
against the knowledge of God, and we take every thought captive to
make it obedient to Christ.” For too long assorted factions within
the Church have sought to sanctify their own ignorance. As a result,
culture is reaping a harvest of bloodshed, blasphemy and disbelief.
It must be realized that God
is the God of all creation, including philosophy when built upon a
solid foundation. If Charlie Church is to reach out to Phil
Philosophy, he must do so by showing that this field rightly divided
also points back to the creator and sustainer of all things.
By
Frederick Meekins
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