The human heart, in terms of its capacity will and choice, is something that is almost universally acknowledged, yet when examined critically, is a matter of exceedingly great complication. I realized this to a greater degree just today while considering the source of the choices that we make. I have often done much of my thinking in this area from the assumption that our choices are simply extentions of our deepest feelings, convictions and desires. In this way, I proposed that choices are not things existing independantly, but are simply the outward expressions of personal ontology.
To some degree, I would continue to hold to this understanding of choice, particularly in regard to the belief that human choices are not the product of mere spontinity existing apart from prior experience or other factors which help form who we are as individuals. Yet when I began to consider the ramifications of the concept of human choice as pure extention of our most central and most deeply held desires, I ran into several difficulties.
The first difficulty was theological. It is my understanding of Scripture that God has given man a certain degree of volitional responsibility and desires us to respond to His promptings and initiatives as He enables us in regard to matters of saving faith and sanctification (as well as all aspects of life in which we are expected to make moral and responsible choices.) I realized that if the choice to belive in Christ as the spirit moves us is something derived from the totality of our internal state, then none of us, being fallen, would be able to choose thus. Moreover, this would imply that some of us (those who accept Christ) have a basic goodness from which they choose this, whereas those who don't accept Christ do so out of an inherent sinfulness. This not only contradicts the scriptural reality that all of us are sinful by nature, but it also reduces our theology to the entirely heretical possition that God effectively saves by merit of our own righteousness, rather than that of Christ.
The second difficulty that came to my mind regarding this theory of will is that of the objective observation that the choices I make are not universally made with respect to what I most deeply desire within myself. To make this most clear, it is most effective for me to refer to Paul's monologue in Romans in which he describes how he does the sinful things that he really does not want to do, and those things which he in is inmost being desires, fails to do. Perhaps it would be a fair assesment to say that the only people who don't identify with this are those who obsequiously conform their opinions to their actions, rather than seek to do the opposite. This led me to consider how we tend to make choices not so much out of the central core of our being, but out of whatever frame of mind is most present on the surface of our conciousness. From personal experience, I speculated on how the heart seems to have layers: there is the set of core beliefs and desires, above which lay many other desires and ideas, in layers of increasing or decreasing contingency. For example, if I were to go on a diet in which I have decided not to eat chocolate cake, the choice to do this would reflect a desire of comparitve importance and centrality. However, on a less central and more contingent level, I would more than likely feel an urgent desire to eat chocolate cake in the situation that I were offered a piece. The fact that I would want to make an effort to resist this desire, and would remember my original commitment to abstain, indicates that the central desire is still most central. But due to the present circumstance, it may cease to be as compelling on my momentary behavior, and I would be likely to give into my surface desire to indulge. My ability to stay true to my diet may well rest in my ability to maintain an appropriate relationship between my central desire and my immediate appitites. For it would seem that in fact one aspect of human will involves the interaction between our strata of desires and our consciousness, so that our consciousness gives particular respect to whatever leval within our heart. (Of course, we should also be careful to acknowlege that our will here also has its limits.)
Applied to the theology of human choice, this view seem to measure up better. I would hold that the Bible does not teach total depravity to the extent that man is so corrupt as to be utterly unable to even think or desire anything a single aspect of which is good. In fact, it seems to frequently imply the contrary in refrence to particular individuals in the old testiment who could not be considered saved, but were viewed as righteous (consider Noah, or Abraham before he was called by God: in fact, God seemed to single both out as righteous individuals, although they were certainly members of fallen humanity.) With this in mind, I think it is entirely reasonable to suppose that at some leval, each of us has a desire for God and to submit to Him, sinse this is just that for which we were made. This desire, although indicitive of some essential value which mankind has, certainly does not make him morally good or worthy of justification. Therefore, when someone chooses to acknowlege Christ as savior, he or she is not expressing any inherent goodness from which that choice was created. The choice is not so much an outpouring of an original sentiment belonging to the totality of his or her being, but is rather the selection of a particular possible reaction to the prompting of the Spirit. Morally, it is really very difficult to speak on the condition of the center of man's heart: one could well argue that it is to acknowlege God, because this is what he was made for and is a longing that, whether he realizes it or not, cannot be removed from him, or that it is evil, because each of us apart from Christ beligerently clings to a love of self-rule and self-determination of what is right. In either case, we are inherently sinful and in deep need of God's redemptive action in our lives. And so it is not that there are the certain righteous individuals who so desire God that they choose him and are saved, and others are predomintated by sin and refuse. All are predominated by sin, and all alike have a desire for God. It is then when an individual choses to submit to the desire for God that has been instilled in him and the divine initive which activates it that saving faith is enabled, and when a person of equal internal condition chooses to deny it that he rejects God's salvation. In a remote sense, one might say that the one was more righteous than the other, because the one choice is simply superior to the other, but it is not in any way by virtue of any such righteousness that one is considered worthy of salvation, for that is out of the question altogether. God does not save those whom he deems more righteous, but simply those who will be saved.
Having said all of this, I feel to make some further remarks regarding human choice that in some way recognizes some important considerations within my initial model of human choice which, on the whole, proved in need of revision. That is the sense in which human choice to some extent may be part of the way in which we are image bearers of God, not only in simply having this capicity, but in making choices we reflect God's creative power and the law of His spoken word. Humans cannot create matter out of nothing, like God can, (only rearrange it, and that in a limited fashion) but when we choose something, we have in a certain sense created something out of nothing. It is not as though our choices are uninfluenced; on the contrary, nearly every choice we make seems to involve certain persuasions, past experiences, or predispositions. However, it is not these that do the choosing, they are only the material employed in making the choice. From whence does the choice itself derive? It might be said to purely random, but that is to say that it has no contingencies whatsoever, which is not only metaphysically impossible within the terms being dealt with, but is in fact contrary to the fact that it is a choice. To say that something is a choice is not to say that is dependant upon nothing, but that it is ultimately dependant on and deriving from the one choosing. In other words, a choice is an ex nihilo creation of the will. But just as God's act of creating is both ex nihilo and a result of his Character whereby He determines certain things to be good, so our choices, in themselves creations out of nothing, are results of various factors within us, and (in this case unlike God) external influence. (As a side note, I think that the science of psychology has been able to tell us much of how our choices can both be influeced and free; maybe this deserves another post sometime.) In this way, we bear God's image as one who creates by His spoken word acting as ultimate law. The whole underlying philosohpy here also deserves further explaination, but it should suffice to say that we might consider God to be the only being who is Himself a perfect union of substance and law; in all other cases, law is that universal which acts upon substantial particulars, but God is in Himself law through His will; that is, His word whereby He spoke all matter into being. In a far lesser sense, humans reflect some of this union between substantial, particular existence and law, for human choices are, in an exceedingly diminutive sense, a formal cause to ceratin events, and thus a type of law within a particular sphere.
Of course, one must recognize the the qualitative, as well as quantitative, differences between human and divine acts of creation. To illustrate this, it should be pointed out that the very material, both as form and as substance, upon which our choosing is dependent is the creation of God. Our creations, though original in their own right as particulars, are mere rearrangments of substances and forms which only God can create. In the sense previously described, our very acts of choosing, which themselves require both formal (the range of possible options to choose from) and substantial (our experiences, predispositions, motivations, and external influences) material for choice, do show the kind of something-out-of-nothing choice by producing a result that is niether random, nor predisposed. Although predictable, and not necessarily particularly creative, it is new, and the product of a human being. That much being said, there are the obvious differences between humans demonstrating formal word-as-law and that of God, such as the fact that only God can create physical matter, and that like wise such "law" which constitutes the essense of human choice and creativity has no power whatsoever beyond the forms within the thinker's mind. As in all things, choice at once illuminates God's image in us, and illustrates His transcendent and infinite nature that is wholly incomensurate with humanity.
I must conclude this tediously long post by stating the most obviously speculative nature of these ideas. I in no way mean to be dogmatic; these are at very best the musings of one aspiring to be a philosopher, and at worst, the ravings of an eccentric fool. I hope the former in time proves nearer the case, and that my ramblings, if not flawless, will in some sense be helpful.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
7 comments:
Hey Micah,
Good post. I agree with much of what you're saying here. Especially about the conflicting natures of our souls/minds.
I like to think about free will quite a bit, and I always seem to have to settle for the same assertion: freedom has two parts: consistency and inconsistency.
We aren't random. We have consistency. Yet if we come to believe that we are completely consistent, we feel like we have no freedom. There is the aspect of freedom that is choosing out of who on is, and then the is the aspect of choosing out of nothing. I appreciate your juxtaposition of these two ideas. My only conclusion for a while has been that what we mean by "free will" is simply what we experience ourselves to be doing as human beings. In other words, "free will" is human will, as we normally understand it. And human will, in fact, personhood, seems to be some mysterious synthesis between finitude and infinitude (to borrow from Kierkegaard), it is both consistency and inconsistency. I believe this holds true of God too, since I believe that he is a person as well. There are parts of him that are necessary, and there are parts of him that are contingent.
But all this aside, I fail to see why love itself needs to be a choice. I understand choices for love to be coming out of love, if they are to have any significance at all.
My current conclusion is that humans naturally sense that they are meant to transcend this world and any particular desire. This transcendence allows for choice...an awareness of a multitude of possibilities. But I do not think that this is the end of the story. I don't think this is an enlightened perspective. I think that, whether or not there is a thirst in a human heart for God, God thirsts for that human to know him, and it is his perspective that matters. I feel like simple (or complex) analysis of human nature won't get us back to God.
Hey Jathan,
Concerning your other comment, yes, I would like to know how you are a traditionalist, annihilationalist, and universalist.
I thought I maybe should share my take on the relationship between choice and love, so that you know where I'm coming from here. I see both as being in a sense co-dependent on the other. Real choice cannot exist apart from love, and love, in its idea form, involves choice.
To use the analogy of human relationships, I look at it this way: I don't expressly choose to be in love with some one. I've tried, and it doesn't work. I've also tried to not being in love, and that often doesn't work either. However, the experience I have called 'being in love' is not the entirety of what love is. This experience describes what is going on inside of me, but love is really more than that; it's about the relationship, and all relationships involve choices. There is a sense in which I don't really choose whether or not to experience love for some one, but love is not just experience, it is also action. In this sense, I must constantly choose to love someone which whom I have a relationship: I must continually decide to be sensitive to them, to treat them with respect, to put their needs and desires before mine.
In many ways, I think that this analogy falls short, because there is equality in human love relationships, whereas God is so far above us that we cannot think that our love for Him is somehow equivalent to His love for us, as would be the ideal case in a human relationship. However, I think elements of the analogy still stand. With regard to the point I just made, one might recall when Christ said in the book of John "those who love me will keep my commandments." I believe that we do love God by choosing to act in a way that pleases and glorifies Him.
Here I need to be careful though, because if I apply this to how my relationship with God began, I might easily be suggesting justification be works. I still believe that we choose to respond to God's inititive by believing in Jesus Christ; That is what makes sense to me from a rational and Biblical perspective. However, when I think about my own salvation experience (about which my memory sadly does not serve me well) I don't directly recall making any such choice. But to me, the point is that it doesn't matter. The point is, I have a relationship with Jesus, and He's set me free. I don't need to know the details of what happened in my mind when I first got their. Maybe it's like being married: (I wouldn't know yet) I don't know whether or not I really chose to fall in love with my wife, but that doesn't matter, I love her all the same, and wouldn't leave her for anything.
I love what you said in the last paragraph...that it doesn't matter how it got there...what matters is that it's there. Yes! This is exactly my point of view.
When I study the nature of my own choice-making, I find it to be a great mystery. I really don't know where it all came from. I've done experiments, rearranging objects on the table, wondering why I chose this way instead of that way. I don't know why. And for that matter, I don't know why I love some people and don't love others, although there is a very strong correlation between feeling unloved by them and me not loving them. This is the natural pattern, anyways.
Yes, I agree that in love relationships, there are choices. And in this life, there are many choices to stay committed in love. I am recently married, and know that I have a life ahead of me of choosing to bring back love when it dwindles. Thank God that there is a part of us more determined than our passions!
But my take on this is that it is unfortunate that we must re-commit ourselves in this way. Having to choose to love over and over again is surely something I hope I don't have to do in the next life. I hope that God will make it steadfast.
When I committed to love my wife as long as we both would live, I did so because I loved her, and because the thought of slipping away from loving her was a terrible thought. But I will slip in and out of love. I know this. It happens quite frequently. Sometimes simply because I'm just tired and grumpy. Or deep in thought. :-)
There is a more practical, determined side of my that keeps me in order. This is the side that lays the rules and makes the commitments. But why does it do so? For the sake of love? All that choosing is not in itself the goal. The goal is love, and for whatever reason, I must STRIVE to keep it up in this life. I do not expect the next life to have this setup. So for me, it is quite easy to imagine love being planted in everyone's hearts, and then being made steadfast as we become completed creations.
Tangent -- you mentioned the "strive to enter the narrow gate" verse. My opinion is that Jesus wasn't telling us how to be eternally reconciled to God. That would seem to against Paul's gospel of grace very strongly. Paul's message is that we don't have to STRIVE to be saved.
Yet the kingdom, for now, comes and goes in our hearts, and God has set before us a task to be steadfast. And salvation certainly starts now for some. Eternal life is knowing God and Jesus Christ, and that has begun in this world. But I believe all will know him one day.
As for the universalist-traditionalist-annihilationist view, I'm gonna have to get back to you on that.
peace,
Jathan
Micah, sorry for the silence. We had a good conversation going. I've been broken to see a few things lately, and I'm recovering. It's kinda like God's taking everything I believed and thought and he's reorganizing it.
I realize that there was a large lack of humility in the way I was going about "figuring things out." I guess in the end I always come back to this, that I really don't know anything of any real substance. What I have is faith, and I cannot help but believe in the good that I see. I see Christ, and whatever else others will say about him, I see enormous love and forgiveness, a true heart for redemption. And when I turn to my neighbors, I don't see anything that is beyond God's power.
I don't see others as any less malleable than myself, any less worthy than myself, and I am quite unworthy. I think Jesus sought to level the playing field for us all, so that we may believe that all will be saved or nobody will, since we're all in the very same rut.
I could give you that univ-annih-trad view if you want, but it's only a theory of how it could all fit together. And right now, I'm a little impatient with theories, including my own. My heart aches, Micah, and you have become my friend.
Jathan
Hey Jathan, no need to apologize for silence. I know that when I'm really busy (which is most of the time now) I can't keep blogging on the top of my priority list, and a certainly don't expect you to do the same. Whenever you want to comment is fine.
I completely hear where you are coming from, and I think that I can really identify. I too love to "figure things out", and suddenly I will realize that my theory or philosophy has become more important than my relationship with Christ. For people like you and me, to whom God has given minds that like to think deeply about these things, I believe that He gave this to us for a reason and wants us to use it. But I am reminded again and again of how we cannot love our ideas about God as a substitute for loving Him. Our ideas are just a possible means to the end of serving Him and relating to Him.
Thank you for your honesty. I think that there are things we can know, but that these are the things that God has revealed to us and we accept by faith. I really hope that this ache you feel is a spiritual growing pain, that you are broken so that God will build you up. I have prayed these things for myself, and will I pray these things for you.
your brother, Micah
Micah, some of my most recent thoughts are in my (rather long) blog post called, "Casting Nets, not Crowns."
Thought you might be interested.
I feel like I reached an insight yesterday about the nature of human freedom...
Perhaps Nietzsche really did advocate the exact opposite of Christianity, in emphasizing the "will to power." Perhaps the will to power is sin itself. Now what I know of power is that when I seek it, I want to decide for myself what is right and what is wrong, what is good and what is bad. In that case, there really is no good that I can reject, unless I'm just playing games with myself, since I determined my own good (or at least I think I did).
But if there is conviction deep within my soul that something is good, and that the opposite of it is truly bad, then appears to me that I have already lost my power. I am now subject to this good. It is in my heart, yes, but it is also "outside" of me...meaning that I can look back at it. Consider whether power and sin and moral grey and wishy-washiness all relate closely to one another. Isn't the wishy-washy person the one who has no strong conviction? Won't such a person value "human freedom" above all else?
I think I know why such a person values choice itself so much. It is because he has not encountered enough love. Instead, a world confronts him with many pleasures to partake in, but in his soul, he knows that none of these things will really make him happy. He's still waiting for something, but he doesn't know what. All he knows in the meantime, deep down, is that he must "save himself," like a virgin for marriage, until this something arrives. This means that he will abstain from abandoning himself to any of the hard loaves that the world has offered him. He knows they are too hard, or too empty, or unfulfilling. So then, it is none of these choices that is most important to him, but rather hovering above them, transcending them, that he has found the most true to himself.
And this is true. He has discovered much of what lies in his heart. He disdains the lies that others bring themselves into with debauchery and such. They've tricked themselves into believing that they really found "the answer."
But he has developed yet another lie for himself: that this transcendence, this detachment from any particular pleasure he's seen, is the highest good for him. He calls this transcendence "free will."
So then, when someone starts talking to him of loving God, if he does not understand what that means, his mind is trained by his own concepts to recognize this "love of God" as another hard loaf, another empty pleasure. He refuses to be moved from his perch. He will not dive down to meet this love.
He does not realize yet that this love of God is a higher perch. It is a higher transcendence, but it is something far better than anything that can be related through the word, "transcendence." It is what completes him. If only he would know this.
The thing about humanity is that it only THINKS that it can create its own good. And even at that, it senses on deeper levels that this is not true. Yet humans have the remarkable talent of lying to themselves. I think the more and more you get to the center of your heart, the more lies you've stripped away. And what I find in the center of my heart is a deep need. Praise God that he's stripped so many lies away! And I know there is more painful removal to take place.
So then, I think TRUE human freedom is rooted in a human's deepest need, and the attainment of what is needed. Yet I don't think it's the right way to go to assert, a priori, that all men crave God's love, deep down. What I think is closer to the truth is something Kierkegaard said: "The need for God is human perfection." The need itself raises a person above what they've been.
So we can perhaps think of this need for God as lying at the bottom of a person's heart, under so many lies, or we can think of this need as something ADDED to a person, making them more than they were, completing the baser nature that was already there. In that case, the baser nature is only a lie once this new need has been infused into the soul.
Oh, one more thing. We don't believe that there is an eternal force opposing God, right? So that means that everything either came from God, or came from [?????]. The latter, what I sometimes call darkness, is what I consider to be random or spontaneous. For where the heck did it come from? Yes, a person is influenced very much by things of his environment, but where did THESE things come from? Either God or [?????]. So then, if a human choice is not spontaneous (from [?????]) and not from God, then what is left? What other "piece" of human choice is left? Can human choice be even described as a thing made up of pieces? We speak of influences leading toward a choice, but not determining it. I think we all have a vague undertanding of what that might mean, but I think it's the duty of the philosopher to try to determine what we mean when we say "influence." The best I can do right now is to suggest that it's like adding sand to the sides of scales, or building up some structure called a "final choice."
peace,
Jathan
dude, you've really let this thing go.
Post a Comment