“Mark and Bev Tindall” <> wrote in message news:<>… “Reprinted from http://www.bruderhof.com. Copyright 2002 by The
Bruderhof Foundation, Inc. Used with permission.”
###############################################################
[Soren kierkegaard]
Christ Has No Doctrine
A true believer is infinitely interested in what is
real. For faith this is decisive, and this interestedness does not
just involve a little curiosity but an absolute dependence on the
object of faith.
The object of faith, understood Christianly, is not a doctrine,
for then the relation is merely intellectual. Neither is the object
of faith a teacher who has a doctrine, for when a teacher has a
doctrine, then the doctrine is more important than the teacher.
The object of faith is the actuality and authority of the teacher;
that the teacher actually is. Therefore faith’s answer is absolutely
either yes or no. Faith’s posture is not in relation to a teaching,
whether it is true or not, but is the answer to the question about
a fact: Do you accept as fact that he, the Teacher, actually exists?
Please note that the answer to this is a matter of infinite concern.
Of course, if the object of faith is only a human being,
then the whole thing is a sham. But this is not the case for
Christians. The object of Christian faith is God’s historical existence,
that is, that God at a certain point in time existed as an
individual human being.
Christianity, therefore, is not a doctrine about the unity of
the divine and the human, not to mention the rest of the logical
paraphrases of typical religious thought. Christianity is not a
doctrine but a fact: God came into existence through a particular
human being at a particular point in history.
p r o v o c a t i o n s
66
Christianity is not to be confused with objective or scientific
truth. When Christ came into the world it was difficult to become
a Christian, and for this reason one did not become preoccupied
with trying to understand it. Now we have almost reached
the parody that to become a Christian is nothing at all, but it is a
difficult and very involved task to understand it. Everything is reversed.
Christianity is transformed into a kind of worldview, a
way of thinking about life, and the task of faith consists in understanding
and articulating it. But faith essentially relates itself
to existence, and becoming a Christian is what is important. Believing
in Christ and wanting to “understand” his way by articulating
it and elaborating on it is actually a cowardly evasion
that wants to shirk the task. To become a Christian is the ultimate,
to want to “understand” Christianity, as if it were some
doctrine, is open to suspicion.
That one can know what Christianity is without being a
Christian is one thing. But whether one can know what it is to
be a Christian without being one is something else entirely. And
this is the problem of faith. One can find no greater dubiousness
than when, by the help of “Christianity,” it is possible to
find Christians who have not yet become Christians.
Faith, therefore, and the object of faith is not a lesson for
slow learners in the sphere of knowledge, an asylum for the ignorant.
Faith exists in a sphere of its own. The immediate identifying
mark of every misunderstanding of Christianity is that
faith is changed into a belief and drawn into the range of intellectuality
– a matter of understanding, of knowledge. Infinite
interestedness in the actuality and authority of the Teacher, absolute
commitment, becoming Christian – that is the sole passion
and object of faith.
Discussion
No comments for “Christ Has No Doctrine”