Faith


30
Nov 09

Doubts, Struggles, and Questions

Do you ever question your Christian faith?  Do struggle with doubts?  Are there certain issues or aspects of Christianity that you don’t quite understand? 

Abraham Piper recently posted about an issue that has been giving him some trouble lately:

It seems far-fetched that God invented a system in which a reasonable/rational/sane person can deny “ultimate reality.”

A great deal of discussion has followed this post as over 100 comments have been posted to date.  Abraham drew attention to one comment in particular today via Twitter, however:

abraham_piper_tweet

Apparently, one 22 Words reader (“john”) wasn’t impressed that “son of one of the greatest preachers of our day” has doubts and struggles. 

An unfortunate comment, no?

It seems that, in some Christian circles, there is pressure to be completely free of doubt, question, or confusion.  At times, we even put this pressure on ourselves, causing these same doubts and questions to become an internal source of guilt and shame.

Why am I doubting this aspect of my faith?   No one else struggles with these questions. Christians shouldn’t have these doubts.  Am I really a Christian?

Don’t Be a Closet Doubter

It takes a great deal of humility to acknowledge your doubts, to pose your questions, to openly struggle with your faith.  I appreciate Abraham Piper’s willingness to so in the public forum of his blog.  One commenter stated:

I commend Abraham for being bold enough to air his questions. He is not concerned with looking like he has it all together, but rather being honest. I’ll take that any day.

Doubts, struggles, and questions are only dangerous if we ignore them, suppress them, or pretend they are not there.  Ultimately, doubt can serve to drive us to prayer, the study of God’s word, and wise and godly counsel.  Most importantly, doubt drives us humbly to the foot of the cross. 

 

What doubts or questions do you struggle with?  In your opinion, is it acceptable and healthy for Christians to struggle with doubt and questions about their faith?

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15
Oct 09

Belief in God and Evolution – Christian Colleges Debate

The Origin of Species by Ray Comfort: Book Cover

An anti-evolution group is capturing headlines with its plans to distribute a special edition of The Origin of Species to tens of thousands of college students at secular universities next month, hoping that an introduction that promotes creationism will change the views of those who read it.

But while that group is fighting for the hearts and minds of students at secular colleges and universities, there is also a theological and scientific struggle taking place at Christian colleges. Some professors, with support from prominent scientists, are trying to defend the teaching of evolution and to make it safe for those who teach biology and the Bible to talk about ways in which belief in evolution need not represent an abandonment of faith. Many Christian colleges have statements of faith — which in some cases must be followed by all students and faculty members — that endorse the literal truth of the Bible or of specific parts of the Bible (six literal days of creation, for example, or that Adam and Eve are the parents of all humans). So teaching evolution as scientific fact, which would just be taken for granted at many non-Christian colleges and universities, raises all kinds of delicate issues.

This is an interesting and complicated debate. I fear, however, that it will ultimately prove to be disruptive and destructive. Unfortunately, we Christians haven’t mastered the art of loving and disagreeing at the same time. When the dust settles, will the Christian community be marked by even more division? To what extent is this distracting from the most important issue at hand – the Gospel?

And finally, what does this say about those “evil,” state-funded, public institutions of higher education which have been teaching evolution as fact all along? Might they become a more acceptable option for Christians if evolution is also taught in Christian colleges?  What would the implications of a trend like this be?  I suppose we might see more Christians living their lives among the lost on “secular” campuses. All Charles Darwin and evolution talk aside, I kinda like the sound of that…

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