The
Inescapability of "Perspectivism"
"People
do not rally to scholarship," observes
Rev. R. J. Rushdoony, "They rally to a cause." People
do not rally to scholarship precisely because
scholarship is not something that inspires
people. No one is passionate about scholarship
because the very nature of scholarship-certainly
modern scholarship-includes a commitment
to a dispassionate, objective search for
truth. Actually, this dispassionate approach,
what Richard Hofstadter refers to as a certain "playfulness" of
intellectuals, has been abandoned by the
most recent scholars, the so-called postmodernists.
Following Nietzsche, the postmodernists are
committed to "perspectivism," the idea that
every individual speaks from a particular
perspective from which any attempts to grasp
or articulate a rational, objective truth
is nothing but a sentimental mirage. Nietzsche
insisted that man's reason is restricted
by his nature and that what the philosophers
considered the objectivity of reason was
nothing more than the rationalization of
a particular human perspective. Nietzsche
and the postmodernists are on the right track
in this observation, though that track does
not lead them to the right destination.
The Biblical teaching, set forth by men
like Dooyeweerd, Van Til, and Rushdoony,
is that men do indeed speak from a particular
perspective, and that perspective eventually
reduces either to that of covenant-breaking
or covenant-keeping. Man's perspective is
that which glorifies either the creature
or the Creator. The cause, which inflames
consistent covenant-breaking man is the cause
of dismissing, denying, and decimating God
and his word and work. The cause of consistent
covenant-keeping man is no less passionate-glorifying
God and enjoying him forever.
Chalcedon's Perspective
Chalcedon's
cause within this covenant-keeping context
is bold and forthright. It is that historic,
orthodox, Biblical Christianity should govern
every area of thought and life. Chalcedon's
cause is simple, radical, and comprehensive.
It admits no division between the "private" and "public" spheres.
If God is sovereign and Jesus is Lord, this
divine sovereignty and Lordship is designed
to engulf every aspect of human existence-not
just the private and "spiritual," for instance.
Man's sin has polluted every area of life.
In his Sacred Scriptures, however, God has
outlined his will for man and all areas of
human existence. The only hope for man is
faith in Jesus Christ and his substitutionary
atonement. From this faith necessarily flows
obedience-adherence to God's law in every
sphere. Biblical law is the standard toward
which godly man must consistently strive.
Biblical Christianity is the only legitimate
form of Christianity; it is summarized in
the early ecumenical creeds and brought to
its fullness in the great sixteenth- and
seventeenth-century Reformation confessions.
Its objective is nothing less than restoring
Christian civilization.
Furnishing the framework for this restoration
is Chalcedon's sole objective (note our vision
statement inside the front cover). Its scholarship
is neither dispassionate, nor neutral, nor
objective-it is scholarship in service of
a cause (as all scholarship is). All of our
preaching and teaching and lectures and literature
and counsel are motivated by this single
objective- reorienting all areas of life
to the standard of God's infallible word.
This includes not only the individual and
family and church, but also vocation, technology,
economics, education, science, the state-and
everything else.
Romanticism Goes to Church
We
live in a highly anti-intellectual age. If
the prevailing error of the eighteenth century
was rationalism, the prevailing error of
the twentieth century has been romanticism-hatred
of the mind and worship of intuition, feeling,
and emotion. This error is no less prevalent
in the church than in the secular society.
Christians during this century have abandoned
to Satan and secularists one area of life
after another, and then had the hypocritical
gall to complain loudly about the pervasive
evils of modern life-immorality, abortion,
homosexuality, blasphemy, socialism, and
so forth. It was the Christians' own pietistic
inertia that created the vacuum into which
modern secularism readily rushed. By and
large, modern Christians are consummate narcissists-they
live to worship the Great Self. They want
to feel good about Jesus, and they will serve
Jesus as long as Jesus is making them feel
good about themselves. They even invent churches
to foster this blasphemy. Notable examples
are the laughing revivals and the church
growth movement. They have adopted a dualistic
approach to life no less intense than that
of the ancient Greek philosophers -for many
modern Christians and churches, escape from
modern life into the recesses of personal
feel-good-ism is what religion is all about.
These religious narcissists
and others often complain about Chalcedon's
being "too intellectual" or "too
scholarly." What they really should be saying
is that we take both the modern sinful predicament
as well as the historic Christian solution
very seriously indeed. A century and a half
of ecclesiastical and social apostasy will
not be assuaged by three sermonic points
and a poem, four tearful verses of "Amazing
Grace," mule-braying revivals, or super-glossy
church growth demographic charts. Neither
the latest version of Microsoft Windows nor
revival of a pale imitation of Eastern Orthodox
liturgy will solve the problem of the modern
apostasy. The modern evil is a comprehensive
evil, and comprehensive evils require comprehensive
solutions. Even the modern Christians who
do recognize and lament the evils spawned
by modern secularism and ecclesiastical apostasy
are usually blind to the real extent of the
problem They therefore advocate quick-fix
solutions. They have been seduced by the
ethos of instant gratification-they believe
that they can overturn the effects of a century
and a half of apostasy with one fell swoop.
They are simply out of touch with reality. Chalcedon's Theological Root Excavation
Chalcedon
knows better. The deeply rooted apostasy
of modern culture requires a theological
root excavation. We cannot simply fuse a
superficial modern Christianity onto the
lush stem of modern secularism. We must rethink
every area of the modern outlook in terms
of Sacred Scripture and Christian orthodoxy.
This requires work. It requires sacrifice.
It requires money. It just so happens that
most modern Christians are not interested
in a ministry that requires work, sacrifice
and money. For this reason, Chalcedon does
not appeal to modern liberalized generic
Christendom any more than it appeals to theological
liberalism itself. Rather, we appeal to those
devout, rock-ribbed saints who believe that
if the Bible is good enough for the church,
it is good enough for the school and state;
who believe that if Jesus Christ is Lord
of the family, he is also Lord of the laboratory
and the board room; who recognize that if
Christianity is good enough for them, it
is good enough for their great-great grandchildren.
We appeal to Christians who have a long-term
vision for godly social change across the
entire spectrum of life.
A gratifying and gifted number of younger
men have emerged to carry on Chalcedon's
work and the work of godly Christian civilization.
They are carrying Rushdoony's vision into
the twenty-first century. They are the vanguard
of bold, Biblical leadership in the face
of well-armed combatants like secular humanism,
Islam, and New Age paganism. Chalcedon and
its cadre of men are at the center of the
struggle for the very soul of Western culture.
As convinced postmillennialists, we are confident
of long-term victory. But there will not
be long-term victory without long-term battles,
and battles require resources. We appeal
to you with the greatest sense of urgency
to pray for this work, and support Chalcedon
monthly. Phone Chalcedon (209-736-4365) or e-mail us
to find out how to become a Chalcedon underwriter
to assist us in this task.
We cannot survive without your support.
In the cause for godly reconstruction, time
is of the essence.
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