• Astorre
    229
    Inspired by Kierkegaard's ideas:

    Faith is neither knowledge nor conviction. It is a leap into the void, without guarantees. Faith is risk, trepidation, and loneliness. Оtherwise there would be no sacramental act, but simply conviction. Faith is not knowledge, for if a person simply knows, they have no doubt. Faith is, on the one hand, imperfect certainty, on the other, intention, and, on the third, a constant feeling of uncertainty. Any attempt to convey the content of the concept of "Faith," in my opinion, seems speculative, because it is a feeling that becomes a judgment when expressed in words .

    Preaching is persuasion. It is a public word addressed to others, with the goal of evoking faith in them, that is, persuading them to accept something illogical, unprovable, and inexpressible.

    Hence the paradox: if a preacher truly believes , then he finds himself in a realm of paradox and doubt—and therefore cannot confidently call others. After all, it's unethical to call for something you're not sure of yourself; otherwise, you're simply avoiding any responsibility and calling for something you yourself can't confirm. If a preacher is convinced, certain of the truth of what he says, he no longer believes, but knows—and loses the right to speak of faith, becoming a hypocrite.

    Preaching faith means either not having it or betraying it.

    I'd like to address possible objections.

    The preacher supposedly doesn't teach, but testifies. He doesn't impose; he simply shares his experience. This is personal testimony, not preaching in the traditional sense.
    But then: The testimony itself is already public and therefore becomes an example, an instruction, a guide. As soon as you open your mouth and say, "I believe, and here's why," you're already suggesting, shaping, and externalizing something internal. This means you're either talking about something that can't be communicated, and therefore distorting it (a lie), or you're convinced it can be communicated and therefore no longer believe (knowledge, not faith).

    The preacher supposedly invites you to share a risk, not offers knowledge. He doesn't say, "I know," he says, "I believe and invite you to take a risk too." But then: to invite risk, you need to define what it is and what's at stake. If you don't know what you're offering, you're irresponsible (you're not risking—you're just enticing). If you know, you've once again moved from faith to knowledge and lost the right to call it faith.

    The preacher sacrifices himself for others: He risks being misunderstood, rejected, despised he sacrifices himself, like Abraham. But Abraham's sacrifice isn't public. Abraham doesn't prove, explain, or teach. He simply acts contrary. The preacher, on the other hand, is on stage, in a position of authority, explaining the "meaning" of sacrifice, although true sacrifice is something else entirely, isn't it? After all, salvation is individual. The preacher cannot take on someone else's faith, someone else's guilt, someone else's risk, or someone else's responsibility. Therefore, the preacher sacrifices nothing but his own comfort or status.

    And here's another thing. The preacher simply loves. He asserts: I want others to be saved, too. After all, is it wrong to wish for others to be saved? Doesn't love justify preaching? But love doesn't guarantee the right to interfere in someone else's destiny. Salvation, after all, cannot be recommended; it cannot be imposed. Otherwise, we fall into the same trap: the preacher "knows" that salvation is good and that this is the path to it. That is, he no longer believes, but asserts.

    If the preacher is simply trying to score missionary points with the Almighty , then things are even worse.

    Hence, I conclude that talking about faith means abandoning it. As soon as you try to convey faith, you rationalize it, and therefore betray its nature. According to Kierkegaard, the only true preacher is the one who lives faith in silence.
  • T Clark
    15.4k
    Faith is neither knowledge nor conviction. It is a leap into the void, without guarantees. Faith is risk, trepidation, and loneliness. Оtherwise there would be no sacramental act, but simply conviction. Faith is not knowledge, for if a person simply knows, they have no doubt. Faith is, on the one hand, imperfect certainty, on the other, intention, and, on the third, a constant feeling of uncertainty. Any attempt to convey the content of the concept of "Faith," in my opinion, seems speculative, because it is a feeling that becomes a judgment when expressed in words .Astorre

    I’ve been thinking about faith recently. It certainly isn’t something that gets a lot of respect here on the forum. The forum is full of people who consider themselves rational and that consideration leads them to atheism. They tend to be condescending and contemptuous of people who profess faith. As I’ve come to see it, this represents a fundamental misunderstanding of what “faith” means.

    Those who have read my posts here on the forum know I have a strong interest in Taoism. I think faith is similar to what Taoists call “Te,” which is sometimes translated as “intrinsic virtuosity” and which I sometimes think of as our true natures, our hearts. This is a quote from Ziporyn’s translation of the Chuang Tzu (Zhuangzi). I’ve used it many times here on the forum.

    What I call good is not humankindness and responsible conduct, but just being good at what is done by your own intrinsic virtuosities. Goodness, as I understand it, certainly does not mean humankindness and responsible conduct! It is just fully allowing the uncontrived condition of the inborn nature and allotment of life to play itself out. What I call sharp hearing is not hearkening to others, but rather hearkening to oneself, nothing more.

    The preacher supposedly doesn't teach, but testifies. He doesn't impose; he simply shares his experience. This is personal testimony, not preaching in the traditional sense.

    But then: The testimony itself is already public and therefore becomes an example, an instruction, a guide.
    Astorre

    I don’t know much about preaching or how preachers see their vocation, but this description doesn’t seem right to me. I don’t think saying “Here’s what I’ve experienced. You can pay attention and see what you find, experience, inside yourself” is necessarily an instruction. Someone may show you a path, but you have to walk it yourself.
  • Astorre
    229
    I don’t know much about preaching or how preachers see their vocation, but this description doesn’t seem right to me. I don’t think saying “Here’s what I’ve experienced. You can pay attention and see what you find, experience, inside yourself” is necessarily an instruction. Someone may show you a path, but you have to walk it yourself.T Clark

    Thank you for your comment. Indeed, after the first reading, that's how it seems, so I'd like to clarify my idea.

    When someone sends us a directive, an imperative, or a command to act, it's not limited to a simple act of coercion—within any command lies a context: I'm telling you what to do and accepting responsibility for it. For example: a mother tells her child to wipe his nose (the mother is willing to accept the consequences of the wrong decision to wipe his nose), or a manager tells a subordinate exactly how to sell (the manager accepts the risk that if their subordinate follows their instructions and it doesn't work), or a state proclaiming an ideology (the sovereign is responsible and accepts the consequences of the ideology's failure). Any act of affirmation carries responsibility. When you say, "You must do X," if you're not willing to share the consequences of doing X with those you're addressing, you're simply a windbag or a demagogue. But if you say, "Guys, do A, because if it doesn't work, I'll compensate you for all the losses you incur (and that's how it will be)"—that's a whole other level of responsibility.

    I was drawn to this topic by conversations with so-called preachers (not necessarily Christian ones, but any kind). They say, "You must do this, because I'm a wise man and have learned the truth." When you ask, "What if I do this and it doesn't work?" Silence ensues, or something like, "That means you didn't do what I told you to do/you didn't believe/you weren't chosen."

    Of course, the topic seems somewhat provocative, but it's certainly no less interesting to think about than the Sleeping Beauty problem or the problem of blue-eyed people on an island. I think the topic is at least thought-provoking.
  • Tom Storm
    10.3k
    I suspect there are as many types of preachers as there are faiths so I don't think we can readily say " the preacher is x". I’ve known my share of priests, rabbis, elders, reverends, preachers, and cult leaders. I wouldn’t say they have much in common, apart from a desire to reach others. But some want to do it through dogma or authority, while others aim to promote individualised faith or pluralism through empathy and contemplation. Religious faith plays no role in my life, but for those it does, it’s personal, intimate, and often ineffable. The connection between personal faith and preaching is often more tenuous than you’d think. I once spoke with an Anglican minister who had delivered an extremely definitive sermon, and afterward, when I asked him about his apparent certainty, he admitted he was riddled by doubt and felt he’d made mistakes in both tone and content. Preaching is performance while faith is introspection.

    He asserts: I want others to be saved, too. After all, is it wrong to wish for others to be saved?Astorre

    The “salvation cult” sounds more evangelical than Christianity per se. Liberal churches that do not follow Fundamentalist dogama generally do not emphasize this. I got through ten years of Baptist Christianity with almost no mention of any need to be saved.

    Episcopal (Anglican) Bishop John Shelby Spong puts it like this:

    True religion is not about possessing the truth. No religion does that. It is rather an invitation into a journey that leads one toward the mystery of God. Idolatry is religion pretending that it has all the answers.
  • Astorre
    229


    Please share: do you see the "preacher's paradox" or do you think it doesn't exist?

    Perhaps I'm proposing too rigid a dichotomy?
  • Tom Storm
    10.3k
    Please share: do you see the "preacher's paradox" or do you think it doesn't exist?Astorre

    No, I don't think it matters.
  • Astorre
    229
    But some want to do it through dogma or authority, .Tom Storm

    I never liked this and I felt it was wrong, which I now expressed with the help of arguments in this post.

    while others aim to promote individualised faith or pluralism through empathy and contemplationTom Storm

    This approach seems clearly preferable to me, as I wrote above:

    Any attempt to convey the content of the concept of "Faith," in my opinion, seems speculative, because it is a feeling that becomes a judgment when expressed in words .Astorre

    I truly believe that each person's personal faith is not a place for debate or philosophical argument. But please consider what I've written as a discussion of the structure built upon faith. That is, the object of study is not faith, but preaching.
  • Tom Storm
    10.3k
    Faith and preaching are distinct acts; I don’t see how expressing the latter necessarily betrays the former.
  • Astorre
    229


    Here is a more detailed explanation if I understood your question correctly

    When someone sends us a directive, an imperative, or a command to act, it's not limited to a simple act of coercion—within any command lies a context: I'm telling you what to do and accepting responsibility for it. For example: a mother tells her child to wipe his nose (the mother is willing to accept the consequences of the wrong decision to wipe his nose), or a manager tells a subordinate exactly how to sell (the manager accepts the risk that if their subordinate follows their instructions and it doesn't work), or a state proclaiming an ideology (the sovereign is responsible and accepts the consequences of the ideology's failure). Any act of affirmation carries responsibility. When you say, "You must do X," if you're not willing to share the consequences of doing X with those you're addressing, you're simply a windbag or a demagogue. But if you say, "Guys, do A, because if it doesn't work, I'll compensate you for all the losses you incur (and that's how it will be)"—that's a whole other level of responsibility.

    I was drawn to this topic by conversations with so-called preachers (not necessarily Christian ones, but any kind). They say, "You must do this, because I'm a wise man and have learned the truth." When you ask, "What if I do this and it doesn't work?" Silence ensues, or something like, "That means you didn't do what I told you to do/you didn't believe/you weren't chosen."
    Astorre
  • Tom Storm
    10.3k
    But as I said, there are myriad types of preaching. Isn’t it simply meant to awaken others? It’s not necessarily prescriptive or certain.

    I’ve never encountered preachers who say, ‘You must do X.’ I would imagine those are fairly simple types. You may be referring to the Fundamentalist Preacher’s Dilemma. I don’t take fundamentalism seriously as a form of credible spirituality. And I say this as a nihilist... :wink:
  • Astorre
    229


    I anticipated this objection:

    he says, "I believe and invite you to take a risk too." But then: to invite risk, you need to define what it is and what's at stake. If you don't know what you're offering, you're irresponsible (you're not risking—you're just enticing). If you know, you've once again moved from faith to knowledge and lost the right to call it faith.Astorre
  • Tom Storm
    10.3k
    Sorry, the idea doesn't resonate with me. The better preachers I’ve seen make no demands and simply promote contemplative living, in harmony with others, often using scripture as allegorical stories. It’s about generating a conversation about value and eschewing dogma.

    But I concede it isn't hard to find monstrous literalists - they are out there too.
  • baker
    5.7k
    I was drawn to this topic by conversations with so-called preachers (not necessarily Christian ones, but any kind). They say, "You must do this, because I'm a wise man and have learned the truth." When you ask, "What if I do this and it doesn't work?" Silence ensues, or something like, "That means you didn't do what I told you to do/you didn't believe/you weren't chosen."Astorre

    Of course this is how it works. Preaching, teaching, mentoring, advising -- these all make for one-way relationships where the whole and sole responsibility is on the student/underling.

    There are self-help books that state in a disclaimer right at the beginning of the book that the author and the publisher are not in any way responsible for what happens to the person if the person should choose to follow the advice given in the book.
  • baker
    5.7k
    Please share: do you see the "preacher's paradox" or do you think it doesn't exist?

    Perhaps I'm proposing too rigid a dichotomy?
    Astorre

    I think it's a naive and idealistic to pose such a dichotomy.

    Most people, and especially religious/spiritual types, hold a stance like this: "If you don't see things the way I do, you're blind/stupid/evil (and deserve to be destroyed)". And that's it, end of story.
  • baker
    5.7k
    Sorry, the idea doesn't resonate with me. The best preachers I’ve seen make no demands and simply promote contemplative living, in harmony with others, often using scripture as allegorical stories. It’s about generating a conversation about value and eschewing dogma.Tom Storm

    Oh? Or maybe you fail to notice their authoritarianism?
  • Tom Storm
    10.3k
    Oh? Or maybe you fail to notice their authoritarianism?baker

    Oh? Or maybe you see authoritarianism everywhere?
  • Astorre
    229


    Oh, here's where I'm ready to intervene and responsibly state: authoritarianism, unlike liberalism, dictates how to act and what to do, but it also doesn't shirk responsibility (for example, a mother to her son or a teacher to a student). In this case, the preacher is considered a pure liberal by me. He says, "I'm affirming this, and you have the right to follow through or not, but the responsibility is yours." So, authoritarianism in its pure form doesn't deserve to be labeled as all the "bad things" it can do.
  • baker
    5.7k
    Or maybe you see authoritarianism everywhere?Tom Storm

    Then I wouldn't see it at all, as there'd be nothing to contrast it against. If everything is orange, you can't tell it's orange.
  • baker
    5.7k
    Oh, here's where I'm ready to intervene and responsibly state: authoritarianism, unlike liberalism, dictates how to act and what to do, but it also doesn't shirk responsibility.Astorre
    What exactly does that look like when authoritarianism takes responsibility? In that it punishes, ostracizes, imprisons, or kills those who fail to live up to the set standards?

    Here, I view the preacher as a pure liberal: "I'm saying this, and you have the right to follow through or not, but the responsibility is yours."
    In other words, a one-way relationship, a one-way responsibility.
  • baker
    5.7k
    Preaching is persuasion. It is a public word addressed to others, with the goal of evoking faith in them, that is, persuading them to accept something illogical, unprovable, and inexpressible.Astorre

    This doesn't sound right, not at all.

    Note how preaching to outsiders is not common to all religions; only the expansive religions (such as Christianity and Islam) preach to outsiders. Judaism, Hinduism, and Buddhism, for example, do normally not preach to outsiders.

    And when it comes to a religous teacher speaking to his ingroup, to the members of his religion, this is actually just a repetition of already learned material (or material that was supposed to be learned already). Such sermons, and insofar there is any conversation with the members of the congregation, such conversations, follow the Socratic method: the conclusion is known and accepted by all participants at the onset, only the steps to that conclusion are rehearsed. The ingroup doesn't need to yet be persuaded; it goes without saying that they have already accepted the religious tenets, or else they wouldn't be there in the pew at all.

    As for preaching to outsiders: I never got the impression that the preacher is trying to "evoke faith" in me, much less trying to convince me to "accept something illogical, unprovable, and inexpressible". Not even remotely. In the best case scenario, I think they were "just doing their job of preaching" and I was entirely irrelevant to it. Iinstead of me, a carboard box might be there, and it would make no difference to them. In the more frequent scenario the preacher expressed his gloating over my eternal demise.
  • Astorre
    229


    What exactly does that look like when authoritarianism takes responsibility? In that it punishes, ostracizes, imprisons, or kills those who fail to live up to the set standards?baker

    You're obviously confusing authoritarianism with totalitarianism. Authoritarianism is when your dad punches you in the face if you steal your neighbor's bike (even though no one saw you). Totalitarianism is when you're a masterless slave, toiling in a quarry for eating an apple that fell off a passing truck. Kind of like a child taken into foster care by someone else for welfare.

    When your dad punches you in the face, he's your opinion leader and your teacher, enforcing good manners and holding you accountable for your obligations. In the second case (totalitarianism), you're not even a slave, just expendable material.

    I understand the audience I'm discussing with, so I'm explaining the ideas step by step.

    So, that preacher who, smiling sweetly, sells you something he "knows" or doesn't believe is a liberal (in the classic sense, he does this to earn missionary points or just money without any responsibility). He's not the father who will pay your bills.
  • Astorre
    229
    Note how preaching to outsiders is not common to all religions; only the expansive religions (such as Christianity and Islam) preach to outsiders. Judaism, Hinduism, and Buddhism, for example, do normally not preach to outsiders.baker

    This resonates perfectly with Kierkegaard: Faith is a personal act. Faith is silent.

    You subtly distinguish expansive preaching from intra-denominational preaching, and that's a great addition. The idea of ​​the post is to identify the preacher's paradox in an expansive religion/belief. I think this is an excellent clarification. But I'd like to identify the paradox without reference to labels, but to the preaching of faith as such (no matter what it is, even belief in aliens).
  • Paine
    2.9k

    A lot of Kierkegaard's testimony takes the form of an intervention. Philosophical Fragments counterposes the Socratic view of 'recollection' that says we have the grounds for knowing truth within us to the Christian view that the condition for knowing truth must be given to us. That follows Pascal who said that Christianity is a scandal for reason but closer to the truth of the human condition than what reason provides.

    The Concept of Anxiety lays out how that difference relates to a person's experience through a contrast between original sin and the emergence of an individual through their sins. By this means, he draws the limits of psychology and the beginning of the theological.

    Works of Love is one very long sermon on the difference between Christian love and every other kind.

    I don't know how that relates to your paradox, but Soren K definitely intended to turn over tables in the temple.
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