Doubt and faith

We’re ambivalent about doubt, I think. On the one hand, we admire the person whose faith is so robust that they seem to be able to act with complete trust and confidence. Other the other hand, we tend to be a little bit afraid of the person whose faith is so robust that they seem incapable of entertaining the possibility that they might be mistaken. In the old days (maybe – I wasn’t actually there) we think that doubt was frowned upon in the Church, perhaps a sign of unfaith or an unconfessed sin. These days we’re likely as not to see doubt as a good thing, even an inseparable part of faith. We say that doubt is part of “a mature faith.”

So, what role does or should doubt play in the life of faith? Is doubt something that should ideally diminish over time, something we should strive to get rid of? Or is it a constant companion since we “walk by faith and not by sight,” at least in this life?

Our modern (and post-modern) culture teaches us that every claim to knowledge or belief is suspect. The fact that there are other people who believe differently than we do can all by itself cast doubt over our own convictions. The fragility and contingency of our knowledge, the way our minds are shaped by culture, upbringing, even biology, can undermine trust in our own beliefs.

One can find (at least I do) that sometimes the things you think you believe just don’t seem as plausible as they once did. You suddenly see the once-solid edifice of your beliefs as a rickety structure held together by duct tape and chewing gum. C.S. Lewis wrote somewhere that he never felt less certain about God’s existence than after he’d just finished defending it with some kind of argument because it made him feel like everything rested on his own puny reason. I’m certainly no C.S. Lewis, so the jury-rigged nature of my own belief-system is even more apparent. Not that there are no good arguments for the truth of Christianity, but those arguments, like the people who make them, are fallible and open to revision. And most of them are inconclusive to say the least.

After all, how much of what we believe is the result of hunches, educated guesses, intuition, or weighting some experiences or pieces of evidence over others, not to mention because that’s what mom and dad/my friends/my super cool professor/Bono believes? Being the incorrigibly social animals that we are, we seem to be highly susceptible to social influences and pressure in forming beliefs.

The trendy post-modern argument that all belief-systems (or “meta-narratives”) are all equally ungrounded is of little comfort here. It’s tantamount to saying “Oh yeah, so’s your old man!” when someone challenges your epistemic credentials. While it might be nice to think that we’re all in the same (leaky) boat, it’s hardly conducive to confidence in one’s own conclusions. We’re faced with what sociologist Peter Berger called “the heretical imperative” – since we no longer see any tradition as simply given and authoritative, we’re forced to choose, knowing that it’s difficult, if not impossible, to offer compelling objective grounds for out choice (this is akin to the existentialists’ notion that we’re “condemned to be free”). Incidentally, appealing to the tradition-boundedness of rationality, as MacIntyre and others do, doesn’t seem to me to help here both because traditions themselves are far from being monolithic and impermeable, especially in the modern world, and it still leaves the question of which tradition one should submit to.

The dilemma here was well put by Kierkegaard: how can faith, which calls for complete (subjective) commitment on our part, be founded on something that is (objectively) uncertain?

Comments

3 responses to “Doubt and faith”

  1. Eric Lee

    Is absolute, ‘objective’ certainty in our faith desirable, let alone possible? And if it’s not, does that make it any less valid or true just because we take a step or two (but not three! we hate three!) back from thinking it is?

    I doubt that Christianity is ‘objective’ in the modern sense that modernists want it to be, but that doubt of mine is logically equivalent to saying “I believe that Christianity is not ‘objective’ by modernity’s standards.” That doesn’t make it ‘post-modern’ or completely subjectivist in any regard.

    Often times when we hear that people are refuting pure objectivisms we think we hear them making a run for the other extreme end of the spectrum when they may in fact not be. We’re just used to dualisms so that’s what we think. (“What, you’re not a Republican? So you must be an abortion-loving Democrat then!”… I used to get that kind of a response all the time…)

    One example is that I would say that George Linkbeck might be going a little far in regards to the Christian story only being able to narrate the Christian story, but Alasdair MacIntyre probably does not. See Trevor Hart’s book that I quoted a week or so ago for more on that.

    Just some thoughts.

    Peace,

    eric

  2. Lee

    You’re absolutely right, of course, that the absence of Cartesian certainty in now way implies that we have no good grounds for believing what we believe. But this is more of an existential/personal question: how do we cope with the gap between the uncertainty of our beliefs and the fact that they call for complete commitment? Usually we think that our actions should be proportionate to the certainty of the beliefs they’re based on (e.g. if I’m uncertain about what’s around the next corner, I will drive cautiously). But faith seems to require that we act rather heedlessly even in the face of uncertainty.

  3. Andy

    Personally, I don’t often find the lack of objectivity, in this sense, an obstacle to my faith. I am not trying to determine the truth or falsehood of any logical proposition. I am living in relationship. And the relationship is definitely with someone.It may be my sub-concious self. It may be the collective self of the historical Christian tradition. It may be a personification of the universe. But there’s definitely someone there, and that someone behaves suspciously like I’m told to expect God to behave. And this is why the strongest argument in Christian apologetics is “Come and see.”

    This obviously won’t win any intellectual arguments. But I guess I’m not really as interested in the question of the existence of God as I am in the question of why I don’t really care about the question of the existence of God except in a detached, intellectual-curiosity sort of way. It’s no more sensible than pondering whether or not my wife is a fem-bot. Of course, secularists tell me that my wife and I are both machines of some kind, but that isn’t about to stop me from engaging in a love relationship with her.

    That’s not to say I never doubt the existence of God. But I think that doubting the existence of God, when I do it, is much more like a crisis of relationship than it is like a crisis of logic. Because I don’t know what God is, I can never really doubt that God is what I have believed God to be.

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