Tuesday, April 12, 2016

Is it Written? Pt. 2



In our last study, we discussed the dangers and problems that come from debating topics, specifically in Scripture, when both of the parties involved are building their arguments from different foundations. When two people build their arguments from different foundations, each person may be convinced in his or her own mind that the argument is sound and reliable, but each person will fail to convince the other. This lack of progress can be attributed greatly to the different underlying assumptions which shape each person’s perception of his own argument and of his opponent’s argument.


In this study, let’s dig a little deeper into this concept. Try to visualize your belief-set as a house in which your heart, soul, and mind live and go about their daily tasks. Essentially, last time we saw why your house looks different from other people’s houses – the foundations are different. In this study, let’s start looking at some reasons why the foundations are different.


First of all, and to me the most obvious, is the fact that people are different genetically. Everyone has tendencies to think certain things or feel certain ways simply because of their parents’ genetics. You might think of these tendencies as their “default settings” – I’m a big computer nerd, so that’s how I see it. When you first get a new computer or a new phone, it has certain pre-installed defaults.

If you’ve ever used a computer with Apple’s default operating system (i.e. most Mac computers) and you’ve also used a computer with Microsoft’s default operating system (i.e. most other computers), then you know that there is a pretty big difference in the way they work! The menus are in different places, they look different, the screen displays things differently – pretty much everything about the way you use each computer is different, even if both computers are designed to perform similar tasks.


Similarly, people come with different default operating systems. Even though we’re all humans and we all perform similar tasks (i.e. eating, sleeping, working, having meaningful relationships, etc.), pretty much everything about us individually is different! Even if you find someone who’s very similar to you, odds are that there are thousands if not millions of other people who aren’t similar to you at all.


How does this all work? When you buy a Mac computer, brand new, it comes with the latest Macintosh Operating System (a.k.a. the latest Mac OS). It has that operating system because it was installed onto the system at the factory in which it was manufactured, by the people who manufactured it. Similarly, when we are born, we come with a combination of our parents’ genetic operating systems installed onto our brain.


Note that the default operating system can be changed on a computer. If you didn’t know this already, you can take a computer that previously had Windows 10 on it and replace it with Mac OS X. Similarly, just because someone has a tendency to behave or think a certain way doesn’t mean that he is solely at the mercy of his genetics – we each have a choice, and we can each fundamentally alter the way we think. But more on that later.



Everybody has certain genetic defaults, but those aren’t the only defaults that shape our actions and reactions. We also have defaults that are imposed upon us, either willingly or unwillingly, by the environment in which we are raised.

Allow me to demonstrate.


Computer software now is designed differently than it was 20 years ago. For example, if you’ve ever played with a computer from 20 years ago, then you know that the defaults on that computer from 20 years ago were pretty different from the defaults on a brand new computer. Windows 10 (2015) looks and feels totally different than Windows 95 (1995). Computer software is also different depending on where you are in the world. If you open up a computer you just bought in China, you’ll probably see a fairly familiar format with lots of Chinese characters – it’s got some similarities but it’s totally different from the computer you have at home where everything is in English!


Similarily, the way you were raised is probably fairly different from the way your parents, grandparents, great grandparents, or great great great great grandparents were raised. If you’ve ever talked with your grandparents about their childhood, then you know that the defaults that they grew up with were pretty different from the defaults you grew up with. In a lot of cases, it’s totally different. Even the things you saw and did as a child in were different from the things that they saw as a child – my generation had TVs and video games to take up all of our time when we were young, but my grandpa’s generation had to do hard work in the fields all day! The cultural norms change from generation to generation. Your childhood looks totally different from your grandma’s childhood. If you compare your childhood to someone raised in China, you may see some similarities (i.e. technological advances, world events), but in some ways it’s totally different from your American upbringing.


The similarities only go so far – if we draw the computer vs. human similarity as far as we can logically, we’ll see some major contradictions. People aren’t computers! Computers are, however, based on the human mind, and it really shows if we look at the individual details.


People are born with certain defaults, and people are raised to be a certain way by their parents and by the influences they see around them. Every day we’re changing based on the things around us, albeit to a lesser extent. With all of these differences, it’s easy to see how someone’s reasoning on a particular Bible verse might be different!


Genes + Environment + Free-will = foundation. It’s easy to see why your foundation is different from anybody else’s.


We haven’t really talked about free-will all that much, and we haven’t really talked about how we can change from the person we are genetically and environmentally predisposed to being. In order to be described as nothing more than the result of genetic and environmental influences, I would have to coast through life without ever changing a view or opinion, but we know that’s not real life. In real life, we make free-will choices every day, even choices that don’t fit in with our defaults, and during our next study, we’ll go over free-will and changing our foundations. Eventually, we’ll also take this brief study of our foundations and our houses and parallel them with real-life scenarios and positions, and we’ll discuss some ways that we can approach them.



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Until our next study, I’ll keep praying for you and I hope that you’ll pray for me too.



In Christian love,
Ethan