ARE YOU SURE YOU'VE GOT IT RIGHT?
A review of Enns, Peter. The Sin of
Certainty: Why God Desires our Trust more than our “Correct”
Beliefs. New York: Harper One
(an Imprint of Harper Collins), 2016
“Faith crisis,”
“loss of faith,” “beset by doubt.” I'm sure most of us have
heard the expressions that signal a divide between what one has been
taught as essential belief and what is experienced in life.
Something as simple as the horror of losing a daughter to a senseless
car accident and attempting to sing along in church the words, “God
will take care of you,Through ev'ry day, O’er all the way . . .”
In The
Sin of Certainty,
Peter Enns explores the dark chapters in a Christian's life that can
be psychologically devastating or, more drastically, can lead to the
abandonment of all faith. Enns uses his own experiences as the
springboard for arguing that certainty as regards belief is not only
dangerous to our trust in God, but is not Biblically mandated. To
support the latter, he draws primarily on the agonies of abandonment
and doubt evident in the writings of Psalms, Job and Ecclesiastes.
Readers
can probably be forgiven for some puzzlement over the vocabulary.
What's the difference between belief
in God and faith
in God, for instance? Is it reasonable to make believing
in
God
and
trusting
in God
alternative choices, or are we talking about distinctions without
real differences? We protestants, at least, have a history of calling
ourselves believers
and the packet of what shall be believed if one is a Mennonite, for
instance, has been enunciated from time to time in faith confessions
with weighty significance. These are the things we collectively and
individually hold to be true, what we believe.
Not whom
or what
we trust or put our confidence in, but what we hold to be
non-negotiable truth. What we believe.
They're
not primarily faith
confessions, though, they're belief
pronouncements. Enns doesn't write about confessions much: “I'm not against creeds or talking about what I believe. But as it's used in
the Bible, believing doesn't focus on what
someone
believes in, but in
whom one places
his or her trust. (p.93)” Even belief as we've come to use it
can't
be legislated (creedified?) since experience renders it fluid. But
trust
can be nurtured into a solid foundation not dependent on belief
or faith,
or even the bright or dark experiences
of life. Enns' sub-title reads: “Why God Desires Our Trust more
than our 'Correct' Beliefs.”
I
attend and participate in a Mennonite congregation. In this
congregation, beliefs vary, especially on emerging questions like
assisted death, abortion, same-gender marriage, etc. On the ancient
beliefs
regarding the nature of God (person or force), the majority express
their
understanding
of God
as person.
That's not my concept of the Biblical entity called God, but I've
found that although the belief
about God's nature varies, the worship and work that follow from
either
belief
can be the same—give or take. It's a clear illustration of the
principle that if preserving unity is important—that we all must
hang our hats on the same peg to achieve it—it better be Trust
in God, not
belief
in a catalog of prescribed items.
But
there is a puzzle there that Enns' book doesn't seem to appreciate
fully: how does one trust God if one comes to doubt
that God exists? And by the same token, how does one trust fully
an entity whose existence one no longer fully
believes in? Using my earlier example of untimely family tragedy, how
does one sing, “God will take care of you,” after concluding that
God does not reach down and prevent vehicles bearing our children
from leaving the road and crashing? But Enns is right in pointing out
that crises of faith—of believing—are common to everyone, and
that the pressure to keep singing, “God will take care of you,”
whether you believe it literally, figuratively or not at all, is
powerful.
So
hold it in and muddle through your life, keeping it all quiet, trying
not to think about the lost faith you now mourn, and hoping nobody
brings it up. Or, after you have tried to hold it in for a while, it
may reach a point where the pressure is too much and explodes into a
full-on crisis. We
need to talk about this.” (emphasis
mine) p-9.
I've
experienced personally the repercussions that can follow from
admitting in a church setting the loss of even one assumed,
hitherto-common belief.
The reaction follows less from the loss itself, but more from the
exposing of such a loss to the air where it must be acknowledged and
talked about, or pointedly denied and its author resented for
creating waves with which nobody is prepared to deal. Who hasn't
bottled up a personal dilemma out of the fear of this consequence? As
Hamlet puts it in Shakespeare's play—on another subject: “Thus
conscience does make cowards of us all, and thus the native hue of
resolution is sicklied o'er, with the pale cast of thought . . .
(III,i)”
The
Sin of Certainty
could serve as a discussion starter, perhaps, if a group could be
found with the courage to discuss the subject frankly. You'll find
plenty of criticism of the “trust over belief” message on line;
it's not hard to locate the push-back. Controlling the canon of
belief is, after all, the controlling of the membership and
denominations are loathe as is any government to give it up.
There
are problems with The
Sin of Certainty
I would have pointed out, were I its editor, beginning with the word
Sin
in the title. My suggestion might have been, The
Hazards of Certainty;
my reasoning would have been that even an unwavering trust in God
must lean on a kind of certainty, making the title self-defeating.
Secondly, I know that to publish hard cover, adult books, a certain
number of pages are expected (generally upwards of 200 or so) and The
Sin of Certainty has
the feel of being padded to reach a number; the argument could have
been made well—maybe even better—in, say, a twenty-page essay.
Thirdly, the style of writing seeks to be too contemporary, too hep,
too informal for the subject at hand. But that may be my bias
talking.
Michael
Hakmin Lee writing in Christianity
Today
puts
the conundrum of certainty and doubt rather well, in my opinion. I
conclude with a portion of his article:
“The
reality of intra-Christian theological disagreements has led some to
conclude that there is something inherently wrong with the Christian
faith itself. On the other hand, I do not think the solution is to
downplay the place of confidence or even certainty in faith. While I
believe there is commonly within evangelicalism an undercurrent of
misplaced optimism in our ability to objectively understand truth in
an unfiltered way which needs to be challenged, more than the pursuit
of certainty itself, it is what we choose
to place our confidence in that
is the issue. Let me share a few examples:
- We should be confident that God exists, but more tentative in our incomplete and inevitably distorted claims of what God is like, which tends to portray God in our culturally informed image.
- We should have the highest confidence that God will accomplish what God has set out to do in the course of history, just more tentative in how this will unfold.
- We should be certain that God has spoken to us through the prophets, apostles, and ultimately through Jesus, and that Scripture captures these divine revelations, but we should be more tentative in what we affirm about theBible itself and what we discern its meanings to be.
The
key is not the total suspension of confidence or even
certainty, but
rather the judicious placement of
confidence and trust.”
That—in
an eggshell—is what The Sin of Certainty is all about.