Joshua Graves
Exploring the Collision of Culture & Faith
FAITH
August 3, 2010

Important thoughts on faith from Gary Glutting.

One of my jobs as a teacher of bright, mostly Catholic undergraduates is to get them thinking about why they hold their religious beliefs.  It’s easy enough to spark discussion about the problem of evil (“Can you really read the newspaper everyday and continue to believe in an all-perfect God?”) or about the diversity of religious beliefs (“If you’d been born in Saudi Arabia, don’t you think you’d be a Muslim?”).  Inevitably, however, the discussion starts to fizzle when someone raises a hand and says (sometimes ardently, sometimes smugly) “But aren’t you forgetting about faith?”

That seems to be enough for most students.  The trump card has been played, and they — or at least the many who find religion more a comfort than a burden — happily remember that believing means never having to explain why.

I myself, the product of a dozen years of intellectually self-confident Jesuit education, have little sympathy with the “it’s just faith” response.  “How can you say that?” I reply.  “You wouldn’t buy a used car just because you had faith in what the salesperson told you.  Why would you take on faith far more important claims about your eternal salvation?”  And, in fact, most of my students do see their faith not as an intellectually blind leap but as grounded in evidence and argument.

To read the rest of the article, click HERE.

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2 Comments

Oddly enough, I was prompted to consider a similar question to what he poses here about accepting simple faith without evidence just last night. The odd part is that my revelation came from watching a children’s curriculum video called “What’s in the Bible?” that involved a pirate puppet explaining the history of the septuagint. Huh. God really does show up in the most unusual places.

by Dana (Aug 4 2010, 9:32 am)

Good thoughts, Dana.

by josh (Aug 5 2010, 11:45 am)
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