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BY
RUSTY BENSON | AFA Journal Associate Editor
Anyone who has ever used the term worldview should tip their
hat to the late Francis Schaeffer, the Presbyterian minister who
in 1955 founded LAbri Fellowship in Switzerland. Schaeffer
popularized the term in writings and in conversation with those
who came to his chalet looking for answers to the big questions
of life.
Nancy Pearcey was one of those seekers who spent time at LAbri
during the early 1970s. As Schaeffer lectured and led discussion
groups on Christian apologetics, Pearcey began to see Christianity
as the final truth of reality and, therefore, relevant to all areas
of life.
Some 40 years later, Western Christians owe Pearcey a similar appreciation
for her landmark book Total Truth: Liberating Christianity from
Its Cultural Captivity (Crossway, 2004). With remarkable
clarity and keen analysis, Pearcey builds on Schaeffers views
arguing that what ails the modern church is the prevailing view
among believers that Christianity is only a set of private beliefs
rather than objective truth. Pearcey contends that this divided
view of truth applauded by a growing secular society
renders Christianity publicly irrelevant.
In this second in a series of interviews with Christian culture
watchers, Pearcey reflects on her personal passion to promote worldview
thinking among Christians and summarizes some of the major themes
of Total Truth.
AFA Journal: In an earlier book with Charles Colson and
Harold Fickett, How Now Shall We Live?, and now in Total
Truth, you have made an invaluable contribution to the Church.
What do you see in your own personality and gifts that has apparently
made this pursuit of understanding the concept of worldview a lifelong
quest?
Pearcey: Discovering that Christianity is an entire worldview
was crucial in my own conversion. I had been raised in a believing
home, but as a teenager I began having questions, and, unfortunately,
neither my pastor nor any other Christian leaders seemed to know
how to answer them. Eventually I decided that if I did not have
good reasons for knowing why Christianity was true, then
as a matter of intellectual honesty I needed to reject it
to examine it objectively alongside the other religions and philosophies
in the marketplace of ideas.
I literally began going down the hall to the school library and
pulling books off the philosophy shelf, trying to find out where
people even talk about such questions What is truth?
What is the purpose of life? Are there any moral principles solid
enough to base my life on?
Some years later I ended up at LAbri in Switzerland where
Francis Schaeffer lived and taught, and there I encountered a form
of worldview apolo-getics that finally addressed the intellectual
questions I was struggling with. Thats why I am so passionate
about the need to continue working out a Biblical worldview on the
issues faced by each new generation. Schaeffer said, we to offer
"honest answers to honest questions."
AFA Journal: The subtitle of Total Truth is Liberating
Christianity From Its Cultural Captivity. Explain that subtitle.
Pearcey: The book explores how a secular understanding of
reality can gradually penetrate even the minds of Christians. The
main culprit is a tendency to compartmentalize our faith. We think
of religion as something we do in church and Bible studies, but
often we dont see how it applies to our professional work
or the issues we read about in the newspaper.
For example, a journalist told me, "When you enter the newsroom,
you have to leave your faith behind." This divided mentality
is often called the sacred/secular split.
Mainstream culture is perfectly happy for us to keep our faith
compartmentalized. We often hear phrases like, "Dont
bring your religion into politics, or into the law, or into Hollywood.
You can believe whatever you want as long as you keep it in the
private sphere."
For example, last year when presidential candidate John Kerry was
asked about abortion, he assured critics repeatedly how much he
"respected" their beliefs, but he made it clear that he
would never vote that way.
This is the nonreligious version of the sacred/secular split, and
it is often called the fact/value split. The idea is that science
gives us "facts," which are objective, testable, and value-free.
But if values are banished from the realm of objective truth, what
happens to them? They are reduced to private preferences, which
are not considered relevant for the public arena.
So, both inside and outside the Church, there is a kind of compartmentalization
that locks Christianity into an isolated sphere of life, and that
prevents it from filtering down and having an impact on all the
rest of life. If we want Gods truth to have power and impact,
we have to unlock it and liberate it to penetrate every area of
our lives.
AFA Journal: You give four chapters in Total Truth
to the issue of origins (Darwinism, Intelligent Design, etc.). Why
do you see this issue as so important?
Pearcey: In modern culture, science has been given a privileged
role in defining what is accepted as truth. And if Darwinism is
true, then Christianity cannot be. If purely natural causes acting
on their own are capable of doing all the creating, then the Creator
is out of a job. Theres nothing left for Him to do. And if
Gods existence doesnt serve any cognitive function
in explaining the universe, then the only function left is an emotional
one. Religion becomes something that can be tolerated for people
who need that kind of crutch.
This explains why controversies over Darwinism keep boiling up
around the country. The main impact of the theory has never been
in the details of mutation and natural selection, but rather in
the way it reinforces the fact/value split, relegating religion
to the realm of emotional need or "values."
AFA Journal: You write that "thinking Christianly"
means understanding that Christianity offers the truth about the
whole of reality. How have you tried to communicate that to your
children?
Pearcey: The key thing for parents to accept is that we
are our childrens primary educators, whether they are homeschooled,
in Christian school or in public school, and my own children have
been in all three at various times. As parents, we are not off the
hook just because we put our children in Christian school or homeschool,
using Christian textbooks. Why not? Because they typically follow
a sacred/secular approach instead of teaching how to develop a comprehensive
worldview.
This is a problem right up to the university level. A Lutheran
scholar, Robert Benne, did a study finding that the vast majority
of Christian colleges teach what he calls an "add-on"
approach. By that he means that the content of the courses is essentially
what you would get in any secular university, with Christianity
added on the side, in chapel and prayer groups. At one major Christian
university, more than half the faculty said they would not even
know how to give a Biblical perspective on the subject they teach.
The weakness of an add-on approach is clear: If we do not teach
our children to apply Christian worldview principles to the entire
range of the curriculum to politics, economics, science,
and the arts then they will almost inevitably absorb a nonbiblical
view in these areas. After all, you cant think without assuming
some principles.
Imagine your ideas being like a toolbox: If you dont have
Biblical tools of analysis in your toolbox, then when you need to
understand some issue, you will reach over and take tools out of
someone elses toolbox ideas developed by someone operating
from some other "ism." Over time, more and more of the
way you think about the world will be shaped by "isms"
that may be contrary to Biblical truth.
A young writer who had just graduated from a Christian high school
wrote that on the first day of theology class her teacher drew a
heart on one side of the blackboard and a brain on the other side.
The teacher explained, "The two are as divided as the two sides
of the blackboard. The heart is what we use for religion, and the
brain is what we use for science."
This is a radical bifurcation. And it means that many of our schools
and churches are turning out people who are Christian in their religious
life, but secular in their mental life. The result is
that they easily absorb secular worldviews without even realizing
it.
AFA Journal: You are critical of parts of contemporary evangelicalism
for being anti-intellectual and anti-doctrinal. How do you see that
impacting the Churchs voice in culture?
Pearcey: If we do not develop a Christian worldview, then
we have no distinctive voice in the culture. The opening
story in Total Truth tells about a young woman I call Sarah,
who worked for Planned Parenthood. Sarah went through a crisis of
faith as a teenager and came through it with a strong Christian
commitment. So how did she end up in a job referring women for abortions?
The answer is that when Sarah went to college, she majored in the
social sciences, which are permeated with cultural relativism
the idea that there are no objective or universal truths, that every
culture has its own beliefs about religion and morality, and who
can say which one is right? Sarah had no idea how to respond to
the challenges she was facing in the classroom. Her church had helped
her find assurance of salvation, but it had not given her the conceptual
tools to handle the hostile attacks on her faith in the secular
college classroom. So eventually she ended up absorbing ideas like
cultural relativism as part of the professional ethos of her field.
Sarahs story is a chilling example of how Christians can
hold correct doctrines on theological issues and still absorb a
nonbiblical worldview. When this happens it is impossible for Christianity
to have a redemptive impact on culture.
AFA Journal: In Total Truth you offer a grid for
analyzing worldviews: creation/fall/redemption. How does this work?
Pearcey: Christianity is primarily a story, a narrative
about events that have taken place from the creation of the universe.
In crafting a worldview, we merely draw out abstract principles
from that story. It is a story with three fundamental turning points:
Gods original creation of the universe, the tragedy of the
Fall into sin, and Gods plan of redemption, which unfolds
throughout history until finally He will create a new heaven and
a new earth.
Everything in the universe participates in this great drama, which
makes it a handy three-step strategy for framing a Christian worldview
on any topic. Whether were talking about the family, the state,
economics, or the arts, we can ask three questions:
1) How was it originally created? What was its original purpose?
2) How has it been distorted by sin, infiltrated by false worldviews?
3) How can we be a redemptive force to bring it back under the Lordship
of Christ?
People often say to me, "I hear so much about the need to
develop a Christian worldview, but no one ever tells us how to
do it." This three-part grid gives basic but foundational steps
in spelling out a Christian worldview in your own field of work.
Of course, nonbiblical worldviews or philosophies also tell a story.
They offer an alternative story about how the universe got here.
So this grid gives a simple but effective tool for analyzing them
as well.
Every worldview: 1) starts with a creation story, an account of
where everything came from; 2) offers an account of whats
gone wrong with the world; and 3) gives people a hope and a plan
for action to set things right again. This is a streamlined and
effective method for analyzing the worldviews you or your children
encounter, from New Age thinking to Darwinian naturalism to Islam.
As I speak to various groups around the country, I sense a growing
hunger for worldview thinking. Christians in all denominations are
starting to realize that they simply will not survive with a compartmentalized
faith. They are eager to learn how Christianity is not just religious
truth, and how it is truth about all of life. Thats
what I mean by calling my book Total Truth.
Nancy
Randolph Pearcey
is the Francis A. Schaeffer scholar at the World Journalism Institute,
where she teaches a worldview course based on the study guide edition
of her book Total Truth: Liberating Christianity from Its Cultural
Captivity.
The book can be ordered
from American Family Superstore at AFA
Superstore.
For more information
about Total Truth: www.gnpcb.org/sites/total.truth
Contact Nancy Pearcey
by visiting www.pearceyreport.com.
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