Before I respond, I just want to deal with your idea of "foundationalism." As explained here, and its various modes, this is not at all Foundationalism as understood in epistemic justification. One can certainly believe in and hold to various sources God reveals himself to us through whether it be through Scripture, nature, reason and/or experience, and such sources may be foundational to ones epistemology for what they see as being true and correct, but this has no bearing on whether one is epistemically justified in accepting such sources, and certainly not whether they are epistemically justified in their beliefs based upon such sources.Jac3510 wrote:I knew I shouldn't have made that last edit, but I did for space concerns. I had three full paragraphs on the difference in traditional foundationalism and fideistic foundationalism, of which I am the latter. There is further a difference in foundationalism andn non-foundationalism and even moderate foundationalism. For instance, Darrell Bock of Dallas Theological Seminary has adopted moderate foundationalism and he states publically that he believes we cannot objectively know whether or not God exists. He personally believs it, but he does not see that anything more than a matter of personal faith.
Now, in my epistemology (and yes, I understand importance of a justified idea), I do NOT hold observed reality (reason) to be the foundational belief. I hold revealed truth (revelation) to be the foundational belief. I interpret reality in light of Scripture. As I said in my now deleted edit from the previous post, I spend an inordinate amount of time in my Bible study on exegesis for that very reason. I do not want my preconceived ideas about reality--of which I have many--to influence my understanding of revelation. We should work in just the opposite direction.
So yes, I am a fideist, and very proud of it. If you asks me which has more evidential weight in my eyes, Gen 1:1 or Ross' entire teleological argument, I'd say Gen 1:1 in a heartbeat and not give it a second thought. I do not look to observed evidence to confirm biblical revelation. Where there is a contradiction, then my interpretation of observational reality must be wrong, becuase Scripture is the basis for all knowledge.
Hmm. My "idea" of Foundationalism is not my idea but is what I learnt in philosophy. An introduction to philosophy on epistemic justification will describe Foundationalism not along the lines of what someone's foundational grounds are for believing something is true, but rather as properly basic beliefs which no further reason can be put to for believing in. Such basic beliefs for example consist of beliefs that are self-evident, produced in a reliable way, or grounded in sensory experience (that is, your direct awareness of experiencing the phenominal qualia of colour, not your perception of colour). This has no bearing on whether one accepts Scripture, reason, nature, or whatever as being authorities on what they believe to be true.Jac wrote:Now, that is MY foundational idea. To use your idea, it's the answer to the series of why's asked by a child.
My anthropology was carefully born out of my reflecting upon reason and Scripture, and so I am sure it is very supported.Jac wrote:It is also why I can know I am saved absolutely. I, myself, have absolutely nothing to do with my assurance. I don't believe the Bible teaches that there are false believers. I find nowhere in Scripture a statement that said, "You thought you believed, but you really didn't." I find statements about believing the wrong thing all over the place, but nothing about not knowing whether or not I believe.
Saying, "You thought you believes, but you really didn't" I feel again misses the crux of the issue in what I am saying. I believe the simpler that one either believes, or does not believe. And even in your position one can think they believe (e.g., those who practiced works based on a belief in Christ) when they really do not.
Now it might seem to you that on my position one believes at one point, and then does not believe, but my position is simply that one either believes or does not believe. To see it as belief and then not belief, or belief or faith that needs to be maintained or persevered in, is to see who a person is as being a unitary and static person. That is, who they are "in the past" is who they are in the future. I have covered this in many different ways, but to be clear, I see who a person is as being unitary and dynamic (at least in our current world). Who we will be at death, is very different who we were when we begun life and at different stages in between.
A more profitable question would be what does Scripture say about who we are? What can we draw from Scripture to explain who we are? These are the crucial questions. You just assume who we are is a unitary static person, but I do not see Scripture saying such a thing. There is nothing in Scripture which says we remain who we are throughout life. In fact, such a thing is the very opposite of Scripture which values the Gospel as being able to change the hearts and minds of man towards God:
- WHOEVER WILL CALL ON THE NAME OF THE LORD WILL BE SAVED."
How then will they call on Him in whom they have not believed? How will they believe in Him (T)whom they have not heard? And how will they hear without (U)a preacher?
How will they preach unless they are sent? Just as it is written, "(V)HOW BEAUTIFUL ARE THE FEET OF THOSE WHO (W)BRING GOOD NEWS OF GOOD THINGS!" (Romans 10:13-15)
I have not actually kept tabs on Graham so can not really say anything beyond what you have presented. However, if Graham does not believe the Gospel any more, then it was still Graham who preached the Gospel. To explain, let me quote where I first raised the question of who we are as persons:Jac wrote:K, Billy Graham doesn't believe the Gospel anymore. He said those things back in 1988. And I'm sure you've read his most recent interview in Newsweek (March 20, 2006). But, K, your position is that a continuum of faith is necessary because a person will develop into the type of person who believes or doesn't believe. Are you saying that Billy Graham was wrong in thinking he was a believer? You can say all day long that these questions don't apply to you because you aren't in their shoes, but it does apply very much to you. Logically, if it is possible for anyone (including you) to absolutely believe they know themselves and yet still be wrong, then how can YOU be in such a different boat? How are you justified in claiming absolute knowlege of yourself in light of the fact that both logic and history shows us that people cannot be absolutely certain about themselves?
I see the "what" we are as being unitary in nature (perhaps with some flexibility of change, but in general the substance of our being is always the same). The "who" we are however I see as dynamic and changing. Now given a unitary dynamic understanding of the person (rather than a unitary static understanding), I still believe the Graham today is the same Graham at birth and at various stages in his life. On the other hand, who Graham is today is different to who Graham was in the past.This gets into exploring an ontology of our "self" which I see as continually developing throughout life. For example, what makes you who you are right now? It is all your previous life experiences and continual development throughout life up until the present time right? Some might answer that we are our physical (and spiritual) body, but this would be to answer "what" we are rather than "who". I see that who we are right now is due to the whole of our life experiences in the temporal world we live in, and not simply one state of it. As such, the person we are at death may be very different to the person we were as a child, or different to who we are as an adolescent, or different to who we are as an adult, or different to who we are at various other times in our life. Yet the resulting person we are at the end of our life, is a coalesce of this continual flow of the persons we once were.
Well I see it is "faith in Christ" which is the reason for salvation I see taught in Scripture. So if at the end of your dynamic growing as who you are you do not have "faith in Christ" then what can I say? I do not see an issue with saying you do not have faith in Christ. And again, I do not see that this negatively affects my own assurance.Jac wrote:I know 100% for sure that I am saved. I know what I believe. But, I'll make a public confession right here on discussions.godandscience.org: I do not know that I will persevere in faith until the end. I think I will. I hope I will. I bet I will. I'd be shocked if God told me right now that I won't last. But I don't KNOW that. That is exactly why I have to spend my life in the Word. That is why I have to keep myself in church. That is why I have to be cautious about who I open up to and who I allow myself to lean on. My faith is not invincible becuase I am not invincible. My heart is still human and fallen. It is deceitful above all things.
To be clear I think we can made a distinction in the focus of assurance in our positions. "Assurance of faith" is more the focus of my own position, whereas "assurance of salvation" is more the focus of yours. Yet, I see in Scripture that salvation is conditional upon faith. So I can only say that one can only be assured of being saved if they are assured of their faith in Christ. On the other hand, for you, faith is not conditional upon salvation. You break any connection which may exist between the two (if any connection existed at all) after some sort of personal faith is demonstrated in Christ.
Now I will say this, either our being saved is dependant upon our response by faith in Christ, or our being saved is not dependant upon our response. You have previously written that it is all God's doing (which I am yet to respond to). That is, that Calvinists are right to believe we can not respond to God, and that we actually want nothing to do with God (total depravity). And so it is not sure to any response from us to Christ that we are saved, but due to God's complete choosing. Yet, I see runs contrary to Scripture which also supports our freedom to choose, if not from the very beginning where Adam and Eve chose to turn against God. Now either salvation is conditional upon a faith response to Christ, or it is not. If it is not, then I see the need for preaching the Gospel is pointless, for God will save who He wants to be saved rather than whoever desires to be saved. Although I am sure you may need to clarify a few points, this is perhaps another extremely important distinction in our positions that has just now been unravelled.
I believe I know who I am in the strongest sense I see we can ever be justified in having a belief. Any uncertainty is due to limitations on our ability to be certain we are right in knowing something.Jac wrote:"The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked; Who can know it?" (Jer 17:9, NKJV). I don't pretend that I can know my own heart. I simply don't understand how you can say that you do. God says in the very next verse "I, the LORD, search the heart, I test the mind, Even to give every man according to his ways, According to the fruit of his doings." Only God knows my heart. I don't know it.
It's not that I don't understand your position K . . . what boggles my mind is how you could be so sure of your own self, especially in light of what you believe.
How can you be so sure that Christ's promise stands firm? Because God says so. But there is the real possibility God did not really say so right? Yes, of course. Especially if you are Fideist simply accepting it on faith without reason. As a Fideist Christan one would just accept Christ died and rise again and they are saved regardless of any reasoning. Being a Fideist may protect you from any challenges which might take away your "assurance", but I can not see how this could possibly provide assurance to anyone else that your beliefs surrounding Christ and the Gospel are true let alone any assurance of salvation. Unless they are willing to simply believe what you say of Christ is true, but then why not equally choose to become a Jehovah Witness, Mormon, Buddhist, Muslim? If a Christian is a Fideist, then there is no reason they can provide to someone else who does not already believe the same as them for why they ought to believe in Christ.
Now lets say you are in some sense Fideistic (although my experience with you on these boards suggests to me that you do have reasons for your beliefs, and often well-considered reasons). The moment you pop out from being a Fideist to consider reasons for your position over others, is the moment it becomes a real possibility that you are wrong! Does this real possibility take away your assurance of being saved? I would be surprised if it did. Yet, your being puzzled over how I can be assured of my faith in Christ could be compared to that of many non-Christians who do not comprehend how we can be so assured of our beliefs in Christ, an afterlife, salvation and so forth when much uncertainty appears to exist. Just as there is a real possibility you are wrong in your beliefs regarding Christ yet you are assured nonetheless, so too there is a real possibility I am wrong regarding who I am but this does not mean I am not assured of knowing who I really am in relation to Christ.