Christians, if quizzed, will favor firm objective truth rather than
loose subjectivity. If, for instance, believers are asked, “Do you know
that God loves you?” most will respond with, “Yes, of course”. We can
treat God’s love as an objective certainty affirmed in the Bible. But
if the subjective question is asked, “Do you often feel God’s love?”
many will probably answer “no”.
Our engagement with objective truth is a well-grounded bias as we
recognize how many features of faith are based on proclaimed truth
rather than on personal experiences. We worship Jesus, for instance, as
a man the Bible reveals to be God’s Son: one who is wholly God, wholly
man, and wholly one in his divine humanity. This portrayal of Jesus is a
bedrock of faith yet we embrace it because we find it in the Bible and
not because we somehow, “feel it must be true”.
But what about knowing Christ as in John 17:3? Is some sense of
relational experience crucial to Christian faith or is it optional?
Does objective truth suffice so that we can have a true and proper faith
without any subjective engagement?
Let me answer by affirming that subjectivity is crucial as it
completes God’s revelation to us—as in the completion of an electric
circuit. God reveals his heart of love to us, and our hearts then
respond in kind as we experience that love. To know the God who “is
love” (1 John 4:8 & 16) is to engage his love in a personal
experience. To know him is to love him.
I enjoy reading the Puritan preacher, Richard Sibbes (1577-1635), on
this. He held that regeneration is our experience of God that only
those who meet Christ can know, and those who have a “veil of ignorance”
cannot fathom: “Of spiritual things, such as is union [with Christ],
and as is the communion between Christ and us, and the mystery of
regeneration in the new creature, such as is the joy in the Holy Ghost,
the inward peace of conscience” [Works, 2.462].
Sibbes pressed the point in a sly jab towards academics who could
talk about God without loving Christ: “As a blind man can talk of
colours, if he be a scholar, and describe them better than he that hath
his eyes, he being not a scholar. But he that hath his eyes can judge
of colours a great deal better.”
His point is well taken: a man born blind can learn and even teach
about the spectrum of light but it takes a sighted person to tell
another viewer, “Look at that part of the rainbow where red turns to
orange”. This is where the difference between a revealed truth, such as
Christ’s full humanity and his true deity, and a relational truth such
as our experience of the Spirit telling us to speak to God as our
“Abba—Daddy” overlap. Both are true and mutually supportive, but—to use
a radio analogy—one operates in the spiritual frequency of an unfelt
explanation of Christ’s being while the other operates in the spiritual
frequency of a felt encounter with Christ’s love. We can think, for
instance, of the difference between the visible and the invisible
spectra of light.
The lesson is this: to engage God in whole terms—in both the
objective and subjective reality of his being—we need his
self-disclosure to become visible to the “eyes of our hearts” (as in
Ephesians 1:18). Engaging God in Christ is not an “either-or” option
that distinguishes thinking Christians from emotional Christians.
Rather it is a “both-and” faith. So some of our earlier Reformation
companions, including John Calvin and Sibbes, were correct to speak of
faith as a personal experience of God’s love for us as revealed to our
hearts and minds by the Spirit who uses objective Bible promises from
God to speak to our hearts.
Some may not be there in their experience. So we must ask: is this
subjective faith out of reach for some? For those who have never felt
God’s love in Christ but who “want it”? No. There is nothing in the
Bible to suggest that God keeps us from feeling his attractive love, a
love that always elicits a response of love in return. We love him
because he first loved us.
The problem is in us: in our refusal to look towards him with open
hearts. Paul said as much in the case of people being blinded by “the
god of this world” (2 Corinthians 4:4). How does the enemy maintain
such power? By misguided loves: when the blinded person’s real love is
for what the world offers, as in John 3:19—they love darkness rather
than light because their deeds are evil.
So let’s affirm objective truth while also responding subjectively in
love to the one who is, in himself, the ultimate living Truth. He’s
absolutely and objectively lovely and those who know him will experience
that love subjectively.
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