Tuesday, June 11, 2019

Is Worldview Thought Still Relevant?

Author's Note: The follow article was published yesterday in The Worldview Bulletin - a tremendous resource with links to contemporary news, articles, and worldview thoughts by leading authors and thinkers.  I invite and encourage you to check them out and subscribe to their bulletins and newsletters - Worldview Bulletin link 
The Contemporary Importance of Worldview Thought
Since the first-edition publication of James Sire’s The Universe Next Door in 1976, worldview thought has been a prominent fixture in western evangelicalism.  Christian leaders and teachers have acknowledged the tremendous benefits that worldview awareness and analysis provides in discipleship and spiritual growth, resulting in a veritable boom in Christian worldview exploration and publication—Walsh & Middleton’s The Transforming Vision; Goheen & Bartholomew’s Living at the Crossroads; Wilkens & Sanford’s Hidden Worldviews; Myers & Noebel’s Understanding the Times; Sire’s Naming the Elephant; the list goes on.  Worldview-oriented ministries have also blossomed—Summit Ministries; Probe; Worldview Academy; Leadership University, etc. 
But the rising prominence of worldview thought has also prompted skepticism and opposition from a range of Christian thinkers—including the influential public intellectual James K. A. Smith at Calvin College.  Critics charge that “traditional worldview studies” are reductionistic, and “lack explanatory power and often misinterpret people.” (Noble, A Disruptive Witness, 52-53) For his part, Smith’s primary charge is that worldview is overly rationalistic, and miss the reality that human habits (virtues) are shaped not by right thinking but by right loves/liturgy (see Smith, Desiring the Kingdom, 17ff; idem., Imagining the Kingdom, 9ff).   

Saturday, June 8, 2019

My thoughts on Chartraw & Allen's "Apologetics at the Cross"

Joshua D. Chartraw and Mark D. Allen, Apologetics at the Cross: An Introduction for Christian Witness. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2018. 329 pp.

Last fall I had the privilege of serving on Christianity Today's adjudication panel for the book of the year in the category of Apologetics & Evangelism.  All four finalists were excellent (not perfect, but excellent) works, with different strengths.  I'd like to take a couple of posts to share some of my thoughts on the four finalists:

Sam Chan, Evangelism in a Skeptical World (Zondervan)
David & Marybeth Baggett, The Morals of the Story (IVP Academic)
Alan Noble, Disruptive Witness (IVP)
Joshua Chartraw & Mark Allen, Apologetics at the Cross (Zondervan)


Chartraw and Allen have written a highly engaging and comprehensive introductory apologetics textbook, which would be a boon for college or seminary apologetic courses.  Christian book clubs and reading groups could also benefit from working through Apologetics at the Cross (AatC).

The orienting motif of AatC is the humility and grace required for reasonable Christian answers.  Chartraw and Allen spend considerable time establishing the context of biblical apologetics – including the famous apologetic mandate of 1 Peter 3:15.  The three-part structure of the work is successful, establishing foundations (Chapters 1-4), structures (Chapters 5-9), and practices (Chapters 10-13) for contemporary apologetics.

Some parts of AatC are stronger than others.  The biblical and historical foundations are quite comprehensive, but the biblical foundations for apologetics seemed a bit of a mish-mash—an attempt to cover examples of Christian defense in Scripture by topic.  A chronological or canonical approach may have been easier to follow; alternatively, identifying specific apologists in Scripture and working out some of their methods and practices could have been helpful.  The history of apologetics in Chapters 3-4, however, was quite masterful.

One of the most impressive elements of AatC is the formatting and style of the book.  The text is replete with helpful illustrations and figures (e.g., p. 24, 34, 35-36, 45, 50, 51, 57, …) and informative sidebars with definitions or quotations (e.g., p. 29, 32, 38, 41, …).  Those reader aids serve to give visual representations of the material Chartraw and Allen are relating (thereby engaging multiple senses and relating to multiple learning styles) and enhance the content of the text.


Chartraw and Allen provide a positive balance in their work, emphasizing not just reasons and evidence for faith, but the need for faithful living witness that matches the message being defended.  There has been a positive movement in academic apologetics toward focusing on the character of the apologist and his/her speech—Chartraw and Allen are not breaking new ground here, but they are furthering a very helpful impetus in the contemporary landscape.


Wednesday, June 5, 2019

My thoughts on Alan Noble, "Disruptive Witness"

Alan Noble, Disruptive Witness: Speaking Truth in a Distracted Age. Downers Grove, IL: IVP, 2018. 189 pp.  

Last fall I had the privilege of serving on Christianity Today's adjudication panel for the book of the year in the category of Apologetics & Evangelism.  All four finalists were excellent (not perfect, but excellent) works, with different strengths.  I'd like to take a couple of posts to share some of my thoughts on the four finalists:

Sam Chan, Evangelism in a Skeptical World (Zondervan)
David & Marybeth Baggett, The Morals of the Story (IVP Academic)
Alan Noble, Disruptive Witness (IVP)
Joshua Chartraw & Mark Allen, Apologetics at the Cross (Zondervan)

In Disruptive Witness, Alan Noble diagnoses the distracted materialistic condition of modern Western society, and exhorts Christians to live as disruptive witnesses individually, corporately, and culturally.  Noble’s understanding of the contemporary context is strong, and heavily influenced by Charles Taylor’s A Secular Age (among others).  His diagnosis does not come across as judgmental or demeaning toward the reader, as Noble is careful to indict his own technological distractedness along the way.

Noble is under no illusions that he (or any of us) can exert the seismic changes that will alter the overall trajectory of our distracted age.  Instead, he opts for the more modest goal of offering “concrete, achievable, meaningful actions to help the church preserve its witness.” (88) His goal is informed by an understanding of where society is and how it has gotten there, along with his fear that many strains of contemporary Christianity have unwittingly bought into secularism and technicism.

The structure of Disruptive Witness is solid, with a pair of triune sections first articulating the problem, then suggesting solutions.  Each chapter is substantial but manageable, and is unlikely to repel the average reader.

Noble’s Disruptive Witness contains some excellent suggestions for a transformed life which are simple, practical, and balanced.  For example, he notes that the simple act of saying grace for a meal (at home or in public) can be a testament that we reject secularism’s notion of a closed universe (“a materialist account of provision”).  Hence, saying grace can remind us of God’s constant provision.  If, however, saying grace becomes a means of “advertising … our faith,” then the practice ceases to be a disruptive witness, and instead “capitulates to the game of secularism.” (113) When suggesting means for “Disruptive Cultural Participation,” (Chapter 6) Noble avoids the temptation of calling his readers to be culture-makers, and instead proposes a universally-applicable “cultural participation” in shared stories (movies, TV shows, novels, music, etc.) in ways that “challenge the distracted, secular age.” (157) Noble’s ensuing suggestions are concrete (e.g., hosting movie nights, discussing shows with a co-worker) and attainable for the intentional disciple of Christ.

One major research/content shortcoming of Disruptive Witness is Noble’s inaccurate, inconsistent, and unnecessarily dismissive treatment of worldview study.  First, Noble uncritically follows James K. A. Smith’s work in Desiring the Kingdom, and asserts that “traditional worldview studies overemphasize rational, intentional, and cognitive beliefs over the way habits shape our desires,” and ignore the impact of “liturgy, experience, memories, and even personality.” (52) Noble does eventually allow that “some of the best worldview thinkers are aware of these dangers,” (52) but in neither place does Noble cite or even mention an example of worldview thinkers—he simply quotes Smith and asserts his own judgment.  Unfortunately, Noble’s treatment (following Smith) of contemporary academic worldview studies (as exampled by Goheen and Bartholomew’s Living at the Crossroads; Walsh and Middleton’s The Transforming Vision; Naugle’s Reordered Love, Reordered Lives; and Sire’s Naming the Elephant and The Universe Next Door) misses the boat—these contemporary worldview thinkers acknowledge the historical tendency to overemphasize the rational and underemphasize the affective in worldview formation and application, and have amply adjusted course to compensate.  Noble seems sadly unaware of the bulk of contemporary academic worldview study, as evidenced by the lack of reference to a single ‘worldview-ish’ thinker (unless one counts Smith in that category), and that renders his adjudication of worldview thought simply mistaken.

Second, Noble argues that worldview thought tends to be reductionistic in nature, lumping broad swaths of distinct individuals with different perspectives under broad worldview categories (e.g., atheism, theism, Marxism, humanism, Islam, postmodernism, etc.). (50) He correctly notes that such reductionism (or categorization) tends to “misinterpret people,” (53) and misses the highly incarnational and individualistic nature of worldviews in the modern West.  But, ironically, the primary task of the first half of Disruptive Witness is to engage in similar generalization, categorization, and reductionism with regards to the contemporary context.  Three examples, one from each of the first three chapters, will have to suffice: (1) “Western society has turned [the] experience of tentative belief into a virtue,” (42) a clear (and, I think, accurate) case of lumping the modern West into one category. (2) “For the twenty-first-century person … the momentum of life that so often discourages us from stopping to take our bearings is magnified dramatically by the constant hum of portable electronic entertainment.” (15) Many readers (myself included) will not see themselves reflected in Noble’s characterization of “the twenty-first-century person,” but will nonetheless be able to acknowledge that he has accurately diagnosed (categorized) the ‘average’ under the broad umbrella.  (3) The dominant mode for meaning is now a “generic existentialist philosophy … [which] involves the belief that ‘existence precedes essence’ and that meaning is something we make and impose on … a neutral, indifferent world.” (68) There are two reductionisms here—first, of the 21st-century individual as an existentialist (there are, of course, several other modes of meaning-making in the contemporary West); second, of existentialism itself, which is, as Noble notes, “a complex and diverse movement.” (68) So, if worldview studies are guilty of generalization, categorization, and reductionism that can misinterpret individuals and fail to account for the diversity (and even rational incoherence) of their beliefs, then it appears that Noble himself is guilty of such.  Please note – my critique is not of what Noble endeavors to do.  I believe his distillation of the contemporary age to be (for the most part) accurate, and exceedingly helpful.  It is a highly-distracted age, and modern hyper-technology has gravely exacerbated our pre-existing tendency to go through the motions of life without deep thought or internal reflection.  My critique is, rather, that Noble inconsistently berates unnamed worldview thinkers (and then, guilt by association, worldview study in general) for what he himself pursues! 

Thus, third, Noble’s treatment of worldview study is unnecessarily dismissive.  The attacking critique of worldview thought on pages 50-54 turns potential allies into enemies—that is, Noble dissuades his readers from taking worldview thinkers (and worldview study) seriously, even though readers could greatly benefit from engaging with worldview material.  The critique of worldview thought does not contribute to Noble’s thesis or purpose—the flow and purpose of Part One would succeed just as well without it!  And for the informed reader who has more of a background in contemporary worldview thought, Noble’s inaccurate, inconsistent, and unnecessarily dismissive treatment of worldview study undermines confidence in the rest of his project.


Those critiques do not undermine the helpfulness of Noble's project overall.  He has his fingers on the pulse of our society, and good suggestions for Christians seeking to reconnect to God and others rather than Siri!

Sunday, June 2, 2019

My thoughts on Baggett, "The Morals of the Story"

David Baggett and Marybeth Baggett, The Morals of the Story: Good News About a Good God. Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2018. 253 pp.  

Last fall I had the privilege of serving on Christianity Today's adjudication panel for the book of the year in the category of Apologetics & Evangelism.  All four finalists were excellent (not perfect, but excellent) works, with different strengths.  I'd like to take a couple of posts to share some of my thoughts on the four finalists:

Sam Chan, Evangelism in a Skeptical World (Zondervan)
David & Marybeth Baggett, The Morals of the Story (IVP Academic)
Alan Noble, Disruptive Witness (IVP)
Joshua Chartraw & Mark Allen, Apologetics at the Cross (Zondervan)

David and Marybeth Baggett have written a winsome and persuasive version of an extended moral argument for the existence and nature of God.  The Morals of the Story (MotS) covers a tremendous amount of ground, surveying the history of moral arguments (Chapters 1, 3, and 4), identifying “recalcitrant” aspects of morality in need of explanation (Chapters 2, 5-9), and arguing that the Christian worldview provides the best explanation for those aspects (Chapters 5-10).

The Baggetts have a witty writing style, which ends up being both a strength and a weakness.  There is considerable humor in MotS, which keeps the reader engaged and entertained along the way.  At the same time, however, a fair amount of the book’s humor seems unrelated (or at best tangentially related) to the content/context, and is thereby distracting.  For example, they jest in regards to Paul Copan’s “pun problem” (89), begin their Intermission (“Answering Euthyphro”) with parodied advertising jingles (93), and share a humorous story of David’s encounter with an “Angel” at his mother’s death (197) – none of which contribute to the story or the argument.

That said, the philosophical argument advanced in MotS is both significant and successful.  The Baggetts are convinced that the moral argument for God’s existence and nature is among the most resonant and persuasive argument available in contemporary society, and they do a masterful job of pooling the relevant resources.  They highlight the inability of secular ethical theories to account for objective good and evil, moral obligations and motivation, moral knowledge, moral hope (transformation), and moral providence.  They also demonstrate the rich explanatory scope and power of the Christian worldview in accounting for those same moral realities.  If humanity’s deep and unshakeable moral intuitions are anything like correct, then, MotS demonstrates that the rational observer should embrace something like Christian theism in response.

In my estimation, the strongest and most ground-breaking work (in contemporary circles, anyway) comes in Chapters 8-9, wherein the Baggetts discuss moral transformation and providence respectively.  Along with our moral knowledge, they argue, humans ubiquitously desire to receive forgiveness and to be renewed—Christianity alone provides the resources for transcendent forgiveness and divinely-enabled change (including the death of the “Dear Self”).

There are two additional minor shortcomings of MotS.  First, the structure of the book may have the unfortunate effect of turning away numerous potential readers.  Chapters 3-4 cover the history of moral arguments for God, and while a professional philosopher like myself might find them absolutely fascinating and informative, I suspect the chapters will be cumbersome for many lay readers.  I think a better approach would have been to move immediately from chapter 2 into chapter 5.  Second, the Baggetts present the book as a Greek drama, taking place in/around Mars Hill.  To that end, they draw upon Socrates’ apology and Paul’s Areopagus address, and present the work in three “Acts” instead of Parts or Sections.  There is a nod at the end that morality may anticipate a “tragic” interpretation, but putting it in the context of a Christian interpretation allows for transformation into a ‘happy-ending’ “comedy” instead.  With those exceptions, however, there is nothing in the content of the book which builds upon or exploits the drama motif.  I think the motif has a lot to commend it, and could have been more fruitfully utilized.