|
"All Truth Is God’s Truth"?
Those who integrate psychology with
Christianity declare, "All truth is God’s truth." Under this
umbrella statement, they embrace the speculative notions of
Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung, Alfred Adler, Abraham Maslow,
Albert Ellis, Carl Rogers, and a host of other psychological
theorists, depending upon their own individual biases.
Theologians have made this expansion
of God’s truth quite respectable under such terms as
"natural theology" and "general revelation," and Christian
psychologists enthusiastically embrace them. One example of
how these terms are used to justify the integraion of
psychology and the Bible is the reasoning of Bob and
Gretchen Passantino in their Four-Part "Psychology and the
Church" series, published in the Christian
Research Journal.
As they introduce their arguments,
they falsely accuse those who oppose integration as failing
to:
. . . recognize that some of what
we learn about God, ourselves, our relationship to God,
and our relationships to others comes from what are
called natural theology (understanding God and
His relationship with the universe by means of rational
reflection) and general revelation (that which
can be known about God generally—especially through the
created world—on a universal basis) (italics in
original).
Those of us who oppose integrating
psychological counseling theories and therapies with the
Bible do not fail to recognize those things mentioned above.
However, we also recognize the severe limitations of natural
theology and the real purpose of general revelation.
The Passantinos say:
God speaks not only specially (in
the Bible, through prophets, and in His Son—see
Hebrews 1:1-2), but also through reason, the material
universe, social history, and conscience.
We do not deny that some things can be
discovered by these natural means. The very basic issue,
however, is whether such humanly discovered truths can be
properly categorized as "revelation," either general or
specific. The Passantino criticism proceeds upon the
assumption that the theological category "general
revelation" (or, as is often used synonymously, "natural
theology") is composed of all such humanly discerned
truth-claims. They find support for this proposition in the
writing of John Coe, a faculty member of Rosemead School of
Psychology. It might be appropriate to say that the
Passantinos have used Coe’s theology to support their
presuppositions about psychology.
In response, we use arguments by Doug
Bookman, whose paper titled "In Defense of Biblical
Counseling" reveals major flaws in Coe’s theology, namely,
his epistemology, anthropology, and bibliology.
Epistemology
"Epistemology" is defined as "the
study or theory of the origin, nature, methods, and limits
of knowledge." In describing Coe’s position, Bookman says,
Coe "regards the claim that the Bible alone is sufficient as
a source of spiritual/moral knowledge as ‘comically and
tragically’ mistaken." In concluding his discussion of Coe’s
position, Bookman says:
I have suggested that this
proposition is flawed in that it commits the basic error
of natural theology, assuming that there is a world of
metaphysical truth outside of Scripture which can be
discovered by the unaided efforts of men.
In another place, Bookman makes the
case that the rationale employed by Coe and others in
defense of such an epistemology is dangerously flawed. Very
briefly, that rationale is accomplished by an arbitrary and
unbiblical broadening of the definition of general
revelation.
General revelation is an important
theological concept. Conservative theologians have used the
term general revelation to identify a very narrow
category of truth that God has made powerfully evident (thus
the word revelation) to every rational human being
(thus the word general), according to the way He
fashioned the moral and physical universe. Romans 1 and 2,
the most important New Testament discussion of general
revelation, states unequivocally that the revelation God has
set before all men, through the infinitely mysterious,
complicated physical universe and through the moral
consciousness of all human beings, renders all humans
without excuse when they reject that truth.
Lately, however, the important
theological category of general revelation has been
broadened to include all truth-claims made as a result of
human efforts to understand the many aspects of the created
order. Those who have broadened the category argue that the
Scriptures are indeed the "special" revelation which God has
left to us and that, because God is the Author of the entire
created order, whenever men discover "truth" in that order,
we can refer to that humanly discovered "truth" as "general
revelation."
Bookman identifies the very dangerous
ramifications of the argument that replaces the biblical
doctrine of general revelation.
First . . . by defining general
revelation as that body of truth which is gained by
human investigation and discovery, the argument is
guilty of neglecting the element of non-discoverability
which is intrinsic to the biblical notion of revelation
and supplanting that notion with its exact antithesis.
Further, the approach is dangerous in that it attributes
to the truth-claims of men an authority which they do
not and cannot possess, and renders it virtually
impossible to bring those truth-claims under the
authority of the one standard by which God demands that
they be measured.
Second, the argument . . . is
confused in its definition of the term "general." By
mistakenly taking that term to refer to the content
of the category (rather than to the audience
to which the revelation thus denominated is available),
the apologists who employ this argument commit two
fallacies which are destructive of orthodox theology:
first, they expand the category to include all manner of
truth-claims which have no right to be thus honored; and
second, they eviscerate the character of revelation by
including in the category truth-claims which are
admittedly lesser than the truths of Scripture, which
demand that finite and fallen men measure them to
determine their validity, and which at best can
possibly issue in a higher level of insight into the
demands of living (italics in original).
Bookman concludes that:
. . . as described in Scripture,
general revelation is truth which is manifestly set
forth before all men (Rom 1:17-19; 2:14,15); it is truth
so clear and irrefutable as to be known intuitively by
all rational men (Ps 19:1-6; Rom 1: 19); it is truth so
authoritative and manifest that when men, by reason of
willful rebellion, reject that truth, they do so at the
cost of their own eternal damnation (Rom 1:20; 2:1,15).
For this seamless, flawless and majestic tapestry of
God-given truth is substituted a patchwork of "lesser"
truths, of truth which "is obtainable at least in part,"
truths which "are not delineated for us by God" but are
"discovered by fallible humans." . . . Surely such a
concept of general revelation represents a ravaging of
the biblical concept.
Anthropology
Coe quite clearly denies the effect of
sin upon the fallen mind of man. Bookman identifies as
absolutely basic to Coe’s argument the proposition that
"fallen man retains the ability and propensity to deduce
truth from the created world and thus to arrive at
conclusions which are as authoritative as the Scriptures
themselves." Coe defends such a proposition, not by any
exegetical consideration of relevant biblical passages, but
rather by pointing out that the sage in the book of Proverbs
explicitly says he learned some things by observing the
natural order and that those things are recorded in
Scripture. Coe concludes that if it could be done by the
biblical sage, it can be done by any human being. However,
such a parallel is illegitimate. The conclusions drawn from
the supposed parallel are wrong and dangerous.
More central to the issue of biblical
anthropology, however, is that Coe’s argument involves a
denial of the biblical insistence that divine truth is
foolishness to the natural man (1 Cor 2:14), that apart from
regeneration man’s understanding is darkened and alienated
from the life of God (Eph 4:17), that all men are enemies in
their minds until God transforms them through the work of
salvation (Col 1:13), and that from the sole of the foot
even unto the head there is no soundness in fallen man (Isa
1:5). Further, even regenerated man is crippled by the
continuing corruption of sin, as well as by the reality of
his own finiteness (Isa 55:8,9; 1 Cor 2:16).
Thus, for any man, saved or lost, to
suppose that his thoughts ought to be regarded as certain
and/or as authoritative as those of God—let alone the notion
that all human truth-claims deserve such respect, simply
because the sage of the Old Testament sometimes related his
articulation of truth to observations he had made in the
natural order—is to deny what the Bible says so often and so
clearly about the real fallenness and finiteness of man and
about the infinite wisdom and matchless authority of God.
Bibliology
Here the question is whether the Bible
is fully God-breathed or includes information discovered by
the human intellect. Bookman shows that Coe "is convinced
that the knowledge possessed by the sage [in Proverbs] and
recorded by him in Scripture was discovered by the sage
alone, with no dependence upon God." Bookman also contends
that "Coe’s perceived parallel between the ministry
of the OT sage and the work of the modern social
scientist simply does not exist."
Bookman summarizes this issue of Coe’s
bibliology in a personal letter to us, in which he says:
The issue here relates very
directly to the character of inspired Scripture. Wisdom
literature, such as that which is represented by the
sage in the book of Proverbs, is one of many precious
and profitable genres of biblical literature. But the
recorded message of the sage, no less than that of the
prophet, the Gospelist or the writer of a New Testament
epistle, is authoritative and dependable simply and
only because it was breathed out by God (2 Tim
3:16). The prophets received their messages by means of
dreams (Num 12:6); that doesn’t suggest that the dreams
of men today are just as authoritative as those of the
prophets. The sage normally received his message by
means of observation; it is erroneous to conclude that
therefore the observations of any man are as
authoritative and/or dependable as those observations of
the sage which are recorded in the pages of sacred
Scripture. Note carefully that the debate here is
not whether any of the observations made by human beings
might be true. Rather, the debate is whether the
observations of men today ought to be regarded as
possessing the absolute certainty and/or normative
authority which the Bible possesses in all of its parts.
The words of the sage are not certain and authoritative
because they were discovered by observation, any
more than the words of Jude are certain and
authoritative because he cites them from the
apocryphal book of Enoch (Jude 14). The words of all
biblical writers are authoritative because the recording
of them was done under the careful supervision of the
Holy Spirit which is known as "inspiration." To regard
the words of men as possessing the same sublime dignity
and ultimate authority that the words of the Bible
possess is remarkably dangerous (italics in original).
The Coe-Passantino understanding of
general revelation is all-encompassing but erroneous. In one
fell swoop they even reduce sections of Scripture to less
than God-breathed in their attempt to show that God’s
revelation refers to that which can be discovered through
observation and natural reason. The word revelation
refers to an unveiling, a revealing of something that could
not be otherwise discovered or known. What mankind gleans
through observation, reason and logic is not revelation, but
discovery. These discoveries can be very helpful to mankind,
such as the discovery of electricity. The kind of psychology
the Passantinos both criticize and defend may include some
discovery about the superficial aspects of man through
observation, reason and logic, but these kinds of theories
include highly subjective, speculative imaginations about
the depths of man. |