Stephen Jackson on The Sola Panel is dead; long live the Sola Panel!
Sam Freney on The Sola Panel is dead; long live the Sola Panel!
Marty Foord on The Sola Panel is dead; long live the Sola Panel!
Dianne Howard on The Sola Panel is dead; long live the Sola Panel!
Mike Bull on Daniel 2-7, Harry Potter and Narnia
The Sola Panel is dead; long live the Sola Panel! by Tony Payne (4 comments). Regular Sola Panel readers will no doubt have detected a little slowness and quietness over the past six weeks or so. … more
Kids’ culture watch spot: Facing fear by Gordon Cheng (3 comments). By popular demand (two people asked), here is my next script for a culture watch spot I did with the kids … more
Daniel 2-7, Harry Potter and Narnia by Gordon Cheng (1 comment). It's a Sunday as I write this, and I'm speaking on Daniel 2 and 7 later this morning at a friend's … more
A constituent on same-sex marriage by Sandy Grant (34 comments). Last year, the Australian Parliament agreed that its Members of Parliament (MPs) should seek the … more
A tribute to John Stott by Sandy Grant (2 comments). Friends, I'm not ashamed to say I shed a tear when I opened up my computer on Thursday morning to read … more
Talkin’ ’bout my generation (part 3): On giants’ shoulders by Scott Newling (26 comments). This is the third post in this series; you can read part one, and more
Bible reading with kids by Sandy Grant (0 comments). I was asked for recommendations for resources that would encourage parents to read the Bible with their kids, especially … more
Talkin’ ’bout my generation (part 2): Stepping aside (not out) so others can step up (not in) by Scott Newling (3 comments). This is the second post in this series; you can read the first post, Unassuming … more
One more sip of the coffee by Tony Payne (8 comments). Sandy Grant is a man of integrity. Back in the early days of Sola Panel, I wrote a post … more
Talkin’ ’bout my generation (part 1): Unassuming generations by Scott Newling (30 comments). There is a model of ‘intergenerational theological decline’ that has been doing the rounds of late, and perhaps you … more
Paul is one of the Staff Editors at Matthias Media. He is married to Cathy and has three fantastic kids. He loves student ministry, reading, writing music and playing the saxophone, and is looking forward to meeting Jesus face to face.
“Anyone else feel this way about themselves, or others?”
I think my answer would be yes, yes & yes!
Paradoxically, I think that even those who go the mystical route (‘we can’t really know God’) are just as dogmatic. In this case, the dogmatism is in dismissing the possibility of knowing God.
Hey Tony, this is a brilliant post. I have been thinking about this in lieu of the atonement recently - we know of it truly, we know of it effectively, but we don’t know it exhaustively. The hymn writer said ‘Tis mystery all!’
I suspect that our rationalistic streak can be made worse because of the importance of defending the truth that God can be known. I know that I get so determined to emphasise the truth that some of the subtleties get lost.
I found this article called ‘Father, Glorify Your Name!’ by Patrick Reardon very helpful and stimulating on this matter:
http://www.touchstonemag.com/archives/article.php?id=13-06-022-f
He discusses the issue of God’s unknowability as it bears on the different ways people regard the name ‘Father’ in the church, and in doing so shows how people misuse the doctrine of unknowability.
If I may reflect on our theological heritage for a moment I’d like to wonder if Broughton Knox insistence that theological language is ‘univocal’ (Selected Works Vol 1, p359) has left us with a difficulty in handling what we do and don’t know about God.
I found understanding the debate between Cornelius Van Til and Gordon Clark on the “incomprehensibility of God” a clarifying moment in my own thinking. Clark’s position seems similar to Knox’s (though Knox wrote so little on these matters that it is hard to tell). Van Til argued that human and divine knowledge coincide in that the point of reference for both is always God, but do not coincide in that human knowledge is always revealed and dependant while God’s is independent and comprehensive. So while both know that “2+2=4” God knows the “infinite number of relationships and implications [of this] that man can never exhaustively know”. In reply to Clark, Van Til claimed that he could never “state clearly” the difference between these two forms of knowledge, since to do so would require him to know exhaustively ( Van Til An Introduction to Systematic Theology P&R;, 1978 p 172). I’m sure Van Til has a better approach.
See R.L. Reymond A New systematic theology of the Christian faith (Nelson, 1998) pp 96-102 for a summary of the deabte, though he takes Clark’s position.
Hi John
Thanks bringing some good Reformed heavies into the discussion, but I think I am still in need of my own clarifying moment. Is it just me or should one of the ‘Van Tils’ in your comment be a ‘Clark’?
TP
No I think the names are right. Maybe I need to fill out some information. Van Til stated that because God is the incomprehensible reference point we can not know exhaustively though we know truly by revelation. Clark found this obscure and asked him to explain the distinction ‘clearly’. Van Til replied that to be able to explain ‘clearly’ how our knowledge differs from God would require us to know in the way God knows. In other words, our knowledge differs from God in ways which we can not know!
Donald Rumsfeld was mocked for telling the media about “unknown unknowns” in military planning (see http://www.slate.com/id/2081042/ ). Remembering that we don’t even know what we don’t know is important in theology. I’d have though it was pretty important in military planning too!
Thanks John. I see the point now. We can know truly, while acknowledging that we don’t know comprehensively. And we can’t clearly articulate in exactly what manner God’s knowledge surpasses ours, because in order to do so we’d have to know more than we do!
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