Monday, January 14, 2008 8:32 PM CST
COLUMN: Argue if you will, but faith and facts don't really need each other
By PENNY WEAVER, Night News Editor pweaver@jg-tc.com
When I read comments by people trying to convince others of the truth in certain religious beliefs, I’m not sure whether to admire such people or move them mentally into my “kooky” category.
Yeah, they probably think that of me, too.
In a way, I can admire folks who speak up and try to convince others of certain religious or biblical truths. Long back-and-forth conversations often get started on these topics on our Web site (www.jg-tc.com — no, not a shameless plug, just FYI).
It’s good to speak up for what you believe in — without undue trampling on others’ views. Many commenters on our Web site have tried persistently to convince others that the Bible is 100 percent accurate, word for word; or that it’s not. Some have argued on and on about evolution versus “intelligent design,” or about Jesus’ very existence, and so on and so forth.
It makes for interesting reading sometimes. Often, a Clergy View will spark an earnest debate, which can be fun.
But on the other hand, part of me says these folks are often just wasting their breath. It’s so unlikely that one person can express their beliefs — no matter how eloquently — to another and change anyone’s mind.
Gosh, I remember when my biggest concern about church was why boys could be altar servers but girls couldn’t. Now that they can, I feel a bit resentful that I missed my chance. I guess they don’t take 37-year-old altar servers of either gender, do they? I wouldn’t look good in those white robes anyway.
But I digress.
Maybe it’s just me, or maybe we Catholics in general aren’t much on evangelism. I’ve sometimes been tempted to join the religious discussions online, but I never do primarily because religion, to me, simply isn’t a matter of proving something — it’s a matter of faith.
Many things can be debated, argued, discussed and hashed out, and sometimes one person can sway others to a different viewpoint, or enlighten someone. Religion isn’t one of those.
Faith is a “firm belief in something for which there is no proof,” according to Merriam-Webster.
I can’t prove to anyone that God exists. I can’t vouch for the Bible’s absolute, 100-percent, word-for-word truth, because I wasn’t there when it was written.
As a journalist, in particular, I want proof of something before I trust it as a truth or a fact. For one thing, that’s my job. For another, that’s also my nature, which makes me a good journalist, I hope.
It continually amazes me that so many people, for example, read something on the Internet and just take it at face value. Suddenly, something they saw online is fact, without any verification, without any proof.
The primary truth about the Internet is that any Joe Schmoe with a computer hookup can start a Web page and put any “facts” on it that he wants. It could be a 450-pound man who logs on while in his underwear — I promise I won’t get more graphic with that particular description — who started the site you’re perusing to learn “facts” about how to get back the svelte figure you had in high school, for example.
That’s not what I’d call a reliable source.
I guess it shouldn’t surprise me, then, that so many people take the Bible at face value, as word-for-word truth, supposedly to be followed to the letter. Some don’t allow any room for interpretation whatsoever, or take into consideration the many times that book has been translated from one language to another.
But that’s their faith. That’s what they believe. The fact is that they can’t truly prove it. Oh, many do try, and more power to them, but it’s something that really can’t be proven.
Faith is just that — a belief. Religion is not science. In science, theories are developed and eventually either proven or disproved. Religion is about faith and about believing in something that you cannot prove. In fact, that’s the key in some ways: Why do you believe in something you can’t prove? You just do.
Even though I make my living via verifiable facts and reliable sources, I have no trouble with faith and believing in certain things that I can’t prove. That’s either a double standard or that makes me really mentally versatile, perhaps — you decide.
I can’t prove to anyone that God exists, or that Jesus was who He was. I don’t want to try. I think that either you believe or you don’t, and it almost doesn’t “count” if someone has to convince you.
I don’t need certain things proven to me. I believe. Depending on what you believe, I’m either pretty stupid for that, or not, but it’s not what others think that matters when it comes to faith. It’s each person being attuned to what is in his or her heart.
So maybe I’m kooky, and it’s the people who try to convince others of certain religious beliefs who are to be admired. Maybe some would say my lack of evangelism puts in doubt just how much I really do believe. Others might say those, like me, who have faith in something we can’t prove are just too idealistic or naive.
That’s okay. The faith I have — and that I keep to myself — gives me great solace and is a source of strength during difficult times. I won’t try to convince anyone else I’m right, but I do wish on anyone the kind of comfort that faith can bring.
If that’s kooky, I like it. I like it a lot.
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newlife wrote on Jan 10, 2008 6:13 AM:
For the detractors, I hope that you volunteer on the Salvation Army Board or have given food to their pantry when it was nearly depleted last fall or I hope that you swing a hammer for Habitat, dontate time to stay at the PADS shelter, hand out food at the Mattoon Food Pantry, are part of a Christmas program to provide coats or toys to local children, I hope you volunteered and rang the bell for the Salvation Army at Christmas, I hope you have taken a troubled local youth with addiction issues and criminal problems into your own home to provide for them and care for them to give them a better chance in life. Because these are all things that I know that people who are on the NLFH committee or attendees have done and are still doing. But they also know that the mesage of hope is larger again than what we can just reach out and touch in our community. Sometimes God calls people to do something a little harder to live their faith. Something a little more difficult. Please remember, Christ died for the whole world...if we carry out the commandment of Love God and Love Others...the Kingdom of Heaven is much larger than what we can easily reach out and touch. I am glad to be part of this Kingdom, I am glad to be a part of New Life for Haiti, and I am glad to sign my name to this comment. Randy Myers, NLFH Committee Member. "