Title: Human Rebellion and Education
1Human Rebellion and Education
- Michael Goheen
- Trinity Western University
- Langley, B.C., Canada
2Danger of minimizing sin
- Believers often have an inadequate awareness of
their adversary or arch-enemy who is near by
and crouching at the door (Genesis 47). - Our tendency to minimize the gravity, scope, and
power of sin reducing it to individual
disobedience is much more than an intellectually
deficiency. It puts us in urgent peril because
sin is a very vicious and mortal enemy, an
irascible and persistent power, which must
certainly be known in order to be overcome.
(Berkouwer)
3Fall into sin
- Tree of knowledge of good and evil (2.15-17)
- Arbitrary commandwhy?
- Satanic temptation
- Doubt about divine source or fairness
- Unbelief
- Imaging life in disobedience to Gods word
- Willful disobedience
4Forfeiting the glory of creaturehood
- Man has take leave of the relation of
dependence. He has refused to obey and has willed
to make himself independent. No longer is
obedience the guiding principle of his life, but
his autonomous knowledge and will. Thereby he
ceases, in effect, to understand himself as a
creature. (Von Rad) -
- In desiring to be like God man thrusts himself
into a dismal and self-defeating privation. In so
doing he forfeits the glory of his creaturehood.
(Berkouwer)
5Characterising Sin Against God
- Against you, you only, have I sinned and done
what is evil in your sight (Psalm 514 TNIV).
6Characterising Sin Idolatry
- They exchanged the truth of God for a lie, and
worshiped and served created things rather than
the Creatorwho is forever praised (Romans
125). -
- If human beings are inescapably religious,
driven always to seek an object of worship, then
the fall cannot be characterised solely as revolt
against the rightful Lord It must be described
further as exchange of religious allegiance.
7God or an idol
- Human beings are inherently religious creatures.
We cannot live without a god, even if it is one
of our own making. We need a center, an ultimate
focus, a point of orientation for our lives. We
have in fact two alternatives. Either we serve
the Lord and obey his will, or we practice
idolatry and disobedience (Walsh and Middleton).
8Sin as Idolatry
- If human beings are inescapably religious,
driven always to seek an object of worship, then
the fall cannot be characterised solely as revolt
against the rightful Lord It must be described
further as exchange of religious allegiance
(Chaplin).
9Idolatry as epitome of sin
- Idolatry is essentially a declaration of
autonomy and independence from our Creator, our
rejection of his rightful kingship. . . .
Idolatry is portrayed in the Bible not as merely
one sin among many, but as the epitome of sin. It
is the central act of disobedience which disrupts
Yahwehs rule over human life (Walsh and
Middleton).
10Sin as idolatry
11Relational dimension of sin
- Not transgression of impersonal standard
- Marital analogy Against exclusive loyalty of
marriage relationship (e.g.,Jeremiah 3, Hosea) - Paternal analogy Against kindness, generosity,
goodness of Father
12Characterising sin Against creation
- Against human life, against shalom, against
health, against prosperity, against wholeness,
against human flourishing. - Am I the one they are provoking? declares the
Lord. Are they not rather harming themselves, to
their own shame? (Jeremiah 719). - . . . disobedience goes against the very grain
of creation itself. Sin is rebellion against both
the structure and the Structurer of reality. Such
rebellion is inevitably self-defeating and
self-destroying.
13Wages of sin is death
- See, I set before you today life and prosperity,
death and destruction. For I command you today to
love the Lord your God, to walk in his ways, and
to keep his commands, decrees and laws then you
will live and increase, and the Lord your God
will bless you in the land you are entering to
possess. But if you heart turns away and you are
not obedient, and if you are drawn away to bow
down to other gods and worship them, I declare to
you this day that you will certainly be
destroyed. . . . I have set before you life and
death, blessings and curses (Deuteronomy
3015-20).
14Sin as covenant rebellion
15Sin as a personal power
- Romans 7.8-11
- Sin a seductive power, a damning power, an
active dynamic and destructive force
(Berkouwer) - Sin is a power that seeks to rule and ruin
everyone and everything. (Berkouwer)
16Characterising the power of sin
- Redirecting power it redirects our allegiance to
an idol. - Malevolent idolatry aims at our destruction.
- Seductive it deceptively conceals its appalling
nature and as it lures us to death. - Disfiguring it corrupts and distorts Gods good
creation.
17Parasitic quality of sin
- A parasite is an organism that lives off the life
blood of another it is an uninvited guest that
keeps tapping its host for sustenance.
(Plantinga) - Goodness is, so to speak, itself badness is
only spoiled goodness. And there must be
something good first before it can be
spoiled.(CS Lewis) - Sin is nothing and can do nothing apart from the
creatures and the powers which God has created
yet it organizes all these in open rebellion
against him. (Bavinck)
18Structure-direction
19Scope of Sin
- Personal lives
- Communal expression
- Non-human creation (Romans 8.19-22)
20Culture Common way of life rooted in a shared
core religious beliefs in form of story.
21Heart of culture
- Religious beliefs are an organising dynamic
and directing power of the various elements of
cultural lifeeconomic, technical, scientific,
artistic, social, and communal. (Brunner)
22Three biblical rules
- The first rule is that every man is serving
god(s) in his life. - Secondly, every man is transformed into an image
of his god. - Finally, mankind creates and forms a structure
of society in its own image.
23Creating society in deformed image
- In the development of human civilization, man
forms, creates and changes the structure of his
society, and in doing so he portrays in his work
the intention of his own heart. He gives to the
structure of that society something of his own
image and likeness. In it he betrays something of
his own lifestyle, of his own god (Goudzwaard).
24Goudzwaard on Ideologies
- Ideologies Humanly constructed stories that fill
the spiritual vacuum after the Enlightenment. - Make an end for human society absolute (e.g.,
material wealth and prosperity) - Certain social powers or forces identified as
means by which the goal can be achieved (e.g.,
freedom of market) saviours or powers which
people put their faith in. - Place ourselves under power of these saviours
- Transform whole of society
25Ideology and Education
- How has this ideology affected education?
- Focus on Neil Postmans End of Education
26Failure of the gods
- . . . the crisis in narrative the decline of
once-sturdy gods. (25) - . . . both students and teachers lack a
narrative to provide profound meaning to their
lessons. (51) - god . . . a comprehensive narrative about
what the world is like, how things got to be the
way they are, and what lies ahead. (6)
27What god will your school serve?
- The truth is that school cannot exist without
some reason for its being, and in fact there are
several gods our students are presently asked to
serve. (27) -
28God of Economic Utility
- If you pay attention in school, and do your
homework, and score well on tests, and behave
yourself, you will be rewarded with a well-paying
job when you are done. Its driving idea is that
the purpose of schooling is to prepare children
for competent entry into the economic life of a
community. (27)
29Transformed into the image of our god
- The narrative/god of economic utility . . .
tells us that we are first and foremost economic
creatures, and that our sense of worth and
purpose is to be found in our capacity to secure
material benefits. (28)
30God of Consumership
- One may wonder, then, why this god economic
utility has so much strength, why the
preparation for making a living, which is
well-served by any decent education, should be
assigned a metaphysical position of such high
station. I believe the reason is that the god of
Economic Utility is coupled with another god, one
with a smiling face and one that provides an
answer to the question, If I get a good job, then
what? (33)
31God of Consumership
- Devotion to the god of Consumership serves
easily as the metaphysical basis of schooling
because it is urged on the young early in their
lives, long before they get to schoolin fact, as
soon as they are exposed to the powerful
teachings of the advertising industry. (33)
32God of Technology
- . . . That people believe technology works,
that they rely on it, that it makes promises,
that they are bereft when denied access to it,
that they are delighted when they are in its
presence, that for most people it works in
mysterious ways, that they condemn people who
speak against it, that they stand in awe of it,
and that, in the born-again mode, they will alter
their lifestyles, their schedules, their habits,
and their relationships to accommodate it. If
this be not a form of religious belief, what is?
(38)
33These gods will fail too!
- . . . the narratives that underlie our present
conception of school do not serve us well and may
lead to the end of public schooling . . . (61). - My intention here is to offer an answer in the
form of five narratives that, singly and in
concert, contain sufficient resonance and power
to be taken seriously as reasons for schooling.
(61)
34Another story?
- If the tale of capitalistic progress is
beginning to fray at the edges then perhaps this
is an evangelistically opportune time for
Christian education to offer another story--one
that replaces the self-salvation of economic
progress with the tale of a coming Kingdom of
redemption (Brian Walsh).